College forbids Chick-fil-A, citing CEO’s pro-marriage views
Chick-fil-A Austin-TX (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
A "small cohort" of students at the University of
Nebraska Kearney (UNK) stopped Chick-fil-A from opening on campus by
complaining about the marriage view of Chick-fil-A's CEO.
In
January, the student body voted Chick-fil-A the most wanted restaurant for
their campus, but a few students who object to traditional opinion successfully
fought the decision.
UNK
student government president Evan Calhoun explained, "After hearing these
concerns raised by a section of our student body, we concluded that these
corporate values are not aligned with our values as a student body."
Calhoun called
Chick-fil-A CEO Dan Cathy's personal opinion in defense of marriage
"discriminatory policies," without elaborating on what specific
policies he was referring to.
Chick-fil-A
serves and hires without discrimination, but the popular chicken franchise came
under fire from LGBTQ activists when CEO Cathy in 2012 shared his personal view
on government attempts to redefine marriage to include same-sex couples.
Off the
cuff, Cathy quipped, "I pray God's mercy on our generation that has such a
prideful, arrogant attitude to think that we have the audacity to define what
marriage is about."
Homosexual
activists attacked Cathy's words as "hate" and expressed outrage over
Cathy's personal donations to the Family Research Council and other pro-family,
pro-marriage groups. Same-sex "marriage" activists unsuccessfully
attempted a nationwide boycott of Chick-fil-A.
There are
also UNK students on campus who disagree with the vote to bring Chick-fil-A to
campus being unilaterally reversed by president Calhoun. They consider the
reversal a denial of the student government's democratic process, against the
student body's will, and discriminatory against Cathy's First Amendment rights.
"I
think it is ridiculous and appalling that this is a situation we are faced with
as a campus and student body, due to the preconceived notions of a very small
minority," UNK student Trevor Wiegert protested in a letter to the UNK student senate.
"This is a country that was built and has thrived on the notion of free
speech."
Wiegert
charges that the group that fought Chick-fil-A was a small cohort of students,
unrepresentative of the UNK student body.
Wiegert
wrote, "Taking a man's opinion on his belief in the traditional family and
construing it to supposedly encompass his entire company's corporate values ...
in order to feel 'safe' or like you're not being 'persecuted' is simply
asinine."
UNK
student Aaron Ohri responded to Calhoun's reversal on Facebook, posting that it
"is a complete and total slap in the face to many of us on this campus who
believe that Chick-Fil-A is not wrong in what they believe."
"I
understand that a Christian lifestyle in this day and society is completely
'disrespectful,' but please do not ever again send me an e-mail speaking for
the 'whole student body' when you do not have a clue what most of us actually
think," Ohri wrote.
In
response to the criticism of Calhoun's unilateral reversal, the student
government is holding a forum on the controversy and is expected to make a
final decision next week.
Because of
its Christian CEO's views, Chick-fil-A has been banned from opening on
campuses, or resolutions have been passed calling for the restaurant to leave
campuses, at Johns Hopkins University, Elon University, Emory University,
Davidson College, Southern Illinois University-Evansville, the University of
New Mexico, New York University, and Wichita State University.
Eastern
Illinois University Family Studies professor Lisa Moyer called Chick-fil-A a
symbol of "hate." "We have this symbol on campus in the Union
representing, essentially, hate," Moyer told Campus Reform.