Posted on 08/02/2012 11:37:07 AM PDT by rhema
The Chick-Fil-A Appreciation Day yesterday was historic. It was historic because it marks a new method of mass protest. I even hesitate to use the word protest because it wasnt a protest. There wasnt any anger. There wasnt any hate. There wasnt any bullying. There were no unwashed crowds of unhappy people holding a sit in and causing other people stress, inconvenience and expense. There were no protest signs, no marches, no noise makers and attention grabbers. There were no revolutionary slogans, no clenched fists, no class warfare, no sullen adolescents in a stroppy mood.
The classic signs of a protest movement were absent. If they were not actually violent revolutions, the great protest movements in history have often had violent undertones. Subtle threats were made. Bullying tactics, financial and political pressure was exerted. Guns were wielded. Behind the scenes in smoke filled rooms men did deals and crossed swords to determine the future of millions. In the great revolutions hoards of unhappy people filled the streets, rioting and on the rampage they took what they wanted, killed who they wanted and in misplaced zeal for justice overturned an established order.
Even the non-violent protests pioneered by Gandhi and the American civil rights movement had an undercurrent of threat. Nevertheless, they avoided violence and they opened the way to other peaceful revolutions in which ordinary people stood up against injustice and tyranny without resorting to violence themselves. In his great biography of Pope John Paul II, George Weigel shows how the Catholic Church, during John Pauls papacy, inspired this sort of non violent revolution across the globe. The Solidarity movement in Poland lit the fuse which brought down the Communist Empire with little or no violence. The revolution of Cory Aquino in the Phillipines, and numerous other smaller scale non-violent revolutions in Africa and Central and South America were all inspired by the people and for the peopleand most of them were also inspired by people of faithworking from the grass roots upward to change their society for the better.
Yesterdays Chick-Fil-A Appreciation Day was the sort of revolt this country needs, but it was even better than the non violent revolutions and peaceful protests which have changed the world because it was so ordinary. It was just plain, ordinary Americans getting in their cars and doing a plain, ordinary American thing: going out for lunch to a fast food joint. It was just plain, ordinary Americans doing something plain and ordinary, but positive and joyful and good. In buying an ordinary tasty chicken sandwich at their corner fast food emporium ordinary Americans were expressing the wish to be left alone to be ordinary Americans.
There were no protest signs (except from a few glum pro-gays who said we were eating hate sandwiches) There were no noisy, angry scenes. Folks in the drive through lines did not honk their horns or proclaim their Christianity with bullhorns. There were no statements against homosexuals or homosexuality. (Indeed, the only statement put out by Chick-Fil-A affirmed their commitment to serve and employ all people equally without notice of race, gender, age or sexual orientation.) The brilliance of the event that it used the network of a nationwide fast food chain as the foundation for a visible, peaceful, creative nationwide statement.
There was no bullying, no hateful anti-homosexual loud mouthed preachers. This grace, patience gentleness and community good humor contrasted with the ugly and spiteful comments from the other side. Nobody wished their enemies to get cancer the way comedian Roseanne Barr proclaimed. Nobody was using back room political and financial pressure to bully the majority of Americans the way mayors of Boston, DC and Chicago were doing. For all the talk of the traditional marriage supporters being full of hate, there was not hatred apparent. It was just ordinary suburban Americans sticking up for their way of life by buying a chicken sandwich with their friends and neighbors. These were not scary people like the folks from Westboro Baptist who tote guns and hate homos. They were the folks next door.
Yesterdays demonstration was a truly American form of revolution. Where else could it happen but the USA?
Same here. I was there about 3:30 and the business was brisk.
Exactly - Yesterday was a decentralized near spontaneous massive gathering - very much Tea Party like. This type of action against the tyranny of the rabid and radical homosexual Left is just a rehearsal for November. After all the rabid homosexuals of the Left are just a branch of the overall obama political left who insist on taking a gun to a picnic to FORCE others to believe as they do. It just didn’t occur to the tyrannical Fascist Left that we wouldn’t cooperate. In addition to not cooperating we massed all over the nation in a very visible way and said “NO”... no we won’t give up are free speech rights or our religious belief rights, or our rights to assemble and associate freely ... We will express our opinion and if you don’t like it - go such an egg...
And scared the very beJeezus out of Williams, 0bama, Reid, etc.
At my CFA, in Fairfield, CA, I got in line at noon and finally got my order by two p.m. And by the time I got to the door, the line behind me was longer than it had been when I got in it. Some folks drove two hours just to stand ANOTHER two hours in line. Some black church folks were their own choir, singing as they went through the VERY LONG line. There were many hundreds if not thousands of folks there of all colors.
There was one gal, just one, who drove up, pulled a sign out of her car and then trooped the line, taking video of all the “haters” there. We all just laughed at her, in a most non-hateful way, of course.
Several TV stations also showed up. It was great and the waffle fries were superior!!!
Great to hear about the Fairfield CFA! I’m an hour’s drive away and couldn’t make it yesterday.
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