Since 2012, members of the LGBTQ community has been incensed that Chick-Fil-A CEO Dan T. Cathy confessed his belief in traditional family values—specifically that marriage should only be between a man and a woman. There was also anger after it became known that Cathy’s father—and Chil-Fil-A founder—Samuel Truett Cathy donated to Christian organizations, some of which lobby against gay marriage.
However, in 2012, the restaurant backed away from politics and issued a statement saying, “Going forward, our intent is to leave the policy debate over same-sex marriage to the government and political arena,” which they’ve done.
Though it’s a reasonable assumption that the owners of the company remain unwavering in their adherence to Christian principles, their beliefs stay personal and don’t commingle with the service provided by their business, which is inclusive of all guests, including members of the LGBTQ community.
All people are allowed into the restaurant. All people receive the same level of service. All people are able to feast on the Lord’s waffle fries. All people pay the same prices. And all people are allowed to use their restrooms. This is complete equality. Chick-Fil-A doesn’t discriminate against anyone.
So, why do these protesters have their feathers ruffled?
Activists who protest Chick-Fil-A don’t seem to care about equality. They demand ideological orthodoxy and complete submission to an LGBTQ agenda that has moved far beyond the basic idea of equal treatment under the law.
These protests are not about discrimination, they’re about ideology. They’re about the pro-God culture of the company and the personal convictions of the company’s CEO. He believes that marriage is between a man and a woman. The protesters don’t. His crime is that he has the audacity to think differently than they do.
This latest round of Chick-Fil-A protests is a demonstration that the idea of tolerance is now a one-way street—a limited currency to be used only by some for self-gain, rather than a guiding principle equally applied to all.
So, the protesters who flocked to Toronto said they were standing up against hate? What’s more hateful than trying to shut down the business of a man who treats you as an equal, just because he disagrees with you about who should be in his bedroom?
He is entitled to his personal beliefs, just as the LGBTQ community is entitled to theirs.
All of this shows that the real agenda of these activists is to use force to compel people to subscribe to a specific world view, or use force to punish those who won’t.
I’m pretty sure there’s a word for that.