I understand that the Bill of Rights is a restriction on the federal government. Incorporation removes powers from the states, and enlarges that of the federal government.
Again, why do you wish to give power to the federal government that it should not have to begin with, if restriction of the federal government is your belief? Your argument for incorporation is not in keeping with the original intent of the Bill of Rights or the XIV Amendment.
There is no right to vote in a federal election in the Constitution.
The states make up one nation. Some standards should be applied to every citizen. IMO there are additional standards that could be applied, beyond the first ten amendments. For example, I would be happy to see English made the official language of the country. I believe it was Theodore White who said that language is the glue that holds a country together.
Please list the protections in the Bill of Rights that you would not like to carry with you as you move from one state to another, or that you would rather see mutated in fifty different manifestations.
The Second Amendment give Americans a right that every statistic proves is a positive, not a negative. Yet, liberals the country over, imbued with the ability to tell the rest of us what is best for us, would remove the right to bear arms were it not in the Constitution, even though it has yet to be incorporate. Thus the battle must be fought repeatedly.
Even now, the newest Supreme Court Justice believes that it applies only to the federal government. Liberals, who live by the motto 'feeling is as good as knowing,' would find a constellation of statutes and laws to replace the protections in the Bill of Rights if they are not incorporated.