Peg you're half right. It was a cop out, BUT that kind of cop out is how any smart and concientious appellate or supreme court justice does business when setting a new precedent. There are three rules.
Rule one: Rule only on the issue before the court, not hypotheticals (such as concealed carry) that the ruling may imply.
Rule two: Rule as narrowley as possible. This gives time for legislators and lower courts t hash things out on the ground and produce some results you can look at. That way you're not flying blind when something like a ccw issue does come up.
Rule three: The SCOTUS is not in the business of doing justice. It is in the busines of making rules so that lower courts know how to rule. It will only (in theory, in a perfect world) take a case if the lower circuits are in conflict or there is a new area to be deat with (like the internet) or if there is a clear constiutional issue. Don't be upset that Heller didn't go further. It was an almost perfect ruling. It told the state no, you can't abridge cerain individual rights on the one hand. On the other hand however, it did not give marching orders to elected officials and subvert the democratic process. It just told them what they couldn't do.
fightingquaker13
That would be fine if the lower courts ruled by the same standards instead of the usual self-satisfying agendas (of the judges). Many judges (including SCOTUS) rule based more on their political affiliations instead of the reading of the letter of the law.
What good did it do for the citizens of DC to have the SCOTUS rule that the 2nd Amendment guaranteed an individual right, only to then allow DC to continue to restrict that right with so much red-tape regulations that they might as well have left it alone to start with. Sure they can sue DC and it'll be tied up in lower courts for the next ten years (hashing it out). Like you said,
"It told the state no, you can't abridge certain individual rights on the one hand. On the other hand however, it did not give marching orders to elected officials and subvert the democratic process. It just told them what they couldn't do.", but they are still doing so in spite of the ruling.
I understand your point on narrowing and pinpointing the exact nature of the area being ruled on by the court (like leaving out CCW as you mentioned) and agree to a large extent, as to the nature of how the court should conduct hearings. But if the original intent of the 2nd Amendment was read as intended (IMO) then the issue would be rendered moot. Shall not be infringed means just that. Which is what DC and most other 'civilized' big cities have been doing all along, infringing on a God-given right that is merely 'guaranteed' by the Constitution.
I think we're somewhat on the same page (or at least the same chapter) just reading with different light.

Maybe it's just a 'pipe-dream' of what should be...... and then we wake into the real world.....