There are people in America who don’t believe in the Constitution. Some disagree with certain sections of the document while others believe the entire Constitution to be antiquated and not relevant to modern society. One part that draws considerable interest is the Second Amendment (2A).
Today in America we have a major political party, that will not be named, that leans in a direction, that also will not be named, that would like to see the Second Amendment abolished. Fortunately, only a small, very vocal minority of Americans support that view, so the Second Amendment is likely safe. The strategy now however is not to attack the Second Amendment directly but to chip away at it with gun-control laws so that the 2A eventually becomes meaningless.
One recent example is the push for a federal safe storage law. Anti-2A politicians often use tragedies as a pretext to propose or implement new gun-control laws. One recent example is a bill introduced by Representative Elissa Slotkin (D-MI-8). Slotkin uses the recent Oxford High School shooting where the parents of the shooter are being charged with allowing the minor shooter access to the gun used in the crime as a pretext for her proposed safe storage law. My colleague John Petrolino provides an excellent analysis of the law proposed by Slotkin and examines her reasoning.
California has long been an incubator of bad legislative ideas that spread to other unfortunate states throughout the country. In California our politicians don’t need a tragedy as an excuse to create ineffective and harmful gun-control laws, they just go forth and create.
In 2019 the City of San Diego passed a safe gun storage ordinance. The Safe Storage of Firearms Ordinance requires that any guns in a residence be stored in an approved locked container, or disabled by a trigger lock, unless they are carried on the body or are in the immediate control of an authorized user.
Not to be outdone, the San Diego County Board of Supervisors led by the feckless (one without feck) Nathan Fletcher (D-4) is currently adopting a safe storage ordinance modeled on the one from the City of San Diego. These ordinances are both ineffective and harmful. To understand why, consider the following:
- The ordinance is unenforceable. It intends to control the behavior of citizens within the privacy of their homes. Most gun owners are responsible and store their firearms such that they are inaccessible to minors and others who are not authorized. People who are irresponsible are not going to change their behavior because of a city or county ordinance.
- It is already illegal in California (CA Penal Code 25100) to store firearms in such a way as to allow access by minors or other unauthorized persons. If a child obtains your improperly stored firearm and harms themselves or others, expect to be arrested, charged, and prosecuted.
- Many people have firearms for home defense. A firearm intended for home defense that is locked, made inoperable, or stored in a safe is useless. Adults need to be able to manage the safe storage of firearms based on their unique circumstances. Parents with young children will handle and store firearms differently than a single adult female living alone or a retired couple.
Handling and storage of firearms in the home is the responsibility of the gun owner and is of no concern to the government. Safe storage laws are both unnecessary and potentially harmful. These laws, like most gun-control laws, are not intended to increase public safety or decrease crime but only to impede legal gun ownership by law-abiding citizens. At best they’re nothing more than virtue signaling, at worst they are harmful and dangerous to the public.
The most productive thing gun owners and all citizens can do is to educate themselves and others, get involved and prevent politicians like Elissa Slotkin and Nathan Fletcher from being elected to office in the first place.
The right to self-defense is a basic human right. Gun ownership is an integral part of that right. If you want to keep your rights defend them by joining San Diego County Gun Owners (SDCGO) in San Diego, Orange County Gun Owners (OCGO) in Orange County, and Inland Empire Gun Owners (IEGO) in the Inland Empire. Support the cause by listening to Gun Owners Radio live on Sunday afternoon or on the internet at your leisure. Join the fight and help us restore and preserve our second amendment rights. Together we will win.
©2022 Joseph T Drammissi
This article and more of Joe’s work covering the Second Amendment and other topics can be found on Substack at https://getagrip.substack.com
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