
u/piberryboy

Asked my artistic daughter to create the letter to invite the group to dine with him.
Discord among the group; they kind of blame me.
Some of the members of our group are salty at one member of the group and they complain to me a lot behind his back.
The person upsetting the others would declare that he was doing something without consulting the rest. At first, I would go along with what he wanted. But as people complained, I started pausing to allow objections or alternatives. Sometimes I even going as far to say, "we good?" Seems to have fixed that.
But then people got salty again because this person, a magic user, was vacuuming up all the magic items. Now they want me to fix it. I guess it does seem somewhat broken, so I'm going to limit his speed as hes encumbered by carrying all these items. But they're salty about his wife, who's character can stealth and thereby come across items first through investigation.
They tell me they feel if I gave them a bag of holding, it would allow them to make communal all the loot, as it would all go in there. I kind of feel like it would cheapen the story just to give them a bag of holding, because they asked. But on the other hand, I could give them one after a particularly hard session. I don't know.
A part of me wants to just tell them to figure out their own shit. Groups dynamics sometimes require massaging, just like in real life.
Funny enough, my Christian friends introduced me to it.
Sometimes it feels like, some god is watching me!
How an atheist candidate survived intense right-wing religious attacks
FERAL HOUSE LAUNCHES A CHANNEL ON TSTTV
‘Hail Satan’ invocation triggers debate about prayer in public meetings
reviewjournal.comYou cannot update core-recommend today because of a security advisory from Symfony
A patch is in the works: https://www.drupal.org/project/drupal/issues/3592065
A win for religious puralism
A ruling that ordered Arkansas to remove its Ten Commandments monument from the state Capitol also found the state violated the Satanic Temple’s 14th Amendment Equal Protection rights. After Arkansas installed the monument in 2018, the Satanic Temple offered its 7.5-foot bronze Baphomet statue for equal placement on Capitol grounds. The Arkansas legislature responded by passing emergency legislation halting the public comment period for all new monument proposals — effectively shielding the Ten Commandments from any religious competition. U.S. Chief District Judge Kristine Baker ruled this maneuver denied the Satanic Temple equal constitutional standing.
The ruling is stayed pending Arkansas’s appeal to the 8th Circuit, but its Equal Protection logic is significant: it affirms that non-Christian and non-mainstream religious groups have the same access rights to government-controlled public spaces as majority faiths. Legal analysts note the ruling could have implications for secularist and minority faith organizations nationwide who seek equal treatment in the public square and government-managed display spaces — a constitutional principle that applies equally to atheists, humanists, and any group the state might otherwise exclude from forums it opens to majority religious expression.
Sources: The Satanic Temple (April 2026); Reason Magazine (April 2026); Bloomberg Law (April 2026)