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Florida AG Uthmeier Defends Second Amendment Rights of Non-Dangerous Felons

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Florida’s new Attorney General James Uthmeier just dropped a bombshell on X that’s got the 2A community buzzing: he’s committing to defend the Second Amendment rights of non-dangerous felons. In a straightforward post Tuesday, Uthmeier assured Floridians that his office won’t be in the business of stripping gun rights from people who’ve served their time for non-violent offenses like drug possession or white-collar crimes. This isn’t some vague promise—it’s a direct pushback against the knee-jerk lifetime bans that have long plagued reformed citizens, signaling a shift toward restoration over perpetual punishment.

To put this in context, Uthmeier steps into the AG role amid a national patchwork of felon-in-possesssion laws that’s anything but uniform. The Supreme Court’s Bruen decision in 2022 upended may-issue schemes and demanded historical analogs for gun restrictions, opening the door for challenges to blanket felon disarmament. Florida, already a shall-issue stronghold under DeSantis, has seen cases like those involving marijuana convictions—once felonies, now legal—where folks remain disarmed despite zero public safety threat. Uthmeier’s stance cleverly aligns with Bruen’s emphasis on law-abiding citizens while carving out nuance for the non-dangerous, potentially setting up test cases that could ripple nationwide. Critics on the left will cry arming criminals, but data from states like Vermont and Pennsylvania shows restored rights for non-violent felons correlate with lower recidivism, not crime spikes—proving Second Amendment restoration is smart policy, not recklessness.

For the 2A community, this is a win worth celebrating and building on. It bolsters Florida’s pro-gun fortress status, pressuring blue states to rethink their draconian disarmament and giving advocates fresh ammo in court. If Uthmeier follows through—perhaps by declining to defend unconstitutional statutes or pushing legislative reforms—expect a domino effect: more states revisiting redeemable felons’ rights, shrinking the 20+ million Americans currently banned for life over non-violent pasts. Keep an eye on Uthmeier’s X; this could be the start of a real restoration renaissance.

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