In a rare win for common sense in the federal bureaucracy, the U.S. Postal Service is floating a rule change that could finally greenlight the mailing of handguns between licensed dealers and individuals—provided they’re lawfully owned and shipped compliantly. The Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC), never ones to mince words, jumped in with full-throated support, blasting the current blanket ban as an unconstitutional overreach that stifles Second Amendment rights. The Postal Service has no authority to invent prohibitions on the commercial shipment of firearms, FPC argues, pointing to the plain text of federal law and recent court smackdowns like the Supreme Court’s Bruen decision, which demands regulations be rooted in historical tradition, not bureaucratic fiat.
This isn’t just procedural housekeeping; it’s a seismic shift with massive implications for the 2A community. Right now, handgun owners are shackled by absurd patchwork rules: UPS and FedEx play gatekeeper with arbitrary policies, often refusing shipments outright, forcing folks to trek to FFLs or pay exorbitant private carrier fees. Lifting the USPS ban would democratize access, slashing costs for everyday Americans buying from out-of-state dealers or transferring family heirlooms. Imagine a rural shooter grabbing a defensive pistol from a distant auction without the hassle— that’s real empowerment. Critics will cry public safety, but FPC’s right: criminals don’t use USPS tracking numbers, and lawful shippers already navigate ATF oversight like pros. This rule, if finalized, pokes a hole in the anti-gun narrative that treats all firearms commerce as inherently risky.
For gun owners, the playbook is clear: flood the docket with comments supporting this before the window closes. It’s a chance to normalize shipping as we do books or boots—because the Second Amendment isn’t a privilege for the well-connected. Pro-2A groups like FPC are leading the charge, but your voice amplifies it. Stay vigilant; one rule change today could pave the way for broader victories tomorrow, reminding the feds that the mail is for We the People, not just their nanny-state whims.