Saturday, June 18, 2011

Ethics repercussion of Robotic on the battlefield (Part 1)


The Ethics repercussion of Robotic on the battlefield of War (part 1)
We live in time of great division between thought of us effect negatively by technology and thoughts who benefit from technology……DGH
 (US Army Talon, HK - Hunter Killer )
 The recent controversy over the C.I.A.’s use of Predator drones or HK in Pakistan raises some interesting ethical questions about conflict in the twenty-first century. Using unmanned aerial vehicles to visit death and destruction on suspected terrorists and insurgents marks a radical departure from the ways we have dealt with enemies in the past. If this is a sign of what's to come, I fear that morality and ethics will be as much under attack in the future as our homeland is within reach of deployment. This happen at the end 2010 on the US Mexican borders.
The history of warfare is, in large part, all about distance. From the stone-age when men used rocks and clubs, to the development of metal spears, then arrows, bullets, and missiles, major advances in military technology have virtually all revolved around the ability to kill from ever increasing distances; or to be more precise, the ability to shoot at your enemy from a greater distance than he can shoot back at you. There is of course a practical rationale for this. To paraphrase General Patton you don’t win wars by dying for your country; you win them by making the other dumb bastard die for his. If an inventor develops a superior weapon that allows you to rain shells on your enemy while his shells fall harmlessly short, unless you have a death wish, you would be foolish not to consider using it.
Whether revolutionary advances in military hardware help end wars or whether they make it easier to start them, is open to debate. It is undeniable, however, that if I have a weapon that I can kill my enemy with before he can even see me – that is to say without cost or danger to myself – there’s relatively little to deter me from using it to wipe him out.
As fascinating as robot tanks and unmanned killer drones may be from a technical and practical standpoint, it is the moral and ethical ramifications of such weaponry that are most interesting to me. Every new development in war technology forces us to reconsider the ethics of warfare. Each invention that makes it easier to wage war; each level of separation from the actual field of battle, lessens the moral and ethical chasm a person must overcome before he can justify the essentially immoral act of taking a human life.
There have been many studies on man’s natural inhibitions against killing. The military has devoted years to developing new and better techniques to overcome this inhibition. Basic training is designed to break down a recruit’s psyche and rebuild it so that when ordered to kill, he will obey without question. Even so, most sane people, including soldiers, would have a hard time mustering the visceral savagery required to put their hands around someone’s neck and choke the life out of them. Put a rifle in a soldier’s hands and order them to shoot, it gets easier. Fire a canon from a mile away, easier still. Press a button to level a village from 30,000 feet? “Piece of cake.” The farther removed we are from the battlefield, the easier it gets to push the button.

                                            (US Navy UCAV)
As the attacks in Pakistan have demonstrated, we now have the ultimate in push button warfare. Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), armed with bombs and missiles, piloted by remote control, mean the person firing the missile doesn’t have to be anywhere near the battlefield. Sometimes these UAVs are operated via satellite from halfway around the world. If it’s easy to numb your conscience into believing it’s okay to drop bunker busters on a town in Afghanistan from 30,000 feet up, imagine how easy it becomes to pilot a remote control drone that shoots at suspected bad guys while sitting in air-conditioned comfort at an air force base in Nevada, 8,000 miles away?
This is not to say that modern warfare is totally devoid of ethical conflict. In his book: “Wired for War: The Robotics Revolution and Conflict in the 21st Century,” Author P.W. Singer examines some of the surreal moral choices soldiers face today: “While the Pilots are no longer at risk, the experience of fighting from home bases, some 7,500 miles away, does bring new psychological twists to war. ‘You see Americans killed in front of your eyes and then have to go to a PTA meeting,’ tells one pilot.” 
(US Air force Unnamed shuttle X-40 Operation Deployment  2011 )


The distance from which we can now wage war also raises ethical questions for political leaders – and by extension those that elect them. Modern Presidents have often been reticent to use military force because of the political fallout that comes from soldiers coming home in body bags. But if we can attack without incurring any casualties among our own men, with the only cost to us being the occasional wrecked robot, then giving the order to use lethal force becomes easier and easier. For example, if you suspect a country like Iran of building a reactor capable of producing weapons grade material, it’s a heck of a lot simpler and faster to order the C.I.A. to send an unmanned drone to bomb it to rubble than it is to engage in diplomacy. Civilian casualties are much easier to justify if your own soldiers are not in harms way.
The more we employ robots to do our killing, the easier it becomes to control the narrative of conflict as well. Wars are messy affairs. They are rarely black and white. Yet unmanned vehicles that fire precision bombs and guided missiles allow us to reduce war to a video game with good guys and bad guys. It is no accident that many of the computer interfaces for modern weaponry resemble game consoles
           End Part 1........................................

Friday, June 17, 2011

Chine’s Government and it workers "The Honey Moon is Over"





Thousands of migrant workers in the Zengcheng district of Guangzhou have been involved in three days of protests and battles with police from last Friday. The eruption in the capital city of southern Chinese province of Guangdong is another sign of mounting social tensions, fuelled by declining living standards for workers.
Several thousand police were deployed to Zengcheng, a satellite industrial town where one-sixth of the world’s jeans are manufactured. The riots were triggered by urban administration security personnel who pushed Wang Lianmei, a 20-year-old pregnant street vendor, to the ground as they tried to clear her stall from a road last Friday.
The woman and her husband are from Sichuan, a major “labour exporting” province. Corrupt security officers have long treated migrant workers as second-class citizens, demanding fines and bribes for minor offences. Because of China’s urban household registration system, the country’s 150 million rural migrant workers have no basic rights such as access to education for their children.
The attack on Wang quickly led to rumours that she and her husband had been killed. The incident ignited pent-up anger among factory workers, who have been hit by sharply rising food prices and housing costs.According to Hong Kong’s Singtao Daily, a group of Sichuan migrant workers attacked police cars when Wang was taken away by ambulance. Large crowds joined in. At least three police cars and an ambulance were destroyed. 
Many Chinese executives and government official are getting rich of the back of these migrant works while the work suffers under less than ideal condition for very low wages. The technology boom have mage china a very wealthy country but for the most part the average standard of live has risen  form average anal income of  2o00 US dollar in 2000 to 7500 as of 2010 but is rise in wage is no share by most migrant work,    (Socialist News) DGH


Brief History of   migrant works in China
Migrant workers in China are mostly people from impoverished regions who go to more urban and prosperous coastal regions in search of work, hence they are the main force for urbanization in the People's Republic of China. According to Chinese government statistics, the current number of migrant workers in China is estimated at 120 million, approximately 9% of the population. China’s urban migrants sent home the equivalent of US$65.4 billion in 2005.China is now experiencing the largest mass migration of people from the countryside to the city in history. An estimated 230 million Chinese (2010) a number equivalent to two thirds the population of the United States —have left the countryside and migrated to the cities in recent years. About 13 million new people join the legions every year. The number is expected to reach 250 million by 2012 and surpass 300 million and maybe reach 400 million by 2025.


DGH