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by spaghettiToy 1379 days ago
> roll my eyes hard every time some SV engineer has a moral outrage/stages a walkout because they discover their company has a DoD

You have 0 input with how weapons of war will be used in the future. I can't say I disagree.

1 comments

That and no one is forcing you to work on said weapons. If someone has a moral issue with working for DoD, I think that's a little naive but that's their right. Demanding the company you agreed to work for, as a subordinate, comply with your personal vision of morality when you're not even in a leadership position is just childish.

Corporations by design are almost never democracies, you are working as a laborer for a dictatorship/oligarchy that's licensed by the overarching government for meeting certain legal requirements. That's it. If you want to dictate corporate values then gain authority within the company or start your own, or leave and go work for someone you see as more aligned with your values. As a rank-and-file engineer you have as much say in corporate values as a plumber has in his clients' choice of religion.

Exception to this is if you're a founding member of a startup, or working for an extremely small company where your contributions carry a lot of weight. In which case congrats, you're on the ruling council of the oligarchy by default, and if the company ever grows to a certain size maybe some idealistic low-level engineer will get indignant about your values :)

If rank and file employees don't have a say, then why do you care what they demand? It seems more like they actually do have a say and they're figuring that out, and that's what you're objecting to.
Thats a model for how the things work, but it's just a model.

In reality, corporations need labourers to get work done, and so labourers have the end say on what actually happens.

There's no need to religiously follow an ideology that says you are powerless when you are very obviously not powerless when you disregard the ideology