By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information | April 21, 2025 A Passport Torn, A Paradigm Shift It wasn’t just a legal move. When Gerald Yin, founder of Chinese chipmaking powerhouse AMEC, renounced his U.S. citizenship, he lit a signal fire across the landscape of the global tech war. It was a gesture with geopolitical weight—equal parts... Continue Reading →
Technofascism Without the Mask: Trump 2.0 and the Gutting of U.S. Diplomacy in Africa
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information | April 21, 2025 The Neocolonial Smile Fades The mask is off. According to a leaked draft order reported by the South China Morning Post, President Donald Trump—now comfortably enthroned in his second term—is preparing to gut U.S. diplomatic spending across the African continent. Embassies are being closed, aid programs... Continue Reading →
Redlines: April 21, 2025
Weaponized Information: Daily Redlines Report – April 21, 2025 Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration. Africa A Snapshot of the Global War Against African People: Reflections from Ecuador From Ecuador to Ethiopia, the assault on African people is global. Imperialist counterinsurgency isn’t just local—it’s transcontinental, racialized,... Continue Reading →
Part I: Sudan and the Colonial Origins of a Manufactured Crisis
Weaponized Information | By Prince Kapone This Was No Accident They want us to believe Sudan is a mess of its own making. That it's all about tribes, religion, and "ancient hatreds." That the chaos is natural, inevitable, and internal. But pull back the curtain, and you'll see something else entirely: a country deliberately broken... Continue Reading →
Ballots, Backrooms, and Betrayal: The Coup Against Democracy in Ecuador
This ain't about a stolen election—it's about a stolen future. The empire’s fingerprints are all over Ecuador’s latest ‘democracy,’ and the people are beginning to wipe it clean. I. They Rigged the Game and Still Claimed Victory Luisa González should’ve won. Everyone knew it. The polls had her leading, the streets were behind her, and... Continue Reading →
Between the Dragon and the Dollar: China’s Resource Dependency and the Struggle for African Liberation
China needs what Africa has. The U.S. wants to stop it from getting it. But beneath the geopolitical chess match lies a deeper question: who do Africa's resources serve—foreign capital or the African people? I. The Empire Is Cracking, But the Scramble Ain’t Over Africa’s soil has always attracted foreign boots, bankers, and businessmen. The... Continue Reading →
Empire Reloaded: Trump’s Africa Hustle and the Machinery of Hyper-Imperialism
Behind the suits, speeches, and staged photo-ops, Trump’s return to Africa is a crude remix of old empire tactics—guns, loans, and lies. The only thing new is the software. I. Africa, Empire, and the Fork in the Road Let’s call it what it is. Africa is being pulled in two directions. On one side, you’ve... Continue Reading →
Redlines: April 15, 2025
Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration.AfricaPipeline Politics: Algeria, Italy and the Great Game in North AfricaThe latest developments in North Africa expose a high-stakes contest where the channels of oil and gas become instruments for global domination. Algeria’s role as an energy hub is recast as... Continue Reading →
The Long Road to Multipolarity: BRICS+ and the Contradictions of the Imperial Order
Part I: The Emergence of Multipolarity — A Dialectical-Historical Materialist AnalysisMultipolarity Emerges from ContradictionMultipolarity didn’t emerge from diplomatic handshakes or academic white papers. It emerged from blood, debt, occupation, collapse, and rebellion. It is not a utopian dream projected onto the future. It is the visible tremor of a system in breakdown, and of the... Continue Reading →
Indonesia at the Crossroads: Between BRICS, Beijing, and the Bayonets of Empire
As Washington pivots, Jakarta edges toward sovereignty. But the empire never sleeps.There’s an old revolutionary saying: some nations get to walk through history; others have to crawl through the trenches of it. Indonesia, the sprawling archipelago of over 17,000 islands, has been doing both—marching and crawling, staggering and rising—from the ashes of Dutch plunder, Japanese... Continue Reading →