Titus has my respect and admiration as a successful businessman, visionary, and now writer. The book is written in a style I very much like: paragraphs that run for three sentences, and sentences that take 3 seconds to read out loud.
The book starts at the very basics of the leviathan state, and is somewhat anarcho-capitalist in its first quarter: describing the failures of equity and ethics brought forward by the existing governance paradigm.
Titus then brings forward the moral case for the cessation of the leviathan-state, which is done competently and deserves no special mention.
The part I especially appreciated concerned the implementation of this world made up of voluntary societies by contract, which is profound enough that I'd simply say it garners a read. I'll be doing a several books from my professional sphere soon, and this one is a great starting point.
8/10