Rand Paul is the Senate's foremost drone critic, but it seems he's finally found a kind of drone he can live with.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., reacted to a France 24 story – also highlighted on the Drudge Report – of a drone that delivers beer to thirsty customers.
The flying booze robot drops a customer beer on a parachute after clients place an order using a smartphone app.
“Perhaps I am not against ALL drones!” Paul noted on Twitter, linking to the article.
Here's more detail from France 24:
AFP - Revellers at a South African outdoor rock festival no longer need to queue to slake their thirst -- a flying robot will drop them beer by parachute.
After clients place an order using a smartphone app, a drone zooms 15 metres (50 feet) above the heads of the festival-goers to make the delivery.
Carel Hoffmann, director of the Oppikoppi festival held on a dusty farm in the country's northern Limpopo province, said the app registers the position of users using the GPS satellite chips on their phones.
"The delivery guys have a calibrated delivery drone. They send it to the GPS position and drops it with a parachute," he explained.
The drone was built in South Africa and nicknamed "Manna" after the Old Testament-story of bread that fell from the sky to feed the Israelites travelling through the desert following their exodus from Egypt.
"It's an almost Biblical thing that beer is dropping from the sky," said Hoffmann.
The beer, free at this stage, is dropped in plastic cups and the drone is performing well.
"Every time it drops a parachute a crowd of 5,000 cheers," he said.
It's truly refreshing to see this deadly piece of 21st-century military technology being used for such a benevolent purpose. Maybe President Obama should rethink his drone program to include free beer delivery. Now that's domestic surveillance we can all get behind.