How corporate profit, colonial borders, and U.S. militarism converge to redraw the map of South America By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 4, 2025 I. The Profits Were the Point: Framing Plunder as Progress The article we are excavating—“Exxon-led consortium’s 2024 profit in Guyana rose 64% to $10.4 billion”, published by Reuters and... Continue Reading →
Slick Sheikhs and the Sovereign Wealth Shuffle: Wall Street’s Gulf Realignment
How Wall Street disciplines deviation, reorganizes Gulf comprador capitalism, and recalibrates financial imperialism in the shadow of Saudi multipolar drift By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 4, 2025 I. Gulf Markets Don’t Move—They’re Moved The article we are excavating, titled “Gulf States Shift Investment Focus Away from Saudi Arabia” and published by the... Continue Reading →
Corn Diplomacy and the Class War: Vietnam Navigates the Grain Trap
Behind the headlines of U.S.–Vietnam agricultural trade lies a deeper battle over food sovereignty, socialist survival, and the slow recalibration of empire in crisis. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 4, 2025The Corn Beneath the Curtain: Bloomberg’s Imperial HarvestThis article was penned by Hallie Gu, a professional amplifier of corporate agriculture narratives whose... Continue Reading →
Redlines: June 4, 2025
Redlines – June 4, 2025 Daily Dispatches from the Frontlines of Empire: Exposing Capitalist Crisis, Imperialist Recalibration, and the Global Struggle for Liberation AFRICA Namibia Courts Western Energy Investors in Bid for “Green Powerhouse” Status Namibia is being hailed as the continent’s next renewable energy “leader” after launching a new round of hydrogen and solar... Continue Reading →
Groceries Cost More in the U.S.—Because Capitalism Needs Hunger to Survive
Food inflation in the imperial core isn’t a glitch. It’s how capital disciplines labor and stabilizes empire—one overpriced meal at a time. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 3, 2025 Part I: Hunger as Business, Affordability as Propaganda By Weaponized Information | June 2025 G. Brian Davis is a freelance personal finance writer... Continue Reading →
Senegal Tries to Break Free—But the IMF Still Has the Keys
How Western media is laundering austerity as sovereignty while the Senegalese people fight to reclaim their future from debt, dependency, and neocolonial theft By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 3, 2025 Part I – Budget Discipline in Chains: When Sovereignty Is Rewritten by the Creditors By Weaponized Information | June 3, 2025 They... Continue Reading →
Peasants and Revolution: From Mao to Cabral
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information The Revolutionary Subject from the Soil Western Marxism long wrote off the peasantry as pre-political, reactionary, or at best transitional. But history—especially in the colonial and semi-colonial world—has exposed that lie with blood and fire. The most successful revolutions of the 20th century—China, Vietnam, Cuba, Mozambique, Angola, Guinea-Bissau—were peasant-based, anti-colonial,... Continue Reading →
Bill Of Whites: The Colonial Origins of the US Constitution
Settler Panic, Colonial Amnesia By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 1, 2025 Why the Collapse of Empire Feels Like Oppression to Those Who Lived Off It “We’re losing our country.” “Our rights are under attack.” “Democracy is in danger.” These are the cries echoing across settler America like the last wails of a... Continue Reading →
AFRICOM Panics—Because Africa’s Tired of Being a Military Plantation
As U.S. bases are kicked out and IMF shackles are broken, African nations are forging new futures—without empire. AFRICOM isn’t defending Africa. It’s defending the illusion of Western control. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | May 30, 2025 When the General Cries “China,” You Know Africa Is Winning Lee Ferran doesn’t write journalism—he writes... Continue Reading →
Redlines: May 30, 2025
Redlines: May 30, 2025 Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, colonial contradiction, and technofascist stabilization. Africa AFRICOM Panics—Because Africa’s Tired of Being a Military Plantation AFRICOM’s commander is sounding the alarm over China’s growing presence in Africa—accusing Beijing of trying to “replicate U.S. assistance.” As if AFRICOM’s legacy is humanitarian, not... Continue Reading →