The "framers" were hardly unanimous in their view of the 2nd, despite the mythology that gun enthusiasts have spread over time. I believe you're doing a bit of that yourself,and referencing what you believe the "framers" believed, based on some pretty sketchy "quotes"...
"There’s a quote floating around the internet, attributed to George Washington in his first State of the Union Address, which says
As stirring as that quote is to some people, George Washington never wrote or said that,
nor did he say anything to that effect. The likely
source of that quote is an article from a 1926 issue of a magazine called
Hunter-Trapper-Trader attributed to C.S. Wheatley.
George Washington is hardly the only founding father being falsely quoted like this; a Google search is all it takes to discover that the majority of pro-gun quotes commonly attributed to the founding fathers are fakes, or are taken out of context. Thomas Jefferson never wrote “the strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government;”
these words were first printed by the Orlando Sentinel in the late 1980s.
Jefferson also did not say “the beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until someone tries to take it;” this quote seems to be from a fictional Jefferson in an independently-published novel called
On A Hill They Call Capital (sic.)
John Adams, who was famously suspicious of unrest among common people, would never have declared “arms in the hands of the citizens may be used at individual discretion for the defense of the country, the overthrow of tyranny or private self defense,” and
Alexander Hamilton could never have said “the best we can help for concerning the people at large is that they be properly armed”
in the 184th Federalist Paper, as is claimed on a prominent pro-gun website, because there were
only 85 Federalist Papers.
Fake quotes like these are abundant and they’re not confined to fringe message boards or bumper stickers. They are widespread and they’ve found their way to the top of the pro-gun mainstream."
Gun activists frequently misquote the founding fathers. The actual debates they had were framed much differently than the debate today.
danreitzdotcom.medium.com