this post was submitted on 02 Dec 2025
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I don't work for them because I chose not to, but honestly, work for them, don't work for them, it's not like they'll lack for employees. If you write that line of code that eventually blows up a hospital or someone else does, it will still happen. You're not going to stop them by turning down job offers. You're going to need to change politics.
This argument is deeply flawed, and I've heard engineers working on arms projects using it to justify what they're doing. That, and the "I just build it, it's not me pulling the trigger" are trotted out to soothe dying moral consciences all the time. There are far too many bright minds being used to create death and suffering.
The fact that by partaking in this industry, you form a critical part of the decision and event chain that leads to bad people killing innocent people is important, morally, and completely unchanged by whether it not someone else will do it. So it does matter if you turn that job down, and not just for your own conscience. If enough people turn down these jobs then that will change politics. And those that do choose to take them need to face up to their responsibility in enabling and perpetuating horror.
I think the issue is that there are people for whom it is necessary and proper to use military violence against, and when you don't continually invest in it, you find yourself subject to those who have (see: Europe vs Russia and/or the US).
Further the decision and event chain that you mention has been used just as frequently by the US military to head-off and prevent escalation of violence.
As I pointed out elsewhere, putting psychopaths in charge can make most things dangerous. The Trump administration is currently weaponizing financial fraud against all of us so the billionaires can feast on the remnants of the middle class. Now obviously, military tools are made to be dangerous, which is not in line with a pacifist morality. But most people aren't pacifists, and sociopath leaders will always find a cornucopia of tools to murder their opposition.
It was immoral to hand these tools to Trump. It was immoral to hand these tools to Netanyahu. But that's a problem with these systems of government, not with the creation of militaries and their equipment.
Yet psychopathic megalomaniacal leaders are a feature of the human race further back than recorded history, where remote mass destruction of estranged populations is a very recent development. Therefore it is immoral to develop, create and deploy weaponry like this and, "we will be the victims of it if we do not", is a similarly weak moral argument to the one above. Just because we expect someone else to do the immoral thing does not render us any more moral for having done it. I don't think. Yes, you can argue necessity, but how far does that go? If a pacifist somehow held in their hands a button which would kill every non-pacifist in the world, should they push it? And, in creating any new technology, we do need to ask, "is introducing this worth the risk of it falling into the wrong hands?" . Similar to how anti privacy laws creep in. If you've got nothing to hide, you've got nothing to fear, until the next government gets in and you need to hide being gay, or brown, or a woman. It's not a question of whether or not "the good guys" get the weapon, it's a question of what happens when the bad guys do, because they certainly will, because that's what bad guys do.
Did you intend this to be paradoxical? If a pacifist pushed a button to kill non-pacifists, he would obviously die from it too.
This is likely wrong. In Sapiens, Yuval Harari discusses at length how genocide is as old as humanity. Some of us would brutally murder each other with sticks and stones if they had nothing better.
I guess I can more or less agree with this question. But most defense work is not creating the atomic bomb. Most of it is incremental improvements aimed at more effectively engaging a military target. Which is why the US did so poorly against guerilla warfare in Afghanistan.... But that's beside the point. Excuse my tangent. I am a defense contractor, I have left programs I was uncomfortable with existing.
Anyway, we agree that psychopathic megalomaniacs are a feature of the human creature. And whether or not they are flying drones, driving tanks, or a leading a hoard of mounted Visigoths at your village, I think most of us would rather remove them as a threat from a safe distance... Like with a missile.
A bit, yes. There's an inherent paradox in the argument about necessity. Put it another way: if the next technology turns all of your enemies into steam, but as a side effect, also does the same to their families, are you forced to develop it, because the people on the other side of the world will just get there first if you don't? What if the one after that is super low resource yet it also kills anyone who has ever shaken hands with your enemy? etc etc. I would argue that creating a new weapon, or developing existing ones further is not made more or less moral on the basis that your enemy might be doing it, because if you know your enemy's mind that well, you could easily defeat them using a slingshot.
Not sure I follow, this seems to be what I was saying. Read it back. The difference is that now we have technology capable of remotely erasing huge populations, and no means whatsoever of keeping it out of the hands of the freaks that invariably take power. It's therefore immoral to develop weapons because if you are clever enough to know how to do that, you should be clever enough to know how the resulting products will end up being used.
So the difference between them then is just one of scale. Oppenheimer probably never got a good night's sleep again in his life, but it's easy to persuade a thousand people to each do a thousandth of what he did. Then each person is only a thousandth as responsible as Oppenheimer. But each increment is still an evil deed, just a smaller one.
"Concern for man himself and his fate must always constitute the chief objective of all technological endeavors...in order that the creations of our mind shall be a blessing and not a curse to mankind. Never forget this in the midst of your diagrams and equations." People working on weapons are ignoring, forgetting or equivocating over this simple fact. Good people don't make bombs and sleep well at night. Find another job, where you can look back at your life's work and honestly believe you made the world a better place.
Most of us would prefer our enemies killed at range, without having to look then in the eye, sure. But look at what you're mixing up here: the psychopathic megalomaniacs who are sitting barking orders a world away from the lethality radii, and the grunts and (invariably) innocent collateral who are atomised inside them.
Direct me to the flaw.
Will someone passing them up make ANY difference to what they're doing?
The flaw is explained in what I just said.
Ultimately, doing something evil just because you decide someone else would do it if you didn't, so you might as well benefit doesn't make it any less evil of you to do that thing. In fact, it makes it worse.
I didn't say it was personally good for you, I said it wont affect that job getting filled. And it won't
No, what you said was that it didn't matter whether or not you took the job, because it would get done anyway. And that is a flawed argument.
It will still happen is a bit of a fallacy. It’s one less person doing that job but I agree that one person won’t make a meaningful change
However the thing that changes is that if you reject that job you reduced by 100% your direct contribution to people killing missiles. Someone else will design that missile but at least you won’t have to live with the guilt that you did
Now, if it’s between that and a much worse life, I won’t blame anyone. But it’s a choice that everyone has to make for themselves. Personally I have possibility to reject those offers, and so I do.
They aren't immune to supply and demand, the job market is the agreegate of us all deciding what we will put up with to stay alive.
I totally agree, not taking the job can mean a HUGE thing to you. It just won't affect the company whatsoever.
I don't do it because I don't like it. I worked for DOD years ago, on non-dangerous stuff but it wasn't something I wanted to personally support.
When does a company decide to recruit? It's when current employees can't handle the workload and/or move projects ahead on schedule.
Not being recruited increases the hiring cycle time and means the development falls further behind schedule.
It's not nothing.
When does a company decide to recruit?
If anyone will take the job, there is zero difference to them. Humans are not statistically morale enough to hinder them more than paying well.
The sooner they hire someone the less time they spend understaffed and the more they have to pay whoever the hire. It's not a huge difference but it is also not zero.