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Cake day: April 10th, 2025

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  • Yeah, precisely.

    There are actually quite a lot of regulations, in not all, but a lot of US states, that mandate varying levels of safe storage of firearms.

    The problem is that to actually enforce that fully, you’d basically need surprise food inspectors, but for guns… which would probably run into the 4th Amendment… or, you’d have to actually revamp the 2nd Ammendment to mandate that people be required to regularly retake/retest on some kind of firearm safety course… I dunno.

    But yeah, an actually responsible gun owner… probably has something like a dedicated sand bucket to point a semi auto weapon into, while they are verifying that its fully unloaded and cleared, juuuuust in case some kind of uncommanded discharge happens when you’re racking the slide to get the (potentially) chambered round out.

    And yeah, never sweep anybody (or a place where anybody could be, within a mile) even with a gun you personally just unloaded. Never finger a trigger when you don’t need to. You just don’t do that.

    I would at least say its possible the dog discharged the weapon, but it doesn’t matter, the situation where that is a thing that can happen should never have been allowed to arise… and yeah, the situations you describe that lead to an ND occuring are much more likely.














  • Its almost certainly part of the ongoing lawsuit Valve is having with New York.

    NY AG claims (among other things) that Valve knows their Steam Wallets and Steam Items and giftcards form part of a system which allow the proceeds of alleged gambling to be converted into real world money, and that Valve doesn’t do enough to stop this.

    Valve claims they do their best to find and shutdown secondary markets (which are against their TOS) that facilitate that, and well now they’re just pulling the plug on another part of that loop, where all of it has to exist for all of NY AG’s claims to be true.


  • 1] Makes sense, just in general.

    2] Makes more sense, when these gift cards are a part of the case they’re currently fighting in New York.

    If the gift cards … stop physically existing as potential ‘money’… well then that somewhat weakens the idea that Valve is pemitting the proceeds of alleged gambling to be functionally redeemable as a valuable physical object / semi-money.

    Another whole big angle of the New York AG’s case is that Valve has just known the secondary market for Steam Items and Steam Giftcards exists, and has done nothing about it.

    They’ve previously countered that they take secondary markets seriously and have put a considerable deal of effort into finding and shutting those down, and well now, if they’re also just pulling the plug on physical cards, that further makes them look like they’re not just belligerently and openly refusing to comply with the law.



  • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.comto196@lemmy.blahaj.zonerule
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    1 day ago

    Yeah, being in the physically most prominent role, and being in the mentally dominant role… not the same thing.

    You could also be a ‘power bottom’, where you’re receiving, but you’re mentally and physically dominant in the encounter.

    You could also basically be bullied into being a ‘service bottom’, though I’m not sure that’s a widely used phrase.

    Also, if you were doing something like cowgirl, as a service bottom… well you’d physically be on top of them.

    You see this is all very straightforward and not at all confusing.