4.9 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 13 May 2025
⏱️ 21 minutes
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This is a free preview of the episode "The Imperial Boomerang w/ Julian Go." You can listen to the full episode by subscribing to our Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/upstreampodcast
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The imperial boomerang, colonial feedback, fascism returning home. These are all phrases that convey the same basic idea—that the mechanisms of repression that originate in the colonies will, inevitably, return back home to the core where they will be utilized against not only marginalized populations here, but against the entire population as a whole. The boomerang exists in many different forms, but the form that we’ll be focusing on today is the form of police militarization. And we’ve brought on a terrific guest to walk us through how it all works.
Julian Go is Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago and author of the book Policing Empires: Militarization, Race, and the Imperial Boomerang in Britain and the US, published by Oxford University Press.
In this conversation, we explore the history of civil police forces starting with the Metropolitan Police Force of London back in the early 19th century. We explore the colonial roots of this historic force and how its architects were inspired by military tactics, tools, and technologies from England’s colonies in Ireland and elsewhere. We explore how racialized subjects were criminalized at home and treated as colonized subjects were abroad, how different waves of police militarization in the US mirrored various colonial wars and occupations through the past few centuries, and how the most recent wave of militarization is just one flow of a continuously rising tide of colonial repression boomeranging back home, the only differences being the subjects targeted and the specific tactics and tools utilized to shut down dissent and criminalize a racialized subproletariat that capitalism both relies on and simultaneously disdains.
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Artwork: Berwyn Mure
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0:00.0 | A quick note before we jump into this Patreon episode. |
0:03.6 | Thank you to all of our Patreon subscribers for making upstream possible. |
0:08.4 | We genuinely couldn't do this without you. |
0:11.4 | Your support allows us to create bonus content like this |
0:14.9 | and provide most of our content for free |
0:17.1 | so we can continue to offer political education media to the public and help to build |
0:22.5 | our movement. Thank you, comrades. We hope you enjoy this conversation. |
0:27.1 | Oh, oh. forms of violence and coercion developed in the colonies and in the imperial peripheries coming back to the |
0:56.7 | United States itself to be used on citizens and so this is this boomerang effect that I'm talking about |
1:03.8 | and I find it a useful and important term for realizing how you know what happens over there in the colony or in the periphery, |
1:13.6 | whether it be in the Colonial Philippines or even Vietnam in the 1960s or today in Iraq or Palestine, |
1:20.6 | what happens there is not separate from what happens here. |
1:25.6 | These forms of violence and repression and coercion that are developed elsewhere come back |
1:31.4 | also here to impact everybody. |
1:34.9 | You're listening to Upstream. |
1:37.0 | Upstream. |
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1:39.9 | A show about political economy and society that invites you to unlearn everything you thought |
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1:47.9 | I'm Della Duncan. |
1:49.3 | And I'm Robert Raymond. |
... |
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