USAID did not simply deliver humanitarian aid—it institutionalized a model of empire that fused relief, civil society, media, governance, and development into the machinery of U.S. foreign policy. Excavating an NPR interview with former USAID Administrator Samantha Power, this essay exposes how liberal narratives of compassion obscure the agency's role inside the broader NGO-industrial complex. Drawing on anti-imperialist scholarship and Global South perspectives, it argues that the real choice is not between aid and no aid, but between imperial dependency and sovereign development. The struggle ahead is to defend the people harmed by aid cuts while dismantling the donor architecture that transforms solidarity into supervision.
The Smiling Butcher and the Colonial Buffet: Trump’s Africa Summit and the Hyper-Imperialist Repackaging of Empire
This wasn’t aid or trade. It was imperialist recalibration—Trump’s empire tightening the screws with spreadsheets, satellites, and handshakes.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | July 10, 2025Tuxedos and Trade Deals: The New Language of LootingThe imperial press has always known how to dress a wolf in a tuxedo. And so, when NPR’s Jewel Bright reported... Continue Reading →
Silk and Steel: China, Triangular Cooperation, and the Weaponized Geography of Development
When the imperial press screams “debt trap,” that’s usually the sound of empire losing its grip.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | July 10, 2025Soft Words for Hard Power: The Imperial Alibi of Triangular Cooperation When China builds a railway in Ethiopia, connecting Addis Ababa to Djibouti’s ports in under ten hours, it’s branded a... Continue Reading →
Empire Off Air: The Collapse of Radio Free Asia and the Fracturing of U.S. Cognitive Warfare
Washington mourns a psyops relic—Asia exhales. The empire’s loudspeaker goes silent, and in the static, new revolutionary frequencies emerge. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 6, 2025 I. “Independent” Propaganda: When the Empire Loses Its Microphone The Washington Post article covering the defunding of Radio Free Asia isn’t a story about press freedom.... Continue Reading →