[quote]It has been nearly five years since Chick-fil-A chairman and CEO Dan Cathy’s comment that the company was “guilty as charged” of opposing same-sex marriage brought the company’s long history of anti-LGBTQ activism to the nation’s attention.
It has been nearly five years since Cathy, facing national backlash, vowed to stay out of the debate and focus on chicken. At that time, the company launched a very small charm offensive, issuing a statement that the company will “treat every person with honor, dignity and respect-regardless of their beliefs, race, creed, sexual orientation and gender.” (Chick-fil-A did not back this up with any LGBTQ-inclusive non-discrimination policy. )
But has anything changed? It sure doesn’t look that way. While the company’s non-profit arms scaled back support for some of the groups that actively push an anti-gay agenda, the Chick-fil-A Foundation’s most recent IRS filings show it gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to anti-LGBTQ organizations in 2015. Though its website’s FAQ claims the foundation “is focused on helping every child become all they were created to be,” its donations went to groups that do not believe this includes LGBTQ youth.
For example, the Chick-fil-A Foundation gave more than $1 million in 2015 (nearly one-sixth of its total grants) to the the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. The religious organization, which seeks to utilize athletes and coaches to spread Christian teachings, imparts a strongly anti-LGBTQ message. Staff and volunteers with the organization have been required to adhere to a strict “sexual purity” policy, prohibiting any “homosexual acts,” even for married couples. The group takes the view that, “The Bible is clear in teaching on sexual sin including sex outside of marriage and homosexual acts. Neither heterosexual sex outside of marriage nor any homosexual act constitute an alternative lifestyle acceptable to God.”
The foundation also gave more than $200,000 to the Paul Anderson Youth Home, a Georgia-based “transformative organization” that operates a “Christian residential home for troubled youth.” Focusing on boys, their teachings include the idea that the “sexual, physical, and mental abuse of children, mostly in the alleged ‘safety’ of their own homes has produced all kinds of evil throughout the culture to include the explosion of homosexuality in the last century.” The myth that people are LGBTQ due to abuse is a claim frequently made by anti-LGBTQ organizations to promote harmful “ex-gay” therapy.
Additionally, the Chick-fil-A Foundation gave at least $130,000 to the Salvation Army. The religious organization has a long history of anti-LGBTQ housing discrimination, opposition to same-sex marriage equality, and supporting exemptions from non-discrimination ordinances. One page on its website, entitled “The Salvation Army and the LGBT Community,” boasts that the group adheres “to all relevant employment laws, providing domestic partner benefits accordingly.’ Given that only a minority of states explicitly bar anti-LGBTQ discrimination, that’s a low bar.
The Human Rights Campaign’s most recent scorecard rates Chick-fil-A a 0 on LGBTQ-inclusive policies (or lack thereof). With its continued foundation giving to those who preach anti-LGBTQ values — at least $1.4 million in 2015 alone — it does not appear that the group has yet lived up to its promise to focus on poultry.[/quote]
Good thing I'm still not one of their customers.
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You're just mad they won't give you and your husband chicken
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2 RepliesEdited by Tis-but-a-scratch: 7/9/2017 4:53:22 AMYou have no clue how much good this company does. Go on, don't be a customer. I'm sure your dollar is missed. Says everyone has a right to believe what thay want. Then criticizes those who don't step in line with them. Liberal hipocracy at it's best.
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Cuck Max angry they won't sell him chicken. You eat the drumsticks, not play them on your colon you fruit.
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11 RepliesShould change your name to Melodramatic Max.
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7 RepliesSo your complaint is that a privately (Christian) owned business is giving to Christian charities and that's somehow wrong?
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1 ReplyWhy should this matter? It's a business. Who they decide to donate to is their business. Amazing how some just can't respect one's beliefs. Why should a business have to bend over backwards for a select few. If one doesn't like their views, go elsewhere.
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Edited by Tis-but-a-scratch: 7/12/2017 6:10:57 PMGoing strong. This is me in line today at a Chic fil a. There was maybe 6 or 7 behind me. Looked as if someone kicked an ant mound. Maybe, just maybe the issues aren't as big as the liberal media wants us to think it is.
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3 Replies[quote]Good thing I'm still not one of their customers.[/quote] Good thing i wont have to wait longer for my nuggets then
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2 RepliesGood, at least one company still has some sense
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Cool, they're a private business. I can care less, their chicken tastes -blam!-ing great.
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Funds athletes, troubled youth homes and the salvos. I dont see the issue here.
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Makes me want some chick fil a
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Their restaurant their choice
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32 RepliesIm going to stop you right here as someone who has been and will continue to be a part of FCA. The Fellowship Of Christian Athletes has Christian Ideals and will teach what they want to teach. Chick-fil-A wants to support a Christian organization which helps thousands of athletes have an opportunity that they otherwise wouldn't have just do it through a Christian lens and you think its a bad thing bc the Christian group doesn't support LGBT communities? What a joke thats like getting outraged at water for being wet. Meanwhile companies that are pro LGBT are bank rolling pro LGBT causes there is literally zero difference yet you just want to be outraged at chic-fil-A. You should probably get pissed off a Bojangles too if you even have them bc they give money to FCA as well.
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2 RepliesGood thing we have companies that won't just roll over and go along with things they don't believe in order to gain more money
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I like chik-fil-a a little more now.
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Thanks for reminding me to support them!
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2 RepliesIf you boycott every company that does something you don't agree with, you'll be a naked homeless man with no possessions eating grass
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1 ReplyEdited by Haunter: 7/10/2017 8:54:49 PMThank you for bringing this to my attention. I will now eat more often at chic-fil-a
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I still am and always will be, They have very good values. [spoiler]and hella good food[/spoiler]
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Do they deny service to lgbt people?
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This is the only thing I care about regarding Chick-Fil-A.
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I'm a pro-gay conservative that will happily munch upon some chic-fil-a whenever given the chance.
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16 RepliesHave they denied service to LGBT? I'll wait, because donating to organizations that promote heterosexual marriage isn't that big of a deal.
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2 RepliesThis offends me as a vegan transgender atheist German engineer who vapes organic decaffeinated compressed soy breast milk on the regular and a person who does Indian naked crossfit yoga 5 times per week. I'm also a male feminist and identify myself as a pastafarian Apache helicopter dog who serves only to one master: my chihuahua which I helped cross the border of Mexico because I hate Donald Trump. My dog also walks me, if you find that weird you're an arrogant ignorant homophobic globaphobic sexist.
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2 RepliesGod forbid gay people eat chicken.