McDonald opened the door to strict scrutiny by declaring it a fundamental right.  That was the biggest deal with that case regardless of anything else.
This is a process, a chess game whereby the SAF is systematically toppling unconstitutional laws.  It will happen.  The precedent is being built case by case.
		
		
	 
I understand that you think it 
should happen.  Frankly, I'm inclined to agree that it 
should happen.
However, objective analysis of the case simply does not support any assertion that strict scrutiny is likely to be adopted in 
Nordyke.  The 9th Circuit is incredibly concerned with consistency with existing USSC opinions and it's ridiculously unlikely that they would risk having the case overturned by going out on a limb and specifying a level of scrutiny when the USSC has thusfar studiously avoided mandating any specific level of scrutiny.
All of that aside, strict scrutiny 
is not currently the law and it's incredibly irresponsible to phrase things as you have and to advise the OP, as you have, that he would be covered by the 2nd Amendment.
Bluntly, if you were a lawyer and you gave the advice you've given in this thread in that capacity, I think it would very likely constitute malpractice.
Also, from a strictly accurate standpoint, neither 
McDonald nor 
Heller declared firearms ownership to be a "fundamental right".  
Heller merely stated that the ownership of a handgun for purposes of self-defense in one's own home was protected by the 2nd Amendment while 
McDonald simply incorporated the 
Heller decision via the 14th Amendment (albeit with a very interesting concurring opinion from Thomas that suggests the Privileges and Immunities clause may not be as dead as some have thought).  Neither decision declared firearm ownership in general to be a "fundamental right".
Look, I'm a gun owner myself; I understand the desire to see these cases as being more than they are.  The objective facts, however, make your positions untenable.  You're reading far more into the cases than is actually there and you're being unreasonably optimistic about the chances for the 9th Circuit (a court who vacated a previous 
Nordyke decision out of concern that it might be inconsistent with the then-future USSC ruling in 
McDonald) will go beyond what the USSC has explicitly stated in 
Heller and 
McDonald.  You're failing to ground your opinions in reality simply because you desire a certain outcome.
ZV