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Nonviolent Offenders Should Not Lose Their Gun Rights for Life

There is no American historical tradition of permanently disarming peaceable, nonviolent offenders.

None.

The Second Amendment does not say “shall not be infringed, unless someone once made a nonviolent mistake, paid their debt, rebuilt their life, and proved they are no threat to anyone.”

Yet that is exactly how the system works today.

A person can make one nonviolent mistake decades ago, complete their sentence, satisfy every court requirement, rebuild their life, raise a family, start a business, serve their community, and still be told they may never again exercise one of the most basic rights protected by the Constitution.

That is wrong.

And Texas Gun Rights is fighting to change it.

Disarm the Dangerous, Not the Peaceable

America’s historical tradition supports disarming dangerous people.

People who pose a real threatwith a proven violent tendency, or who are dangerous to others.

But there is no serious historical tradition of permanently disarming peaceable citizens merely because they committed a nonviolent offense.

In fact, all able-bodied men used to be expected to keep arms for militia service, and historical restrictions focused on danger, rebellion, violence, or threats to public safety, not blanket lifetime disarmament for every person labeled a felon.

That is the standard Texas should return to.

Not “soft on crime.”

Not “anything goes.”

Not “violent criminals get a free pass.”

Just a simple principle: disarm the dangerous, not the peaceable.

Texas Gun Rights President Chris McNutt put it plainly:

“If a person is violent or dangerous, the justice system should deal with them accordingly. But a peaceable Texan who made a nonviolent mistake, paid their debt, and proved they are no threat should not be treated like a criminal for the rest of their life. The Second Amendment is not a government privilege. It is a constitutional right. And Texas should lead the nation in restoring that right to nonviolent offenders who have earned it back.”

This Issue Is Bigger Than Most Republicans Want to Admit

This issue exposes a massive inconsistency in the Republican Party.

Donald J. Trump is a nonviolent felon after being convicted in New York on 34 counts of falsifying business records, a case he continues to challenge and denounce as politically motivated.

He received an unconditional discharge, meaning no jail, probation, or fine, but the felony convictions remain unless overturned.

So every Republican lawmaker should have to answer one simple question:

Should Donald J. Trump permanently lose his Second Amendment rights because of a nonviolent felony conviction?

If the answer is no, then the same principle should apply to peaceable Texans who made nonviolent mistakes, paid their debt, and proved they are not dangerous.

This is not hypothetical.

Look no further than Weatherford, TX, the home of David Hart.

More than two decades ago, Hart was convicted after a nonviolent drug possession case during a devastating period in his life. He lost his father and wife, was homeless, and was struggling with addiction.

But Hart served his time, went through rehabilitation, rebuilt his life, became a successful business owner, served as a firefighter, joined the Texas State Guard, and became a respected member of the Parker County community.

Yet because of that old felony, he has been blocked from serving as a volunteer reserve police officer because he cannot legally carry a firearm.

Meanwhile, Hart has the certifications to train law enforcement on how to properly use a firearm.

The hypocrisy is never-ending.

Hart has earned support from lawmakers, local law enforcement, public officials, and community leaders to have his rights restored because they know the truth: he is not a danger to society. He is a redemption story.

Sadly, the Texas Board of Pardons & Paroles denied his pardon after a hearing in 2025.

There are thousands of Texans across the state facing similar situations.

Texas Must Lead in 2027

Texas Gun Rights is making restoration of gun rights for nonviolent felons who prove they are no risk to society a top priority in the upcoming 90th Texas Legislative Session, which begins in January 2027.

And if Republican lawmakers truly believe in redemption, constitutional rights, limited government, and the Second Amendment, this should not be a hard vote.

Of course, the gun confiscation lobby loves permanent disarmament because it helps normalize the idea that rights are privileges.

Today it is nonviolent felons.

Tomorrow it is people targeted by “Red Flag” gun confiscation laws, veterans, people who take the wrong medication, or anyone the government decides is too risky, too controversial, or too independent to be trusted with arms.

That is why this fight matters.

Once the government gets comfortable deciding which peaceable citizens are “allowed” to exercise constitutional rights, no one’s rights are safe.

The Second Amendment protects the people, not just the politically favored, or the people who can afford the best lawyers.

Help Texas Gun Rights fight to restore the rights of peaceable Texans, defeat the gun confiscation lobby, and defend the Second Amendment without compromise. Chip in today.

 

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