BluesStringer
Les Brers
I have been following this convoluted post. From what I can see, everyone has a right to be stupid. Let me give some examples; it is perfectly legal to crawl under a car that is jacked up on a wobbly bumper jack, it is perfectly legal to ride a bicycle on a heavily trafficked two lane road that has no shoulder, It is perfectly legal to store your gun anywhere you please, even in a tissue box. There are people that do these things every day, there are even people that carry their gun stuck in their belt sans holster. The real benefit of these actions is to the gene pool. Darwin is right.
Then you absolutely have not been "following" this thread. No one is arguing against good safety practices. The main argument is that there shouldn't be any laws mandating that a "one-size-fits-all" set of practices be imposed upon those of us whose individual circumstances don't get anywhere near fitting the set of circumstances that started the argument, and which any law would ostensibly be intended to address, which was:
This is how kids get access to guns. Keep it on your person or in a locked safe.
To which the following and others of the same gist replied:
I have no kids, no kids ever are in my house. Something like the tissue box might work for me, if it held together well.
To which was bleated:
You don't have to 'have kids' for a kid to get your gun.
Which, after a couple of back-and-forths led to this mistaken statement, which was repeated several times right up until this nonsense was posted about 4:30 this morning after my making multiple postings with absolute proof of its inaccuracy:
Strict Scrutiny is what struck down the Chicago handgun ban: The Heller Decision and Strict Scrutiny - The Truth About Guns
I'm not reading the rest of your post as you clearly do not know what you're talking about.
And in fact, even the link he offered to make his non-point was actually just another proof of what I've been trying to tell him all along - he's 100% wrong about strict scrutiny ever having been applied to the Second Amendment in any level of federal appeals courts, including the Supreme Court, until the Fourth Circuit just did so for the first time in the history of history just two days ago, February 4, 2016 in the case of Kolbe v. O’Malley, 42 F. Supp. 3d 768 (D. Md. 2014).
As you say, the tissue box storage method, just like the other potentially unsafe practices you mentioned, are all perfectly legal, so why this guy brings up strict scrutiny and court rulings etc. in relation to the tissue box can only mean he wants a law that will impose his ideas about safe storage on the rest of us for whom no safety issue exists because we either don't have kids, or if we do they're grown and responsible enough to be trusted around a loaded tissue box, or we never have children visit our homes, or any combination thereof, and that is what this "convoluted" post has morphed into being about because the guy won't admit that he is mistaken about an extremely important and significant matter of law regarding our rights to keep arms by any damn method we choose within our own homes.
With all of the last paragraph in mind, there is also no "gene pool" or Darwinian issue involved with storing weapons unlocked in one's own home when they don't have kids and none ever visit, because it's no more of a threat of spontaneous discharge while it's leaning in a corner within reach from your bed, or sitting on your night-stand, or on your kitchen table, than it poses the threat of spontaneous discharge while holstered on your belt or locked away in a safe. It's really a rather ridiculous assertion to be frank.
Besides that, Darwin was wrong about a lot of things.
Blues