Only by accepting this will one be on their way to true freedom.
#capitalism #anticolonialism #ChristoFascism #cdnpoli #economics
Only by accepting this will one be on their way to true freedom.
#capitalism #anticolonialism #ChristoFascism #cdnpoli #economics
The state of so-called canada has always been a front for colonial companies and private interests. From the hudson Bay pelts to the alberta tar pits, the owning class never cared about the land nor the people.
This country is a lie.
Abolish canada!
.
.
.
#anarchism #anticolonialism #canada #AbolishCanada #landback #politics #radicalart
Cannot fucking wait to see them at Glasto, I hope we start burning Butcher Aprons 😉
#Kneecap #Colonialism #AntiColonialism #AntiFascism #GlastonburyFestival
🖥 O colóquio “50 Anos de Dipanda. A imprensa africana e a democracia”, que decorrerá em Luanda entre 28 e 30 de Maio, vai ter transmissão online. podem encontrar o link Zoom no nosso site.
ℹ️ https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/events/50-anos-dipanda/
#Histodons #Dipanda #Angola #AfricanPress #AntiColonialism #PortugueseColonialism #HistoryOfThePress #ImprensaAngolana #HistóriaDaImprensa #AntiColonialismo #ImprensaAfricana #ColonialismoPortuguês #Democracia #Democracy
@fanta siempre lo ha sido, fue y será siempre la dictadura del #capitalismo salvaje. Qu esperaban de unos -edos- (estados) Que se fundaron y forjaron sobre los cadaveres de nativos propietarios legitimos de sus tierras que fueron expoliadas por colonos ? De unos #racistas que se asociaron en un #klan para perpetuar la supremacia?
#anarchism #antifa #antiimperialismo #anticolonialism #StopAllWars
Burkina Faso: The Rise of a Nation That Said No to the West
In a world shaped by quiet subjugation and subtle control, Burkina Faso is roaring back, loud, unapologetic, and uncompromising.
This small West African nation, once dismissed as a “failed state,” is flipping the imperial script with surgical precision. In under five years, it has expelled French troops, rejected IMF loans, nationalized foreign-owned mines, powered cities with solar energy, and rolled out its own line of electric vehicles.
How?
At the center of this transformation is 37-year-old Captain Ibrahim Traoré, Africa’s youngest head of state and arguably the West’s newest geopolitical headache. Once a dusty pawn in France’s post-colonial chessboard, Burkina Faso is today a defiant voice in global geopolitics. And it’s not just about one man, it’s about what he represents: a continent done with dependency.
And it’s not just about one man, it’s about what he represents: a continent done with dependency.
The man who makes the West squirm
Since taking power in September 2022, Traoré has reportedly survived at least 19 assassination attempts. The targets were real. The message was clear.
Why? Because he’s dangerous, to the status quo.
He is young, military-trained, and ideologically focused. He speaks not in diplomatic pleasantries, but in the language of sovereignty, dignity, and pride. Through social media and grassroots broadcasts, his words reach far beyond his borders, inspiring a new generation of African youth. He has no interest in being legitimized by Paris or Washington.
Instead, he’s forging new alliances, with Mali, Niger, Guinea, and Russia, under the Alliance of Sahel States, a regional bloc anchored in self-defense, resource control, and African-led governance.
The threat is so real that Traoré has publicly said: “They want me dead, not because I failed, but because I refused to kneel.”
From French Colony to IMF Laboratory
France colonized Burkina Faso, then Upper Volta, in 1896. It extracted gold, cotton, and labor, and left behind a hollowed state by 1960. But even after independence, France’s grip never loosened. It continued to dominate the economy through control of the CFA franc, foreign mining contracts, and military presence under the guise of “counterterrorism.”
For decades, Burkina Faso lived in a loop: coups, Western aid, IMF austerity, repeat. Structural adjustment programs slashed health and education spending while protecting elite interests. Meanwhile, French and Canadian companies extracted over 60,000 kilograms of gold annually by 2024, while most Burkinabè remained in poverty.
The Black President the West can’t control
When Traoré, a little-known military captain, ousted the French-aligned regime in September 2022, it wasn’t just a change of leadership; it was a rupture. Traoré didn’t just challenge the West rhetorically. He has done it operationally.
But Traoré didn’t stop at regime change. He launched a revolution, not with slogans, but with blueprints.
As he bluntly put it in a widely circulated interview, “Don’t bring us aid. Bring us ownership. We’ll run the manufacturing facilities ourselves.”
The revolution was basic, but radical
Captain Ibrahim Traoré didn’t arrive with billion-dollar bailouts or corporate mega-deals.
He did the basics. Just the basics. But in a region sabotaged by centuries of extraction and dependency, doing the basics was revolutionary.
He focused on nation-building, community-building, and economic development. He prioritized education over military spending, science over religion, manufacturing over dependency, and agriculture over mining. He focused on food security, community empowerment through small businesses, and natural resources conservation through sustainable agriculture practices, mining with a plan, and self-sustenance through local production of goods. He beefed up government services to provide basic needs such as healthcare, education, and electricity. He ripped the governance of corruption and financial misappropriation.
Traoré’s genius wasn’t in declaring independence. It was in making it visible, through food on tables, light in homes, teachers in classrooms, and factories run by Burkinabè hands.
In a world where many leaders chase headlines and foreign handshakes, Traoré chose something rare: he governed, he turned sovereignty from an abstract concept into a lived experience.
And that, more than anything, is what shook the West: a leader who didn’t beg for recognition but built a system that couldn’t be ignored.
Contrast this with Pakistan, where the state has long been held hostage by a toxic mix of religious extremism, foreign debt, and military-first governance. Decades of IMF bailouts, military compromise, and external dependencies have left the nation politically unstable, economically shackled, and branded as an eternal beggar.
Wise Traoré saw that trap, and refused to walk into it. Instead, he turned down aid with strings. He demanded partnerships with ownership. And, he rebuilt his nation by starting where others wouldn’t, at the roots.
The voice the West can’t silence
Burkina Faso’s revolution isn’t just political. It’s cultural. It’s generational. It’s viral.
Across Africa and the Global South, Traoré is no longer just a president. He’s become a symbol of what’s possible when sovereignty is not for sale.
The age of silence is over. The Global South is speaking. And Ibrahim Traoré is the voice the West can’t shut down.
#africa #AfricaDevelopment #AfricaRising #AfricanLeadership #AfricanSovereignty #antiColonialism #BurkinaFaso #BurkinaFasoEV #decolonization #goldNationalization #IbrahimTraoré #IMFRejection #militaryLeadership #news #PanAfricanism #politics #postColonialAfrica #SahelStates #selfReliantAfrica #solarPowerAfrica #SymbolOfResistance #TraoreRevolution #WestAfrica #youthInPower
I just love their energy, and how they bring out the nazis in our midst...one of whom tried to stalk my wife on here.
https://news.sky.com/story/kneecap-release-new-single-ahead-of-wide-awake-headline-show-13373390