Future Fictions Lab : Reverse-Engineering Tomorrow
In The Future of Violence, Benjamin Wittes and Gabriella Blum examine how technological proliferation has decentralized the capacity for mass destruction, moving it from the hands of states to individuals and small groups. The authors highlight how emerging tools in biotech, robotics, and cyberwarfare allow remote actors to threaten global security with unprecedented anonymity. This shift creates a distribution of vulnerability where traditional borders and legal frameworks no longer provide adequate protection. Consequently, the text argues that private corporations must increasingly act as security partners because they control the essential platforms and technical expertise that governments now lack. To manage these omnidirectional threats, the authors suggest a redefined social contract that integrates private sector defense with international legal cooperation. Ultimately, the work serves as a warning that modern liberty depends on finding new ways to regulate a world where anyone can strike from anywhere.
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