this post was submitted on 10 Apr 2025
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I think drone warfare so far has shown that one of the advantages of drones, for a weapon, is their ability to be produced cheapy, en masse, and with a relatively limited manufacturing infrastructure. Assuming you have the computer parts anyway, which are abundant in today's society. One of the implications of that, I think, is that in future asymmetric or civil wars and the like, they're not going to be like fighter jets or tanks, where one side will have them and the other must improvise countermeasures. They're going to be like guns and explosives, where both sides are going to have access to at least some degree.
Oh absolutely agreed, I was mostly just responding to the idea that the 2nd amendment would be a safeguard. Last I checked, drones don't seem to be considered a weapon in most cases, and thus are not seemingly covered by the 2nd amendment right to bear arms. Instead, they're a free-for-all, which is both a good thing and a bad thing, of course.