How bout law school? I just thought Quantus could benefit from some basic civics - his teacher was OBVIOUSLY bad because he has no idea how our government works. Of course, as long as he sits in his house, clutching his copy of the Constition and never ventures into the real world, it doesn't matter what he believes.
Guess you haven't learned tact yet in school, nor learned anything about arguing your case. Assuming an air of arrogance because you are in law school doesn't assist your case. Let me guess, you're a first year, right?
There are those of us who have actually graduated from law school and have practiced for some years who disagree with you. For example, you seem to place as much emphasis on the Constitution (not Constition as you spelled it) as the common law. Apparently, the law school you attend has failed to instruct you in the proper balance between the two, to wit, there is no balance. The Constitution is the principle foundation of our system of government, and where the Constitution speaks, the common law ceases to have primacy. Common law only operates in the absence of statutes, and where statutes exist, common law, at best, serves as a guide for understanding those statutes.
By the way, Quartus' (not Quantus) idea of how it's supposed to be is correct, not yours. While the Supreme Court's decision that it was the interpreter of the law was understandable and even laudable given the checks and balances systems developed by the founders, it was not intended as an authorization for courts to legislate from the bench. If a court found that a law was unconstitutional, the law was to be voided. It was not to be modified, molded, or shaped to fit the court's interpretation.
As for the incorporation of the 2nd amendment, that's actually a debatable point. Various Supreme Court decisions have narrowly defeated the full incorporation doctrine (usually for less than laudable reasons) and there is sufficient doubt in the logic of those rationales that a lower court could find that they are distinguishable in the right case, and determine that the 2nd A should be (if in fact it has not already been) incorporated.