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NYC politician tries to use office to force out CFA

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  • NYC politician tries to use office to force out CFA

    A powerful New York politician claims she was just speaking as a private citizen when she tried to run Chick-fil-A out of town, but she used her official letterhead and even invoked her position as City Council speaker to apply pressure on the embattled chicken chain.

    New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, who has mayoral aspirations, sent a letter to New York University president John Sexton on Saturday asking the school to immediately end their contract with the fast food restaurant. The Atlanta-based company's sole New York City outlet is in the school's food court.

    "I write as the Speaker of the NYC Council, and on behalf of my family. NYC is a place where we celebrate diversity. We do not believe in denigrating others. We revel in the diversity of all our citizens and their families,” the letter begins.

    "Let me be clear ‐‐ I do not want establishments in my city that hold such discriminatory views," Quinn, an open lesbian who recently married her longtime partner, also wrote in the letter. "We are a city that believes our diversity is our greatest strength and we will fight anything and anyone that runs counter to that."

    'If we allow something like this, then the next letter might be concerning someone’s view on abortion.'

    - NYC Council member Peter Vallone

    “As such I urge you to sever your relationship with the Chick‐fil‐A establishment that exists on your campus,” the speaker added.

    The letter has drawn the ire from others on the council.

    “She can write to someone as a council member, but if she states that she is writing as the Speaker it can only be on behalf of the entire council. She has to have the majority vote of the council, and I don’t recall voting on this matter,” City Councilman Peter Vallone (D-Queens) told FoxNews.com. “A stance on gay marriage is in no way a forum to prevent someone form running a business in a community.

    “If we allow something like this, then the next letter might be concerning someone’s view on abortion.”

    A spokesperson for Quinn told FoxNews.com in a written statement that, while officials in other cities have said they would block Chick-fil-A through land-use means, Quinn was just expressing her own views.

    “Christine Quinn was simply voicing her own opinion; she fully understands that Mr. Cathy has the right to say and donate to anything he wants. But she has the right to use her voice just as much as he does,” Quinn’s spokesperson added.

    The speaker elaborated on her stance and seemingly backpedaled while speaking with reporters at an event in midtown Manhattan on Tuesday.

    “I support businesses that are open and inclusive -- that reflect the viewpoint of New York City, the most in diverse city in the world. That said, businesses that follow our laws have a right to open here,” said Quinn during the announcement of the city starting a career center for veterans. “We are asking Mr. Cathy to reconsider, open up his mind and really overcome his homophobia and stop investing his money in efforts to limit the rights of LGBT Americans. I’m raising my voice -- which can be loud at times -- but I’m never going to misuse this office in any way at all.”

    Whether the school will take Quinn's advice remains to be seen. In 2011, NYU’s Student Senators Council considered a resolution to remove Chick-fil-A from campus but ultimately ruled that, “to ban any entity from campus for ideological reasons is, in most every case, to limit freedom of expression,” and did not seek a resolution from the full University Senate.

    But John Beckman, a spokesman for NYU, tells FoxNews.com in a written statement that given the recent news, the matter will be revisited by school officials.

    “The University Administration will ask the University Senate to take up the issue of Chick-fil-A’s status on campus again when it reconvenes this fall to make a recommendation on how to proceed,” he said.

    New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said last week that he would not follow the lead of his counterparts in Chicago, San Francisco and Boston, who all said Chick-fil-A was not welcome in their cities. Bloomberg said it was “inappropriate” for any government to decide if a business can or cannot operate in a city because of someone's political views.

    Quinn also had posted a petition on Change.org last week that demands Cathy apologize for his remarks. Another petition on the website was created by an NYU student and gathered 15,000 signatures of students also demanding that the chicken chain be removed from the campus.

    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    50 years ago this wouldnt be news. Goddamn faggots

    Comment


    • #3
      All I know is that the gay/lesbian rights people who are wanting boycotts, refusal of new CFA locations being opened, wanting to close other CFAs et.al are worse than CFA is in the first place. Everyone has an opinion, the owner of CFA voiced his. However, he isn't refusing service to gays or lesbians or refusing to hire them: he just stated that God doesn't condone gay/lesbian marriage. Which God doesn't. Hypocritical liberal morons.
      Originally posted by PGreenCobra
      I can't get over the fact that you get to go live the rest of your life, knowing that someone made a Halloween costume out of you. LMAO!!
      Originally posted by Trip McNeely
      Originally posted by dsrtuckteezy
      dont downshift!!
      Go do a whooly in front of a Peterbilt.

      Comment


      • #4
        Heaven forbid someone has their own opinion. The lesbian and gay community should just eat else where or get over it.

        I also dont give a flying fuck if they get married.

        Everything don said is spot on. I bet the company is making money hand over fist right now and laughing all the way to the bank.

        Comment


        • #5
          Can homosexuals enter into a legally binding contract with each other where all rights and privileges that are implied with married heteros are spelled out for them?

          Comment


          • #6
            This is me, but if I ran CFA, I would start placing restaurants around NYC and offer free food for the first month and then run a campaign that states - We've fed you for free, provided jobs and believe in this city, what has your gov't done for you?

            Comment


            • #7
              Shit most people dont get married because its cheaper for them to live. Especially if kids are involved. They run the system and get on food stamps and shit.


              If you gave them free food for a month they would be pissed when you cut them off.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Forever_frost View Post
                New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said last week that he would not follow the lead of his counterparts in Chicago, San Francisco and Boston, who all said Chick-fil-A was not welcome in their cities. Bloomberg said it was “inappropriate” for any government to decide if a business can or cannot operate in a city because of someone's political views.
                Finally, someone with a lick of common sense. If a private individual chooses to not do business with a company over religious beliefs and/or political stance, that's fine. A government entity trying to force out a business for those reasons is unacceptable.


                Originally posted by Sleeper View Post
                If you gave them free food for a month they would be pissed when you cut them off.
                That is so true.
                When the government pays, the government controls.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Sleeper View Post
                  Shit most people dont get married because its cheaper for them to live. Especially if kids are involved. They run the system and get on food stamps and shit.


                  If you gave them free food for a month they would be pissed when you cut them off.
                  Yeah, I know. The ride is almost over.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by 46Tbird View Post
                    Finally, someone with a lick of common sense. If a private individual chooses to not do business with a company over religious beliefs and/or political stance, that's fine. A government entity trying to force out a business for those reasons is unacceptable.
                    Bloomberg hardly represents such a person. Getting this one right was dumb luck on his behalf.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by 46Tbird View Post
                      Finally, someone with a lick of common sense. If a private individual chooses to not do business with a company over religious beliefs and/or political stance, that's fine. A government entity trying to force out a business for those reasons is unacceptable.
                      Originally posted by Slowhand View Post
                      Bloomberg hardly represents such a person. Getting this one right was dumb luck on his behalf.
                      The funny part is that CFA never made it a political stance in the first place. Our new age media has perverted a question he was asked regarding his beliefs on gay marriage. His reponse was purely religion-driven, and he stuck to it.

                      I'll have me some CFA for lunch.
                      Originally posted by PGreenCobra
                      I can't get over the fact that you get to go live the rest of your life, knowing that someone made a Halloween costume out of you. LMAO!!
                      Originally posted by Trip McNeely
                      Originally posted by dsrtuckteezy
                      dont downshift!!
                      Go do a whooly in front of a Peterbilt.

                      Comment

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