From “Drones as War” to “Drones as Everyday Life”
02 April 2026

From “Drones as War” to “Drones as Everyday Life”

*“Yesterday, I Went to Mars ♡”*

About

Here’s a calm, concise version for a podcast description:

This episode reflects on how the image of drones is changing.

For many people, drones have recently been associated with war—footage from Ukraine or the Middle East, where they are used for precise, remote actions. That perception has become quite strong.

But a recent story offers a different perspective. In the UK, drones are increasingly being used to smuggle items into prisons—delivering drugs, phones, and other goods directly to cell windows, almost like a delivery service.

This highlights something important. Drones are no longer special or rare technology. They are accessible, relatively easy to use, and capable of bypassing traditional physical boundaries simply by operating in the air.

Many systems around us were designed with ground-based assumptions. As drones become more common, those assumptions start to break down.

What we may be moving toward is not just a world where drones exist, but one where they are part of the basic infrastructure—similar to how the internet evolved over time.

The key difference is that drones operate in the physical world. They move objects, not just information. That makes them both useful and, in some cases, more complex to manage.

In that sense, the use of drones in warfare and in everyday situations may be part of the same broader shift—one that is already quietly underway.