Part VII – Food for Profit: The Ruling Class Capture of the Global Food SystemBy Weaponized Information Editorial CommitteeIntroduction: Not Broken, But OwnedThere is a popular belief that the global food system is broken. That hunger persists because of inefficiencies, misaligned incentives, or unfortunate market externalities. But the truth is sharper and more violent: the... Continue Reading →
Exorcising the Ghost of Malcolm: Class Struggle, Colonial Liberation, and the Failure of Western Marxism
Ghosts in Our Blood exhumes the internationalist, anti-imperialist, and Grenadian roots of Malcolm X, smashing the museum glass of liberal iconography and Western Marxist distortion to return him to the world struggle that claimed him.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 12, 2025I. Bringing Malcolm Back to Earth — Out of the Museum, Away... 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 →
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 →
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 →
Communes, Collectives, and the Ecosocialist Horizon
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information Reclaiming the Future from Below As capitalist modernity collapses under the weight of its own contradictions—ecological breakdown, mass displacement, monopolized food systems, and imperial overreach—the world finds itself at a crossroads. On one path: technofascist dystopia, ruled by billionaire climate bunkers and digitized scarcity. On the other: the slow, stubborn... Continue Reading →
Peasants and Revolution: From Mao to Cabral
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information The Revolutionary Subject from the Soil Western Marxism long wrote off the peasantry as pre-political, reactionary, or at best transitional. But history—especially in the colonial and semi-colonial world—has exposed that lie with blood and fire. The most successful revolutions of the 20th century—China, Vietnam, Cuba, Mozambique, Angola, Guinea-Bissau—were peasant-based, anti-colonial,... Continue Reading →
AFRICOM Panics—Because Africa’s Tired of Being a Military Plantation
As U.S. bases are kicked out and IMF shackles are broken, African nations are forging new futures—without empire. AFRICOM isn’t defending Africa. It’s defending the illusion of Western control. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | May 30, 2025 When the General Cries “China,” You Know Africa Is Winning Lee Ferran doesn’t write journalism—he writes... Continue Reading →
The Agrarian Question in the Age of Technofascism: Peasant Struggle, Climate Catastrophe, and the Future of Revolution
By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | May 27, 2025 Land, Labor, Liberation In an era when Silicon Valley titans speak of AI farms on Mars and the IMF preaches “digital inclusion” to starving peasants, the question must be asked: who still feeds the world? The answer—painful, simple, revolutionary—is: the dispossessed. The global peasantry, often... Continue Reading →
Lines in the Soil, Fire in the Sky: Vietnam, Korea, and the Empire’s Broken Map
Korea was carved. Vietnam refused. Two revolutions, two outcomes—both exposing the fragility of U.S. empire and the enduring power of people’s war. This is the story of partition as counterrevolution, of counterinsurgency as colonial relapse, and of liberation carved not in treaties but in blood and resolve. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 26,... Continue Reading →