It was a lot less rapey in the show than in the book. Still rapey, though, yes
It was a lot less rapey in the show than in the book. Still rapey, though, yes
I really think a gun safety class should be required to own a firearm. However, I also see how that would violate the second amendment (by making it harder for those of lesser means to exercise their right to own a weapon because they do not have the same resources available to take a class).
I think that as long as we have the second amendment, we should be offering taxpayer-funded firearm safety courses in all states. And requiring them.
Gun storage requirements vary dramatically from one state to the next.
As an American gun owner, I would not give them the benefit of the doubt. There’s no reason they couldn’t have secured their weapon or–even better–not had one in the house where their mentally troubled son lived. There’s absolutely no excuse for him having had access to that firearm.
I agree that the company shares some blame, but ultimately it comes down to the fact that they gave this kid access to a gun, knowing full well that he had mental health issues.
This is a really sad story, but it’s also a story of parental neglect. Why did this kid with mental health issues have unrestricted internet access? Why did he have access to his stepfather’s gun?
Those aren’t the fault of some chatbot.
Something is really wrong if you need to lock up your kitchen knives.
Also, in the books, her first night with Khal Drogo is him raping her.
That person was reporting their experience. It’s not false that they have not seen it. I haven’t, either.
I’m not willing to have to reduce my power usage so someone else can live in a desert. If it’s uninhabitable, people shouldn’t live there.
It was Vancouver, Washington and Portland, Oregon. Heavily blue areas closely surrounded by heavily right areas.