I hate to sound jaded, but living in Baltimore, I hear about a lot of shootings. And it kind of just becomes noise after a while⦠at least until it happens at a school. [Outsider Club Header]
Jan 13, 2023 By Jason Simpkins for the Outsider Club Hereâs How We Stop the Shootings I hate to sound jaded, but living in Baltimore, I hear about a lot of shootings. And it kind of just becomes noise after a while. At least until it happens at a school. Unfortunately, school shootings have become devastatingly routine on a national level. Yet they never cease to disgust. That was the case for me last week when a double shooting sent a Baltimore high school into lockdown. In that instance, both a 15-year-old girl and a 16-year-old boy were shot behind a local high school. Thankfully, both survived. But disturbingly, they were also just two of seven teenagers shot within the span of a week. This is frustrating. Itâs a demoralizing problem to have â both locally and nationally. Thatâs why I continue to hold out hope for solutions. And mercifully, one may be around the corner. You see, for the past five years Iâve been researching technologies that could help solve this problem. One such solution includes camera technology thatâs capable of scanning people for weapons, as well as AI-based facial recognition. It has 500 types of weapons in its database. It can tell if youâre carrying a gun, knife, or even a bomb. And it can compare a personâs face with a database of known terrorists or criminals. [VSBLTY school shooter cut] As such, it can thwart a terrorist attack before it even begins. The technology has already been tapped to provide security solutions at high-profile events like the Super Bowl, the Rose Bowl, concerts, billion-dollar boat shows, and Silicon Valley technology conferences. And no one even knew it. The New Emperor of Energy Storage Youâre looking at the future of a $3.3 trillion industry. Thanks to this groundbreaking innovation, clean energy can be fed to the power grid 24/7... Regardless of whether the sun is shining or the wind is blowing. I call it the "Newton Battery," and it crushes every other battery on the market. The Swiss and the Saudis are already using it. And grids across the globe will be using this battery before we know it. Itâs all possible thanks to one tiny companyâs patented tech. The best part is that 99% of investors have no idea that it just went public... [Get in on the ground floor now, before it's too late.]( However, not everyone is comfortable with facial recognition technology â especially when it comes to children and schools. And if thatâs the case, thatâs fine, because another technology Iâve looked into uses a different type of body-scanning technology that is more akin to airport body scanners. In fact, the guys who invented those spinning cylinders many of us pass through on our way to catch a flight have invented a new, more advanced, more efficient body scanner. It also uses AI and machine learning to detect things like 3D-printed guns, plastic explosives, and ceramic knives â all things that would evade your run-of-the-mill metal detector. Better still, if thereâs any kind of contraband that authorities are on the lookout for, this technology can be programmed to find it. Road flares, for example, which are now being used to disrupt sporting matches. Or bottles of alcohol being smuggled into a stadium or onto a cruise ship. I even flew out to the companyâs headquarters near Boston to see it firsthand. [Hexwave Demonstration] So I can tell you itâs extremely efficient. You donât have to take your jacket off or put your purse down. All it takes is a momentary pause as you pass through. That may seem somewhat trivial, but when hundreds of students, or tens of thousands of people, are attempting to pass through a security checkpoint, the 30â60 seconds that get saved add up to hours of reduced wait time. New Robot Has Tech Execs Scrambling You might not believe this is even real, but I assure you this video has been left unedited. Nearly every tech company in the world is scrambling to get its hands on this tech. And investors are set to profit handsomely. Get the details on [our Top 3 Stocks Picks here.]( These are the kinds of solutions that I think will end up being deployed. Theyâre practical and implementable in a way other solutions (like arming teachers and having one door) are not. They also skirt neatly around the Second Amendment debate, which is an absolute quagmire. Perhaps thatâs why technology like this is already being deployed in schools. Indeed, Atlanta Public Schools spent $2.6 million on the technology last year. And if you ask officials, itâs been well worth the money. Teachers and administrators no longer have to check every bag, and students donât have to queue up in long lines to be intrusively searched. I also know this is gaining traction because I passed through similar scanners on my way to a Sunday night football game last September. So thereâs a real opportunity here â not just to make money but to end one of our most horrifying national nightmares. Thatâs why Iâm proud to cover technologies like these in my Secret Stock Files investment service, where I investigate all manners of defense and security tech. You can [find out more about that here](, if youâre interested. Fight on, [Jason Simpkins Signature] Jason Simpkins [follow basic]([@OCSimpkins on Twitter]( Jason Simpkins is Assistant Managing Editor of the Outsider Club and Investment Director of Wall Street's Proving Ground, a financial advisory focused on security companies and defense contractors. For more on Jason, check out his editor's [page](. *Follow Outsider Club on [Facebook]( and [Twitter](. Follow the Outsiders [Twitter]( | [Facebook]( | [LinkedIn]( | [YouTube]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. 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