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Anti Federalist
10-18-2015, 12:34 AM
Disgusting...



She Kills People From 7,800 Miles Away

http://www.thedailybeast.com/features/2015/she-kills-people-from-7800-miles-away/index.html

Anne crawled out of bed in her North Las Vegas house around 10 p.m. and started to get ready for her shift.

She pulled her chestnut hair into a bun and slipped on her olive green flight suit. In the kitchen, she packed fruit to snack on during her shift and stuffed her schoolwork into her backpack-sized lunchbox just in case it’s a boring night. Most nights she doesn’t have a chance to open a book.

Giving her dog, a tan Sher-Pei/pit bull mix, one last pat, she left her house and joined thousands of other workers leaving for the midnight shift. Whi le most people were heading to hotels and casinos in town, Hubbard was on her way to Creech Air Force Base and a war. Anne, an Air Force staff sergeant, was—and still is—a remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) sensor operator or “sensor.” At Creech, she is assigned to a reconnaissance squadron flying missions over Iraq and Afghanistan. Few weapons in the American arsenal are more relentless than the RPA fleet, often called drones. For more than a decade, the United States has flown RPAs over Afghanistan and Iraq, providing forces on the ground with an eye in the sky to spot terrorists and insurgents, and in most cases the firepower to destroy them. Piece black and white

As she rode to work, Anne—or “Sparkle” as she’s known to her fellow drone operators—wasn’t focused on the desert outside her window. It was 2009 and President Obama was sending troops in a surge to Afghanistan. Sparkle’s mind was on a desert 7,800 miles away. Over the next 24 hours she would track an insurgent, watch as he was killed by a Hellfire missile, and spy on his funeral before ending her night with a breakfast beer and a trip to the dog park.

Whichever name you prefer, it’s clear we’re living in an amazing time for innovations that would’ve seemed like science fiction even ten years ago. In other words, we’re living through untold numbers of the moment so many scientists spend their whole lives working toward -- the breakthrough.

....

“I remember thinking, I’m about to drop this weapon on this dude,” Sparkle said. “After you do five, six, 10, it is another day at work. You put your hard hat on.”

timosman
10-18-2015, 12:40 AM
http://sendvid.com/0o2zi6d6

Ronin Truth
10-18-2015, 07:44 AM
Would it really be any better (or worse) from 7.8 miles away?

Voluntarist
10-18-2015, 08:28 AM
xxxxx

juleswin
10-18-2015, 08:44 AM
Would it really be any better (or worse) from 7.8 miles away?

it would be far better if it was 10 yards away. At least the perp would have a chance to fight back.

DP714
10-18-2015, 08:44 AM
Would it really be any better (or worse) from 7.8 miles away?

One would hope that at some point it just becomes too close for comfort and would require more than just a blanket order from a superior to pull the trigger or press the button; that it would be hurtful to the conscience to kill for a reason other than self-defense. One would hope...

Henry Rogue
10-18-2015, 08:47 AM
Would it really be any better (or worse) from 7.8 miles away?

The remoteness both physically and emotionally, may cut down on the need for PTSD treatments at the VA.

tod evans
10-18-2015, 08:57 AM
There's no reason for drones or soldiers to be overseas attacking anybody.

Until the American public stops ingesting the propaganda and starts stringing up the traitors waging undeclared wars this BS will continue.

Ender
10-18-2015, 10:02 AM
There's no reason for drones or soldiers to be overseas attacking anybody.

Until the American public stops ingesting the propaganda and starts stringing up the traitors waging undeclared wars this BS will continue.

Ender's Game

Orson Scott Card was ahead of his time and predicted it well.

Mr Tansill
10-18-2015, 10:09 AM
Like it or not, this is, and always has been, the nature of progress in warfare. First it was fists, then rocks, then knives, swords, bows and arrows, etc. We always seek to gain an advantage against those we are fighting. Yep, war is ugly. Always will be; always has been.

tommyrp12
10-18-2015, 10:11 AM
Related:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVA3T7FoM3E

I watched it for free, but the site i got it from is no longer around. It's a boring movie (propaganda) anyway.

enhanced_deficit
10-18-2015, 10:21 AM
Drone Pilot With PTSD Confined Without Charges by the Air Force (http://www.worldcantwait.net/index.php/features/covert-drone-war/8688-drone-pilot-with-ptsd-confined-without-charges-by-the-air-force)
Nick Mottern | April 28, 2015
As the Obama government attempts to justify its drone program, Staff Sergeant Shane R. Owens, a drone sensor operator suffering from PTSD from having been involved with drone killing, assigned to the 11th Reconnaissance Squadron at Creech AFB, has been confined by the Air Force without charges since March 5 at nearby Nellis AFB in Nevada.
As late as yesterday afternoon, Monday, April 27, the Nellis Public Affairs Office would provide no information on when Owens would be released or anything about what is happening with his case. His lawyer, Craig Drummond said Monday evening that Owens has yet to appear before a military law judge.
Drummond filed a writ of habeas corpus in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas on April 9 seeking Owens release, and he suggested on Monday that I be in touch with Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James, who is cited the filing to see if she has even heard of Owens confinement.
Owens' extremely bizarre, sad situation, which may reveal much about the day-to-day operational reality of the Obama drone program, is documented in an excellent work of reporting that appeared on April 19 in the Las Vegas Review Journal (http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/las-vegas/lawyer-seeks-drone-sensor-operator-s-release-nellis-jail)

surf
10-18-2015, 10:42 AM
The remoteness both physically and emotionally, may cut down on the need for PTSD treatments at the VA.
not true. a while back I read where these killers actually get it worse.


Some say that the drone war has driven them over the edge. “How many women and children have you seen incinerated by a Hellfire missile? How many men have you seen crawl across a field, trying to make it to the nearest compound for help while bleeding out from severed legs?” Heather Linebaugh, a former drone imagery analyst, wrote in the Guardian. “When you are exposed to it over and over again it becomes like a small video, embedded in your head, forever on repeat, causing psychological pain and suffering that many people will hopefully never experience.”

“It was horrifying to know how easy it was. I felt like a coward because I was halfway across the world and the guy never even knew I was there,” Bryanttold KNPR Radio in Nevada. “I felt like I was haunted by a legion of the dead. My physical health was gone, my mental health was crumbled. I was in so much pain I was ready to eat a bullet myself.”http://www.salon.com/2015/03/06/a_chilling_new_post_traumatic_stress_disorder_why_ drone_pilots_are_quitting_in_record_numbers_partne r/

Ronin Truth
10-18-2015, 11:16 AM
The remoteness both physically and emotionally, may cut down on the need for PTSD treatments at the VA.

Isn't 'drone view' just exactly the same regardless of the distance away?