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Associated Press

ATLANTA (AP) - All of a sudden, biting into a fried chicken sandwich has become a political statement.

Chick-fil-A, the fast-food chain known for putting faith ahead of profits by closing on Sundays, is standing firm in its opposition to gay marriage after touching off a furor earlier this month.

Gay rights groups have called for a boycott, the Jim Henson Co. pulled its Muppet toys from kids' meals, and politicians in Boston and Chicago told the chain it is not welcome there.

Across the Bible Belt, where most of the 1,600 restaurants are situated, Christian conservatives have thrown their support behind the Atlanta-based company, promising to buy chicken sandwiches and waffle fries next week on "Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day."

The latest skirmish in the nation's culture wars began when Chick-fil-A president Dan Cathy told the Baptist Press that the company was "guilty as charged" for backing "the biblical definition of a family." In a later radio interview, he ratcheted up the rhetoric: "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.'"

That fired up gay rights advocates, including a group that waged a campaign against the company in recent years by publicizing $3 million in contributions that the Cathy family foundation has made to conservative organizations such as the Family Research Council.

"This solidifies Chick-fil-A as being closely aligned with some of the most vicious anti-gay voices in the country," said Carlos Maza of Equality Matters.

A Chicago alderman vowed to block a Chick-fil-A proposed in his district, and Mayor Rahm Emanuel supported him, saying, "Chick-fil-A values are not Chicago values." Boston Mayor Thomas Menino wrote in a letter to Cathy: "There is no place for discrimination on Boston's Freedom Trail and no place for your company alongside it."

In announcing it was pulling its toys, the Jim Henson company said it has "celebrated and embraced diversity for over 50 years." It directed its revenue from the Chick-fil-A toys to GLAAD, a leading gay rights organization.

On the other side of the debate, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a Baptist minister, declared next Wednesday "Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day" to support a business "whose executives are willing to take a stand for the Godly values." Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who like Huckabee ran for president as a darling of social conservatives, joined the cause along with religious leaders.

"As the son of a dairy farmer who milked many a cow, I plan to `Eat Mor Chikin' and show my support by visiting Chick-fil-A next Wednesday," the Rev. Billy Graham said in a statement, referring to the slogan in the company's ads, which feature cows urging people to eat poultry.

The Rev. Roger Oldham, spokesman for the Southern Baptist Convention, said many Christians want to support businesses owned by fellow believers, and the loyalty intensifies "when Christians see a fellow Christian being persecuted."

"They will come out of the woodwork when a theologically based position is being politicized by individuals for their own purposes," he said.

The Cathy family has never hid its Southern Baptist faith. Since Dan Cathy's father, Truett, opened the first Chick-fil-A in 1967, the restaurants have been closed on Sundays, and the company refused to reconsider during the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, sacrificing profits. It also boasts that the Chick-fil-A Bowl is the only college football bowl game with an invocation.

Chick-fil-A posted more than $4.1 billion in sales last year, most of it below the Mason-Dixon Line. Just 14 of its restaurants are in the six states and the District of Columbia where gay marriage is legal. Massachusetts has just two locations, both more than 10 miles from Boston. Illinois, which does not have same-sex marriage, has around a dozen, though only one in Chicago.

The company is well-positioned to come through the criticism relatively unscathed, even if it loses new markets in the North and elsewhere, University of Georgia marketing professor Sundar Bharadwaj said. He said that is because Chick-fil-A basically reflects the politics of its customers.

At a downtown Atlanta Chick-fil-A on Thursday, customers were divided over the company's stance.

"If you're a Christian, you believe in the Bible. The Bible says homosexuality is wrong. (Cathy's) absolutely right," Marci Troutman said over her breakfast.

Her business partner, Steve Timpson, said he chose not to eat at Chick-fil-A: "You've got to be more tolerant if you're going to operate in the wider market in this country."

Nearby, Dustin Keller offered another view of Cathy: "It's his opinion. He's entitled to it. I'm just here to eat."


(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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  • Abuse
    gordogalindo wrote...
    Anyone
    upset over Chick Fil A's position should look in the mirror and realize what a hypocrite they are. For any City Official to come out and state they will deny any permit for a company to rightfully open their private business selling food will be sued faster than they can say idiot. Do you really care if they CEO doesn't believe in Gay marriage? They don't discriminate against anyone in regards to employment or who can be served in their restaurants, you're just an intolerant hypocrite to protest this company.
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    So tell me gordo
    If your local grocery store ceo came out and proclaimed his faith in allah, and said that it was only a matter of time before America was crushed by muslim followers, and that he was really looking forward to that day...would you rush down to take advantage of his sale on canned peas? Would you possibly look at moving your business across the street to his competitor? I figure if you own a business and decide to proclaim your views on political matters, then Americans have the right to avoid your business despite the fact they may love your products. Your view sounds socialist to me, buddy!
  • Abuse
    gordogalindo wrote...
    wrote
    Like a true Socialist pig that you are wrote. Can you intelligently make a comparison? Apparently not, Mr. Cathy made no such "violent" threat toward anybody. Do you in your narrow little mind feel threatened by Mr. Cathy believing in God and the Holy Bible?? You're lame attempt to made a connection resulted in a violent take over by a vicious and murderous cult, Islam, the same religion that would hang homosexuals in the street. You're an idiot and a hypocrite.
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    Sorry Gordo
    I thought since you had a computer you were a partially rational person. My mistake.
  • Abuse
    wrote...
    sure
    people do have the right to not eat there if it offends them. and i also have the right to support them even more than before!! which is why we're going there for lunch again RIGHT NOW! long live the Chick-Fil-A chain for believing in something and sticking to it!!!!!!
  • Abuse
    IamPaul wrote...
    Wednesday is Chick-fil-A day
    I am eating out Wednesday, Chik-Fil-A day. Pass the word around. I hope Chick-fil-A has a record Wednesday. The Lib Govmt leaders should just stick to governing all the people and keep there own moral or imoral ideas to themselves. It is high time the moral right stand up for God and Country! I have no problem with gay people being gay. Just do it in private and dont expect me or anyone else to condone it!
  • Abuse
    Ron VK wrote...
    political office
    While you have a right to your opinion and have the right to eat or not eat where ever you want. Why do the libereals think it is the right of muslems to put a mosque near ground zero but you can't put a Chic-a-fil in Chicago?
  • Abuse
    azdriver wrote...
    Went There
    As soon as I heard the news on the car radio, I went right over to the nearest store and bought one of their delicious shakes.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    Liberals...the poster children
    for intollerance.
  • Abuse
    gordogalindo wrote...
    Poor wrote
    You use a Muslim comparison, a cult that is violent, murders innocent women and children to intimidate and you call me irrational? What a coward.