| > If we don't like what they're telling us to do, we can always pick different people. On what basis are the voters supposed to make that decision? What we see is that our representatives take money from defense contractors and then do what those defense contractors want them to do. If they have a good reason for that they aren't sharing it. That's the problem you're ignoring. "We can't tell you because it's a secret" is something they can trivially say when the actual reason is blatant corruption. Doing what defense contractors want for the same reason we subsidize corn in Iowa is indistinguishable from having an actual reason when the actual reason is secret. Which means we either have to assume that having no public reason implies corruption, or have no defense from corruption and consequently prolific corruption. And we can't have a corrupt and unaccountable military, that is totally crazy. So what you're really saying is that they either have to give us the reason (or end the programs) or we need to "pick different people". Which is kind of what I'm saying. > But anyway, the military isn't going to do the same thing they've always done with intelligence -- liaise with civilian government orgs to gather intel and ultimately launch operations based on that intel. What operations? There is no military operation you can launch to prevent someone from breaking into a computer when you don't even know they've done it until after it's already over. You don't have a time machine. This isn't a military problem. Look at the real world analogy of what they're afraid of: It's like a foreign government having a spy infiltrate an American company and steal their private documents. The defense from that has to be from inside that company. You can't solve it from the top down. |
Guess what -- corruption is a possibility of our system. The end. Pick guys who you don't think are going to be corrupted, or haven't been outed as corrupt if you find that important.
Most Americans don't find corruption to be that big of a deal. You know how I know that? Because they keep voting the same corrupt people into office. Apparently, as long as things keep getting done, no one seems to mind the corruption.
As for military response, there are plenty of military operations you can launch to deny foreign nations the capability of hacking into a company like Sony, just like there are plenty of military operations you can launch to prevent foreign aggressors from shooting down US passenger planes, or pirating along US coasts, or any of the dozen other preventative military operations the US performs every single day.