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this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2026
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This is coordinated. Multiple states at the same time.
I don’t think it has anything to do with guns. Middle of the bell curve, most people aren’t using these for guns. They’re using these for right to repair. They’re using these for garage businesses. Shop businesses. Small businesses. (See: not corporate USA). Or for making/creatimg.
I’ve no doubt there are people sitting on some small slice of a tail on the bell curve who do print gun parts, but this is about corporate America.
It’s also a foot in the door dig on free and open source software.
It’s a way to block individual and small business from horning in on corporate America’s profit for a comparably tiny slice of their own.
Printing a knob to replace a broken on/off switch instead of buying a whole new item? Worse, selling that item or even just posting the pattern for free? We can’t have that.
Now, you’re bypassing my item’s proprietary system by printing…
Wait. I was able to sell threaded hand screw knobs for $5 each. Now you’re all just printing them? And the pattern is up there for free?
We need a law.
Great points, I think you're on to something.
I think the old saying "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity" doesn't apply when malice and corporate interests are in alignment. Now I'm curious to dig into who actually wrote the bill, and who are they financially supported by...
Given the open source bit, probably Microsoft.Linux is encroaching on home computing, Libre on office.
Whomever owns the biggest shares in arts, crafts, woodworking, etc. You’re supposed to buy the supply and end it there. Not seek profit.
It is nothing less than, I say without exaggeration, a war on property rights as a whole.
You shall buy, not produce. Have your crafts, but don’t get entrepreneurial with it.
"Have your crafts"
You mean, "Buy materials from the big chain craft store, where ten beads will run you $5."