Kindly show me where the wording of the 2nd Amendment limits the people to only those weapons suitable for militia use. And please define what "weapons suitable for militia use" are.
Here's the deal: The second amendment being part of the Constitution, when you cite the second amendment as an authority, you acknowledge the authority of the whole Constitution....including the part of the Constitution which gives the Supreme Court the right to interpret what things mean. You don't get to cherry-pick the parts you like from the parts you don't, it's all or nothing. To disavow the Supreme Court's authority is to disavow the Constitution's authority and with it, you disavow the second amendment.
You have repeatedly cited the second amendment as an authority, which means you acknowledge the authority of the Constitution, including the part which gives the Supreme Court the right to decide these matters.
According to the Supreme Court:
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA et al. v. HELLER
....We also recognize another important limitation on the right to keep and carry arms. Miller said, as we have explained, that the sorts of weapons protected were those "in common use at the time." 307 U. S., at 179. We think that limitation is fairly supported by the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of ""dangerous and unusual weapons"."
So we start with a list of everything and then remove those items which are either not 'in common use', and/or are 'dangerous and unusual. Feel free to add your own and let's test it.
So, let's go down the list:
- Non-lethal weapons (ie; paint-ball guns, tazers): In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Non-Lethal Chemical weapons (ie; tear-gas, pepper-spray): In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No
- Ranged weapons (ie; bow, crossbow, sling-shot): In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Melee weapons (knives, axes, saps, baton): In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Pistol: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Rifle/shotgun: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Assault-rifle: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Machine-gun: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Hand grenade: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? Yes.
- Grenade launcher: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? Yes.
- Rocket launcher: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? Yes.
- Patriot missile battery: In common use at the time? No. Is dangerous and unusual? Yes.
- Nuclear/radiological weapons: In common use at the time? No. Is dangerous and unusual? Yes.
- Lethal Biological/Chemical weapons: In common use at the time? No. Is dangerous and unusual? Yes
- Crack Cocaine: In common use at the time: No. Is dangerous and unusual: Yes.
- Methamphetamine: In common use at the time: No. Is dangerous and unusual: Yes.
- Meth-lab: In common use at the time: No. Is dangerous and unusual: Yes.
- ICBMs: In common use at the time? No. Is dangerous and unusual? Yes.
Accessories are not 'arms' but given all the hoopla over 'assault weapons' we can apply the same standard to them and see what we get:
- Detachable Magazine: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- 30rnd Magazine: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- 60/100rnd Magazine: In common use at the time? No. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- 100/200rnd linked (belt-fed) ammo: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Pistol Grip: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Forward Grip: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Telescopic/folding but-stock: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No
- Rifle Barrel under 18in: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Flash Suppressor: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
- Sound Suppressor: In common use at the time? Yes. Is dangerous and unusual? No.
All you have to do is apply a little bit of logic and this becomes very easy to figure out.
Getting back to topic, even the first amendment's "
Congress shall make no law..." doesn't literally mean "
no law". There's a metric ****-ton of laws pertaining to religion from prohibiting animal sacrifice to allowing clergy to solemnize municipally binding marriage licence applications. It means the law can't undermine the right.
Likewise "
shall not be infringed" does not mean unlimited. It means the right cannot be undermined. The Supreme Court has set up a lemon test for any proposed limit, and the degree of that test which applies is Strict Scrutiny. A minimalist safe-storage law would pass Strict Scrutiny and thus would not be an infringement.