Arlo, I am diverging somewhat but I'd like to hear your thoughts on why the right to own a gun is entrenched in the Bill of Rights but the right to vote is not.
Well, that's an interesting thought. I'd like to think the latter is more important. Historically speaking, gun ownership was impossible for a slave. But then, so was voting. Voting was also prohibited from non-land owners and women. Supposedly, you would think the NRA would love gun sales to include poor urban black people, vagrants, high schoolers, devout Muslims and hippies but, somehow, I suspect they've run the numbers and realize how unlikely that is (the cost of an AR-15 is rather prohibitive for those either living paycheck to paycheck or with the need to prioritize more important necessities). I kinda think there's a political viewpoint that would prefer voting to be just as unlikely for non-WASPs.
If owning an AR-15 was indeed an unalienable right for all citizens then there'd be as much a reason to issue vouchers for that item as well as an annual allotment for ammo as there would be for any form of welfare or Medicare. But, somehow, I suspect the anti-socialists would bear arms over such.
Voting? Well let's just say it's supposed to be easier for some than others ... according to some. In the original days of the founding fathers, it was.
Of course, this is merely a wandering thought on this. Thanks for inviting me to deeply step in that.