Photo credit: AP | Customers stand in a long line at the Chick-fil-A in Columbus, Ga., Aug. 1, 2012. Chick-fil-A supporters are eating at restaurants in the chicken chain as the company continues to be criticized for an executive's comments about marriage and family.
The chicken sandwich became a political statement for a day as supporters of the Chick-fil-A presidentâs stance against gay marriage caused traffic jams at the fast-food chainâs restaurants nationwide.
Baking in the Southern California summer heat, lines of Chick-fil-A fans snaked around the eateries and down streets Wednesday as patrons ignored gay rights advocates armed with âCluck Offâ signs and vuvuzelas urging them to eat elsewhere.
Similar crowds converged across the country at Chick-fil-A, which has more than 1,600 branches. In Madison, Ala., police were called to maintain order. Some customers waited outside Chick-fil-A restaurants carrying 8-foot crosses or dressed as Superman, according to users on micro-blogging site Twitter.
MORE: Chick-fil-A gay marriage comments prompt reactions
Former presidential candidate Rick Santorum tweeted about his Chick-fil-A lunch. âOK leftists go crazy,â he wrote.
The huge crowds were responding to a call from another former presidential candidate, Mike Huckabee, who had dubbed Aug. 1 as Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day after the chainâs president, Dan Cathy, publicly spoke out against same-sex unions two weeks ago.
Cathyâs comments, as well as revelations that the chain has donated millions of dollars to anti-gay marriage groups, have sparked a furor from several big-city mayors, actors Mia Farrow and Roseanne Barr, Muppets creator Jim Henson Co. and thousands of consumers who have pledged to boycott the chain.
Rival burger chain Wendyâs ordered a North Carolina franchisee to take down signs he had posted at dozens of locations that read âWe Stand With Chick-fil-A.â In a statement, Wendyâs said it is âproud to serve customers of varied races, backgrounds, cultures and sexual orientation, with different beliefs and values.â
On Wednesday, popular West Hollywood, Calif., bar the Abbey unveiled its new sandwich, the Chick-For-Gay, which it plans to serve to its largely gay and lesbian clientele through the November elections.
Still, more than 600,000 people RSVPed on Facebook for Huckabeeâs appreciation event. He wrote on the social networking site that he was âincensed at the vitriolic assaultsâ on the chain, which he described as âa great American story that is being smeared by vicious hate speech and intolerant bigotry from the left.â
Huckabee, now a radio show host, posted photos on Facebook of his visit Wednesday to a Chick-fil-A in Destin, Fla.
Not all customers eating at Chick-fil-A sympathize with Cathyâs stance against same-sex unions. Many said they were backing the companyâs right to free speech. Others arrived to voice their displeasure with liberal values in general.
âIâm not against gay rights by any means, but I think this guy is getting a bad rap,â Beaumont, Calif., resident Ed Vatter, 57, said over a plate of chicken nuggets and waffle fries at the Chick-fil-A in Laguna Niguel, Calif.
âPlus,â he said, âthe foodâs pretty good.â
He was one of more than 150 customers who jostled for seats as employees shouted out orders and people waited 30 minutes in lines that stretched out the door at lunch time.
Retirees Susie Kendall, 78, and her husband, Tom, 82, had never been to a Chick-fil-A before, but they swung by to show support for Cathyâs beliefs.
âWeâre afraid America is doing the political thing instead of the right thing,â said Susie, a homemaker, of the shift toward gay marriage acceptance. âPolitical correctness can be done away with as far as Iâm concerned.â
Outside, a single protester, Laguna Niguel resident Tamara Lindner, 47, wore a shirt with a âNo H8â logo and referred to people who patronize Chick-fil-A as âsheep-le.â
âThis is the silent protest,â she said.
Chick-fil-A, a privately held company in Atlanta, refused to comment on the effect of the appreciation day on its sales.
In a statement, it noted that the event âwas not created by Chick-fil-Aâ but said it appreciated âall of our customers and are glad to serve them at any time.â
The company, which operates under Christian beliefs that include being closed Sundays, reiterated its âsimpleâ goal of providing âgreat food, genuine hospitality and ⦠a positive influence on all who come into contact with Chick-fil-A.â
It sent out a similar statement after Cathy was quoted in a small Christian publication, the Baptist Press, that the chain was âguilty as chargedâ of supporting âthe biblical definition of the family unit.â
The story quickly went viral. Soon, Cathy went on the Ken Coleman talk show, a syndicated radio program, and reiterated his stance.
âI think we are inviting Godâs judgment on our nation when we shake our fist at him and say, âWe know better than you as to what constitutes a marriage,ââ Cathy said. âI pray Godâs mercy on our generation that has such a prideful, arrogant attitude to think that we have the audacity to define what marriage is about.â
In more gay-friendly Hollywood, Calif., dozens of Chick-fil-A critics crowded outside one restaurant waving signs as diners munched on the outdoor patio.
Even People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals showed up to protest the treatment of chickens before slaughter.
Police officers hung out by the counter, watching for disturbances. A large rainbow flag fluttered from a Jeep that was blaring its horn. The small parking lot and the drive-thru lane were overflowing, causing a traffic backup on nearby Sunset Boulevard.
One customer, Roy Simmons, 60, said he ditched his habit of packing a lunch so he could cheer on Chick-fil-Aâs right to an opinion. He also opposes gay marriage, he said.
âWith the left, if you donât toe their line and say what they want you to say, they shut you down as a hater, a bigot or a homophobe,â said the La Crescenta, Calif., construction manager.
But protester Brian Hamilton, an actor, said Cathyâs comments had alienated many consumers â" himself included.
âWe are well aware of the repercussions of hate speech when it is directed at (gay and lesbian) people,â said Hamilton, 48, a West Hollywood resident who said he is gay. âItâs not good business. Itâs not smart.â
Gay rights sympathizers said they will gather again Friday outside Chick-fil-A locations for National Same-Sex Kiss Day, where they plan to publicly embrace in so-called kiss-ins to draw attention to the companyâs donations to anti-gay marriage groups.
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