December 18, 2017 Branded 'hate chicken' by the left, Chick-fil-A feeds Atlanta's stranded travelers By Monica Showalter
Well, well, well, what have we here? As thousands of Atlanta's airport passengers found themselves stranded due to a power outage in what was for many, an unfamiliar airport, who should come out to feed them for free, making their hellish travel ordeal a bit less hellish?
Zitat Late Sunday night, while Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport worked to restore power during a massive outage that crippled air travel at the nation's busiest airport, officials handed out Chick-fil-A and waters to stranded passengers.
"Lights on and delivering food and water to our passengers," the airport said on Twitter, thanking Chick-fil-A Chairman and CEO Dan Cathy for opening on a Sunday.
Seems the restaurant chain, whose outlets are ordinarily closed on Sunday due to the Baptist owner's wish to honor the Sabbath, went ahead and opened up in order to feed the hungry multitudes. As per Judeo-Christian practice describe in the Bible, actually. Jesus said that if your cow falls into a well on the Sabbath, you get the beast out, regardless of the day of week. (Someone had been criticizing him for performing miracles on the Sabbath.) For Chick-fil-A, the airport emergency at Atlanta fits right into that category.
Some "hate chicken."
It goes to show that the company, influenced by its owner's biblical values, brings good stuff, not hate, to the needy.
Zitat “We know that it might not be popular with everyone, but we thank the Lord we live in a country where we can share our values and operate on biblical principles,” he said in an interview with the Baptist Press.
Chick-fil-A has done these kinds of charitable giveaways in the past too, I recall for hurricane refugees. This isn't the first time. Their chicken is delicious, their service is top-notch, their restaurants are wonderfully clean and small wonder they surpass all other fast food establishments in profitability per store due to their popular business model, even as they are open only six days a week. Yet the left has been quick to demonize it, boycott it, zone it out of business, and subject it to selective enforcement for code violations.
Now the airline travelers experiencing Atlanta for the first time will recall not just the airport stranding alone, but the kindness shown by Chick-fil-A, the restaurant chain that lives by its values and cares about others, asking nothing in return. These are the values that are so abhorred by the left.