Weaponized Statecraft Series | In Commemoration of Fidel Castro's BirthdayBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 13, 2025Revolution is Not a Spectacle—It is a Verdict“There is something that is not seen in cement or lumber or in stone, and that is what is built among the people, the education received by the people, the... Continue Reading →
Labor Power: Alienation, Extraction, and the Reproduction of Life
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information Labor Is the Bridge Between Soil and Society Food does not emerge from soil alone. It must be coaxed, cultivated, and carried into being by human labor. Labor is the active force that transforms nature—not just for profit, but for survival. Yet under capitalism, this labor is not honored, supported,... 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 →
Seven Fronts of Liberation: The Bolivarian Revolution and the Global Struggle for Socialist Sovereignty
How Venezuela’s 7 Transformations Are Confronting Empire, Constructing Socialism, and Teaching the World to Fight By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information July 31, 2025 Why Venezuela Matters in the Age of Empire and Collapse At the dawn of the 21st century, when neoliberalism strutted across the globe declaring the end of history, one nation dared... Continue Reading →
Metabolic Rifts: How Capital Subjugates Nature’s Cycles to Profit
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized InformationAgriculture as Metabolism, Not MachineBefore agriculture was commodified, it was life: a complex, cyclical exchange between humans and nature. Seeds fell, soils breathed, animals fertilized, microbes decomposed. Water flowed, sun shone, people harvested, ate, and returned to the land what they took. This was not Eden—it was labor, struggle, and adaptation—but... Continue Reading →
Rebellion Without End: July 26th and the Unfinished Cuban Revolution
From the blood of Moncada to the barricades of today, Cuba’s revolution was never a moment—it is a method, a memory, and a mirror held up to empire. As the technofascist world order decays, the spirit of July 26th returns to demand a new generation of revolutionaries rise and finish what was begun. By Prince... Continue Reading →
Liquidating the Jamahiriyah: Libya, Hybrid War, and the Murder of African Sovereignty
A revolutionary state was dismantled, a sovereign leader lynched, and a continent thrown into chaos—all under the banner of human rights. This is the true story of Libya: not a civil war, but a hyper-imperialist counterrevolution by empire. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information “You will regret it when it's too late… when chaos spreads,... Continue Reading →
Revolution After Victory: Mao’s Sixty Points and the Struggle to Stay Red
In the wake of socialist victory, Mao sounded the alarm: triumph breeds complacency, and revolution demands method. His 1958 “Sixty Points” was not a plan—it was a weapon. A lesson in how to keep the revolution alive by transforming leadership, confronting contradiction, and placing politics in command. Weaponized Statesman Series | Mao in Nanning, 1958... Continue Reading →
Credit Is Not Eternal: Lenin, the Peasant, and the Test of Revolutionary State Power
In 1922, with the fires of civil war fading and the hardships of famine and bureaucratic decay sharpening into focus, Lenin stood before the Eleventh Party Congress not to celebrate victory, but to sound an alarm. In his most unsparing speech, he turned the full force of revolutionary critique inward—against incompetence, against illusion, and against... Continue Reading →
Pick Up The Rifle: Engels, the Commune, and the Unforgiving Science of Revolution
In his 1891 Introduction to The Civil War in France, Frederick Engels reloaded the most dangerous weapon the working class has ever forged: the truth that the state must be smashed, not reformed. Drawing on the blood-soaked memory of the Paris Commune, Engels warned that the dictatorship of the proletariat is not a slogan but... Continue Reading →