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The End of Killing

How Our Newest Technologies Can Solve Humanity's Oldest Problem

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The End of Killing

Written by: Rick Smith
Narrated by: Brian Troxell
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Technology will make killing a thing of the past.

The gun is antiquated technology, and it is responsible for tens of thousands of senseless killings every year. Humanity has accepted that killing is an unavoidable fact of life - but Rick Smith argues that it doesn’t need to be this way and that we have the means to make the bullet obsolete in our lifetime.

Smith is the founder of TASER (now Axon), and in this book, he demonstrates that we are on the cusp of a world in which killing is neither required nor acceptable. That change won't come by way of stricter gun control laws. No, what holds us back from making an overdue and necessary shift in how we think about weapons is our skepticism about new technologies and their potential.

Smith has devoted his career to understanding why and how we kill each other. In The End of Killing, he reviews the history of weaponry and warfare as well as the latest technologies in crowd control, surveillance, and artificial intelligence. He delves into the big, thorny questions about how technology is creating more tools for police, homeland security, and military, and offering more options for our personal safety and our justice system. With clarity and conviction, he challenges the conventional wisdom on these subjects, showing how technologies that appear strange and scary at first can be the key to making the gun a relic of the past.

In our current impasse of dead-end debates about gun violence and police brutality, Smith offers us a clear roadmap into a safer future. Thought-provoking, insightful, and controversial, The End of Killing will make you reconsider the violent world you inhabit - and imagine the safer world on the horizon.

©2019 Rick Smith (P)2019 Rick Smith
21st Century Violence in Society Surveillance Artificial Intelligence Thought-Provoking
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Corporate Noble Cause

Rick Smith’s “The End of Killing” is a story about reasons. It is not a story about how the TASER device and Axon developed as products so much as it is about the evolution of the company and Smith’s desire to legitimately see the world be a better, safer place.

Why have we as society not evolved past developing more effective ways of killing each other to finding ways to not kill but still effectively and efficiently deliver public safety and military intervention?

Smith delves into some of the controversy around his company, the challenges they faced and his visions about what the future holds.

I highly recommend this book if you are interested in technology as a solution for things that one wouldn’t normally associate technology with.

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