bankside
JUB 10k Club
Actually they are not expected to be able to overthrow the US military just to be able to resist tyrannical actions by the government long enough to force a moral dilemma in said military. If their cause is just enough, a significant amount of the military forces will be sympathetic enough to cause the military to become unreliable and threaten full blown civil war, something no tyrannical government wants. If their cause is not just then they will be defeated plain and simple. In either case, the American people will know of their cause and judge it appropriately. The fates willing we should never have to come to a point where such an armed resistance would be necessary for it would mean that the entire system had failed.
In some hypothetical time of tyranny, people shooting at the military while flashing their NRA membership cards and waving a copy of the constitution around is not very likely "to force a moral dilemma in said military."
If their cause is just enough, a significant amount of the military will not follow unethical illegal orders anyway. The entire trouble with this ridiculous US system is spelled out in the last sentence of your quote. It has nothing to do with "the fates willing" whether or not ordinary people will become victims of their own government. It has to do with the actual effort those people make to maintain a free and open government at all times. Fate and chance have fuck all to do with it.
I've said this before about the US constitution in general: in commonwealth countries we don't especially limit governments with a piece of paper whose meaning we argue in the courts, we limit governments by giving them unlimited theoretical powers but then electing smart principled people to wield those powers, and expecting them to do their jobs and mind the lessons of history.
And about the second amendment in particular, with respect to this anti-tyranny argument: I think it breeds a terribly complacent mindset in the US: government doesn't matter because if it gets bad enough we can always shoot them. That is a stupid way to run a system of governance yet that seems to be the case. People don't engage. They don't protest. They don't demand reforms. They don't join unions. They just expect very little of their governments, and when pissed off they just go polish their guns and wait for the day when the troops come over the hill. If Americans tried anything at all other than merely bitching about government while clinging to their guns, they'd realise how extremely out of place a gun is when talking about any kind of meaningful government reform.
A gun is not a policy tool. It is only an agent of political change in a failed state. And the only way a state can fail is if its people allow it through its complacency.
You'd think a country that gave the world some profoundly beautiful language in "we the people" would have a little more awareness that the "assholes in washington" got there because of "we the people."

