Chicken Hearted
As a legal matter marriage
is the creation of a legal entity the members of which receive benefits and
incur costs and liabilities they would not have otherwise – similar to the
creation of an LLC. (Of course most people who marry see the act as much more -
as a profound declaration of affection
and commitment - but that is something apart from law and
government.) It seems reasonable and
equitable to me that marriages between homosexual couples are given the
same treatment and recognition by governments as those between heterosexual couples.
Many religious people disagree. They believe that the institution
of marriage is of divine origin, that a marriage must meet some doctrinal
requirements including being between a
man and a woman, and that governments
should accept those requirements in deciding what to treat as a marriage. This
does not mean that they are bigoted against homosexuals, though some are. It
means only that they take their creed seriously as in a free country they have
a right to do and as in a civil country they would be able to do without fear
of ostracism.
The Chick-fil-A company has been attacked over the years
because it and its founder have supported Christian organizations favoring the
legality of only traditional marriages.
There have been actions by politicians in some cities to keep the
company’s stores out of places in their jurisdiction and at least one serious
attempt at a boycott. The boycott failed completely because the company’s loyal
customers, many of whom share its founder’s opinions, made a point of
patronizing a Chick-fil-A store at the
time.
I do not like to see anyone intimidated by political
correctness’s would-be thought police, and I am surely sick of watching gutless
corporate weasels cave in and crawl on their bellies out of fear of criticism from
a few obnoxious twits on social media. In
the past and irrespective of whether one
agreed with their opinions, it was easy to admire the people running Chick-fil-A for sticking to their guns and standing up
against the pressure. Now it is hard not
to see them as just another bunch of craven corporate weasels.
This week executives at the company announced their
foundation would no longer give money to the Salvation Army or the Fellowship
of Christian Athletes. I know nothing
about the activities of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, but the Salvation
Army does good charitable work all over the country and is admired for it by
many people whether or not they agree with its religious beliefs. (As an aside I would guess that the Salvation Army provides
more charity to needy homosexuals in a week than the entire LBGT social media
mob’s members do in a year.) There was
some stuff from the company about refocusing
the activities of the foundation toward homeless people and other things, but it seemed fairly obvious that the
decision was made and promoted to placate critics. After all it is odd that a foundation announcing its intention
to focus on helping homeless people would simultaneously dump the organization
that is doing more than any other to help homeless people.
Besides being wrong, the action is stupid. It won’t appease
the company’s enemies. It will only make them more aggressive by showing Chick-fil-A
can be had. It will offend and sadden customers and others who had stood by
Chick-fil-A. It is not as bad as what
Gillette did. The people running Chick-fil-A are not directly spitting in their customers’ faces as with Gillette. They are more spitting in their own faces, and that is bad enough.
Labels: political correctness, politics
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