The Second Session of the AES/CESS as a Turning Point in State Power, Regional Integration, and the Unfinished Question of Rupture By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 2, 2026 What Was Actually Decided in Bamako: Reading the Communiqué as a Political Act The second session of the College of Heads of State of... Continue Reading →
The Mirage of Billions: Qatar’s Pledge and Zimbabwe’s Sovereignty Theater
How Gulf petrodollars, comprador elites, and imperial decay converge in Harare — and why the struggle of workers and peasants remains the only true investment in liberation.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 26, 2025The Mirage of a $19 Billion Turning PointOn August 23, 2025, Business Times Zimbabwe ran with a headline designed to... Continue Reading →
Chains at the Dawn: Slave Revolts as the First Modern Proletarian Uprisings
From the cane fields of São Tomé to the swamps of Virginia, the enslaved struck the first world-historic blows against capitalist-imperialism — long before the factory whistle summoned Europe’s “free” workers.By Pablo Katari | Weaponized Information | August 10, 2025I. The Plantation as the Foundry of Modern CapitalismPolitical economy, that hired prizefighter of capital, delights... Continue Reading →
The Base Is Gone, but the System Remains: Senegal, France and the Imperialist System
France’s retreat from Senegal isn’t a reset—it’s a rupture. The neocolonial order is cracking under pressure, and the Global North must choose: defend the crumbling empire, or help dismantle it.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJuly 18, 2025Imperial Retreat Disguised as DiplomacyOn July 17, 2025, the Associated Press published a report announcing that France had officially... Continue Reading →
Development or Dependency? Senegal’s Strategy in Imperial Chains
A revolutionary analysis of Dakar’s 2025–2029 plan, exposing the CFA trap, extractive PPPs, and the class war beneath “endogenous growth.”By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 15, 2025Part I – Chains in the Name of Growth: Senegal’s Neocolonial ArchitectureThe government says development. The people see debt. The experts say fragility. The worker sees hunger.... Continue Reading →
Niger Didn’t Expel China—It Recalibrated the Terms of Struggle
Western media calls it instability. We call it sovereignty. Behind the headlines about “expulsions” lies a deeper truth: Niger is not turning away from China—it’s turning toward itself. This Isn’t a “Breakup”—It’s a Recalibration Toward Sovereignty By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 26, 2025 Part I – When Sovereignty Speaks, Empire Sends In the... Continue Reading →