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Has Trump handled the coronavirus crisis correctly?

Hello!Trump made the coronavirus catastrophe dramatically worse, and he must not be allowed to play conquering hero!Donald Trump, reality-TV phony to his core and life-long carrier of the moronavirus, clearly believes all he needs to do to erase his almost unfathomable levels of failure and stupidity that have led to the coronavirus crisis is to play-act being a resolute leader on the teevee. Having spent weeks denying, minimizing and outright lying about the coronavirus threat, Trump now seizes live airtime every day to preen about what a strong and capable leader he is — and also to present himself as the biggest victim of this crisis, even as people die and millions find their jobs are threatened — even as he does nothing consequential but tweet, lie and boost his own ego. MSNBC’s Morning Joe levels Trump for whining about his money instead of leading pandemic responseTrump's commitment to being seen as the conquering hero (while doing as little as possible) is a result of his bottomless narcissism, of course. New York Times White House reporter Maggie Haberman indicated on CNN that Trump took over the daily coronavirus task force briefings from Vice President Mike Pence because he was jealous of all the attention Pence was getting. Gabriel Sherman of Vanity Fair also noted on MSNBC that his White House sources say Trump "has been furious and frustrated at New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has been holding these very widely well-received early morning press conferences" — because, of course, Trump sees it as stealing his precious spotlight. Trump is ‘furious’ with New York Gov. Cuomo because his pandemic press conferences 'sort of hijacked the news cycle': sourcesThere's good reason to fear that Trump's reality-TV simulacrum of a competent leader is working to fool Americans. His approval rating has jumped, hitting almost 50% in the latest Gallup poll, which is as high it's ever been. Indeed,polling repeatedly shows the majority of Americans believe Trump is doing a great job handling this crisis. President Trump's Job Approval Rating Up to 49%He isn't. On the contrary, Trump is largely to blame for the horrific situation we now face, where the disease is spreading rapidly and the economy is tanking. As difficult as the task may be, especially with so much else going on, it is critical that journalists and activists do everything in their power to remind the public that the only reason the situation is so bad is that Trump screwed up.The biggest screw-up that caused this situation was Trump's belief that any problem can be made to go away by simply lying about it and denying it. To that end, he did everything he could to hide the fact that the coronavirus had already reached the U.S. — and by trying to hide the problem, he allowed the virus to spread unchecked through the population. Now it's too late to do anything but embrace drastic lockdown procedures nationwide, which are grinding the economy to a halt and, likely kickstarting what will amount to another Great Depression. Trump wants to play-act the hero, but don't forget: This crisis is his faultThe sheer number of lies Trump told to bamboozle the public — and the markets — into thinking coronavirus was no big deal is too large to list in detail, though the New York Times published a lengthy breakdown last week. He promised it would "work out well" in January and suggested that a vaccine would be available shortly (at best, it's next year). Throughout February, Trump promised that the virus "miraculously goes away" and said that "the numbers are going to get progressively better" (they have been getting progressively worse). In March, he was continuing to call it "mild" and saying "I'm not concerned at all." Opinion | A Complete List of Trump’s Attempts to Play Down CoronavirusHe told these lies despite the fact that, as various reports have showed, intelligence services had been briefing him about the threat of coronavirus for months. Instead of trusting his own intelligence reports that the Chinese government was covering up the extent of the viral spread, the Washington Post reported, Trump instead chose to believe the notoriously dishonest President Xi Jinping of China, thanking Xi for his "transparency."China has been working very hard to contain the Coronavirus. The United States greatly appreciates their efforts and transparency. It will all work out well. In particular, on behalf of the American People, I want to thank President Xi!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 24, 2020Meanwhile, South Korea was swinging into action, instituting a plan to corral the spread of the virus without facing the economic devastation of a lockdown. That nation has 50 million people and is one of the most densely populated in the world, and yet was able to dramatically slow the spread of the disease without much curtailment of people's freedom. The key, according to Science magazine, was the institution of widespread testing that allowed doctors to focus resources and quarantine efforts on people who were already infected, instead of locking people at home and crippling the economy. Coronavirus cases have dropped sharply in South Korea. What’s the secret to its success?While Italy has seen the coronavirus run rampant, the small town that was the center of the nation’s outbreak has managed to curb its spread by implementing mass testing. Testing on that scale is not possible in a country as big as the U.S., but these results show that the major restrictions and huge economic impacts could have been much reduced with a strategic approach that involved mass testing instead of treating everyone like a potential vector. Subscribe to read | Financial TimesBut Trump quite obviously didn't want mass testing, and seemed to believe he could hide the spread of the disease by preventing any measurements of it. As Politico reporter Dan Diamond told NPR, Trump did "not push to do aggressive additional testing in recent weeks" because "more testing might have led to more cases being discovered of coronavirus outbreak," and Trump believed "the lower the numbers on coronavirus, the better for the president." Report: Trump Dropped the Ball on Coronavirus Testing Because He Only Wanted Good NewsWhat happened instead is that we have no idea how many cases there are in the U.S., but we know for sure it's a lot more than what's being counted — almost certainly orders of magnitude larger. Because there's no way to know, people are in a panic and governments are shutting down most public-facing businesses, grinding the economy to a halt. Trump continues to lie, claiming tests are easily available. In reality, they continue to be rationed across the country, so there's no telling how long it will be until it's safe to return to normal.The US is now on pace to have the worst coronavirus outbreak anywhere... pic.twitter.com/GgtcF4788J— Mark MacKinnon (@markmackinnon) March 25, 2020"What's happening here, in this country, was avoidable," the Atlantic explained in an analysis of this disaster. "Nearly every flaw in America's response to the virus has one source: America did not test enough people for COVID-19." How the Coronavirus Became an American CatastropheEven though Trump's pathological lying is the principal cause of this disaster, he hasn't backed off this lie-all-the-time strategy. He has started claiming there's an effective treatment using drugs that have potentially severe side effects, even though there's as yet no scientific evidence for this claim. (One person has already died due to taking Trump's advice.) He's making noises about "reopening" the economy by Easter, even though he has no authority to do this and there's no reason to believe the crisis will anywhere near contained by then. He repeatedly promises help is on the way— in the form of naval ships, a testing website, medical supplies and increased testing — even though his administration has in fact done almost nothing to provide those things. Fact-Checking 5 Trump Administration Claims On The Coronavirus Pandemic and Man dead after trying to create Trump's coronavirus miracle drug from household cleanerThe Senate has passed a bill earlier today, despite Republican efforts to make it a giveaway to the already-rich, appears to get direct aid to people who need it. That should help, but it won't make this crisis disappear. We're still facing widespread infection, many deaths and catastrophic levels of unemployment. https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/03/26/senate-trump-coronavirus-economic-stimulus-2-trillion/Trump will try to use this crisis to position himself as a strong leader guiding his people through a difficult time. He must not be allowed to do this. None of this would be nearly as bad if he wasn't a sociopathic monster who from the beginning was more interested in concealing the crisis than fighting the virus. This crisis is Trump's fault, and it is the duty of the media and activists and Democratic politicians to remind the public of this every single day until the election. If we still get to have one…Thank you Amanda Marcotte (@AmandaMarcotte) | Twitter

What is it really like to live in the heart of a big city like NYC, where it's always busy and crowded? Is it exciting or can it be suffocating sometimes?

1980s New York CityIn general, New York is a nice big city (really big city) and is constantly expanding and reinventing itself. It's expensive, noisy, crowded, fast-paced and harsh during the peaks of summer and winter. New York City has five boroughs, and a variety of neighborhoods, so while it’s likely that nearly everyone could find some suitable area, it still won’t be right for everyone. New York exists at a double speed. Everything here is a little faster, a little more hectic, and people try to fit more things into a day than in many other places. It’s probably not a good fit for a very laid back person. For me, it’s always interesting, which is worth a great deal. But New York is not for the weak of heart, the weak of mind or the weak of body. But she's also very beautiful. That's for sure. New York’s full of life and adventure, there's always something to do, the people are strong and they speak their mind, there's the best transportation- unlike most places, you don't even need a car because the subway can take you everywhere for one price - and there's so much diversity and culture everywhere. And there's this strange comfort to be living in New York, knowing that there's millions of people there and there's ALWAYS noise and something going on. No matter what time it is, there's people out, and that makes you feel safe. Also, restaurants and stores are open till very late at night, many even 24 hours, and that's great in case you ever want to have a pizza or watch a movie at midnight. There's not many places that are open as late like in NY. Let's just say that Manhattan is the gold standard for a diverse and exciting life. It is the best place to work and make good money. But it can overwhelm one. I consider it necessary to have a place outside of Manhattan to go to for the best living experience. Conn , Hudson River Valley, Hamptons, Jersey Shore, Poconos, Adirondacks or any other green place has to be the yang to your Manhattan ying or vice versa.The city was completely different in the 1980s. Much scarier than it is today. The city where greed was good that captured the grit, grime and glamour of 1980s. New York in the 1980s was an altogether different city from the safe, clean (for the most part), cosmopolitan urban playground it is today. It wasn't nearly as safe as it is now. Sure, the city had a lot of "character" and created stories that you will remember and tell your grandchildren, stories movies and gritty TV shows are made from. In the 1980s, New York City's Times Square wasn't so much the "Crossroads of the World" as it was the wrong side of the tracks. The nightclubs of the 1980s were often wild landscapes that attracted unique nocturnal animals. The sex market and drug trade thrived in the area, and homeless encampments dotted its streets. Many local theaters - once legitimate operations showcasing the performances of renowned actors like Lionel Barrymore - had become home to peep shows and porn movies. Living in New York was a little like combat, you could get mugged by a crack addict. That is why savvy ‘street smarts’ were developed. But I remember walking down 8th Avenue, home to strip clubs and porn shops, and meandering Hell’s Kitchen neighborhoods and the local butcher would give us slices of bologna to munch and the delis would give us sour pickles from their big street barrels. We would walk just a few blocks and run into swarms of people that we talked too. I remember that magical feeling of not only being a part of an intimate community, but also something larger and grander than we could ever really know at that age but happily knew we’d spend a lifetime trying to figure out. We don’t remember feeling afraid. We don’t remember it as a horror show. We remember it simply as our childhood, one we shared with millions of other people, one which we could have despite being a part of a decidedly middle-class family—and not one in which our parents’ income needed to be in the mid-six-figures. It’s a time that feels hopelessly far away and impossible to ever recapture entirely, especially as the income gap between the ultra-rich and profoundly poor continues to widen, and long-established businesses close, while more Duane Reades and Whole Foods open up. We’re not sentimental for the worst parts of that time, but we can’t help but condemn the idea that New York in the 80s was nothing but those bad parts. And we can’t help but think of what a haunted house set in. New York circa now would look like, namely, a vast landscape of chain stores and banks and huge glass condos populated solely by people who work in finance. Now that? That’s what gives us real nightmares. Give me the subway of the 80s instead of that. Give us pretty much anything instead of that.Many of the neighborhoods that nowadays are "hip and happening" were extremely dangerous places back then. For example, take Brooklyn. Now a center of youth culture, 25 years ago it was a real dangerous place to be. Even Times Square, now a major tourist center of New York City, was an absolute dump. A lot of this decay was due to the crack epidemic; in many lower class apartment lobbies, crack addicts passed out were a common sight. Addicts, desperate to get enough money for a fix, were constantly mugging and stealing. Crime was higher, the city was dirtier, and graffiti covered the surfaces of subway trains, building walls, bus stops and park benches.The city came out of bankruptcy in the late 1970s and by the mid 1980s a crack-cocaine epidemic began to take hold in the city. People would steal radios and "CBs" from parked cars everywhere, giving rise to those removable car radios and signs in car windows saying, "NO RADIO!" I remember every park, even Washington Square, was scary after dark. You knew not to walk through there at night. My funniest memory looking back now was taking the train to 42nd Street and practically running from 5th to get to Port Authority. One Saturday night I was heading out to Jersey, at 1am taking a drunken friend home. On the FDR doing 110 dodging ten gallon potholes. How could I possibly let a pretty girl go to the Port Authority to catch a bus? By the Triboro I passed an officer in a junked out Chrysler. He flashed his lights. I slowed down, he did not pursue. Because no good deed goes unpunished but it wasn't the NYPD's job to do so. I purposefully put a really cheap radio in the car. Like a $29 Realistic model. So it would not get stolen. One morning I got to the car and the window was broken in. I opened the door. And there by the foot pedals was the radio. I picked up the radio, and on the top cover, in magic marker in large red block letters was written "F... You. Get a better radio..." The New York City subway of today is what one might lightly call “starkly different” from its predecessors. In the 1980s, over 250 felonies were committed every week in the system, making the New York subway the most dangerous mass transit system in the world. Over the course of a decade, New York public. You'd never make eye contact on the subway, either. The trains were always dirty and covered in graffiti. It was the cheap way to travel and you felt it. And boy, did you sweat if you got on an express train by accident and wound up in an area you didn't want to be.In fairness, I worked in Midtown in a Fortune 500 high technology environment and spent plenty of time traveling around the USA and there was nothing anywhere that rivaled the energy and excitement of New York. I walked miles every day in Manhattan and felt safer there, surrounded by all of those people, than I ever have felt again. Yes, in Manhattan, there were pockets of risk here and there that I avoided. I saw the beautiful side of the City. I had a rich social and cultural life during that time. I went to museums, galleries, movies, and shows. I ate out and went to the occasional bar with friends. I stood in line for hours to see The Empire Strikes Back and The Return of the Jedi and countless other movies on their opening nights with huge crowds of other people. The opening of a new Woody Allen film was a major civic event. I used those closely printed pages in the front of the New Yorker -- the ones non-New York residents just skip over! -- to find cultural events I wanted to attend. I thought the 80's were fun and happy years, for me anyway. Even though the streets were dirty, the subways were filthy and crime was about to reach it's peak, I only remember the good things during those years because, I think, they far exceeded the negative stuff. After all it was New York City, my hometown. The whole point of what I'm saying is that although the crime was high, it wasn't so high there were shootouts on every corner, and in spite of it, life went on.In the 80's, if you were lucky enough to live in NYC, there were many things to do and many good times to be had. Now, New York is one of the safest cities in America. Areas that used to be slums filled with desperate people now house million-dollar apartments and expensive boutiques. I remember walking from Grand Central to Port Authority on 42nd St. It was all strip clubs and XXX theaters and video shops. I learned to wear sunglasses no matter what the weather. Now it's tourist central with ToysRUs and the Disney store.Many people, most of them high paid professionals, led insulated lives during this era. They traveled in taxis around the city. They bought bagels and lox and caviar at Zabar's. They enjoyed cultural spectacles at the Metropolitan this and the Metropolitan that, and rendezvoused at the New York Athletic Club. They met for breakfast at Sarabeth's; they lunched and dinnered with friends who lived that way too, sharing their theories about poverty, and crime and punishment, and the Yankees, and the best tennis racquets, and their next trip to Europe. Hey, I charged up a storm at Bergdorf and Bloomingdale's and Saks, ate at The Four Seasons and An American Place and the River Café. We sat next to Joe Piscopo one night at the Empire Diner, which made the City's best milk shakes and Blue Plate specials. It was the eighties, and Wall Street was in LBO heaven.My sales job required I work 75 to 90 hours a week and more to make budget. At work, a lawyer named Bob was addicted to coke. There were a lot alcoholics too. I asked a social worker about the "success" rate of different rehab programs. She replied that about 90% of their clients relapsed. That sounded hopeless to me. And I said so. Her answer was one I'll never forget: Yes, relapse is often part of recovery. It happens in Weight Watchers. It happens to people trying to quit smoking. It happens to drug addicts. Almost all the time. Eventually, either they die or they kick their habit.A big Palestinian family owned the corner limestone apartment building next door when I lived in Times Square. One of them raised pigeons on the roof. None of the adults spoke English. But the children, all born in Brooklyn, did. They stalked one another on our steps with toy Uzi's. The Palestinian children next door have grown up. One became a pharmacist. One works for a civil rights NGO. One is a film producer. There is a doctor, and a teacher. We are good friends. Their father still smokes. I would do anything for them. One of the boys married an Italian girl from Bay Ridge, not surprising really; he looks like he was born there, with his tan skin and black hair and tough guy sneer. She comes from a family that measures a cook based on her pasta skills. This new Brooklyn daughter-in-law has offered to teach the Arab mother from Jerusalem how to cook "real food". His mother of course was indignant. Now and then, a sedan would stop with the windows open blaring Tito Puente trumpets and bongos. I soon began to notice that lots of people in Brooklyn were hanging' out. We had a heat wave, but that didn't stop them. The hot sidewalks steamed after a summer thunderstorm. The car battery was lifted out of the hood one winter night after we parked it on 6th Street. A few months later, on 13th street - a drug neighborhood - the front passenger side window was smashed. I'd left an empty pocketbook on the front seat. A few months later, I learned what a crack pipe looks like.What defines New York? Firstly the bustle, the life. You need to understand the context. Just to take one example, Dublin (at the time) had no tradition of street food. None. Suddenly I am in this place with hot dog and bagel vendors and they make the food right there! And it is delicious. To this day the flavor of NY mustard is probably my favorite taste, bar none. And the people! So many people! If I sound like a gawp-eyed kid from the Sticks, well I was most assuredly not but nothing prepared me for NYC. I admit though, Europe at the time was not terribly multicultural so seeing Sikhs, Rastafarians, Asians of all stripes etc. was, well it was like being in an alien spaceport (in a good way).Secondly the infinite variety. No matter what your specialized taste or niche interest, there was a place that catered just to you. It is difficult to describe how amazing this was in the pre-internet age. For example, I was into RPGs, and in Dublin we had one shop—a comics shop—that had, like a half-shelf devoted to the most popular RPGs and war games. The scale. We had toyshops where I came from, of course we did. But nothing like the Toys R Us on the upper 90s (I forget exactly where). It was like the warehouse at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark, it just went on forever and every aisle had a new wonder. They also had a guy either whose actual job was to engage with the kids visiting the store or who got away with it week after week as you only had to look at e.g. a Stretch Armstrong or a Light saber and he'd be showing you how it worked, having duels with you etc.Then there is the "The Crazy." The other answers have referenced the crime, the lack of personal safety and so on. I was relatively sheltered from this but even so I was mugged twice by adults in the years I was there, once for my calculator watch, once for the 6 bucks or whatever I had on me. Yes too, were the men nodding out on the sidewalk, sprawled on steps around the neighborhood, were heroin junkies. The Palladium on 14th Street was world famous. And the never ending drug scene. I never understood the appeal of a club where everyone is taking illegal drugs, sometimes in full view of everyone else, with noise masquerading as music blasting away, lines down the street to get in, a ridiculous cover charge, and a guy at the door who decides whether he'll let you in. It was the ultimate homage to shallow, self-destructive decadence. On a winter night a friend of mine was walking down the street toward home and was jumped from behind. My friend was strong, with a tattoo and muscles. But it was dark, 8th Street was deserted, it was very late, and he panicked. Did the guy who attacked him have a knife? a gun? a brick? My friend didn't know. He didn't wait to find out. He reeled around and grabbed the attacker. Then he flung him down and jumped on top of him. Then he smashed the attacker's head into the cement until the man stopped struggling. And then my friend jumped up and ran.I met my friend Judy for drinks at Elaine's one night. But suddenly, Judy would only talk with the guy in the suit who sat next to her. So I talked to Kamran, from Lebanon. Someone flashed an Arabic newspaper with a photo of Yasser Arafat. "Ewww!" I said. "This is a great man. Why don't you like him?" asked Kamran. Look at him, I said. He's disgusting. Kamran scowled. "You're just like all Americans," he said. "You don't like him because he doesn't look like you." Kamran was right. That was my biggest problem with Yasser Arafat. It was a time of vigilantes; Bernie Goetz was just the most famous of them, but the JDL (Jewish Defense League) was quite active as well - protecting synagogues and cemeteries from desecration by neo-Nazis and more typical hooligans. Yes, even in NYC, back in those days there were old school neo-Nazis who would spray swastikas on buildings, torch synagogue doors, and knock over tombstones. I don't remember what the name was, but I'm pretty sure there was a similar type of group in the Black community as well, both in Harlem and in Brooklyn. I know the Italians in Benson Hurst had a similar group also to protect their own. Basically, few if any ethnic groups relied on the police for protection and enforcement. We guarded our own.By the early nineties, Giuliani got elected mayor. He immediately declared that he would clean up the city. And to make an example of the fact that he meant business, he said that he would rid the Fulton Fish Market of all mob influence. But he spoke before he acted. So the same night they burnt down the entire market down, lock stock and barrel.NYC was fantastic. I attended many theater and Lincoln Center performances, often for $5 or $10 and also met many other Deaf New Yorkers like me, and there was always something to do. NYC was never boring. I also explored most of NYC on foot (or via subway) and got to know the city well . . . and I loved it!.

Why would a statute violate the Second Amendment that provided that all guns, not being lawfully carried or within immediate reach, must be stored in a safe? Unless the gun is stolen from him, the owner is civilly, not criminally, strictly liable.

This has already been decided by the Supreme Court decision in the ruling handed down in the case of the District of Columbia v Heller (2008). Wikipedia has a very good synopsis of the case so I will post the link here. District of Columbia v. Heller - WikipediaDick Heller challenged Washington D.C.’s 1975 law that banned residents from owning guns not already owned and registered prior to 1975 and required all firearms to be kept unloaded and disassembled or bound by a trigger lock.Dick Heller was a special police officer for the District of Columbia. His job required him to carry a gun in federal office buildings but he was not allowed to take his handgun home or to possess a handgun in his home. Of all the people that should be able to have a gun at home would be a special police officer that worked for the Federal Government. He was the good guy with a gun. He was highly trained to respond to bad situations in his neighborhood, which at the time was having problems with gang activities, including gang shootings and murders. Yet, all he could do was call 911 and wait for the few hours it took Metro PD to respond. There response time was measured in hours and not minutes. If a bad guy showed up in his house, he would have to say please wait one minute, assemble his rifle, load it, then say okay, I am ready, then he could defend himself. I am sure the bad guys would give him the minute or two of time out he would need. The DC metro police were well known to have serious questions if you effectively responded to a self-defense situation with a gun because they knew it had to have been stored illegally in order to deploy it so quickly. So your residence would be searched because you are now the criminal. Do not have ammo for a gun you do not own. You could only have ammo for the caliber of guns that are registered to you. This includes spent casings.An interesting side note, the NRA did not support this case for fear of getting a bad ruling because until 2010, the Second Amendment had not been incorporated under the 14th Amendment and so did not apply to the states, it only applied to the Federal Government. A young, relatively new, upstart attorney, Alan Gura figured out how to get the 2A incorporated while in law school (IIRC he even wrote a paper on it for one of his classes and was told by the professor it would not work and so of course he had to prove him wrong).The decision in short (read the ruling in greater detail by clicking on the link I provided):—The Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with service in a militia, and to use that arm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense within the home.—Like most rights, the Second Amendment right is not unlimited. In the ruling some limitations are outlined, and the ruling also left the door open for litigation for courts to determine the extent 2A rights can be limited based on case law already in place for other rights such as the 1A, 4A, and 5A. (There are many cases working their way through various District courts now and a few promising ones will likely reach the Supreme Court in a few years. This is why the retirement of Justice Kennedy is such a big deal in the gun law debate. It is also why many in the gun community worked very hard to elect Trump over Hillary even though many are not fond of Trump. Many held their noses and selected the lesser of two evils. I have many progressive-liberal friends who are gun owners that also voted for Trump for the same reason. Many in the gun community are starting to become single issue voters because we kept compromising for a long time and we realized we keep coming out on the loosing end. We give and give and get nothing in return.)—The handgun ban and the trigger-lock requirement (as applied to self-defense) violate the Second Amendment. The District’s total ban on handgun possession in the home amounts to a prohibition on an entire class of “arms” that Americans overwhelmingly choose for the lawful purpose of self-defense. Under any of the standards of scrutiny the Court has applied to enumerated constitutional rights, this prohibition – in the place where the importance of the lawful defense of self, family, and property is most acute – would fail constitutional muster. Similarly, the requirement that any lawful firearm in the home be disassembled or bound by a trigger lock makes it impossible for citizens to use arms for the core lawful purpose of self-defense and is hence unconstitutional.Two years later, in the McDonald v City of Chicago (2010) ruling the Supreme Court incorporated the 2A under the 14th Amendment so it now applies to all states and overturned Chicago’s ban on handguns. Chicago’s ban on handguns was not very effective, as they were the most commonly used tool for shootings and murders and they did and still do lead the nation in the highest per capita murder rates by guns. They only difference is now the law abiding can legally have handguns in their homes to shoot back. More of them are and are successfully defending themselves and more of the criminals are ending up on slabs and the remaining ones are starting to think twice before entering homes of the innocent without a prior invitation.So if a trigger lock is unconstitutional, what makes storage in a safe constitutional?I live in CA that has passed safe storage laws. San Francisco went further and passed a law mandating all firearms be stored unloaded in a safe unless it was in the physical possession of the owner while at home. They were sued and they agreed to settle by rescinding the law. Why? Their lawyers knew they were going to lose because of the Heller decision, the Supreme Court already ruled on that one. Why waste money on a battle you have already lost?My school has a large population of students that live in poverty and come from gang infested areas. Many are 2nd and 3rd generation gang families. They grew up in that life and only know guns and violence. We regularly find guns at school. They get them from their parents who did not get them legally. Their parents will claim the kid took it without permission to protect the kid from arrest or say I do not know where he got it if arrest is no big deal. If it was from the parent without the parent’s knowledge, the parent can be charged for violation of the safe storage laws. Few have a safe or other secured place to store their firearms. I have not found one that has. When I talked to our School Resource Officer about it her response is the DA will not file those charges because there is a good chance they are unconstitutional and he does not want to waste the time and effort to defend that all the way to the Supreme Court. If challenged he would drop it immediately. Then it would become public knowledge and they would lose leverage for plea bargaining. It is a charge they will always drop to make a bargain. The defense attorneys know it. The people being questioned by the police who are not smart enough to first ask for their attorney do not know that.As to civil liability, in the eyes of the courts, the civil liability issue would be looked upon similarly as a situation where your car was stolen and then the thief caused an accident with injuries and damage. You did not do it so you are not liable, even if you left the keys in the car. Individuals are only responsible for the acts they commit.What if you were on vacation for a month in Europe. You would have no idea your car was missing for up to a month. How can you report it stolen if you do not know?Same with guns. Many of us have gun collections These are guns that are collected for many reasons and are not shot or rarely shot. They can be locked away in the safe for years. If someone accessed the safe without our knowledge, we would not know until months or years later when we were looking for that gun. I know many gun owners that have three or four safes.Safes do not stop thieves, they only slow them down. Again, if I am on vacation, a patient thief with plenty of time and the right tools will get into the strongest of safes.And for all of you that want registration, that is how criminals find out who has the guns. A few years ago the gun owner database for the State of CA was hacked and personal information taken, like names and address and what guns would be found at the addresses. The state did not report this for several months and tried to cover it up. What about the New York journalist that used the freedom of information act to get the names and addresses of concealed carry permit holders then published those in the paper? That is a list of where guns can be stolen from.Please, stop proposing laws that penalizing the law abiding gun owners and only target criminals. Criminals do not follow the laws and always get their guns. We need criminal control such as long prison sentences and they have to earn their keep in prison, why should I have to pay for them when it was their criminal activity that got them there in the first place.

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