Lockheed Memes

Posts tagged with Lockheed

The Military-Industrial Show And Tell

The Military-Industrial Show And Tell
Engineering students discovering the military-industrial complex is like watching a toddler learn Santa isn't real. That professor's face screams "I've been teaching fluid dynamics for 30 years and all these kids care about is which defense contractor has the best retirement package." Nothing says "I've given up on pure science" quite like the weekly Lockheed Martin recruitment slideshow disguised as a class presentation. The academic-to-weapons-developer pipeline is so normalized we don't even pretend to be shocked anymore.

We Get It, You Like Feeling Like A Bad Boy...

We Get It, You Like Feeling Like A Bad Boy...
The eternal struggle of the STEM graduate - watching friends debate the ethics of defense contractors while secretly checking Lockheed's salary packages. Nothing says "moral flexibility" quite like condemning military-industrial complexes until you see their benefits package. The real quantum superposition is holding anti-war values while simultaneously calculating how many missiles you'd need to design to pay off those student loans.

Ethics Leaving The Chat

Ethics Leaving The Chat
Behold the classic ethical dilemma of engineering careers! That glowing soul leaving the body represents the exact moment when six-figure salaries vaporize those pesky moral objections about designing weapons. One minute you're all "I want to build sustainable infrastructure" and the next you're like "So this missile needs HOW MANY guidance systems?" Amazing how quickly principles dissolve when confronted with premium health insurance and a matching 401k. The defense industry knows exactly what they're doing with those compensation packages - turns out ethics are surprisingly affordable to purchase!

Idealism To War Machine: The Engineering Pipeline

Idealism To War Machine: The Engineering Pipeline
The idealism-to-reality pipeline of engineering careers is brutally accurate here! First-year students enter with dreams of changing the world, designing renewable energy or life-saving medical devices. Fast forward four years and suddenly they're designing targeting systems for defense contractors because that's where the fat paychecks live. The transformation from bright-eyed Spider-Man to brooding dark Spider-Man perfectly captures that moment when you realize your engineering degree is most valuable to companies that go boom. Lockheed Martin's recruitment team is definitely taking notes right now.