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Sometimes people try to argue that if the Second Amendment is an unlimited right (not so, no right is unlimited, but that's another discussion), why does it not include privately owned nuclear weapons. This is not a very good argument; the following exposition should explain why.
A nuke is a strategic weapons system, not an "arm". It is an area-effect weapon; it cannot be used for precision targeting of one individual (unless said individual lives alone in Antarctica). It cannot be employed at all without massive collateral damage. Its utility for use by a lawful citizen for lawful purposes is effectively nil. It cannot be safely stored except with 24/7 security and needs to be maintained and monitored by experts to remain safe and useable.
Furthermore, even if used "correctly", it is almost impossible for a nuke to be detonated without effects that can cause inter-state or international concerns (ie radiation, fallout, electromagnetic pulse, ecological impact, etc).
More to the point, restricting nukes is clearly within the purview of Strict Constitutional Scrutiny. SCS is the view that restrictions on a major (enumerated) right must be necessary to society (not merely preferred or desirable), narrowly construed, and the least restrictive means available of achieving the necessary goal.
Clearly, if everybody and his brother owned a nuke, we would not have a society for long, but rather a nation covered in mushroom clouds and ruins. That certainly covers the "necessary" clause of Strict Scrutiny.
Poison gas, bio-weapons and other WMD are also not Second Amendment issues for similar reasons.
Know the issues on which you wish to debate, and you will make better arguments.
Plus to add, no one person has complete control over a nuke. Even the president himself has certain protocal and people to launch one. I advocate that the second amendment covers anything the average soldier has access to without special security clearance.