Every technology has a spectrum of usefulness, between applications that make people's lives better, and worse.
It's not FUD to point out that a particular technology will be primarily used for the latter.
We generally don't hold people responsible for direct effects of their work. Working on drones that will kill people for the military is a direct effect.
'Game-changing potential', whatever that means for this kind of work, is not a first order effect.
the same arguments against the drone fleet is the same against the atomic bomb. What something is designed for (death in both cases) is not always their effect. For example, the atomic bombs were used to incredible devastation and death when used but it could be argued they prevented the next war with Russia since a war between two nuclear powers meant total destruction on both sides.
I'll venture into prediction here. Do you think a regional warlord or rogue state ( ISIS or whatever comes after it ) would enter a conflict with another state that was backed by the US? They might, knowing that the US would be unlikely to do more than give airstrike and strategic support. But what if the US had a drone army/fleet that could do close air-support, block to block firefighting, differentiate combatants and non-combatants? It could mean a tougher fight for a group like that since little but money is risked on the side of the US.
Seems to me that at the moment there are a number of state and non state actors who seem happy to pull that tail of the US tiger, knowing that the consequences of the US reacting badly is the significant destruction of their country. Doesn't seem to deter them.
Expecting terrorist orginisations or rogue states to act in a rational way is the same as expecting the US to back down when their pride or national interest is threatened.
It's not FUD to point out that a particular technology will be primarily used for the latter.
We generally don't hold people responsible for direct effects of their work. Working on drones that will kill people for the military is a direct effect.
'Game-changing potential', whatever that means for this kind of work, is not a first order effect.