It was late last week when Florida’s Republican-led state House passed a bill to lower the legal age to buy a rifle or long gun. Under the status quo, Floridians must be 21 to legally purchase such a weapon, but GOP legislators want to lower the limit to 18.
Oddly enough, Florida raised the age limit from 18 to 21 in response to the deadly mass shooting in Parkland that left 17 people dead, but that was five years ago. Now, Republicans are prepared to undo the reform.
Gov. Ron DeSantis told reporters yesterday that he’s on board with the change:
“Look, I was in Iraq. I was there with 18-year-old Marines, 18-year-old soldiers that were put out in the streets of Fallujah and Ramadi and told they had to risk their lives for this country. Then they come back after doing that, and even though they were carrying a firearm the whole time, they’re told you cannot exercise your Second Amendment rights here as an adult and as a veteran?”
The Republican governor also denounced the 2018 change that Florida Republicans helped approve.
Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) says he supports lowering the minimum age to buy a rifle from 21 to 18:
— The Recount (@therecount) May 3, 2023
“Look, I was in Iraq. I was there with 18-year-old Marines … Then, they come back after doing that, and … they’re told you cannot exercise your 2nd Amendment rights here?” pic.twitter.com/RO8omBC68K
DeSantis’ comments came one day after a mass shooting in Florida that killed four people, including three children.
As for the substance of the governor’s argument, I can appreciate why some, especially on the right, might find this sensible. If American teenagers serving in the military are handed rifles, why deny those same young people the same weapons on U.S. soil?
But the closer one looks at the governor’s comparison, the more problematic it becomes.








