The world underestimates how much some White Americans actually want to be Jeffrey Epstein. That’s why their biggest influencers like Nick Fuentes claims that Epstein has “aura”
Nigeria's Cooking Gas Crisis & Why Sovereignty Matters
Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, which also happens to sit atop the largest natural gas reserves on the continent, is, for some reason, currently going through a serious gas price crisis.
In this report for the Spearhead, @Big_Mck explores that reason, what it means for the future of Nigeria, and what the country’s over 242 million citizens must do about it.
‘Tanzania is a Geopolitical Battleground in Africa’: David Hundeyin
On June 3, 2026, The Spearhead premiered its debut documentary, ‘What Happened On October 29?’, at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, a documentary which challenges the Western narrative about the violent, anti-government protests that rocked Tanzania in October 2025, offering an African-centered perspective on these “protests”, and exposing the nefarious, external forces behind them. This East African premiere came 8 days after the documentary’s West African premiere, which was held in Accra, Ghana.
In this excerpt from a panel discussion held immediately after the Dar es Salaam screening, Nigerian investigative journalist and founder of The Spearhead, @DavidHundeyin, sheds light on the true geopolitical role that the so-called "objective" and "unbiased" media outlets of the West play in Africa's information space, and what Africa's indigenous media must do about it, if the continent is ever to truly prosper.
TikTok Flags Spearhead Videos... For Racism
Sometime this April 2026, The Spearhead was forced to take down a report it had posted on TikTok, a report which, according to TikTok, contained hate speech, specifically a racial slur.
The racial slur in question was “Niger”.
As in the independent, internationally-recognized West African country, Niger.
How did TikTok’s proprietary, multibillion-dollar, AI-powered content moderating system manage to somehow forget that Niger is a country?
And could this “bug” have something to do with the platform's recent acquisition by the United States government?
@barrahart reports for The Spearhead.
“Do you know how many countries that don’t like America?”
Well, America is not even disliked enough.
Dear Africans, you need to stop defending or making excuses for the United States. That country dislikes you more than you can ever imagine, and there’s no amount of resentment that will be enough for Donald Trump and his people. Add FIFA to the mix too.
Why Is the U.S. Allowed to Host the 2026 World Cup?
Rather than helping the world come together, the United States has proven yet again to be a bad-faith actor.
During the run-up to the 2026 World Cup, other countries’ football players and officials, mainly those from the Global South, accused border officials of mistreating them.
The allegations come amidst the United States' military aggression against Iran, and silence from the usual Western loudmouths who had much to say when Qatar, Russia, and South Africa had hosted the tournament in years past.
The double standard has become impossible to ignore, as @Big_Mck reports.
It's your father that is trash.
Of course Maria Sarungi, Mo Keita and the rest of the HRF cartel would send the Nigerian in their team after me because they know that your stomach is your God and NGO funds can never allow you to even pretend to have a code.
Of course it had to be you. Of course. Your entire professional life has been spent following grifters around and pretending to work while failing to contribute anything useful to the world. From Iyin Aboyeji to Bosun Tijani, to Maria Sarungi and Alex Gladstein, your story can never change.
Useless fucking asslicker that hasn't outgrown the poverty he was born into. Complete waste of African skin!
US-Funded "Lobito Corridor" Is A Tool To Cheaply Extract Africa’s Resources – David Hundeyin
On June 3, 2026, The Spearhead premiered its debut documentary, ‘What Happened On October 29?’, at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, a documentary which challenges the Western narrative about the violent, anti-government protests that rocked Tanzania in October 2025, offering an African-centered perspective on these “protests”, and exposing the nefarious, external forces behind them. This East African premiere came 8 days after the documentary’s West African premiere, which was held in Accra, Ghana.
In this excerpt from a panel discussion held immediately after the Dar es Salaam screening, Nigerian investigative journalist and founder of The Spearhead, @DavidHundeyin, sheds light on the infamous, US-funded “Lobito Corridor” railway project, how this project exists only to perpetuate the West’s plundering of Africa, and how the continent’s more equitable partnerships with China threaten the very premise of this project.
4 years on a full scholarship courtesy of my brain, which is the only way I could ever have attended that school — family didn't finish clearing the debt from my first semester until the month I graduated.
On May 26, 2026, The Spearhead premiered its debut documentary, ‘What Happened On October 29?’, in Accra, Ghana, a documentary which challenges the Western narrative about the violent, anti-government protests that rocked Tanzania in October 2025, offering an African-centered perspective on these “protests”, and exposing the nefarious, external forces behind them.
This West African premiere was followed by East African premieres in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on June 3, and in Nairobi, Kenya, on June 6, respectively.
The documentary is out on YouTube now!
Click on the link or scan the barcode to learn the truth about October 29, 2025, from those who lived it.
https://t.co/VkIfT6DXrI
Joshua Maponga Speaks At The Spearhead’s Press Conference In Tanzania
On June 3, 2026, The Spearhead premiered its debut documentary, ‘What Happened On October 29?’, at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania, a documentary which challenges the Western narrative about the violent, anti-government protests that rocked Tanzania in October 2025, offering an African-centered perspective on these “protests”, and exposing the nefarious, external forces behind them. This East African premiere came 8 days after the documentary’s West African premiere, which was held in Accra, Ghana.
In this address during a press conference with Tanzanian media held on June 4, Zimbabwean author and philosopher, @vudzijenaj – who was a special guest at the premiere – speaks to the truths that The Spearhead’s documentary reveals, and offers a stern warning to Africans about the true role of Western-funded NGOs in their lives.
LGBTQ+ are united. Feminists are united. Patriarchists are united. Billionaires are united. The ruling class is united. The clergy is united. Even bandits are united. The only group that does not recognise the importance of unity is the POOR.
This is because many poor people do not view poverty as a man-made condition, which should be collective fought and defeated, they see poverty as a natural condition, and even one to be ashamed of. This mindset leads them to identifying with the rich class with whom they have nothing in common and share none of the same struggles.
Then you’ve got religion on one end assuring that everything is okay. “There’s nothing to worry about, as there’s a trillion dollars waiting for you in heaven, but you have to die first before you take it.”
It's crazy.