8 Pro-2A Companies Outside the Firearms Industry

People assume “pro-Second Amendment” always means gun makers and retailers. Not even close. Some of the most influential support comes from wireless, coffee, insurance, payments, education, and media—industries that shape culture, commerce, and public opinion. 

If you think “pro-2A” support only comes from the firearms industry, this list will change your mind. These organizations have gone on record through awards, public statements, sponsorships, or mission pages that explicitly align with the Second Amendment. 

1) Patriot Mobile — Wireless / Telecom 

Patriot Mobile isn’t subtle about where it stands. In 2025, the company was presented with the Business 2A Champion Award by Women for Gun Rights—an award specifically described as recognizing non-firearms businesses supporting the Second Amendment. The release also quotes Patriot Mobile leadership emphasizing advocacy for 2A rights as part of its identity. 

What makes Patriot Mobile different: The company openly brands itself as America’s only Christian conservative wireless provider—giving members access to premium cellphone service with priority coverage on all three major U.S. networks, plus 100% U.S.-based customer support. It’s a rare example of a telecom brand combining top-tier technology with an unapologetic commitment to faith, family, freedom—and the right to keep and bear arms.

Why it stands out: Telecom isn’t typically a “values headline” category, so a wireless provider earning a 2A award is unusual (and attention-grabbing). 

2) Black Rifle Coffee Company — Food & Beverage 

Black Rifle Coffee Company has built a brand around a specific audience: veterans, law enforcement supporters, and unapologetically pro-2A consumers. In a Fox Business profile, the company is described as “unapologetic” in its support of law enforcement and the Second Amendment—positioning 2A alignment as a public-facing identity, not a hidden preference. 

What makes Black Rifle different: The company openly centers its identity around patriotism, veteran support, and pro-2A values—turning everyday consumer coffee into a culture-forward statement of support for freedom and constitutional rights.

Why it stands out: It’s not a “quiet donation” vibe, but branding, audience, and culture wrapped together. 

3) Right to Bear Insurance — Insurance / Legal-Defense Style Coverage 

Right to Bear Insurance has publicly stated it was founded to support the Second Amendment—specifically, to protect and defend that right against “unfounded legal retaliation.” In a PR Newswire release reacting to San Jose’s insurance mandate proposal, the company takes an explicit pro-2A position and explains its purpose and posture. 

What makes Right to Bear different: Its entire model exists to help lawful gun owners navigate legal exposure after self-defense incidents, turning constitutional support into practical protection when it matters most.

Why it stands out: This is a business built around the legal aftershocks of self-defense, meaning it’s structurally aligned with the 2A debate. 

4) EPIC Merchant Systems — Payments / Merchant Processing 

Payment processors can decide who gets to do business—and that’s exactly why EPIC positions itself as 2A Friendly and explicitly says it specializes in FFL-related businesses. EPIC’s own site highlights firearm-friendly processing, describes common processor shutdown problems in the industry, and frames its offering as helping lawful businesses avoid terminations and frozen funds. 

What makes EPIC different: The company directly addresses financial discrimination against firearms-related businesses—providing merchant services designed to keep lawful operators active when mainstream processors shut them out.

Why it stands out: “Pro-2A” in payments is about more than politics—it’s about access to financial rails

5) 2nd Amendment Processing — Payments / Merchant Processing 

This one is about as direct as it gets. 2nd Amendment Processing frames its mission as protecting payments, supporting values, and rejecting what it calls “woke financial censorship.” It also explicitly states it believes lawful businesses shouldn’t be denied financial services based on ideological beliefs—tying its existence to the wider 2A commerce conversation. 

What makes 2nd Amendment Processing different: The company positions itself as a financial lifeline for pro-2A businesses, offering payment infrastructure specifically designed to resist political deplatforming.

Why it stands out: It’s not just “friendly to the industry”—it’s built as an alternative for it. 

6) Hillsdale College — Higher Education 

Higher education rarely leans into shooting sports as a constitutional education project, but Hillsdale does. Its Halter Shooting Sports Education Center includes a prominent statement: Dedicated to Educating the Public on the Second Amendment.” The center also describes a mission that mixes safety/marksmanship with constitutional teaching and civic ideas. 

What makes Hillsdale different: The college integrates marksmanship with constitutional instruction, treating the Second Amendment not just as sport, but as a core civic principle worth teaching and preserving.

Why it stands out: This is a rare intersection of academia + shooting sports + explicit 2A education. 

7) U.S. LawShield — Legal Services / Self-Defense Legal Coverage 

U.S. LawShield positions itself around education and legal defense after self-defense incidents, and it explicitly frames its mission as Preserving Freedom for Good®” while supporting “the inalienable right of self-defense.” Their PRWeb materials also describe education programs, resources, and a large partner network—pointing to a broader ecosystem play, not just a product. 

What makes U.S. LawShield different: Beyond legal coverage, the organization emphasizes education and preparedness, building a nationwide support network for responsible gun owners.

Why it stands out: It’s 2A-adjacent infrastructure including legal education, defense resources, and community building.

8) Armed American Radio — Media (Talk Radio / Podcast) 

If you want a media brand that doesn’t hedge, this is it. Armed American Radio’s own “About” page declares: The 2nd Amendment IS NOT UP FOR DEBATE,” and describes programming centered on constitutional rights, politics of guns, training issues, and efforts to infringe on freedoms. 

What makes Armed American Radio different: The platform functions as a megaphone for gun owners—shaping narrative, educating listeners, and activating grassroots engagement around Second Amendment issues.

Why it stands out: Media is culture plus persuasion. Platforms like this don’t just “support,” they mobilize too. 

Why this list matters 

The Second Amendment conversation isn’t only fought in legislatures. It’s shaped by infrastructure—who can bank, who can process payments, who can get coverage, who educates, and who controls the narrative. These organizations show that “pro-2A” support can show up outside the firearms industry.