Chick-Fil-A And The People Who Support Them

Instinct Magazine (Archive) - September 14, 2021
by, Buck Jones

Remember back to the olden days of the culture wars, when the LGBTQ community united in opposition to a company that was anti-gay marriage and beat them in the court of public opinion with a successful boycott?

No? Neither do I.

Many of us have vague fond memories of the media storm that surrounded the comments made by the president of Chick-Fil-A, the popular restaurant chain run by a Southern Baptist family from Georgia. For a hot second, all of our allies on MSNBC, in the political sphere, even our gay friends who rarely followed the news seemed aware that going to Chick-Fil-A was verboten.

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What really happened is as follows.

In the summer of 2012 (these things always seem to happen during a presidential election year, to fire up the political bases for both the FOX News right and the MSNBC left), the president of Chick-Fil-A Dan Cathy said in a series of interviews and subsequent tweets that he was against marriage equality. Specifically, “I think we are inviting God’s judgment on our nation when we shake our fist at Him and say, “We know better than you as to what constitutes a marriage”. I pray God’s mercy on our generation that has such a prideful, arrogant attitude to think that we have the audacity to define what marriage is about.”

Okay, whatever. It almost seems quaint looking back on his comments, given all that the Trump years unleashed on us like a firehose.

Growing up in the South, I remember that Chick-Fil-A was always closed on Sundays, the “Lord’s Day,” in respect for the Sabbath. It just made our lunch choices at the Augusta Mall food court a bit easier without their availability as an option, and we knew that the company was run by conservative Christians. We didn’t think anything more about it.

So it wasn’t exactly a big news flash to learn that the company was also against marriage equality. But suddenly everyone was up in arms because of Cathy’s comments. LGBTQ groups organized a boycott, while Arkansas Governor (and perennial FOX News guest) Mike Huckabee led a counter-boycott that supported Chick-Fil-A.

Guess which side won?

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In the short term, Chick-Fil-A’s sales spiked. Christians and conservatives flocked in support of the chain, and the restaurant became a kind of political signal of the looming cancel culture that would later develop as the left held individuals and institutions accountable for their words and actions.

In the medium term, marriage equality obviously became the law of the land thanks to the Supreme Court Obergefell decision in 2015. Chick-Fil-A’s support of “traditional marriage” faded as it tried to refocus on its business and withdraw from the media spotlight as a symbol of a losing crusade. But it remains a company deeply influenced by its Southern Baptist founders and corporate board.

Recently Business Insider reported on who the average customer is today for Chick-Fil-A. I imagined that after nearly a decade of public scrutiny and as a symbol for the political right, their customers would reflect the demographics of the typical Trumpist / FOX News viewer (angry old white people).

I was mistaken.

The typical Chick-Fil-A customer is a Gen-Xer in the suburbs with a high income who only eats there around 11 times a year, but eats fast food almost every other day. According to their research, “The typical Chick-fil-A customer is white and between 45 and 54 years old, according to data provided by analytics firm Numerator. These customers tend to be either adult couples, or large, young families. They likely live in the suburbs, with a high income and a full-time job.”

It added, “Although the average customer is white, a Chick-fil-A customer is more likely to be black than the typical quick-service customer overall.”

Ouch. So here we are, nearly a decade after this negative spotlight on a company that everyone knows is anti-gay, and nothing has changed.

I’m not a Chick-Fil-A customer, even though I fall within that demographic checklist. Yeah, their waffle fries are great, and they have a great chicken sandwich. But I don’t want to give my money to any company that views me as a threat, as antithetical to “God’s design” or civilization. Yes, the list of companies we are supposed to boycott is never ending, with Amazon at the top of the list but I fail even that easy abstinence with each e-book I purchase for my Kindle. So I’m not above being called a hypocrite.

However, I’ve made a decision that I can forgo Chick-Fil-A (and Cracker Barrel, for that matter) for the larger picture, to support” the gay agenda” so to speak. Boycotting in and of itself is not a bad thing, but don’t fool yourselves into thinking that much, if anything, will change from it other than making you feel righteous.
 
Chic-fil-a is alright. People Dedicated to Quality has better sandwiches and chicken, IMO.

The mac and cheese is good for what it is.

I don't go there religiously to piss off fags, that's gay, but it does tickle me when I find myself having it.
 
As someone who worked in a mall a couple of years back, Chick-fil-A was the go-to-place for me. Virtual boycotts never made much sense to me since they never actually go to any of the places they boycott.
 
"Yes, the list of companies we are supposed to boycott is never ending, with Amazon at the top of the list but I fail even that easy abstinence with each e-book I purchase for my Kindle. So I’m not above being called a hypocrite. "

So whats the fucking point of this article? I was about to call the author out within the first 5 words but I glanced at the last paragraph and saw this so he already did it for me.

You know why people dont do it, and boycots dont work even when it isnt against some globo-corp monopoly. They dont actually care, the cries against a large swath of people being almost entirely virtue signaling and the rest self-interest are valid, and people will give up a lot of shit for convenience, once you ask them to inconvenience themselves, you see where their values lie.
They do realize that Chick-fil-A stopped donating to the anti lgbt organizations YEARS ago, right? So they can shut the fuck up about it.
I was also gonna bring that up, I remember hearing, after they started booming around the time of those controversies, they decided to separate from that shit. The only "religious" thing they openly do anymore is that they dont operate on Sundays so I wonder if they'll be boycotted for that by maybe some Redditors or some shit who cant pick apart nuance and reconcile it with their own viewpoints.
 
I am wondering if the author was invited to a Middle Eastern restaurant would they quiz the restaurant owner on their options on LBGT issues. In addition, would they demand to see the tax returns of the business and owner to review them for non-PC donations?
 
My only beef (heh) is they got rid of their spicy dressing. Other than that, I love my bigot chicken. Never had one bad experience with them. They get orders painfully right every time, and never forget napkins. I‘m hungry.
 
"Yes, the list of companies we are supposed to boycott is never ending, with Amazon at the top of the list but I fail even that easy abstinence with each e-book I purchase for my Kindle. So I’m not above being called a hypocrite. "
Can you imagine living life in such a way that almost everything is "sinful" "problematic"?

Where there's an endless list of companies one is "supposed to boycott"?

Woke really is a cult. An anti-human, "toxic" cult.
 
They’re opening up a chick fil-a in my mom’s city in Canada, so I guess I’ll see if God’s chicken is worth the hype.

in reality, most normies don’t even care about the alphabet people outside of pride month. Not surprised that they’ll choose chicken over gays
 
I think Chick-Fil-A is mediocre, but I hate faggots. Should I start eating there?

As a middle aged LEZBEEN, YES.

We have one Chick-Fil-A in my city. The place is clean, staff always friendly, and the chicken sandwiches are great. I go because they have waffle fries just like the Orange Julius in the mall when I grew up in the 1980s.
 
we have deemed your choice in fried chicken a political statement and DON'T YOU FUCKING FORGET IT
 
$5 for a hockey puck-sized patty, tho. Granted, that might seem cheap to eurofags, but still.
Who said I got the shitty puck-with-a-pickle? 40 pieces of chopped chicken to nurse on during work is good enough for me, if I'm too lazy to just air-fry the shit myself, CFA's a good alternative.
 
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