From my understanding of the 2nd, some of you are getting the cart before the horse, according to the founding fathers way of thinking.
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed.
founding fathers premise 1: a free state is a peachy idea (desired result)
founding fathers premise 2: a well regulated militia is necessary to preserve the above (engine to achieve the desired result)
As I understand it, in the late 1700's, "well regulated" meant adequately skilled, and adequately equipped.
Founding fathers premise 3: the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed (pre-requisite for supplying that engine in premise 2)
The founding fathers were all graduates of the school of hard knocks, early american wilderness division. You''d better have the skill to bark that squirrel up that tree, or you weren't getting lunch today. You'd better be able to lung/heart punch that deer on the other side of the vale, or you weren't getting dinner, dried jerky, and a new shirt and moccasins. You'd better be able to load, fire, and hit the attacking indians before they burned you up in your cabin. So
1) the founding fathers, like Neo in 'The Matrix' believed that to get to premise 2, "We need guns, lots of guns". (and ammo) And because they existed in an environment where you acquired the needed skill as a natural offshoot of premise 2, or you got a Darwin award (you starved, the red man got you, or the red coats got you) they
2) saw no need to elaborate on training as part of the process, beyond using one of the meanings of "well regulated".
So those of you who think you need to pass a test before you acquire the means to defend yourself, have it bass-ackwards in the eyes of the founding fathers. Winston Churchill thought you were full of it too. He didn't say "give us lots of training, and we will finish the job", he said "give us the TOOLS and we will FINISH the job". (and yeah, they did some training along the way with all the arsenal of democracy lend/lease toys.)
If you give most reasonably intelligent, results-oriented humans a tool, they usually pretty quickly figure out that tool is relatively useless if they can't use it effectively. So then they go read the instructions. Or ask somebody. Or start competing in IDPA, USPSA, etc, even though they suck at it at first, because they see the need. Or mercy me, ACTUALLY GO PAY SOMEBODY FOR TRAINING, ALL ON THEIR OWN. Because they came to that realization posed by J.C. at ASP when he asked "is your EDC a defensive tool, or just a woobie?" (no, I'm not putting up a link, go search it on YouTube)
Those of you who took an oath to protect and defend the constitution, but think people need to pass a course before "CONSTITUTIONAL carry", may need to re-evaluate your position, because in my opinion, you're violating that oath you took, and the founding fathers are very disappointed in you.
Hope you all enjoyed my rant. I'm going back to lurker mode now.