As I understand it, the safety issue is real in theory, but not in practice. If, for instance, you have a gound loop and use a cheater plug to lift the ground on the amplifier power cord, this is ok because the amp is still grounded via the interconnects to the preamp (assuming the pre-amp is grounded via a 3-prong power cable).
Now, let's say you make the foolish mistake of removing the interconnects to the amp with the amp turned off but still plugged in. You now have a REAL safety issue because you've just removed the component's path to ground.
So, as I said, it's not a safety issue in pratice because you generally wouldn't leave an amp in the plugged-in-but-not-connected state for very long (usually only while making component changes).
However, as any component manual will tell you, unplug ALL affected components before removing interconnects. Follow this rule 100% of the time and you will be fine.
Cheers.
Now, let's say you make the foolish mistake of removing the interconnects to the amp with the amp turned off but still plugged in. You now have a REAL safety issue because you've just removed the component's path to ground.
So, as I said, it's not a safety issue in pratice because you generally wouldn't leave an amp in the plugged-in-but-not-connected state for very long (usually only while making component changes).
However, as any component manual will tell you, unplug ALL affected components before removing interconnects. Follow this rule 100% of the time and you will be fine.
Cheers.