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Chicago White Sox Support Gun Control Lobby’s Everytown for Gun Safety

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The Chicago White Sox’s decision to publicly align with Everytown for Gun Safety isn’t just another corporate virtue signal—it’s a calculated branding move that treats the Second Amendment like an inconvenient relic rather than a living constitutional right. By lending their platform to Mike Bloomberg’s flagship gun-control outfit, the team signals that fan loyalty and ticket sales matter less than currying favor with coastal donors who view lawful gun ownership as a public-health crisis. For a franchise already struggling to fill seats, this is less about “community safety” and more about virtue auctions where the currency is cultural clout and the cost is alienating millions of law-abiding sports fans who see the right to keep and bear arms as non-negotiable.

What makes the play especially tone-deaf is the selective outrage: Chicago’s own streets remain a daily referendum on failed progressive policies—strict gun laws paired with revolving-door prosecution and fatherless homes—yet the White Sox choose to amplify an organization whose model is national disarmament rather than confronting the city’s real drivers of violence. Everytown’s talking points consistently blur the line between criminals and concealed-carry permit holders, pushing “universal” background checks that function as de-facto registration schemes and “red flag” laws that sidestep due process. When a major-league club endorses that agenda, it hands the gun-control lobby a cultural megaphone that reaches beyond politics into the living rooms of families who simply want to defend themselves without apology.

For the 2A community the takeaway is straightforward: institutions once considered apolitical are now active terrain in the culture war, and silence is no longer an option. Fans who value the right to bear arms have every reason to redirect their dollars—whether through boycotts, letter campaigns, or elevating pro-Second-Amendment athletes and sponsors—until teams understand that constitutional principles aren’t optional accessories. The White Sox may have scored points with Bloomberg’s network, but they just handed the broader firearms community another data point proving that cultural institutions must be actively defended, not passively trusted.

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