Do Republicans Still Buy Sneakers Too?
In 1990, in the midst of a heated -- and racially charged -- U.S. Senate race in North Carolina between Republican incumbent Jesse Helms and Democratic challenger Harvey Gantt, Chicago Bulls superstar guard Michael Jordan issued one of his most famous lines. Jordan, who grew up in Wilmington, North Carolina, and won a national championship in 1982 for the famed University of North Carolina Tar Heels basketball program, was asked whether he would endorse Gantt. Jordan's memorable response, which OutKick founder and syndicated radio host Clay Travis subsequently adopted for a book title, was: "Republicans buy sneakers too." Jordan, in other words, refused to politicize his brand and thus risk sacrificing sales of his signature Air Jordan sneakers, which Nike had first unveiled six years earlier.
It was an admirable assertion of political neutrality -- a refusal to bend the knee to those mandating stifling and homogenous political correctness. As Jordan would later tell ESPN during the filming of its docuseries "The Last Dance," which aired in 2020, "I never thought of myself as an activist. I thought of myself as a basketball player." Jordan's neutrality from decades ago was criticized during the ESPN miniseries by someone........
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