I've seen a few posts on Facebook and insinuations in the blogosphere (i'm bringing this term back) condemning the use of aerial drones.But I don't really see the problem with using drones. The biggest issue is that it disembodies war, it makes killing easier and less personal.But this is easily remedied. Drones prevents our own human lives lost, I'd assume the strikes are going to be more targeted resulting in less collateral damage, and they enhance intelligence gathering which further reduces collateral damage. When the technology matures too, it's generally more efficient to maintain a drone that replaces multiple soliders, which saves costs.We're only going to see computer-controlled robots take over more roles of humans, in combat and elsewhere, i'm not sure that it makes sense to promote to use of humans when drones are available.So... my question is, what's the big deal with drones? Why do people hate them? What do people expect us to do instead?[Edited on May 31, 2012 at 11:02 PM. Reason : ]
5/31/2012 11:01:50 PM
I know there has been a lot of controversy lately about domestic use of drones. It definitely raises some privacy issues.
5/31/2012 11:09:09 PM
Drones are not targeted. Just wiki the amount of civilian deaths in Yemen.And that's the conservative estimate. By labeling all "military-aged" men as militants, we've essentially redefined what "targeted killing" means.Until you've adequately read up on Glenn Greenwald's blog, you really don't know what the hell is going on.Besides, all military weapons used abroad will eventually come back and be used to expand the American surveillance state.The only people who benefit from drone strikes are the companies who make drones. Period.
5/31/2012 11:27:01 PM
The issue of relabeling civilians is despicable, but is a separate issue from the drones.And i'd bet that the civilian casualties nowadays are lower than with technologies in the past.The ideal situation is for no war ever, but in the absence of this possibility, a technology that reduces this vs. previous technologies would be preferable wouldn't it?Regarding domestic use, what can a drone do that a person in a helicopter can't do?We're far more in danger of overly intrusive electronic surveillance than what a camera in the sky can see and gather. I also don't really see domestic use growing too much, just because the use cases are fairly small for local police. If it got to the point where cops are trying to use them to catch speeders or people not wearing seat belts, then i'd say legislative action is needed.
5/31/2012 11:42:39 PM
Fantastic article:http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-rise-of-the-killer-drones-how-america-goes-to-war-in-secret-20120416
5/31/2012 11:45:03 PM
^ reading it now, but I keep seeing people bring this up:
5/31/2012 11:51:37 PM
does that also explain why Obama has indicted twice as many whistleblowers as all other presidents combined? Technology?"If the Bush administration didn’t like somebody, they’d kidnap them and send them to torture chambers.If the Obama administration decides they don’t like somebody, they murder them."-- Noam Chomsky
6/1/2012 12:01:35 AM
your president drops drones and tells everyone that he's killing militants, even though that's factually incorrect. he's killed 3 American citizens, including a 16 year old from Denver. then he PERSONALLY calls foreign heads of state and asks them to imprison journalists who report these attacks. and he detains whistleblowers like bradley manning who expose these crimes.and he does all of this with absolutely NO OVERSIGHT. no transparency, no due-process. He has actual death panels who meet in secret to create kill-lists. Jesus fucking christ, how bad does it need to get before you change your stance on the issue?And on top of ALL OF THAT, it doesn't even fucking work. There are more than twice as many members of al Qeada in the Arabian Peninsula than there were when we started these drone attacks. Why? Probably because when we kill civilians, relatives and friends of the victims join the only group who want to resist our occupation.just fucking admit it, already. you're president is a right-wing asshole. quit fucking trying to rationalize it.[Edited on June 1, 2012 at 12:15 AM. Reason : ]
6/1/2012 12:06:57 AM
source on the calling head of states?Our country has been dismissing the killing of civilians for decades, under the guise of war and terrorism.Eliminating drones would do literally nothing to change this. We'd just drift back to regular planes and missiles, or some other unforeseen technology. Maybe space-based-rail guns might be the next eye in the sky we kill civilians in other countries with.You'll never fix the problem by blaming the tool. You have to target your energies at the people that promote reckless militaristic behavior.Afghanistan War: Civilian Deaths Fall 20 Percent, UN Sayshttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/11/afghanistan-war-civilian-deaths_n_1508447.html
6/1/2012 12:20:36 AM
6/1/2012 12:23:55 AM
6/1/2012 12:27:01 AM
6/1/2012 12:27:45 AM
6/1/2012 12:40:32 AM
is it impossible for you to realize that the pursuit of war technology enables war culture?
6/1/2012 12:49:41 AM
6/1/2012 2:54:31 AM
6/1/2012 4:01:03 AM
Every time a drone crashes or is shot down, slit the throat of a random Senator's child. [Edited on June 1, 2012 at 12:36 PM. Reason : .]
6/1/2012 12:35:57 PM
6/1/2012 1:02:05 PM
6/3/2012 1:14:10 PM
6/3/2012 2:18:46 PM
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/414704/may-31-2012/the-word---two-birds-with-one-drone
6/3/2012 3:30:48 PM
^^^ I completely agree. Not only should policy advance with technology, policy should be written in a conceptual, value-based, technology-agnostic manner to the great extent possible.Unfortunately, policy is not written that way and our government shows no inclination to interpret existing laws in technology neutral terms. Should IP-based phones be subject to the same wiretapping laws as conventional land lines? Should email be treated the same as snail mail? The government doesn't think so.Policy solutions would be wonderful, but such policies don't exist. The government has demonstrated repeatedly that it will exploit technology to the detriment of our rights, all while hiding from public and judicial review under the guise of state-secrets.I'm a Luddite when it comes to technology and government surveillance, and it has nothing to do with the technology.
6/3/2012 3:46:01 PM
6/3/2012 7:01:46 PM
^actually, some in some instances drones actually enable ptsd because the operator has to "follow" the target for days on end, essentially getting to know the target on a personal level, which makes the actual kill more traumatic.not all drones are the giant planes in the sky. some are the ones that can hover over a person's home.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyJoJUs14bc
6/3/2012 8:29:17 PM
we're killing civilians.and it really pisses me off that self proclaimed "progressives" now embrace this tactic and try to rationalize that it is somehow precise and effective. it doesn't matter how many times you post diagrams of war technology finding its way into your new iphone, our drone policy is a horrific leg of our expanding military apparatus that is waging war and occupying multiple nations that we're not even at war with.
6/4/2012 12:57:02 PM
NASA sends drones to monitor hurricanes??http://www.tgdaily.com/general-sciences-features/63814-nasa-sends-drones-to-monitor-hurricanes^ I don't think anyone is justifying or rationalizing the killing of civilians. We've been killing civilians, in more egregious ways, before drones. At least a drone can't rape the civilians too. The problem though isn't with drones, it's with war. You're barking up the wrong tree, and hurting the anti-war cause, by blaming the drones.
6/4/2012 6:11:03 PM
you get no intellectual credit for divorcing the technology with the act of war.the continued support of war driven technological advancements is a sad state for a supposed progressive to find himself in.this "don't blame the tool" argument is incredibly stupid. The tool was designed for the slaughter of human life 1st, the surveillance and invasion of privacy 2nd, and the "monitoring of hurricanes" 834th. The pursuit of warfare technology absolutely is a moral argument. How many muslims should be killed so that you may someday be able to track Hurricane Whogivesashit on your iPad?the tool and the warfare are intrinsically locked with one another, and no matter how moist the technology makes you, your continued support of "trickle down" warfare technology does not make you a fucking pacifist.
6/4/2012 6:39:46 PM
6/4/2012 6:54:19 PM
6/4/2012 8:06:24 PM
the airplane is the perfect example for you free-market loving conservatives to shun warfare advancements.two dudes came up with an idea, thought it through, made it, and changed history without needing to blow shit up in the process.
6/4/2012 8:17:05 PM
6/4/2012 8:25:03 PM
6/4/2012 8:34:41 PM
6/4/2012 8:40:37 PM
grumps, you seem like a good people.but this really feels like a situation where you (and moron, really) are unwilling to challenge your preconceptions because doing so would make you uncomfortable.if there is any number that is being "inflated," it is most certainly the number of reported "MILITANTS." The administration admits to rewording the verbiage of "militant" to better help their political narrative, which is nothing short of propaganda.I'm not really interested in the technology =/= military argument, because in this instance, the technology is most certainly being used to further an imperialist agenda, which is definitely a moral dilemma and should be opposed by anyone who wants to see an end to this decade long war.
6/4/2012 9:02:07 PM
6/5/2012 12:07:59 AM
6/5/2012 1:16:52 PM
6/5/2012 5:44:46 PM
nobody mentioned a US drone today killed Al Qaeda's 2nd in command Abu Yahya al-Libi
6/5/2012 6:51:15 PM
Score another one for the good guys
6/5/2012 7:12:08 PM
What makes Glenn Greenwald LOL-worthy?
6/5/2012 8:42:23 PM
6/5/2012 9:26:08 PM
To the best of my knowledge, the President is permitted to reveal things, since ultimately it's the administrative branch that's in charge of classification levels. It's lame that he's doing so for purposes of a propaganda film, but it's not illegal.Bradley Manning and Barack Obama have different jobs, clearances, and authorities under the law. One of them can make certain things public if he so chooses. The other cannot. I'll fault the President for throwing insider info at a movie to get him re-elected, not for arresting people who committed crimes.
6/5/2012 10:28:07 PM
6/5/2012 10:57:07 PM
Size Matters.http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2154721/The-Phantom-Eye-New-drone-completes-test-flight-lands-bump.htmlThe Phantom Eye: Huge new drone with 150-foot wingspan which is designed to stay airborne for four days completes its first test flight (but lands with a bump)
6/5/2012 11:46:06 PM
The only problem with Phantom Eye is that right now, it doesn't have any customers. Boeing built that purely on its own dime (ie. no government monies involved), but so far, no one has come forward with buying one.Quick thought on the overall argument:Whatever you may argue, drones are definitely making it much, much easier for the White House to pull the trigger, whether or not you agree that what's being shot at are legitimate targets. There is no way the government would be this liberal with traditional manned airstrikes. Top it that this is the equivalent of the CIA having their own air force, giving them the ability to kill people, legitimate targets or otherwise, with a freedom and expediency it never had before. That is a legitimate criticism of drones, and something that people really need to think carefully about given the long term consequences.The argument about whether drones are a civilian or military technology is an extension of the debate on the entire aerospace industry. On one hand, there are many legitimate uses of aerospace technologies in daily life from commercial transport to recreation. However, the industry as a whole is still intrinsically linked to the defense/military because the cost and complexity of the technology leaves few customers that can afford it, such as militaries.
6/6/2012 1:44:09 AM
6/6/2012 9:33:26 AM
6/6/2012 3:00:27 PM
6/6/2012 4:07:44 PM
6/7/2012 11:36:33 PM
A bit off topic from the direction this thread has taken, no doubt:But fairly recently, the FAA approved drones for use in the united states airspace. There isn't a solid plan in action yet to implement this, but that is beside the point...http://www.cnn.com/2012/06/11/us/maryland-drone-crash/index.html?hpt=hp_t1There was a Navy drone crash in MD today, near Salisbury. These types of crashes with drones aren't nearly as uncommon as some might have you believe. I can't help but think that once every police force has drones to fly around, there will be many MANY more crashes... possibly damaging personal property and/or killing civilians.I'm just a tad uneasy about all of this, or other reasons as well.[Edited on June 11, 2012 at 4:59 PM. Reason : ddf]
6/11/2012 4:58:29 PM