‘Militainment’

With further advancements in drone technology, the US government is not likely to cease its drone activity any time soon, instead placing special focus on early recruitment by targeting young gamers.

Video gamers do have a skillset that is very important and enhances the skillset of drone operators. So when I talk to people about this, I say, we don’t need Top Gun pilots – we need Revenge of the Nerds.

Missy Cummings, associate professor of aeronautics at MIT and a former US Navy pilot

“There’s always been a connection between the world of war and the world of entertainment. And I call this phenomenon ‘militainment’, where the military world is actually now pulling tools from the world of entertainment to do its job better,” says Peter Singer, author of Wired for War.

“Video gamers do have a skillset that is very important and enhances the skillset of drone operators,” says Missy Cummings, associate professor of aeronautics at MIT and a former US Navy pilot. “So when I talk to people about this, I say, we don’t need Top Gun pilots – we need Revenge of the Nerds.”

In the midst of the fast advancement of technology and lagging international legislation, this film shows how drones change wars and possibly our future. We look at the psychological implications of drones and how “distance creates indifference”. We examine those on the different sides of the drone strikes and the consequences of dehumanising war. And we ask if the US government can ever be held accountable for the hundreds of innocent lives lost in the CIA’s war.