"of the people by the people for the people"
With this quote in mind, do you really think the term the people was used at the time to mean the state governments? Or do you interpret it to mean the citizens of the states
Those are the only two options? What of 'autonomous freeholders residing within arbitrary lines of state jurisdiction' vs 'those granted coercive power over said freeholders?' The militia would be comprised of the first; the superstructure of the USA would be of the latter.
If you consider the state militia as a direct opposition to the forces commanded by the federal government then you need to start complaining about federal abuses of power. The federal government has taken command of the state militias before.
Were I a US citizen, this is one of the issues on which I'd certainly be speaking up.
Fun fact: Did you know the initially 10 amendments were not edits but rather a list of rights that one side did not think needed to be explicitly mentioned but the other side thought needed to be explicitly mentioned? In the framers' minds these rights did not change the rest of the document.
However you are correct that the constitution was made editable. If the zeitgeist wants it edited then the zeitgeist should edit it rather than pretend it is already edited.
No, I did not. I respectfully request evidence of what was in the framers' minds at the time of the drafting of the constitution. Then, I request that you split some of the money you make from the James Randi Million-Dollar challenge, upon proving your mind-reading skills. Forgive the snark, for which I'll apologize upon the posting of/linking to/provision of said evidence.
The very fluidity of the US Constitution is why so many of us outside your borders both admire the functioning of your government, and swear quietly to ourselves about your populace's engagement therewith. Would that more constitutions were written with the intent that change come to them in an unspecified future.