You are (of course) entitled to your opinion. That being said, I've seen it enough to know it happens. It's all about stacking tolerances. Some dies (with press, and shell holder) will let you bump the shoulder too far back. It's also the reason, radical wildcat case forming involves seating a bullet into the lands when the formed case shoulder is either small or a guestimate. (.17 Ackley Hornet comes to mind, with it's false shoulder in an un-fireformed case.)I'm not convinced that the case shoulder can be set back so far with standard dies as to cause a weak or inconsistent primer strike. Think how much the firing pin actually protrudes.
If it was possible for the firing pin to drive the case forward so much clear of the boltface as to result in a partial strike, then I think there would be a dangerous headspace condition.
Rifles could then be blowing up all over the place, so sorry just not buying this at all.
The case may fail, but likely what happens is it has case head separation on the 2nd or 3rd reloading. Cartridge brass is pretty ductile when new and annealed, and will allow for a lot of user error when reloading.
As far as excessive headspace, well, excessive headspace doesn't imply (automatically) a catastrophic failure. Rather, it describes a condition. One that may, or may not, be dangerous. That may, or may not, cause the receiver to fail in holding in that spike of pressure.
But as I said, everyone is entitled to their own opinion; even if it's wrong. <shrug>
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