From the cotton of Bengal to the sugar of Jamaica, the wealth of the City was not born of free exchange—but of forced extraction.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJuly 24, 2025The Architecture of CatharsisOn July 22, 2025, The Guardian published an article by Chris Osuh titled “Manchester’s Royal Exchange rooted in slavery and colonialism, research... Continue Reading →
Revolution Is Not an Import: Kim Il Sung and the Struggle to Establish Juche
Weaponized Statesman Series | Kim Il Sung at Pyongyang, December 1955 In 1955, Kim Il Sung confronted a Party adrift in imitation. This was not a call for isolation, but a demand to root revolution in the lived experience of the Korean people. Juche, he argued, was not a slogan—it was a method of survival.... Continue Reading →
Radioactive Theft and the Sahelian Rebellion: Weaponizing Sovereignty Against Empire
As Niger reclaims its uranium from French control, the West cries foul. But beneath the noise lies a deeper truth: hyper-imperialism is in retreat, and a new anti-colonial front is rising in the Sahel.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 20, 2025Radioactive Theft and Cognitive Combat: Al Jazeera’s Neocolonial ScriptOn June 20, 2025, Al... Continue Reading →
Furnace of Sovereignty: Mali’s Refinery and the War for Gold
From colonial chains to smelting flames, Mali's gold refinery is more than infrastructure—it’s insurgent architecture in the long war for African self-determination.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJune 14, 2025When the Furnace Burns on African SoilOn June 13, 2025, Business Insider Africa published a news article titled “Mali strikes gold refining deal with Russia to curb... Continue Reading →
“Walter Rodney Speaks”: A Revolutionary Autopsy of the Guerilla Intellectual (Part 1 of 2)
Book Review Series | Part I: The Making of a Guerilla IntellectualBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 14, 2025I. Tailor’s Son in a Tailored World: The Fabric of a Colonial UpbringingWalter Rodney didn’t come from Harvard. He came from Bent Street—Guyana. From the home of a self-employed tailor and a seamstress. And in... Continue Reading →
Feathers for the Empire: How the Heiltsuk Constitution Shakes the Foundations of Settler Sovereignty
Don’t be fooled by the drums and regalia. This isn’t Canada recognizing Indigenous power—it’s Indigenous power recognizing itself. And that’s what makes the state afraid. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 12, 2025 Drums, Dances, and Dispossession: How the Canadian State Hides the Boot Behind the Feather On June 12, 2025, The Guardian... Continue Reading →
Gold and the Guillotine: Imperial Propaganda and the Sahelian Struggle for Sovereignty
Burkina Faso and Mali are reclaiming their gold—but Western media calls it “instability.” What’s really being threatened isn’t investment. It’s empire. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 12, 2025 I. The Narratives of Empire, Gilded in Panic In June 2025, a pair of dispatches from Business Insider Africa and Reuters landed like mortar... Continue Reading →
Revolution in Transition: Bolivia, Lawfare, and the Next Phase of Anti-Imperialist Struggle
The court approved Andronico, but shut the door on Evo. But this isn’t just a legal reshuffling—it’s a political rupture. Beneath the robes lies a deeper battle over who holds power in Bolivia: the state, or the people who built the revolution from below.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJune 6, 2025June 7, 2025From Courtrooms to... 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 →
The Wind of History: Stalin, CNN, and the War Over Revolutionary Memory
When empire trembles, it smears. Stalin’s monument in Moscow is not a return to tyranny—it’s a rupture in imperialist amnesia.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationMay 27, 2025Digging Through the Dirt: Who’s Telling This Story and Why? “I know that after my death a pile of rubbish will be heaped on my grave, but the wind... Continue Reading →