The Guardian romanticizes women's escape into witchcraft retreats, masking a harsher truth: capitalism has fragmented community, only to sell facsimiles of it back to the lonely. Beneath the rituals of sisterhood lies a commodified search for healing, where pain is packaged as a wellness experience for those who can afford it. This article stirs empathy but shies away from confronting the systemic forces that produced these wounds. Women are not merely seeking solace; they are expressing anger born from societal oppression. The challenge is to transition from commodified refuge to collective action, turning shared grief into political power.
Santa Marta Rises: The III Social Summit and the Struggle for a Sovereign Hemisphere
A Weaponized Information Report on the III Cumbre Social de los Pueblos de América Latina y el Caribe — Where the peoples of the continent gathered to defend the Zone of Peace, advance desdollarization, secure food sovereignty, and confront the ongoing imperial restructuring of the United States. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | November... Continue Reading →