The June 2026 Laos-China state visit unfolded as a significant convergence between two socialist nations navigating their intertwined ambitions amid a capitalist-imperialist world. Rather than surrendering to the narrative of a “debt trap,” Laos and China embraced a collaboration marked by political intent, evidenced in thirty-two agreements across sectors like agriculture and technology. This partnership aims to transform Laos into a self-sufficient state, guided by its revolutionary history. The imperial media, however, conveniently ignored this cooperation, as it undermines their narrative of helpless nations. Laos, now reclaiming agency, is no longer portrayed as a mere victim but as a sovereign actor defining its path to development.
Loose Lips Can’t Sink This Ship: Propaganda, “Betrayal,” and the West’s Desperate War on Multipolarity
NATO’s news mills took one reformist’s loose talk and dressed it up as proof of Russian treachery, all while hiding U.S. bombs, Israeli missiles, and the role of Iran’s comprador clique. This is empire’s game: smear allies, fracture blocs like BRICS and the SCO, and sell despair as fact. But from Tehran’s streets to Oakland’s... Continue Reading →
Steel Tracks and Sovereignty: China, Central Asia, and the Battle to Bypass Empire
From the Astana summit to the Eurasian steppe, a new logistics corridor threatens the dollar order and NATO’s grip. But beneath the tracks, class contradictions—and revolutionary possibilities—are emerging.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 18, 2025Wiring the Steppe While the Empire SleepsYesterday Reuters flashed a 400-word wire announcing that China and the five post-Soviet... Continue Reading →