There is exactly one Chick-fil-A in New York City. Which is striking, because New York City is big and lucrative, and Chick-fil-A is a big and lucrative brand. And, as I discover during lunch at its sole location on the New York University campus, it’s decently tasty, too. The menu is just what one would expect from the name: Chicken in various states of fry served on buns, with fried potatoes in various different cuts on the side, and pop and milkshakes for drinks. It’s cheap, quick, and charmingly kitschy, with a menu spare enough to limit the anxieties of choice.
This simple business model has made Chick-fil-A very successful — it is to the South what In-n-Out is to California — and its founder, 92-year-old Samuel Truett Cathy, very rich. Forbes estimates his worth at $1.2 billion. And he’s devoted his considerable wealth to a life of philanthropy. He has distributed more than $35 million in scholarships to help Chick-fil-A employees go to college, another $26 million to scholarships for students at Berry College, and another $18 million for foster homes throughout the United States. He’s been honored by the Children’s Hunger Fund, and won the Horatio Alger award and the William E. Simon Prize for Philanthropic Leadership, for his charity.
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Incidentally, Cathy is also an enthusiastic Baptist, and one domain of his charitable giving reflects that fact. Chick-fil-A is closed on Sundays, includes religious language in its mission statement, and donates some money to causes like the Campus Crusade for Christ. Consequently, a meme has developed on left-leaning and pro-gay-rights websites in the past year that Chick-fil-A is virulently anti-gay. Since then, the nonagenarian Samuel Truett Cathy has gone from a noted philanthropist to a hate-figure — in two senses of the phrase — for many liberals, and has gotten a string of very negative press.
It’s become a prickly issue. The company will no longer take requests for comment regarding its donations, philanthropy, and political or religious activism. Cathy issued one statement when the controversy began to congeal: “In recent weeks, we have been accused of being anti-gay. . . . We have no agenda against anyone. While my family and I believe in the Biblical definition of marriage, we love and respect anyone who disagrees.”
Nonetheless, when a Chick-fil-A opened in Chicago last year, activists affiliated with getequal.org protested to “stop the hate” and distributed flyers styled with a pun on its name, “Bigot-fil-A,” that the organizers apparently found clever. Elsewhere, college students have tried to get Chick-fil-As removed from their campuses. They were successful at Indiana University at South Bend. Which might have something to do with the fact that there’s exactly one Chick-fil-A in New York City: If the chain wanted to open another store here, it would likely face similar protests.
But the dirt that activists have dug up on Cathy isn’t really that incriminating, even from a pro-gay-rights perspective. His top sin, according to the agitprop flyers produced by getequal.org, is financial support for the National Christian Foundation and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Also among Cathy’s anathema affiliations is Campus Crusade for Christ. (When you think Campus Crusade for Christ, you think homophobia, right? Me neither.) There is no evidence that Chik-fil-A has funded groups that are primarily devoted to opposing same-sex marriage, such as the National Organization for Marriage (which is not to imply that such a donation would demonstrate anti-gay animus).
Judging by the arguments put forth on lefty blogs, there are three additional justifications for singling out Chick-fil-A for protests: The first is a local Chick-fil-A catering for a Pennsylvania Family Institute marriage retreat at which, PFI president Michael Geer says, “At no time . . . was the subject of same-sex marriage discussed or presented” (despite what was erroneously reported elsewhere). The second is relatively small donations to the group Focus on the Family (which, despite its reputation among bien pensants, actually devotes most of its funds to charitable efforts outside of the culture war, as David French has pointed out). And the third is Chick-fil-A’s ties to WinShape, a charity with dozens of projects, one of which is a marriage retreat limited to legally married, opposite-sex couples.
So the facts show Cathy to be a generous philanthropist who devotes millions to uncontroversial education charity; who gives some thousands more to Christian groups; who admits that for theological reasons he opposes the legal institution of same-sex marriage, but isn’t preoccupied by it; and who doesn’t exclude from his charity socially conservative groups. Reasonable people can disagree with WinShape’s requirements for couples on its marriage retreats and dislike aspects of Focus on the Family’s research and advocacy. But no reasonable person can see proof of frothing anti-gay bigotry in Samuel Truett Cathy’s donations, especially when his own words convey “love and respect” for same-sex-marriage advocates.
Activists are obviously welcome to protest and withdraw their patronage from any business, especially one whose political advocacy they disagree with. That’s democracy. But if we really want to “stop the hate” — and we should stop hate where it actually exists — we should look elsewhere than Chick-fil-A and the aged philanthropist at its head.
— Matthew Shaffer is a William F. Buckley Fellow at the National Review Institute.
editor’s note: This article has been amended to correct the misspelling of the restaurant chain’s name.
A man invents a food service concept for which Americans are perfectly willing to exchange their wealth to enjoy, and liberal secularist pukes seek it's destruction because the founder acknowledges the existence of a power beyond holy government.
Excellent post. Unfortunately the Left rarely wants equality. It wants superiority. Gay marriage is so good as to be ABOVE criticism. Not sharing the same THOUGHT life as the left is proof of bigotry and evil. All divergent views must be crushed and de-legitimized not simply debated.
This is the problem that Left has with Chick-fil-A until all that disagree with the Left are crushed they can't rest.
The left is so lazy as to assume any Christian group must be anti-gay as they define it. This is what we mean when we say the left are the aggressors in the culture wars. Demonizing Campus Crusade as anti-gay will just turn more people against the left's agenda. The Culture Wars continue....sadly.
The left's rants on this company doesn't seem to have affected their business...the lines are still long inside and in the drive-thru. It may just be free advertising for Chik-Fil-A.
Why is it that the ones who preach tolerance don't pratice it? To quote Doc Holliday in Tombstone: "Why Wyatt, my hypocracy knows no bounds". Typically liberal/left.
Just found out today that the Johnsonville company (brats) is a major supporter of Gov. Walker in Wisconsin. Now Johnsonville and Chick-Fil-A are both on my "preferred" list.
When the left disagrees with the right, the disagreement is intellectual and diverse. When the right disagrees with the left, the disagreement is based on hate. It's become so cliche that I wonder how these so-called stop the hate protests can even persuade those who are protesting!
This is the thin tip of the wedge. Today it is merely distasteful to be Christian and to endorse such an ignorant position as opposition to gay marriage. In time, it will be encoded in our laws and it will be illegal to practice orthodox Christianity. If you think this is conflated conspiracy laden twaddle, try to adopt a child from a Catholic agency in Boston.
I will hate socialism until I die. Well, actually, on through eternity, too, so I doubt it'll EVER stop.
For socialists, It's OK to be rich, and it's OK to be Christian, and it's not a cause for death to be both at once. But to use one's wealth to further one's Christianity? That's where the rubber has to meet the road.
If Cathy had just kept his views and his money to himself, he'd have avoided all this. Does he not know that TAXES are the best form of philanthropy, anyway?
Who needs private charity when we have welfare programs?
Does Cathy get moral dispensation if he agrees to hold a gay wedding at a Chik-Fil-A franchise?
Trivia Q: What percentage of society can be homosexual before humanity loses the ability to reproduce?
"the argument is undercut by general ignorance manifested in the first couple of paragraphs."
What argument? The author didn't make one - he simply informed us that the Chik-Fil-A founder is under attack for being an active rich Christian.
As for ignorance, the first couple paragraphs you reference describe Chik-Fil-A and Cathy's background. Did the writer mischaracterize the business? Is the info on Cathy inaccurate? Or by omission, does it leave out alternate info that would paint a different picture?
Of what is Shaffer ignorant?
I'm ignorant of the percentage of society that can be homosexual before humans lose the ability to reproduce. I know there's a cut off, I'm just ignorant of where nature sets it.
The loyal opposition is not the only ones with the ability to boycott companies whose politics stand in opposition to theirs. My personal list includes:
Hallmark
Levis
Coke
McDonalds is on my hit list as well, but I can't bring myself to pull the trigger on that one yet.
Is it a boycott if I don't make a Facebook page or a blog or go on CNN to convince everyone else of the rightness of my point of view?
I've just quietly bought no Levi's since around 1993, when they chose to stop supporting the Boy Scouts. Fine. That was their choice how to place their corporate donations. My choice was to put my family's clothing budget elsewhere.
I've also stayed away from Dannon as much as possible since they were a sponsor of the Million Mom March.
I do plan to stop at Chick-Fil-A on my next road trip.
My college (Florida Gulf Coast University) recently had a battle about Chick-fil-A. The debate was whether or not to have it in the new food court in the rebuilt student union. The school newspaper, numerous times had the "leader" of the people opposed to the resturant on the front page, they made no mention of anyone who wanted to have Chick-fil-A. The young man's basic argument was that having the "anti-gay" chain in the student union would violate the building's purpose to be a place where anyone could enter without fear of being hated/discriminated against.
Thankfully, the faculty at FGCU showed some mental clarity and approved the resturant. So now I am sitting in the food court, enjoying a Spicy Chicken sandwich with a cool vanilla shake to make sure I don't burn my mouth to ashes, and reveling in the fact that sanity prevailed here.
This article highlights why the Left hates capitalism. It's hard to control the ideas when people have choices. I vote with my wallet. Chik-Fil-A and other like-minded companies will reap the rewards. God bless them!