I guess when you work in an industry where what you create or do is done for killing, as a person, you must have crossed some line of what is okay to do for yourself. Similar to people who remote control 'drones'. And at that point, I would think your will to try and change what the company is doing is very small.
On that note, I jumped back off the fence. Not for me.
I've been asked to work for military industry companies before. And I have always declined for ethical reasons.
But as I sit here and think about it, I wonder if its a good thing that a person like myself (that believes I'm on the ethical high-ground) decline these types of jobs.
Someone is going to take the job. Perhaps someone less skilled than myself, perhaps someone less ethical than myself ? What is the result of that ?
As another poster wrote, it's "good" that the targetting gets more precise, meaning less collateral damage.
But to each his own. We need to be able to sleep at night aswell. And that to me also seems like a really good reason to decline.
I'm kind of on the fence about wanting to work in that industry.