No. But, so far as bias goes, there's a mighty gulf separating "anyone" from paid activists.
I just found that article randomly in a Google Search. I believe those "activists" mostly sought magazine restrictions and background checks, and recently tried to stop the 3-D printing of guns. Their advocacy and disruption of democracy is nothing compared to the NRA.
Which is beside the point. The Militia Act of 1792 defines "the militia" as, essentially, every able-bodied free man. That's what they were thinking of when they wrote the 2nd amendment.
Depends on how the Amendment is parsed. It's introduced with "A well regulated Militia". This confers onto the states the responsibility of militia, including that militia members have a right to keep (in their homes or militia arsenal) and "bear arms" (military-wise) which "shall not be infringed" upon by the federal gov't.
John Paul Stevens, associate justice of the Supreme Court 1975-2010 said a more-appropriate wording of the Second Amendment would go like this:
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security
of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear
Arms
when serving in the Militia shall not be infringed."
The original version of the Amendment (passed by the House) was much like that:
"A well regulated militia composed of the body of the people,
being the best security of a free state, the right of the people
to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed, but no one
religiously scrupulous of bearing arms, shall be compelled to
render military service in person."
No. States already had their own militias, ones that generally existed before the Revolution itself. But that's also beside the point.
The state militia (and the need to man them) goes back a long way. The colonies were supposed to supply arms but fell short. Bonuses were offered men who supplied their own weapon, but few showed up. When war came, the militias weren't very effective, mostly older poorly-armed men serving on their state's home-front; very little training firing-wise because of ammunition shortages. Hence the need to regulate the militia into something more effective.
As far as we are concerned, and I know I'm being tedious and repetitive here, but the MAo1792 defines the militia and opens a window into the minds of the guys who wrote the Bill of Rights as to what they mean by "militia."
Open that window a little higher.
Automobiles and other motor vehicles are a major expense now. That doesn't prevent most Americans from owning at least one.
Not many farmhands today (say, the equivalent of a laborer or farmer then) buy brand-new cars.
One estimate has a musket then costing about two-months wages for a skilled worker (that's about $14,400 today, based on manufacturer-worker $20-hourly-rate). That would be like a farmhand today (making an average of $4000-per-month) having to produce a lump-sum of $14,000 for a weapon that was sporadically-needed and ineffective at hunting.
That era wasn't the one that produced the second amendment, though. The argument over the the meaning of "militia" must not only begin with the 1792 act, but also center around it. Even then, as Scalia notes, bearing arms is a right given directly to the people. There were reasons for that.
I think he said the Constitution overall applied to the People.
Someone can argue that it's an obsolete notion, but the remedy is via democratic activity and Constitutional amendment rather than by trying to twist words around.
That last part ("twist words") sums up the NRA. "Democratic activity" better-applies to that Everytown group. The opinion of the people is what ought to prevail, though that process is undermined by NRA lobbying and pay-offs to corrupt politicians living the lives of millionaires.
Seems neck-and-neck.