| ▲ | bigyabai 7 hours ago | |||||||
> by having the smartest people inside these companies coming up with the best tech while also shaping the conversation from the inside. The smartest people don't get that choice. Oppenheimer, Teller and Ulam were all ignored in matters of policy, the Manhattan Project was not designed to integrate their political feedback. Conversely, the scientists at Peenemünde never got to question the effectiveness of V-1 bombs with a CEP measured in miles. Their participation in policy was deliberately severed, ultimately to the detriment of the Wehrmacht. When you start seeing technologies that affront humanity - warrantless surveillance, civilian terror weapons, chemical/biological agents - that's when normal people step out. No amount of sanewashing will fix the underlying administrative issue, it only exacerbates the underlying moral dilemma. | ||||||||
| ▲ | theturret 6 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Fair point. I don’t think that simply working at a defense-tech would or should give someone sway over political decisions. Which might be also good: von Neumann advocated for a U.S. nuclear first strike on the Soviet Union. In the context of this thread my claim is simply that smarter people will yield smarter solutions that balance the tradeoffs mentioned earlier. The choice to use those weapons still lies with our elected leaders. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | dudefeliciano 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
> that's when normal people step out. So Oppenheimer Teller and Ulam were not normal/sane people. In other words, they had the choice, and made a decision. Everything is political. | ||||||||