Spoilers  for episode 6 of season 3 of Black Mirror below. 

Civilian casualties are as common as they are condemned. Numbers remind us that governments, be it democratic or authoritarian, kill large numbers of civilians as a military strategy.

In his lecture, Thomas Gregory discussed the principle of noncombatant immunity. While it may be strong, the fact that civilian casualties occur so often show that in the hearts and minds of our leaders, perception is what matters, not principle.

Governments go a long way for this perception. The United States, for example, is using and consistently developing what scholar Eric Bonds describes as “hyper-rationalized violence.” This encompasses everything from precision weaponry, technical and administrative procedures to limit civilian deaths, and calculations to achieve ‘proportionality’ goals. Crucially, most of this involves high-level technology.

And so, the act of murder seems to transform, as technology progresses, into a cleaner, more sophisticated business. This, however, hardly means fewer civilian deaths. The attack on Soleimani, for one, resulted in far more casualties than the direct targets. For drones, this is a relatively small-scale blunder.

As Bonds exposes, while drone wars have been celebrated as ‘the most precise… in history’, their bombs have unintentionally killed thousands of unarmed civilians and contributed to utter devastation.

But a drone is unlike any other weapon of war. As a piece of technology, it is accessible to all. Despite the significant security controls on drones, cybersecurity consultants have warned that equipment is already available to hack drones so they can bypass security controls. Technology is a democratizing beast, and it walks hand-in-hand with corruption. If there is a will to hack, there is a way.

Little else captures this situation with the passion and conviction of Black Mirror’s “Hated in the Nation”. This episode is set in a disturbingly familiar London and follows Detective Karin Parke (pictured above) as she investigates a string of mysterious deaths.

Parke eventually discovers that these deaths are caused by bee drones. The small robots replace extinct bees and are essential to humanity’s survival. However, they’ve been exploited due to a government backdoor and are now being used to kill civilians. In particular, they are programmed to kill whomever Twitter deems the most hated in the nation.

As for its cinematic value, “Hated in the Nation” is often criticized for its convoluted delivery. It tries to do too much so does nothing well. But it does one thing excellently. It illustrates our oncoming dilemma. A need is identified. Some piece of technology fulfils that need. It does its job well. Then, someone uses it in a way it wasn’t meant to.

Drones make enough mistakes when used as intended. What will happen when we lose control?

Unfortunately, “Hated in the Nation” has no answer. It does, however, hold a warning. The more we rely on technology, the more we relinquish control. It predicts a future of ‘small massacres’ we are already seeing. While fundamentally different from the callous, unrestrained mass violence of the past, it is no more humane. If anything, this is the rise of the civilian killer.

We have crafted a murderer with no face and no uniform. It can become anyone and has enemies we don’t know of. With no need to bend to perception, its target will not be only world leaders or suspected terrorists.

Now, anyone hated in the nation is fair game.

 

References:

Ahmed, Mohiuddin and Paul Haskell-Dowland. “Aerial threat: why drone hacking could be bad news for the military.” The Conversation. Updated October 8, 2019. https://theconversation.com/aerial-threat-why-drone-hacking-could-be-bad-news-for-the-military-124588.

Bonds, Eric. “Humanitized violence: Targeted killings and civilian deaths in the US war against the Islamic State.” Current Sociology 67, no. 3 (2018): 438-455.

Hawes, James, dir. Black Mirror. Season 3, episode 6. “Hated in the Nation.” Aired October 21, 2016, United Kingdom: Netflix, accessed October 26, 2020.

Swart, Mia. “Death by drone: How can states justify targeted killings?” Al Jazeera. Updated July 11, 2020. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/7/11/death-by-drone-how-can-states-justify-targeted-killings.