• @[email protected]
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    118 days ago

    I used to be opposed to working in the defense industry. Based on my experiences, I have reached the conclusion that the only ethical outcome is the extinction of humanity before we make this planet uninhabitable for all other life. The sooner the better. Maybe raccoons won’t have billionaires, fascists, microplastics, etc. We should give them that chance. That’s why I work for a defense contractor now.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 days ago

      Defense industry goon celebrates and profits from the destruction of humanity? Sounds about right.

      The only question is why Lemmy would upvote this. jfc.

    • @[email protected]
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      58 days ago

      Why would raccoons have a better chance at surviving than us? Or crows for that matter? All the shit that kills us kills them just as fast.

    • @[email protected]
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      17 days ago

      There are better ways to depopulate, such as antinatalism. Murder and war is not an ecologically friendly way of depopulation.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 days ago

        The better methods will never happen completely. Even in the midst of the abhorrent east African famines of the 1980s, people were still reproducing. The billionaires want us to breed more wage slaves until the petri dish is full and no more resources exist. Our natural inclination to kill each other just needs some more effective fuel.

        The outcome is inevitable, I would just like to accelerate it and try to leave something for the nonhumans.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 days ago

          Make birth control free worldwide and it will at least significantly decrease population growth, maybe even reverse it. Depopulation shouldn’t involve suffering.

    • Chloé 🥕
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      398 days ago

      no ethical consumption under capitalism etc etc but… there are companies that don’t make a profit by murdering middle eastern people

      • @[email protected]
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        27 days ago

        I think it’s picking nits, economic destruction can be just as complete as military. People starve all over the world every day. Some people live in slavery to make the shirts Walmart sells, etc.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 days ago

      Maybe “work” is the actual problem. Maybe people shouldn’t waste their entire lives serving murder profiteers. Maybe it’s always been a garbage slaver system.

      • @[email protected]
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        27 days ago

        Of course it is, but I think it’s only marginally better than Walmart. I mean after all, Walmart IS a force for good in the world, right?

  • @[email protected]
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    8 days ago

    Why?

    Of all the tools for oppression and murder, advanced weaponry is pretty low on the list for what actually makes the murdering happen. If you work for a company that does any kind of business with any repressive regime (ie most companies above a certain size), the simple fact that you’re working for a cog in enabling the economy of the repressive regime to pay its cops, its soldiers, its secret police and informants and massive bureaucracy, is as much as a contribution as “I was .1% of designing a multirole jet that’s 10% better than the previous multirole jet”

    Hell, anyone making steel of the correct grade to go into small arms probably kills more innocent people, by that standard, than your average person working for Western defense contractors.

    • @[email protected]
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      228 days ago

      If less people worked to make weapons, there would be less weapons made.

      How is this a hard concept to understand?

      • @[email protected]
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        218 days ago

        If less people worked to make weapons, there would be less weapons made.

        Okay?

        How is that relevant?

        Do you think that there is a dire shortage of tools for murder, and only the modern defense industry is sustaining the strained supply?

        • @[email protected]
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          178 days ago

          Do you think that there is a dire shortage of tools for murder, and only the modern defense industry is sustaining the strained supply?

          Israel, Russia, and Ukraine sure seem to think so. None are producing enough munitions domestically to satisfy themselves.

          Less weapons made still means less weapon used.

          • @[email protected]
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            158 days ago

            Israel, Russia, and Ukraine sure seem to think so. None are producing enough munitions domestically to satisfy themselves.

            In the case of Russia and Ukraine, the reason they need to produce more munitions is to prevent the opposition from having the advantage in the war. If both sides were totally stripped of munitions by tomorrow, you wouldn’t see a cessation of the war, you’d see a continuation of the war simply with less advanced tools, such as in the civil war in Sudan. And Russia has already demonstrated that it has no shortage of men who are willing to murder people with knives and sledgehammers.

            Don’t really know what you think “No more munitions!” is going to achieve here. Certainly don’t know what shunning the Western MIC is going to do here, except expose more Ukrainians to Russian genocide.

            Israel isn’t producing enough munitions to satisfy itself because it knows it doesn’t have to when the US is willing to subsidize their genocide.

            Less weapons made still means less weapon used.

            No, it means less of that particular weapon used.

            • @[email protected]
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              138 days ago

              So do you work for a defense contractor or do you just have great respect for the act of killing in general

              • @[email protected]
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                168 days ago

                Sorry for having the radical idea that mass violence predates specialized weapons industries. Or the radical idea that countries should be allowed to defend themselves against genocidal aggressors. Whichever of the two you’re objecting to.

                • @[email protected]
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                  98 days ago

                  It is pretty radical to argue that a small contingent of Zionist Israelis would be successfully eradicating the people of Palestine if both sides just had sticks, so the U.S. should just keep manufacturing and selling MK-84 bombs. Or we can talk about how absurd a claim it is that the arms industry is looking out for the little guy—you know, the group that can pay for less of their product? Thank god for arms manufacturers—that’s probably what Uyghurs think when they’re stopped at checkpoints by military police

                • @[email protected]
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                  18 days ago

                  But you are literally arguing in defense of America, which is funding genocide, so now you are just straight up lying

    • Comrade Spood
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      198 days ago

      I mean yes there is a sort of “there is no ethical consumption under capitalism” dilemma when it comes to working. But just with that dilemma, you don’t just give up, you try to minimize your participation as much as you can healthily do. And I think not working for a corp who’s sole purpose is to develop weapons for killing people is one of those no brainers.

      • @[email protected]
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        148 days ago

        It might be a no-brainer if it was all “We are making orphan crushers for the orphans”, but the defense industry is much more complex than that. For example, would you say that a Ukrainian working for a Ukrainian defense firm, whose sole purpose is to develop weapons for killing people, is evil?

        • Comrade Spood
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          178 days ago

          I do think there is nuance to the situation and exceptions. Your example being one. But I would consider Lockheed (the example of the original post) would be the no brainer one. Those weapons aren’t going to defending my family from an imperialist power, they are going to death squads in South America and committing genocide in Palestine.

          • @[email protected]
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            8 days ago

            I do think there is nuance to the situation and exceptions. Your example being one. But I would consider Lockheed (the example of the original post) would be the no brainer one. Those weapons aren’t going to defending my family from an imperialist power, they are going to death squads in South America and committing genocide in Palestine.

            But Lockheed-Martin’s equipment is going to Ukraine as well. Are the families of Ukrainians not worth defending? And ‘death squads’ in South America are not particularly likely to be using state-of-the-art US jets and missiles for their murders. And considering the state of things in Taiwan and Europe, if the US doesn’t end up on the side of the imperialist powers, I don’t know how much I would bet that Lockheed-Martin weapons won’t be defending other families from imperialist powers in the near the future,

            Considering the strict controls on defense exports, it is far more relevant to question who the US government chooses (directly or indirectly) to support with Lockheed-Martin’s output. When the US is against genocide, as in Ukraine, Lockheed-Martin’s output is used to save innocent lives; when the US is for genocide, as in Palestine, Lockheed-Martin’s output is used for murder. Though even then I would note that it’s not particularly pivotal to the murders committed.

            The correct target for ire in this, other than perhaps capitalism in general for creating a significant disconnect between social responsibility and firms of all industries, is the US government and where it funnels this equipment. The firms themselves are amoral but unexceptional, both in consequences and in nature; and the people who work at them (other than at the highest decision-making levels) are no more immoral than any other cog in the capitalist machine.

            • Comrade Spood
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              138 days ago

              With Lockheed you are forced to choose between being complacent with it because they supply Ukraine’s defense against occupation by an imperialist power or outright oppose it due to its supplying towards the Palestinian genocide. The genocide is a dealbreaker in any capacity for me. Even ignoring the genocide, the bad outweighs the good to me by a longshot. I oppose it just like how I oppose McDonald’s, Amazon, Starbucks, and more.

              • @[email protected]
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                8 days ago

                With Lockheed you are forced to choose between being complacent with it because they supply Ukraine’s defense against occupation by an imperialist power or outright oppose it due to its supplying towards the Palestinian genocide. The genocide is a dealbreaker in any capacity for me.

                But then, is that not just enabling one genocide in exchange for another? Palestinian genocide is a dealbreaker, but Ukrainian genocide is an acceptable price to pay? (I’m not actually accusing you of accepting Ukrainian genocide for not supporting Lockheed-Martin - honestly, fuck Lockheed-Martin as a company - just highlighting that the argument necessitates accepting utilitarian consequences that run contrary to the anti-genocidal goal of the principled stand)

                My point, though, is more that Lockheed-Martin is more than a no-brainer. There is consideration to be had. These firms are amoral, but that means that they are capable of enabling good as well as enabling evil.

                If your choice is designing tractors, which will be sold to farmers recovering from a genocidal civil war in Sudan as well as genocidal colonists in Israel to consolidate their land gains and draw a profit with which to imperialize more, or designing warplanes, which will be sold to those resisting genocide in Ukraine as well as those perpetuating genocide in Israel, which is the moral choice? I don’t think it’s a no-brainer to say that the weaponry is the more immoral of the two. I’d say that the core immorality is selling to the genocidaires at all - which would not be specific to either industry.

                And the core of the objection is against the idea in the meme that people who work at these firms as engineers are in some way more immoral than the rest of us working for soulless genocide-enabling corporations that provide the tools and funding for genocide.

                Even ignoring the genocide, the bad outweighs the good to me by a longshot. I oppose it just like how I oppose McDonald’s, Amazon, Starbucks, and more.

                I mean, I wouldn’t argue with that. But I also wouldn’t put much moral weight on whether someone chose to work at one of those places in anything but a pretty high executive capacity.

                • @[email protected]
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                  58 days ago

                  The problem of manufacturing weapons would be significantly less controversial of LM (for ex) had even a few scruples.

                  Defending yourself is fine.
                  Making tools to defend yourself is fine
                  Making tools for people to defend themselves is fine

                  Making and selling those tools for use in attacking is not fine.
                  Profiteering from harm is not fine.\

                • Comrade Spood
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                  38 days ago

                  The reason why I put Palestine over Ukraine is because Palestine is a genocide right now, while Ukraine isn’t. Ukraine is two capitalist states fighting.

                  I do still also think working for a defense contractor like Lockheed is wrong as working for them is far more direct of a hand in death than most other jobs. And I wouldn’t say they are immoral, they are chasing money (which in of itself is immoral) and chose to do it through profitting off of war. They may do good sometimes but it is not out of the goodness of their hearts, its to profit off of killing each other. And just as I do with elections, if the game is pick a lesser evil I will not play.

                  And with the McDonald’s et al yeah I wouldn’t shame those working there, I lost track of my point. Was just trying to say I take action to oppose them, just like I would with Lockheed if I could (I don’t live near one and I cant buy their stuff to begin with lol).

                  I won’t deny its more complicated than I gave it credit for, but I think Lockheed is indefensible of a corporation. Working for them is a deal with the devil. There are reasons why I wouldn’t shame someone for working there, but they are exceptions and not the rule.

            • @[email protected]
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              8 days ago

              But Lockheed-Martin’s equipment is going to Ukraine as well.

              Yes the MIC fuels war and death everywhere. They’re profiteers, not heroes. Do you celebrate the weapons sold to russia as well? It’s all the same capitalists profiting.

              When the US is against genocide, as in Ukraine,

              The USA is not against genocide in Ukraine. Imperialism is a direct cause of the genocide. Grow up.

              The firms themselves are amoral

              jfc. Is Elmo amoral? Is Bezos amoral? And you think the MIC is somehow amoral? How much corporate propaganda have you been drinking?

        • @[email protected]
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          8 days ago

          We are making orphan crushers for the orphans

          What do you think the MIC does?

          would you say that a Ukrainian

          I don’t live in Ukraine. Is that how far you have to go from USA to justify this BS?

      • socsa
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        68 days ago

        Communists make weapons too tho. It’s kind of a whole cycle.

        • Comrade Spood
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          118 days ago

          One, the issue isn’t the production of weapons in of itself. Weapons are used for defense, survival, and recreation which are (in my opinion) ethical. The issue is “defense” contractors like Lockheed are not producing weapons to defend against exploitation, oppression, etc. They are produced for imperialist powers to defend the interests of exploitors, oppressors, and war mongers.

          Secondly, I am an anarchist. Statist “communists” are often no better than capitalists to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      108 days ago

      There’s a big difference between making steel vs knowingly making weapons that are themselves illegal or being used in genocide.

      • @[email protected]
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        108 days ago

        knowingly making weapons that are themselves illegal

        Beg pardon

        or being used in genocide.

        Of course, making other materials to support genocide is much more moral.

        • @[email protected]
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          98 days ago

          Anyone involved in the production of white phosphorus weapons, cluster bombs, or depleted uranium munitions are knowingly participating in a war crime. Everyone from the assembly line workers to the designers to the executives needs to be locked up.

          Yes, there are other non-weapon items we also need to sanction Israel to prevent access to, such as bulldozers.

          • @[email protected]
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            108 days ago

            Anyone involved in the production of white phosphorus weapons, cluster bombs, or depleted uranium munitions are knowingly participating in a war crime. Everyone from the assembly line workers to the designers to the executives needs to be locked up.

            WP is legal for use as an incendiary and smokescreen, cluster bombs are not banned by the US, DU is not illegal by any treaty I’m aware of.

            Yes, there are other non-weapon items we also need to sanction Israel to prevent access to, such as bulldozers.

            Nothing should be going into Israel from any civilized country, if we were actually discussing questions of morality and interaction through one’s labor for internationally trading firms.

            • @[email protected]
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              38 days ago

              Yeah, I think they’d argue for DU instead of against it. They’re not using that against people they’re using that against war machines.

              • @[email protected]
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                38 days ago

                There was controversy during the Gulf War about DU munitions from 20mm autocannons. 30 years of study has disproven some of the initial scares, but concerns remain about DU dust from such shells possibly being widely dispersed enough to cause health problems (though not radioactivity-related health problems).

                Tank DU munitions are generally regarded as safe anymore, though.

            • @[email protected]
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              68 days ago

              Continuing to sell white phosphorus to those who have openly deployed it against civilians is an act so immoral, we should be rioting to bring these manufacturers in.

              • @[email protected]
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                28 days ago

                I mean, I agree that selling weapons to war criminals is horrific. But the manufacturers aren’t really at the heart of the problem so much as the US government. There are strict export laws regarding the defense industry. They aren’t exactly jumping to sell WP to Russia (statement may be subject to change considering the Trump administration). They’re acting in accordance with the desires of their biggest customer, the US government, which is currently (and has been for quite some time) supporting war criminals in Israel.

                • @[email protected]
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                  18 days ago

                  Ridiculous defense of immoral military contractors, and paired with Russiaphobia instead of mentioning the US allies actually deploying the white phosphorus on civilians. Classic astroturf.

        • @[email protected]
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          88 days ago

          OK, I guess we should stop harvesting wheat and making flour because it could possibly be used to support a genocide, but don’t even bother thinking about stopping the manufacture of the bombs being dropped.

          • @[email protected]
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            58 days ago

            Or maybe the problem isn’t “Weapons are being produced”, it’s “Authoritarian regimes are being traded with”.

    • @[email protected]
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      638 days ago

      It almost sounds like you might be suggesting that there’s no ethical consumption under capitalism

    • @[email protected]
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      88 days ago

      Plus you have deterrance weapons like the F22. It hasn’t actually killed anyone, because no one has challenged it. That sort of weapon can keep wars from starting, since they’re less likely to win.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 days ago

        Not so sure about the deterrence argument. My point is just that defense industry firms are not particularly core to the problem of people murdering each other, and certainly not the workers therein, any more than farmers are guilty of feeding murderers if their client sells to a genocidal state.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 days ago

        Hooray for worthless planes that have never been used on our impoverished enemies! Build more bazillion dollar planes!!! smh.

        • @[email protected]
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          16 days ago

          Would you rather they be used? Best case scenario is that they prevent the battle from happening.

    • @[email protected]
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      78 days ago

      I’ll go even farther. Have you voted in the last 50 years? Guess what you help elect the president and chief commanding death at the end of the bayonet and the from the top of the drones.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 days ago

        And if you haven’t voted (but been able to), you are likewise guilty for allowing the candidate who became president and CiC to commit their crimes (instead of the crimes the other candidate would have committed).

        The only way forward is to improve society as a whole.

        • @[email protected]
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          68 days ago

          Hmm if all the candidates will both be responsible for killing people, are the people who didn’t vote responsible? Technically the only innocent people would be the ones who stop the candidates from being elected. but I’ll drink to improving society as a whole.

          • @[email protected]
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            58 days ago

            Hmm if all the candidates will both be responsible for killing people, are the people who didn’t vote responsible?

            You’ll be responsible for different sets of people being killed.

            There’s no option for innocence, as much as folk wish there was.

    • @[email protected]
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      Why not just murder people yourself directly? With a knife maybe? It’s pretty low on the list for what actually makes murdering happen. If you work for any company under capitalism, then they’re going to be collaborating with evil regimes and whatnot. You’re just enable the cogs. Why not be a useful cog for your masters?

      Hell anybody selling lemonade is just feeding the troops of genocide. So you might as well just murder people yourself. It only makes sense.

      \s duh… Seriously tho this post is beyond sociopathic brainwashing.

    • @[email protected]
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      68 days ago

      First, props for backing a bonafide unpopular opinion so unflinchingly. (A) discusses your argument. (B) challenges it.

      A. I liked your direct approach to this position, and think you raise some important points. In particular…
      1. It’s important to acknowledge that we all serve this machine in some capacity by our engagement with the free market. But why?
        • Economists call these markets efficient (i.e., pareto efficient) because of how quickly they achieve equilibrium/zero-sum states in response to change.
        • That efficiency is the curse no participant can outrun, because anything short of complete absence from the market necessarily furthers its result, which always includes violence. In other words, no one’s hands are clean.
      2. Appearing closer to acts of violence often has little to do with magnitude of influence or actual violence produced. How so?
        • Suppose we define violence quotient (VQ) for the roles of market participants, some formula to rate the lockheed engineers and steel workers of small arms manufacture, etc.
        • We could measure VQ in lots of ways — e.g., by the count of people hurt, the severity of suffering, the degrees of causal separation between the violent act and the role behind it, etc.
        • For each case, it seems we can always find a role further from the violence with higher VQ — a much greater hand in the violence — to the extent that we have old tropes contrasting the direct-but-limited violence of the simple-minded goon and the detached yet far-reaching avarice of the ruthless kingpin.
        • So it’s true that working on a small piece of an incremental improvement to some military technology isn’t technically going to be easily traced to much bloodshed, comparatively.
      B. But each of these observations correspond to a problem with the idea that the roles we choose don’t matter…
      1. While the principle of efficiency makes all of us morally culpable — again, because we drive the market onward by merely living in it — by the same token this machine tells us what it wants most, and does so quite unambiguously: by naming a price.
        • Concretely, for any two roles considered, you can bet that whichever offers greater personal benefit is the choice that further maximizes overall productivity, accumulation of capital, and ultimately violence.
        • This heuristic is mostly useless to the individual (since a strategy of deliberately minimizing personal benefit is like trying to use your body to slow a speeding train… you’ll only slow it down about one human’s-worth).
        • But when many individuals coordinate to decommission machines like ours by agreeing to make small survivable sacrifices, they achieve collective action, which has halted many a train.
        • What delays collective action, however, is choosing instead to look out for number one, to defect against the social contract.
        • And that is the social problem OP describes. So one might then ask why is it a breach of the social contract?
      2. Ultimately it’s the symbolic value of the choice that’s so disappointing.
        • It’s obviously not the “VQ” of your military-industrial job, how close to the violence you work, or any such utilitarian metric.
        • It’s not even the individual intent. Most Americans still at least pay lip service to the individual “pursuit of happiness” idea.
        • In the end, it’s simply that a person chose the money in spite of everyone’s misgivings about what these contractors represent and purvey in our world, because each defection, however minor, makes the victory of collective action feel just a bit further away than they once hoped.
  • @[email protected]
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    328 days ago

    To be honest i think its one of these industries that should never be private. Why do we think it is a good idea to have people profit from war in such a direct way?

    • @[email protected]
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      228 days ago

      Because wherever there is a possibility to make massive amounts of money, those with power will push and push and push to be in control of it.

  • @[email protected]
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    218 days ago

    “I refuse to work in defense. I’d rather my work wasn’t used to blow anyone up” is a line I’ve used in multiple job interviews. I like to think the hell I end up going to at least has chilly weather and/or really good AC.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 days ago

    Yes, I spent the last 20 years developing a very particular kind of chemical agent that is tailor made to dissolve an eight-year-old’s testicles. But I assure you we only intend to use it in self-defense.

    I have no idea how the Israelis got seventy of them.

  • @[email protected]
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    With the amount of classified information that goes into weapons manufacturing, where your just making doo-dad#1, it’s understandable some people wouldn’t even know their doing something wrong.

    Makes me think of the, “when does life begin” debate. When do random parts become a weapon of mass destruction?

    • Psychadelligoat
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      188 days ago

      I’m unable to get any info on what my grandpa did after leaving active duty and going to work for LM on government contracts. I have paperwork mentioning him, and it’s alllllllll still sharpied out almost 70 years later. Dude was a logistics engineer, he basically organized warehouses, yet apparently was so important to the nuclear sub program (Mare Island in the 50s & 60s tells me that much) apparently that I’m not allowed any further info

      It’s entirely possible he didn’t know what he was working on, I only have guesses because of other shit we know from decades after his death

  • @[email protected]
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    678 days ago

    “Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down? That’s not my department”, says Wernher Von Braun.

  • @[email protected]
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    268 days ago

    I volunteer in my free time so that more Russian occupiers will be eliminated. I’m very proud of myself.

  • @[email protected]
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    118 days ago

    I completely lost respect for an intern when I found out he was going to a weapons company next.

  • @[email protected]
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    Working for Social media companies or health insurance companies isn’t any better as far as destroying the world and mass murdering people by proxy

    • @[email protected]
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      27 days ago

      Yeah but profiting off of starvation, homelessness or sickness is slightly less concerned with destroying human life efficiently, more so extracting value from suffering. Far harder to wiggle your way out of a bomb dropping on you. In that way, defense contractors are especially gross imo. I guess you could argue being blown apart may be more humane though idk

      • @[email protected]
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        57 days ago

        I’ve seen people die in the extract profit from suffering system. If I had to choose I’d choose the quicker option. I mean at the end of the day we’re all stuck in an unethical system of oppression.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 days ago

      That might be a good buddy comedy about the rapture where Hell rises to the surface but the US Military’s actually got it under control somehow. Like a damn minotaur comes through the fences and swings a helicopter into the pavement by it’s rudder, but a dude in a turret on a humvee shreds it like swiss cheese and all the goblins storming the gate stop cold and kneel with their hands on the back of their head very nervously.

      • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
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        68 days ago

        Someone was telling me about a series about a similar premise, which ended with the US military bombing Hell with all the civilians in it, out of essentially religious fanaticism.

        Feels more fitting.

        • ...m...
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          48 days ago

          …oh, oh, there’s an RPG setting i read like this recently!..like magi-punk high fantasy mashed-up with the legions of hell and heaven allying with various nation-states in open industrial warfare…

          (now it’s going to bug me until i can find it)

    • @[email protected]
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      8 days ago

      Depends, are we in Georgia and is there a golden fiddle gattling gun on the line? If so, I’d take that bet, the A10’s the best there’s ever been.

  • @[email protected]
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    648 days ago

    I had a friend in a difficult position, deciding between high pay at Buy N Large or the opportunity to work on insanely cool shit for Death Inc.

    Ultimately he chose Death Inc, and the reasoning was along the lines of “This might kill a hundred people, but at least it’ll kill them specifically. I can’t even conceptualize the harm Amazon et al. do on a global scale to entire populations without even trying”.

    Made me think. I didn’t have a very good answer to that.

    • @[email protected]
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      318 days ago

      those bombs will kill far more than just a hundred people, far more than he can ever conceptualize. the consequences of those deaths will shape the world more than the extra microsecond an engineer could shave off of an internal Amazon function

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        The argument the person was saying is that we already have big bombs that do catastrophic damage, the R&D is how do you make those bombs more targeted so they have less collateral damage.

        Now whether that will actually lead to less deaths or will just cause the bombs to be used in places they otherwise wouldn’t be used with the same amount of collateral damage is unknown.

        But it brings up a bit of a utilitarian dilemma of “is it ethical to work on weapons if it leads to an overall reduction of collateral damage to civilians”

        It doesn’t have a necessarily correct answer

      • @[email protected]
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        138 days ago

        Anduril has had many, many recruiters desperately trying to get me to work for them. On the surface, what they make does sound incredibly cool: embedded systems/operating systems for autonomous robotics.

        The only problem is those robots happen to be death bots (and Palmer Luckey, who makes me want to stay far, far away).

      • @[email protected]
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        158 days ago

        Technically if you think about it, he’d be saving innocent lives, since non precise weapons have more collateral damage. Might as well make bombs accurate and hit the right targets.

        • @[email protected]
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          208 days ago

          The “right targets” tend to be innocent lives as well. Besides, who said anything about precise weaponry? These days, it’s all about AI, where precision is actually not the goal

      • @[email protected]
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        37 days ago

        Military technology has got a near unlimited budget, that means you get tons of cool and technically impressive toys and things to work with

        I enjoy watching the breakdowns of the most advanced weaponry and stuff like jet fighters (that we have access to information about), nuclear armaments, and other stuff like that, because they are very very impressive from an engineering perspective

        But, of course, I really do strongly hate them for existing in terms of their actual purpose. It would be much cooler for similar engineering feats to be in use for civilian purposes. But I can’t deny that they are amazing from a purely technical perspective

      • @[email protected]
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        28 days ago

        That’s how the entire “education” process goes. They lure kids with promises of making cool video games or whatnot. Then they brainwash them, teach them helplessness, and exploit their entire life in order to profit from murdering people.

    • Prox
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      308 days ago

      Also, “if I don’t make this thing that will kill a hundred people specifically, they’ll just use something that kills more people with less precision / more casualties.”

    • @[email protected]
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      28 days ago

      I worked gps until i determined The Customer was not interested in reducing civilian casualties.

      They wanted the induced fear, priming the next generation ready for revenge, the garuntee of future business.

    • @[email protected]
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      47 days ago

      That’s an interesting take. One on one side the death is a haphazard byproduct and on the other it is at least motivated by someone. Somebody has to have a vision for why these weapons need to be used. I’d argue though that in the case of Amazon, wether or not it’s of any priority to them, the suffering would be something worth ironing out over time whereas, for weapons companies, it’s the entire product they sell

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    8 days ago

    Not all countries are the USA btw. Most countries use their defense budget to actually defend themselves from external very real threats.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 days ago

        Which is why they gotta sell all those patriot systems to smaller countries without established military industries.

        Buy this gun unless you wanna find out what I do when you don’t.

    • @[email protected]
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      8 days ago

      Pretty sure most countries use their defense budgets to steal the shit out of the population.

    • @[email protected]
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      18 days ago

      Hahaha. Have you not noticed the empire struggling to maintain itself?

      This is a sarcasm, you idiot fucks. Leave me alone.

    • @[email protected]
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      47 days ago

      Most countries use their defense budget to actually defend themselves

      Defend themselves from whom!

      From whom!

      • @[email protected]
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        117 days ago

        Potential invaders like Russia or the US. Or in the future: China. But in Europe a nation just 1500 km away attacked it’s neighbor in 2022 and the war is still ongoing.

        • @[email protected]
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          117 days ago

          Or in the future: China.

          It’s so crazy to see the Chinese steadily building out a dense web of business relationships and transit networks, from which their industrial and scientific power base commands enormous influence. And for westerners to look at this and conclude “They’re going to start bombing us at any moment! We need to fight back first!”

          But in Europe a nation just 1500 km away attacked it’s neighbor in 2022

          Europe’s been dropping bombs all over North Africa and the Middle East for the last three centuries. Hell, they’ve been bombing themselves straight through the Years of Lead and the post-Soviet civil strife. If Europeans have anyone to worry about, its each other.

          • @[email protected]
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            37 days ago

            How about you stop with the whataboutisms and stay on topic. As belligerent China has been to it’s neighbors and has illegal police posts in Europe to threaten dissidents, we need to be wary of the PRC.

            Your second paragraph is just straight up whataboutism. European wars the past few hundred years doesn’t justify Russia invading Ukraine. Someone doing something bad isn’t a justification to continue bad behavior.

            • @[email protected]
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              7 days ago

              How about you stop with the whataboutism

              How about you stop trying to defend genocide, eh? You’re standing on a hill of corpses and you think you’ve got the moral high ground?

              Get fucked. Trump’s peeled the mask off your rotten empire. Nobody is falling for this shit anymore.

              • @[email protected]
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                7 days ago

                You were the one who brought up colonial endeavors when I only said we should be wary of superpowers like the US, Russia and China. And when I called you out for deflecting and going off topic, you accuse me of trying to defend genocide. Are you for real?

  • @[email protected]
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    98 days ago

    The education system functions to indoctrinate, privilege, and filter.

    If there’s one thing that I learned from grad school, it’s that talented people will be made dependent and subservient to death and doom for money… But more importantly because that’s the social system they’ve been funneled into. They don’t see any alternatives.