UNDERSTANDING TASERS
The family of weapons currently manufactured by Axon Incorporated known as the TASERs have been around since the 1980s and have been evolving since then.
The term came from “Thomas A. Swift’s Electric Rifle” in the related book, published in 1911, which was a fanciful weapon foreshadowing the “blaster” of contemporary science fiction.
The first model was invented by a NASA engineer, with limited market. In the 1990s the brand was revitalized, and eventually gave us the models we associate with the “TASER” name today.
Law enforcement was the original user of the TASER, but the many practical limitations on the nature of the devices prevented their widespread use for first responders. The one those of us in law enforcement were really “waiting for” showed up around 2003 in the form of the Taser X26.
The system in that highly portable weapon produces an effect on the target person that we call “NMI” or “neuro-muscular incapacitation” in which the electrical currents going between the probes painfully lock up the muscles near the skin, stimulating both sensory and motor nerves at the same time. This drops a person like the proverbial sack of potatoes—after the French Fry cutter.

Getting overwhelmed or misled by our emotions can be a source of significant trouble. Emotions are not simple, but sometimes there are simple actions we can take to manage complex things.











