A New Afrikan revolutionary whose life fused care with struggle. A political prisoner held not for what he did, but for what he represented. A case study in how the U.S. state disciplines liberation through time, cages, and memory. His legacy forces a question the system cannot answer: what happens when the oppressed organize to... Continue Reading →
Framing Sovereignty as Senility: Excavating the BBC’s Narrative on Ahn Hak-sop
How imperial propaganda turns testimony into tragedy, and why Ahn Hak-sop’s final walk demands we join living struggles for Korean sovereignty By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 1, 2025 Framing Sovereignty as Senility: Excavating the BBC’s Narrative on Ahn Hak-sop The story the British press wants us to absorb is simple: a frail... Continue Reading →
From the Ashes of Attica: Sharpening the Spear Against the Silence of Western Marxism
A Revolutionary Review of Orisanmi Burton’s Tip of the Spear — and an Indictment of the Euro-American Left’s Cowardice in the Face of Black InsurgencyBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 5, 2025They Called It a Riot. He Called It War. In the hands of Western Marxism, the Attica uprising is little more than... Continue Reading →
“Blood in My Eye”: George Jackson, Prison War Communism, and the Scientific Weaponry of the Lumpen Vanguard
On the first day of Black August, we excavate George Jackson’s final manuscript—not to memorialize him, but to weaponize his theory of revolution behind bars, and his call for the liquidation of empire by its most discarded class. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 1, 2025 This System Has No Reformers—Only Gravediggers George... Continue Reading →
From Needles to Rifles: The Revolutionary Praxis of Mutulu Shakur
“You have to be concerned about the soul, the spirit, and the body. Healing is political when the people are being made sick by oppression.” — Mutulu ShakurPart I: Roots of a Revolutionary – From Harlem to the Republic of New AfrikaMutulu Shakur was born Jeral Wayne Williams on August 8, 1950, in Baltimore, and... Continue Reading →