ronnie_suburban wrote:I'll never eat at one of these places and it has nothing to do with their food.![]()
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dodger wrote:Sorry, I guess I’m uninformed. What are the reasons?
dodger wrote:Sorry, I guess I’m uninformed. What are the reasons?
D.
Dave148 wrote:dodger wrote:Sorry, I guess I’m uninformed. What are the reasons?
D.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chick-fil ... ontroversy
WhyBeeSea wrote:Appreciate the civil conversation on this. It's a nice change of pace to what we're all probably used to.
I love the food at chick fil a but have decided to stop eating there as well. But I'm not going to criticize others for continuing to do so.
thetrob wrote:By not eating at a Chick-fil-a, are you punishing Cathy or are you punishing the franchise owner who may not share those same beliefs?
In addition, Chick-fil-a donates large amounts of unused food to food banks, funds scholarships for their workers, does lots of community work, and in times of need have opened the restaurants to help feed people.
MarlaCollins'Husband wrote:thetrob wrote:By not eating at a Chick-fil-a, are you punishing Cathy or are you punishing the franchise owner who may not share those same beliefs?
In addition, Chick-fil-a donates large amounts of unused food to food banks, funds scholarships for their workers, does lots of community work, and in times of need have opened the restaurants to help feed people.
I have a couple of thoughts on this. I'll start with the positive - I don't know of a fast food chain that treats its employees better than this one appears to and that means a great deal to me. And there's no question that the company does some good in the world via some of its charitable contributions. That said, I can't support a company whose leadership has made the conscious choice to go out of its way to support legalized discrimination based on sexual orientation, no matter what drives their decision to do so.
Regarding the idea that people who choose not to patronize the place are hurting franchise owners as well. In Chicago, virtually every franchise owner opened after the controversy was very much in the public sphere, so no, I have no qualms whatsoever about not contributing to their profits.
Pursuit wrote:Disappointed to see a moderator introduce politics to these discussions. In my view, we get enough of this stuff everywhere else during our day. I’m sure its all well meaning, and more so, there’s been a page of reasonably civil discourse, so congrats to all. That said, I think we’ve got the gist, can we return to food based discussions now and leave the politics out of it?
stoutisgoodfood wrote:Although I've had their product and it was decent, I prefer to give my business to small individual spots (like Big Guys, which isn't much farther away for me). Those folks are the true warriors of fast food and deserve the shout out!
gnarchief wrote:Food is inherently political so trying to separate the topics will just kneecap discussion.
The city’s first Chick-fil-A with a drive-thru is coming to a new retail development at 1113 S. Jefferson Street in the South Loop, according to a real estate report.
thetrob wrote:At one point their charitable arm also donated to organizations considered anti-LGBTQ, but they no longer contribute to them.
nsxtasy wrote:thetrob wrote:At one point their charitable arm also donated to organizations considered anti-LGBTQ, but they no longer contribute to them.
Not true, according to the above Wikipedia link, which states, "As of April 2018, Chick Fil-A reportedly continues to donate to anti-LGBT groups." They cite four references for that statement, including this one:
Chick-fil-A is still bankrolling anti-LGBTQ causes
ronnie_suburban wrote:Putting politics aside, what is the actual allure of this place? The food is mass produced, low-level crap, and virtually indistinguishable from any other fried fast food chicken sandwich out there. I just don't get it what there is to be excited about.
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ronnie_suburban wrote:Putting politics aside, what is the actual allure of this place? The food is mass produced, low-level crap, and virtually indistinguishable from any other fried fast food chicken sandwich out there. I just don't get it what there is to be excited about.
Cathy2 wrote:I would not put all my faith in what Wikipedia states.
thetrob wrote:The last cited/ verified donations were from 2015, and were to the Salvation Army, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and to a youth home in Vidalia.
article in thinkprogress.org wrote: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.