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At some point, yes, they would. The whole point of the article is that people with the technical knowledge to maintain and improve the US miltary shouldn't do it. Luckily, reaching a critical mass of scientists and engineers with such attitude, enough for basic defense systems to fail, seems unlikely. But there's such an horizon. I wonder why the Russians are not launching invasions of several resource rich African countries as we speak. Because the US is far stronger. And still they grabbed half Ukraine, at the border of NATO, way more important than most African countries. Same with China, the South China Sea, and expansion via artificial islands. If Russia and China can get away with that, the US being vastly superior from a military standpoint, what world destabilization, or plain open war would happen if the US just a bit weaker? And, BTW, the war has started already, in the information battleground, with US and Western Europe's being ravaged by Russian and Chinese attacks. The naivete point stands. We need more computer scientists defending Western democracy values, because today, more than ever, they're under attack. |
Ok, so if I'm following this logic, which is if you're not the strongest then someone is going to invade you, then the USA is going to start invading everyone because it is the strongest.
Or, if not, could there possibly be other factors that come into play when deciding to invade someone and destabilise the world?
> The naivete point stands. We need more computer scientists defending Western democracy values, because today, more than ever, they're under attack.
I agree. Let's fund this with a reduction in our standing army. Oh wait... the people who make the bombs might not like this.