Bhaskar Sunkara’s market socialism is a bold yet flawed vision that naively overlooks the burdens of imperialism. He critiques past socialist models while proposing that worker-run firms can flourish within a system still embedded in capitalist exploitation. However, the reality is that these worker enterprises would still rely on the global hierarchy that upholds imperial advantages. A true socialist awakening must reject these inherited structures and demands an anti-imperialist framework instead. Without confronting the realities of colonial legacies and ensuring reparative relations, Sunkara’s proposal risks socializing the benefits of imperialism while maintaining its oppressive mechanisms intact.
No Pride in Empire: Seattle’s Rainbow Classroom and the World Cup War Machine
The Seattle Pride Match is not just a progressive celebration but a vehicle for imperial propaganda, co-opting the cultural struggles of predominantly Muslim nations like Iran and Egypt. This event frames the West as a moral authority while masking the brutal realities of sanctions, military finance, and surveillance that underpin these dynamics. The local organizers, corporate sponsors, and FIFA collaborate to transform a football match into a colonial lesson, undermining the very values they profess to uphold. The real challenge lies in recognizing this manipulation and reframing the narrative: embracing genuine solidarity and resistance against imperial structures, rather than succumbing to an illusion of moral superiority.
Marx in the Witness Box: How Jacobin Turns a Chinese Worker’s Wounds Against the Revolution
Jacobin's critique of Chinese worker Xiao Hai's memoir misrepresents the entire Chinese Revolution as a failed experiment based on exploitation. While Xiao Hai's story merits recognition, the narrative frames the factory's plight as representative of the whole nation, ignoring China's transformation from a colonial past into a sovereign socialist state. The real conflict lies not between the state and its workers, but rather over how the fruits of development serve the people's dignity versus capital's control. Exploitation exists, but it's the state that counters this with public power, proving not every wound validates Western perspectives of failure. Thus, the critique deflects from recognizing China's unique developmental trajectory amid global capitalism's inequities.
They Called It Ego: Jacobin, Chris Smalls, and the Policing of Black Anti-Imperialist Labor
Chris Smalls, once heralded as a labor hero, now finds himself a casualty of overblown ego in the eyes of Jacobin. Yet, this portrayal dangerously obscures a deeper truth: his evolution from solely confronting Amazon to advocating for Palestinian and Cuban solidarity reveals an unsettling fear among the respectable Left. They're comfortable with labor militancy as long as it remains contained and domesticated; once it branches into anti-imperialism, they recoil. Smalls symbolizes a challenge to the status quo, an unfiltered confrontation with empire that threatens to redefine labor politics as an international struggle. In essence, the fear of a Black worker embracing a global perspective exposes the fragile backbone of contemporary Leftist thought.
Capitalism Did Not Float In on the Market: Chibber, Jacobin, and the Political Function of Western Marxism
How Western Marxism Turns Colonial Violence into “History Theory” to Save the Settler OrderBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | December 14, 2025When “History Theory” Becomes an Alibi for Empire This essay is a polemical intervention into a recent Jacobin interview with NYU sociologist Vivek Chibber, published as a transcript of an episode of Confronting... Continue Reading →
Zohran Mamdani and the Contradictions of Socialist Governance in the Imperial Core
A victory born from crisis, constrained by capital, and tested by the global architecture of empire. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | November 2025 A Victory Shaped by Crisis, Not Consensus Zohran Mamdani did not win the mayoralty of New York City because the city suddenly embraced socialism. He won because the crises that... Continue Reading →
Breaking the Settler Pact: Confronting the Colonial Foundations of MAGA Communism
MAGA Communism is not a rupture with U.S. imperialism—it’s a patriotic restoration wrapped in red. Its “anti-imperialism” stops at the empire’s borders. Its socialism is reserved for settlers, not the colonized. Real revolution begins by naming the enemy: settlerism, not just capitalism. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 28, 2025 Red Is the... Continue Reading →
Trump’s Tightrope Was a Trap: The U.S.–Israeli Strike on Iran Was No Surprise
It wasn’t miscommunication. It was choreography. From evacuation optics to narrative delay, Trump’s so-called diplomacy gave cover to an imperial assault. The bombs were coordinated. The story was scripted. The target was sovereignty.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 13, 2025Smoke and Mirrors at 30,000 FeetOn 13 June The Guardian ran a straight-faced news... Continue Reading →
Whose Workers, Whose Wages? A Revolutionary Intervention Against the Imperial Left’s China Syndrome
While China brings electricity, roads, and rail to the Global South, the imperial left brings its measuring tape—only to weep over wage gaps. But whose gap are they really mourning? And in whose name?By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 10, 2025Bricks, Not Sermons: The Scale of Struggle in Concrete TermsIn the war for... Continue Reading →