I see. So you feel government has the right to restrict or prohibit citizen ownership of weapons?
Government has no rights only powers that we grant to it.
Rights are exceptions of power and in the case of the fundamental rights recognized in the Bill of Rights, exceptions of powers never granted.
I would say that, as a blanket statement, government would have exactly the same ambit of power to restrict or prohibit citizen ownership of weapons as it has to restrict or prohibit citizen assembly, speech or press/publishing or exercising their religion.
Free speech is regulated by laws that define what speech is unacceptable, obscene, offending or injurious.
The press is regulated by laws defining what is obscene also, and libelous or what is a slanderous accusation.
Religion is regulated in ways that restrict the citizen's free exercise. Animal and human sacrifices, polygamy and use of illicit substances are all declared illegal.
Assembly and Petition is regulated as to where and when one may protest, the permits required to do so, payment for police overtime, requiring bonds to be held for damage etc.
None of these regulations can be described as having prohibitory action on the right itself.
Not being able to scream fire in a crowded theater does not silence you.
Laws against libel don't prevent you from writing and publishing.
Laws against sacrifice don't prevent you from worshiping your God (or not).
Laws requiring 200,000 abortion-rights protesters to get a permit doesn't affect your local, 50 member Democratic club from having a picnic and softball game in the park.
All these regulations have at their core, a proscription against certain behavior that is an abuse or could lead to an immediate abuse of the right in question.
Gun laws don't follow this model. Prior restraint is the model. The acts of brandishing, threatening, shooting at someone without just cause, unjustifiable homicide etc, etc, are illegal. No problem with that. Such illegitimate action against your fellow man is most certainly an abuse of the right to be armed.
The problem rises when, in an additional response to these events, the protected
means to possibly commit these offenses is targeted. No where else except with guns, is the means attacked. You are not required to wear a gag in a theater, you are not impeded in writing or submitting a manuscript. You and your political club are not forced underground, your church is not nailed up.
Restrictive gun laws have as there core, just say no to everybody, all the time, no exceptions; or at a minimum, one must first prove that he is worthy to exercise.
So . . .
Just as with the 1st Amendment's near absolute protection of political speech (you can pretty much say anything when opining about government short of death threats to officials) the citizen's right to own and use firearms that have militia usefulness (and thus are useful to secure the free state) and in common use at the time, is near absolute (See
US v Miller, DC v Heller). The right can only be disabled for crimes committed, mental infirmity, dishonorable discharge from the military and abuse of intoxicants
after due process.