New Yorker magazine is worried about about Chick-Fil-A

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I blame this thread for making me go for Chick-Fil-A the other day. And it was deeeelicious!!!šŸ˜‹šŸ˜‹šŸ˜‹
 
The New Yorker is mostly pandering to their Leftist ideological subscribers. Many New Yorkers hold no issue to CFA.

ā€œCatholicā€ Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in 2012 that CFA is NOT welcome in NY, and he said the same of pro-lifers.

CFA is simply a restaurant. The owner is a Christian, is open about it, but the food itself isnā€™t religious. Itā€™s weird how globalists will say ā€œYou donā€™t like diversity? Look at all the cool restaurants!ā€ Then when a restaurant gets a spot which an ideology they donā€™t like, it must be shut out. Itā€™s very hypocritical.
 
CFA is simply a restaurant. The owner is a Christian, is open about it, but the food itself isnā€™t religious. Itā€™s weird how globalists will say ā€œYou donā€™t like diversity? Look at all the cool restaurants!ā€ Then when a restaurant gets a spot which an ideology they donā€™t like, it must be shut out. Itā€™s very hypocritical.
Sometimes I walk around Hobby Lobby and wonder how many anti-Christians are around me, just because I find it amusing to let my mind wander as I peruse the aisles for paper and craft supplies I probably donā€™t need. LOL.

Youā€™re correct. Itā€™s very hypocritical.
 
From this and the article itself, one would think terrorists or some other hostile entity were invading Americaā€™s Big Apple, not that a restaurant famous for its fried chicken sandwiches had opened another location. The vitriol toward a company a Christian founded highlights just how much progressives hate Christianity.

The articleā€™s quick history of the restaurant cherry-picks Christian beliefs to justify its bias against Christianity.
Following the shooting at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando, local folks gathered in line to donate blood. Employees of a nearby Chick-fil-A opened the restaurant, although itā€™s normally closed on Sundays to give employees time with their families, and gave donors food while they were waiting. Stories like this abound, yet thereā€™s no mention of this kind of repeated generosity from the company.
Itā€™s not uncommon for progressives to show disdain for Christianity, but this was an effort of, dare I say, cow-size proportions. Unfortunately, all it did was highlight The New Yorkerā€™s narrow-minded views and that many people love Chick-fil-A.
 
And they act like thereā€™s nowhere else in all of NYC for one to purchase a fast food chicken sandwich.

The sky may be falling!
 
Unfortunately, the Chick-fil-a near my house has a history of being somewhat anti-Catholic. I havenā€™t been there in about 8 years. They used to hand out those Chick .com pamphlets and could be somewhat abusive if they saw a rosary or other Catholic symbol in the car through the drive through window. Thankfully it was just the manager and owner of the franchise, so I still go to Chick-fil-a when I can outside of my town.
 
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Nearest one to me is 45 miles away, but more likely to go to the one in the mall where I do back to school shopping (which is 60 miles), so while Iā€™ve been there, itā€™s not often.

Real point was that NYC isnā€™t exactly limited-options on food places, so I was kind of obliquely referring to free market ideas (which, granted, is practically a foreign language to some extreme leftists like NYC Democrats)ā€“Chick-Fil-A opened in NYC because they believed they could sell sandwiches (etc), and since they were right about that, theyā€™ve added locations. The fact that the owners are Christian (and, gasp, donā€™t hide the fact after leaving church on Sunday) doesnā€™t mean that they canā€™t make sound business decisions based on business reasons.
 
Had Chick-Fil-A for the first time Thursday. Waffle fries were very good. The grilled chicken club sandwich was good. The crispy chicken deluxe sandwich was outstanding.
 
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