If that's what he meant, my need still stands. It doesn't need to be a bad guy with a gun if I'm hiking in the woods alone. It's always uncomfortable to pass or catch up to guys hiking on the same trail when you are a woman alone. I'm a firm believer of #notallmen. But my freedom is a tad restricted if I hike alone. Or at least my sense of security since I've done it sans a weapon anyway.
Nope, I have a real live example. I've driven a lot alone around the US. Parking my little cab-high camper Datsun or Toyota (I've had both) to sleep has felt safe and unsafe depending on where I stopped. I've always felt less safe in campgrounds near or in cities.
And here, we agree. It's an incredibly ignorant argument to claim you need your guns for the reason the writers of the 2nd Amendment likely had in mind.
I have seen 'Deliverance', what makes you think that a lone man does not feel the need for a gun (or a bow*)?
You may be more likely to shoot yourself and end up critically injured in the wilderness by carrying a loaded gun than you are to ever need it for self defence (I accept that in some areas a rifle is needed for defence against e.g. bears). one observation that has been made is that in the US most people have an exaggerated idea of their risk of an incident in which a gun would be needed for self defence. Even in the US I believe many LEOs complete a career without ever having needed to open fire.
*As a teenage girl in England I was able to carry around a laminate bow with arrows with no apparent restrictions, whilst my rate of fire may not have compared with a pistol I guess my accuracy and stopping power was equivalent. Of course concealed carry was not an option.
Rather like the second amendment it was compulsory (until recently - 1960) for Englishmen to practice archery to maintain an armed militia to defend the nation from the French.