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Huge Response For Support Chick-Fil-A Appreciation Day

12 comments, 142 views, posted 1:35 pm 02/08/2012 in News by Viscera
Viscera has 11856 posts, 1476 threads, 1076 points, location: 1123 6536 5321
Lord of Glencoe

It used to be that taking a bite of a chicken sandwich just meant you were hungry. Now it has become a symbol of whether you stand for or against same-sex marriage, or – alternately – the right to express your personal views without fear of retaliation.
At Chick-fil-A locations across the country, people voted with their wallets today, coming out to express support for the fast-food chain after CEO Dan Cathy said in an interview that he is a firm backer of traditional marriage.
“I believe what the Bible says (about marriage),” Chauncy Fields told us after wolfing down a breakfast of chicken and biscuits. “So I came out here to support Chick-fil-A and the movement.”
Chris Johnson sees a double standard. “He (Dan Cathy) said the exact same thing that President Obama said,” Johnson told Fox News -- referring to the president’s past opposition to gay marriage – “And he gets negativity, and Obama gets positivity.”
At one Atlanta location, the restaurant was packed, while the line for the drive-thru looped twice around the building and out into the street.

The backlash across the country against Chick-fil-A has been ferocious. After the mayors of Chicago and Boston heaped scorn upon the company, the mayor of Washington, DC, suggested it was peddling “hate chicken.”
Those comments drew a sharp response from Rev. William Owens of the Coalition of African American Pastors. “Some people are saying that because of the position that Chick-fil-A is taking, they don’t want them in their cities. It is a disgrace. It is the same thing that happened when I was marching for civil rights, when they didn’t want a black to come into their restaurant," he told a press conference in Washington, DC.
The Chick-fil-A firestorm has taken on different meanings for different people. For some, it harks to the days of intolerance and segregation. For others, it is about religious views of marriage. But for most people who Fox News spoke to today, it is about free speech.
SUMMARY
COMPANY FACTS
Chick-fil-A is a family owned and operated company. It has 1,615 stores in 39 states, and 2011 sales were $4.1 billion.
“I think it comes down to a First Amendment issue. I mean, I do believe in the traditional values of marriage between a man and a woman,” youth pastor Stephen Lenahan told Fox News after a leisurely breakfast with three members of his ministry. He is also puzzled as to why Dan Cathy is such a target, when other corporate CEOs who openly support same-sex marriage are not similarly criticized by conservatives.
Lenahan says he sees a bigger issue at work here. “There is kind of a culture war going on and people aren’t really respecting each other and difference of opinion. There’s no dialogue taking place to get to the heart of what we really believe as a nation and what is truth.”
Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day – as it is being called was the idea of former Arkansas governor and Fox News contributor Mike Huckabee. But as protests against Chick-fil-A swelled across the country, dozens of groups and prominent individuals joined in support of the company.
Among the groups is Project 21, a black conservative activist organization. One of its members, Demetrios Minor, said critics of Dan Cathy have taken his statements completely out of context. “I think liberals are missing a vital point in their blind hatred of Chick-fil-A,” Minor said in a statement sent to Fox News. “Being against gay marriage is not being anti-gay.”
Crtitics of Chick-fil-A argue that the company’s opposition to gay marriage goes well beyond Dan Cathy’s statements. Over the years, its philanthropic wing, WinShape, has donated millions of dollars to outside organizations that actively lobby against efforts to legalize same-sex marriage.
On Friday, supporters of same-sex marriage will have their say. They plan a “kiss-in” at Chick-fil-A restaurants across the country – encouraging gays and lesbians to share a public display of affection at the home of the chicken sandwich.


Extra Points Given by:

griffin (5), Quaektem (5)

Comments

1
1:42 pm 02/08/2012

Viscera

I'll be interested in the coverage of the "kiss-in" and if the numbers even come close to those who came out to support Chick-Fil-A, and in my case, the freedom to believe what you want without retaliation. I predict that less then 50,000 people nation wide will take part in the kiss-in.

3
2:35 pm 02/08/2012

cyvoid

the university of louisville is looking at kicking chick fil a off campus. Fuckin retarded. say that the comments are detrimental to the lgbt community, and want to act to protect peoples right to be.

of course this is at the expense of someone else's right to have an opinion that doesn't agree with yours

http://www.kentucky.com/2012/07/27/2273842/uofl-president-provost-will-not.html

0
4:57 pm 02/08/2012

Viscera

well, more evidence the left isn't interested in liberty, but rather no choice. The anti-choice left is afraid of ideas that don't fall in goose step with theirs. Funny juxtaposition eh?

0
6:30 pm 02/08/2012

cyvoid

as is the right. it is the one thing they have in common

0
6:56 pm 02/08/2012

Cnik

Quote by Viscera:
well, more evidence the left isn't interested in liberty, but rather no choice. The anti-choice left is afraid of ideas that don't fall in goose step with theirs. Funny juxtaposition eh?

No, we believe in liberty. We even support freedom of speech.... we just don't believe in supporting companies that use that freedom to promote hatred.

Example: I believe the KKK, skinheads, and neo-nazi's have the right to say whatever they want. Yet I will never contribute a single dollor to any of them. Whereas these people who purchased food from Chick-fil-a yesterday knowingly and proudly gave money to an organization that supports anti-human righrts groups.

It's not about freedom of speech......

1
7:53 pm 02/08/2012

Viscera

I have no problem whatsoever that someone doesn't agree. But where does the line get drawn in regards to punitive retribution? There is a difference in saying, "I don't agree with someone, so I am not going to be a customer" vs

Quote:
"There’s no place for discrimination on Boston’s Freedom Trail,and no place for your company alongside it.”

So the idea that a group doesn;t agree with gay marriage, but still serves the general public and doesn't engage in hiring discrimination is abhorrent to some, while the same group spews

Quote:
“anyone who eats S*** Fil-A deserves to get the cancer that is sure to come from eating antibiotic filled tortured chickens 4Christ.”

Are you seriously saying that the two pov and the way they are expressed is the same? This is all about freedom of speech and the attempt of the left to bully, intimidate and shout down a dissenting (albeit apparently majority) opinion

2
8:59 pm 02/08/2012

griffin

Quote by Cnik:
It's not about freedom of speech......


Of course it is. Selectively, though. Just subtract 'discrimination' or 'hate' from what they say, and insert 'catholic' or 'orthodox jew' instead. They also condemn gay marriage. So let's have it:

"There’s no place for catholics on Boston’s Freedom Trail,and no place for your church alongside it.”

If that asshole had said that instead, he would have been fucking lynched. But it's ok to browbeat a CEO? It's not cool to hate on a religion for what they believe (and would be political suicide in Boston), but perfectly ok to do so to a CEO. Hmmm. Gotta say, it still smells like freedom of speech to me. Let's try one more and see how it sounds:

"There’s no place for orthodox jews on Boston’s Freedom Trail,and no place for your synogogues of hate alongside it.”

Wow. That's creepy. I wonder why they don't go after the jews too? Maybe because it looks and sounds uber shitty. Again, political suicide.

So just to recap, religions get a free pass on what they preach, but a CEO doesn't. Gotta say, it still looks like freedom of speech to me. Where was the hate when Obama was against gay marriage?

Not shopping there, I can dig it. I think boycotts can be a very effective way of getting problems addressed. And I think it could really help change corporate policy. But mayors openly saying that the company is not welcome, etc. etc. is simply douchey.

If I was Cathy, I'd file for planning permission in each city that blathered such hate filled garbage, and either watch them cave and eat humble pie, or sue them into the ground upon rejection.

1
9:48 pm 02/08/2012

Quaektem

Quote by Cnik:
No, we believe in liberty. We even support freedom of speech.... we just don't believe in supporting companies that use that freedom to promote hatred.

I would not have been surprised if Manino spoke out against Chick-fil-a, that he threatened to block there ability to open a restaurant is the problem I have. That is a very dangerous precedent to let stand...

Quote by Cnik:
Whereas these people who purchased food from Chick-fil-a yesterday knowingly and proudly gave money to an organization that supports anti-human righrts groups.

Really? I hope it's not the completely misrepresented FRC again... please tell me you have more than distortion and lies to back this statement up this time.

0
12:00 am 03/08/2012

Viscera

Quote by griffin:
If I was Cathy, I'd file for planning permission in each city that blathered such hate filled garbage, and either watch them cave and eat humble pie, or sue them into the ground upon rejection.


those cities would be my nest proposed expansion with lawyers from the ACLU at my side

1
12:04 am 03/08/2012

Viscera

Quote by Quaektem:
Whereas these people who purchased food from Chick-fil-a yesterday knowingly and proudly gave money to an organization that supports anti-human righrts groups.


ad hominem attacks always take the place of substantive ones. Not approving of something isn't being anti (insert tem here) I don't apporve of atheists, that doesn't mean I don't think they have a right to believe or not to believe what they want, nor do I picket/legislate/or try and intimidate them to change theor minds. That's the difference

Quote by tolerance:
a fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward those whose opinions, practices, race, religion, nationality, etc., differ from one's own; freedom from bigotry.
1
1:47 am 04/08/2012

Viscera

Quote by Viscera:
I predict that less then 50,000 people nation wide will take part in the kiss-in.



Quote:
More than 20 protesters gathered at one of the fast-food restaurants in Decatur, Georgia, an Atlanta suburb, where Mark Toomajian kissed his partner, Jim Fortier, 58, for the cameras.

20 protesters?? That qualifies as a demonstration??? There were 50-75 people in the line I was in for less then 10 mins at 3:30 in the afternoon in Burlington, MA. Imagine how many were there at noon? And there was no malcontents being disruptive except from one side, imagine that.

early coverage of demonstration

0
3:01 pm 04/08/2012

Viscera

yep, small in comparison. I rest my case

story

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