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The "well regulated Militia" refers to the State militias of the time (not the modern-day private militias of the right-wing separatist, survivalist, and broader "Patriot" movement). The US Federal government did not originally, and was not intended by the Constitution to ever have a standing Army for longer than two years at a time. The State militias were meant to serve that function. The Second Amendment does not describe an individual right to bear arms, but a collective right, specifically that of the State militias. Since 1903, that basically means the National Guard.Amendment II wrote: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.
Unfortunately, that's not the current interpretation of the bonkers conservative majority of the Supreme Court. But that's the thing. The US Constitution is a secular document written by humans at a particular time with a particular philosophy and practicality in mind, intended to set forth that philosophy and lay the groundwork and erect the framework to be interpreted by humans down through the years.
On the other hand, the Bible, contrary to your assertion that it is "a product of a completely different culture and time," is supposedly the literal and immutable word of God himself. And as a Catholic, you believe that the Pope is God's Vicar on Earth. So, either God changes his mind a lot, or a lot of people and Popes are getting it wrong. Or both. Or neither?
I'm not interested in this red herring about whether the Bible and Christianity produce more good or evil. That's a separate argument from whether it's true or not. Whether something is popular, old, or good, has no impact whatsoever on whether it's actually true. You're attacking a straw man when you say "you stupid, mean atheists only reject my god on the basis of some bad people doing things in his name." False. And I'm getting seriously tired of you making that assertion, as we've covered this several times before, yet you refuse to listen. One more time: The reason we don't believe in your god is because there's no evidence for him. Period.
The obvious fact that people do bad things because of their belief in a given religion is a separate subject altogether. But on that point, no, you can't give credit and glory to Christianity for every wonderful thing it inspires, but then eschew every evil thing done clearly because of Christianity by saying "no, that's just bad people misinterpreting and justifying their lunacy."
EDIT: "at a time" and a couple other little thangs. Also, King, or in the spirit of anti-monarchy...hmm...Champion?