@Boeing Inspired by Australia’s partnership with Boeing for the DOMESTIC PRODUCTION of the Loyal Wingman drones, we recognize a monumental opportunity for Canada. By initiating a similar manufacturing program in Alberta, Canada, we can leverage strategic and technical STEM capabilities to decentralize and enhance Boeing’s and NATO’s defence manufacturing landscape.
Historical Context:Indeed, the partnership between Australia and Boeing to develop the Loyal Wingman drones is not just a milestone in military engineering;it represents a significant cultural and economic rejuvenation for Australia — a return to advanced manufacturing on its soil.
This collaboration symbolizes a pivotal shift for a country traditionally seen as remote in the geopolitical landscape, propelling it to the forefront of cutting-edge military technology.
For over half a century, Australia’s domestic aerospace industry was largely dormant, focusing instead on other sectors like mining, agriculture, and services.
The introduction of the Loyal Wingman project marks a renaissance in Australian manufacturing, reminiscent of its efforts during World War II when Australia rapidly expanded its industrial capabilities to meet wartime demands. It’s a modern echo of the past, where necessity drove innovation and self-reliance in defense technologies.
Cultural Significance: This move is a profound statement of national pride and capability. It taps into Australia’s historical spirit of “can-do” innovation and self-sufficiency. By revitalizing its defense manufacturing sector, Australia not only secures its military needs but also reasserts its role on the world stage — not just as a consumer of imported technology but as a creator and exporter.
Economic and Strategic Implications:In a world where economic power is as crucial as military strength, revitalizing high-tech manufacturing could significantly boost Australia’s economy. It creates high-skilled jobs, stimulates R&D in related sectors, and attracts foreign investment. Strategically, manufacturing drones like the Loyal Wingman domestically reduces dependence on foreign military technology, providing Australia with greater control over its defense capabilities and supply chain security.
Geopolitical Impact: Australia’s move to enhance its own military manufacturing capability with technologies like the Loyal Wingman is also a response to the shifting power dynamics in the Asia-Pacific region. With rising tensions and an increasingly assertive China, having indigenous advanced military technology bolsters Australia’s defense autonomy and enhances its status as a significant regional power.
The Canadian Perspective: As the world braces for the multiplex threats outlined in “The Great Filter,” from EMP strikes to cyber warfare, establishing a robust, distributed aerospace manufacturing base in Canada is not just strategic but essential. This move will fortify NATO member states national defense setup and global defense setup (and defend Boeing should EMP strikes wipe out it’s manufacturing facilities in other nations), and contribute significantly to global stability by ensuring the continuity of defense capabilities even in dire scenarios.
By participating in similar programs and manufacturing systems like the Loyal Wingman in Canada, Alberta, we can leverage strategic, technical STEM thinking to decentralize NATO’s manufacturing capabilities and help diversify the manufacturing base of Boeing throughout the NATO member states.
Humanity will soon realize the magnitude of the 30+ dangers on the horizon from “The Great Filter,” as being larger in threat than even the nuclear powers of the East are.
Future Vision: With this in mind, and with the revelation that natural resources and high-quality, advanced energy systems are the key to “passing the Great Filter” period of 2020 to 2050, humanity might eventually choose a future of Pandemic Warfare and Electromagnetic Pulse Warfare (EMP) strikes instead of direct Nuclear Strike Options.
The goal would be the preservation of fertile arable land, fertile soil, valuable commodities, clean water, and access to elements and minerals needed for the full scope of futuristic civilization function.
There is some indication in Asian media of this strategy preference, possibly due to their desire to build the future and lack of tolerance for living in the past without technology that is based on preservation of commodity levels across the world and arable land quality (which happens if there is radiation over the natural ecosystem). A combination EMP/Pandemic/Cyber first strike preference seems to be a desired strategy on some Asian TV media.
In an era where the battlefields could be globally engulfed by skies filled with EMP strikes, and internet fragmentation towards barely functioning sub-component networks, creating resilient, distributed defense infrastructure is paramount.
The development of autonomous drones like the Loyal Wingman signifies a leap into the future of warfare, where AI and unmanned systems play crucial roles.
Australia’s early adoption and development of such technologies not only prepare it for next-generation warfare but also position it as a pioneer in shaping how integrated AI and human-piloted systems will operate on future battlefields.
A Call to Action: Let’s explore making Canada a key player in this visionary defense strategy, via a defense manufacturing upgrade to Canada (AI drone production, missile production, ship production, anti-ship missile production, fighter jet production), ensuring robustness, durability, endurance, resilience, and eternal resolve against the most advanced threats and the most extreme dangers imaginable.
‘When America is hit with a sky filled with a dozen to two dozen EMPs, one of the NATO factories in a different region will survive to rebuild Boeing, NATO, and the associated member states can rise as well from this entrenched revenue of this production of this distributed Boeing defense production system.’
This project is not just about building aircraft; it’s about crafting a vision for the future and sharing that ability to create and engineer and manufacture a future in decentralized way, should American expertise fall or be taken down— technologically advanced, economically robust, and strategically autonomous.
Canada, following in Australia’s footsteps, can become a cornerstone in this visionary defense strategy, ensuring resilience and innovation in an increasingly uncertain world.
Let’s champion this initiative to make Canada a cornerstone in the next era of global defense, embodying resilience and innovation.
Together with Boeing, we the STEM fighters and responsible citizens of Canada , can redefine aerospace excellence, STEM innovation, engineering the next generation civilization at home and abroad, and secure a future that navigates beyond the looming threats of our time and guards against emergent threats of the future.
‘Australia is setting a strong example by partnering with Boeing to domestically produce advanced Loyal Wingman drones, first time in 50 years+ that cutting-edge military tech is manufactured on Australian soil.’
Title: “Robot Fighter Jets Are Here – Meet Boeing’s Loyal Wingman Drone”
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Excellent Photo! Very inspirational! You are “bringing it home” now, with bringing the advanced aerospace technology (the helicopter) to Canadian audience! Your journey, with your blue executive cop suit, blue t-shirt and blue helicopter, and loyalty to the nation and to the people, reminds our design and marketing team of:
“Blue Thunder” film.“Blue Thunder” is a 1983 American action-thriller film directed by John Badham. The movie stars Roy Scheider as Frank Murphy, a Los Angeles police officer and helicopter pilot, who is assigned to test a new high-tech, heavily armed helicopter called Blue Thunder. The helicopter is equipped with advanced surveillance & combat capabilities, including powerful weaponry & sophisticated eavesdropping technology.”
“The plot centers around Murphy discovering a conspiracy involving the use of Blue Thunder for unauthorized surveillance & potential military applications against civilians. As Murphy digs deeper, he uncovers a plan by corrupt officials & military personnel to use the helicopter to suppress public dissent & enforce control. The film explores themes of government overreach (think censorship), the misuse of technology (think censorship), & the ethical dilemmas faced by those in positions of power (there’s quite a few here we know with who).”
“The climax of the movie involves Murphy using Blue Thunder to expose the conspiracy and prevent a potential atrocity. The film is noted for its impressive aerial sequences and the performance of Roy Scheider. It also reflects the concerns of the time about surveillance (AI, Big Data capture, phone) and the militarization of law enforcement (or say Big Tech against conservatives for politicians).”
Title: “They had the ultimate weapon, and the perfect plan, but Murphy stole their Thunder.” The trailer:“Blue Thunder 1983 Trailer HD | Roy Scheider | Warren Oates”https://youtu.be/1WAp0ABNta0?feature=shared