ICE has morphed into a modern-day Gestapo. Its agents are shooting unarmed civilians — like Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis — and choking detainees to death, as happened to Geraldo Lunas Campos, whose killing was officially ruled a homicide. Over 32 people have died in custody and four have been straight-up executed. The agency’s sprawling detention camps, like Camp East Montana, look eerily like Nazi concentration camps. These aren’t glitches — they’re features of a system built to dehumanize the racialized “other,” a colonial playbook coming home to the heart of the empire.
The parallels with historical authoritarianism are impossible to ignore: ICE is Donald Trump’s fascist enforcement machine. Nighttime raids, disappearances into private prisons, and extrajudicial executions echo the U.S.-backed death squads of Latin America. The empire exports its violence abroad, then perfects those same methods and turns them inward against its own marginalized populations.
This is the Imperial Boomerang theory — first coined by Aimé Césaire and sharpened by Hannah Arendt — in brutal action. Colonial control techniques (torture, mass surveillance, detention camps) that empires use on the colonized eventually boomerang back to the metropole as domestic repression. What the U.S. honed in the Philippines, Vietnam, and Iraq — militarized policing, racialized counterinsurgency — is now being deployed in Minneapolis and Los Angeles against immigrants and dissidents. The empire is hollowing out its own democracy until it becomes a militarized dictatorship.
This boomerang is speeding up America’s decline. An overstretched empire is pouring bloated budgets into ICE that dwarf every other federal agency combined, while the economy craters under tariffs and proxy wars. Unconditional support for Israel — another repressive ethnostate — and the brutal crackdown on domestic protests signal both moral and material exhaustion. The dollar is sliding, allies are drifting away, and the whole thing smells like the final stages of every empire that chose brute force over diplomacy.
The explosion of over 200 detention centers, many on former military bases like Fort Bliss (site of Japanese internment during WWII), conjures images of Soviet gulags or Nazi lager. Bureaucratic language hides the killings behind sterile phrases like “death by natural causes.”
The decay shows up clearest in the collapse of legitimacy: massive protests against ICE, global rejection of American exceptionalism, and an internal crisis where every act of repression only breeds more resistance.
The boomerang keeps swinging, accelerating America’s slide from republic to failing authoritarian state.
Only organized resistance — community patrols to stop raids, mass protests, civil disobedience — can break this death spiral. Abolishing ICE isn’t some utopian dream; it’s a historical emergency. An empire that kills in the name of “security” eventually devours itself, proving that the real threat doesn’t come from the outside — it comes from those who hold power.

