UPDATE: Seems like quite a few chicken-loving, same-sex marriage foes turned out for Wednesday's Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day.
Based on reports from around the country, many Chick-fil-As had lines out the door come lunchtime. Attendees emphasized a mix of support for the company's stance against equal marriage rights and for what's being billed as an underlying free speech issue in the initial backlash against the fast food chain's officially outed politics. Mayors in a handful of cities, including Boston and Chicago, responded to president and COO Dan Cathy's recent remarks on his "Biblical" view of marriage by insinuating that the chain was not welcome within city limits.*
According to CNN, the company won't say exactly how much the demonstrations boosted the company's bottom-line, but has confirmed that Wednesday was a "record-setting day." [Elsewhere in Slate, David Weigel reports on the scene at a Chick-fil-A in Pennsylvania.]
Gay rights supporters, meanwhile, are still gearing up for what they're calling "National Same-Sex Kiss Day at Chick-fil-A" on Friday, a name that pretty much explains it all. "Let's show Chick-fil-A thanks for their support of Love, Equality, and the Real Definition of Marriage! Invite your friends!" organizers said on its Facebook page.
Wednesday, August 1: It's looking like Chick-Fil-A, already in the middle of the ongoing debate on gay marriage, will serve as ground zero for the increasingly heated culture war this week.
The fast-food chain has long attracted chicken lovers across the political spectrum despite its open alignment with conservative evangelical Christian ideas and organizations that steadfastly oppose same-sex marriages. But that appears to be changing in the wake of chain president Dan Cathy's recent decision to publicly affirm the company's "Biblical" view on marriage to the Baptist Press.
Cathy's comments gained enough media traction to make the company's history of supporting anti-gay efforts compete with the apparent tastiness of its product, sparking calls for a boycott on the left—and some constitutionally questionable efforts by city mayors to ban the chain—and an outpouring of support from the write-in response.
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