If you genuinely want to learn about insulin for T2s, the link in my signature is a good place to start. It's not as simple as "T2s produce too much insulin."
Hypos are not as safe for a T2ID as your signature link professes either...
Permit me to lift a direct quote from "Blood sugar 101."
"If you should feel strange within an hour of injecting Lantus, test your blood sugar. If it is lower than 70 mg/dl you should immediately take as much glucose as you would need to raise your blood sugar 60 mg/dl and then test every fifteen minutes and take more glucose until you are back at a safe blood sugar level. (Pure Glucose, found in Smarties or Sweetarts and Glucose pills will act within 15 minutes). If you are a Type 2, your liver has the ability to dump glucose into your bloodstream if you go dangerously low, so unlike many Type 1s you aren't likely to end up in the ER with a hypo. But you should always keep some Smarties around if you use insulin, just in case you need it."