By all accounts, S. Truett Cathy has been a very
successful businessman and entrepreneur.
Years ago he decided to offer an alternative to the usual fast food
business by serving chicken exclusively instead of the omni-present beef
hamburger. And so Chick-Fil-A was born
in Atlanta in 1967.
Cathy’s restaurants are notable for (as fast food goes)
excellent quality from good ingredients; unfailingly cheerful, prompt, and
eager-to-please staff; good, adult onsite local management; orders brought to
the table along with a strolling staff member continually offering free drink
refills; and buildings kept impeccably clean.
It is an experience replicated in virtually every outlet I have
visited. It is exactly the first-class
operation (within its fast-food niche) that American ingenuity can deliver and
the American people should support so as to encourage good corporate conduct
and customer service.
In addition to his business skills, Mr. Cathy is also a
very fundamentally religious man. His
expectations of employee conduct are reputed to be very high; he generously
rewards in return; and he closes all of his restaurants on Sunday to allow his
people a day of rest away from work and the opportunity to share in their own
observance of the Sabbath. Sunday
closing is almost unheard of any more, particularly in the restaurant
business. In some ways it is nice to see
a return to that quiet time 50 years ago when people did not need to shop seven
days/week and twenty-four hours/day. A
time when people could stop the endless pursuit of profit and labor for at
least one day of recuperation, recreation and reflection. Perhaps surprisingly, that one day of closing
does not seem to have affected Chick-Fil-A’s financial statements in any
serious way.
S. Truett Cathy remains as Chairman and CEO of
Chick-Fil-A, while daily operation of the corporation has now been passed to
his son, Dan Cathy, as President and COO.
A few weeks ago in a television interview, Dan Cathy expressed his
opposition to same-sex marriage. He went
on to say that “I think we are inviting God’s judgment as a nation when we
shake our fist at Him and say ‘we know better than you what constitutes a
marriage.’” Why Dan Cathy chose to speak
out in this controversial topic, having little or no special insight or
contribution to add to the topic, is unclear.
But as to be expected in this age of instantaneous dissemination and
responding commentary, his comments “went viral” all over the Internet and broadcast
airwaves. The gay/lesbian community and
various liberal commentators denounced his comments, and many called for a
boycott of Chick-Fil-A. Fox
commentator/former Governor Mike Huckabee off-handily proposed an eat-in day as
a show of support to Chick-Fil-A, and hundreds of thousands subsequently lined
up at some of the establishments. Videos
showed some Cathy protestors trying to inappropriately engage Chick-Fil-A staff
into the debate and hold them guilty-by-association. Yet it is safe to say that a smiling 17-year-old
high schooler sitting in the drive-through window making $7/hour is hardly
going to alter this political/social discourse or change Mr. Cathy’s thinking.
My support for same-sex marriage is likely well known by
my readers. (See an extensive discussion
on the topic in my blog of 12/15/2008.)
I am in full disagreement with Mr. Cathy’s opinion and his basis for
it. I am also an advocate and
practitioner of using my purchasing dollar to try to influence corporate
conduct. (I still avoid Exxon gas due to
the Exxon-Valdez incident over two decades ago!) So my immediate reaction was to instinctively
join the boycotters and avoid any Chick-Fil-A sandwiches in my future. But the more I continued to think about it, I
have hesitated.
There are many people in this country who have opinions I
disagree with, at times very strongly.
And certainly vice-versa. But the
bigger problem we have in America right now is not one of our disagreements,
but our inability to work through these in a civil and productive way to the benefit
of the many. We simply argue, shout
louder, move further and further apart, and seek to defeat each other at all
costs any way we can. Nobody gets
anything instead of many getting something.
Social and economic progress does not move.
I do not agree
with Mr. Cathy’s views. But in America
our First Amendment protects each of us to hold and speak whatever views we
have; we must respect that right in others if we are to have that right in turn
for our own beliefs. So I would be happy
to sit quietly with Mr. Cathy and have a civil discussion of our disagreements
to see what we might be able to learn from each other. But it is when one moves from thoughts to actions
that consequences are to be truly measured.
In that regard I think the Cathys run an excellent business in a manner
I wish more businesses would follow. To
my knowledge, there has been no report of a gay or lesbian (either married or
single) being refused employment or fired from a Chick-Fil-A establishment, or
a customer being turned away, solely due to their sexual identity. However abhorrent Dan Cathy’s views may be to
me, it does not appear that those views have permeated into his corporation’s
policies and practices. And, to my somewhat
surprise, that has come to make a significant distinction to me.
So I will continue to protest Mr. Cathy’s views whenever
and however possible. Nevertheless, I
choose not to penalize his company and its many good employees as long as in their actions they
remain independent of those views. But
let me be clear: the minute I may hear of a confirmed report of any such
discrimination occurring in the business place, I will join such a boycott and return
all of my dollars to the hamburger world without hesitation.
The older I get, and the more experiences that I have with
tough ethical situations, the blacks-and-whites of my values and principles
seem to become more clear. But the
clarity of the right course of action to take in consideration of all those
involved becomes more gray, more nuanced.
Maybe, in one ideal world, that hesitation should not be. But hopefully it simply reflects a greater
willingness to pause in reflection, work through a more thoughtful reasoning,
and make a small personal step towards achieving greater wisdom. Our hardest decisions never come easily.
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1 comment:
Thanks, Randy. Well thought out and presented! June Neumann
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