Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Chik-Fil-A Not Alone: Here Are 10 Restaurants That Liberals Hate And a Few Other Companies You May Know of.

UNIVERSAL FREE PRESS   "When a company takes a stand against the backwards policies put forth by the current administration, they are immediately labeled a “right-wing” company, which liberals demand to be boycotted. It’s not always the company’s stance, however, but the founder’s beliefs that have progressives screaming “fire and brimstone,” as if business owners are somehow not entitled to a political or social opinion. So, in the spirit of free enterprise, if liberals want to fight with withdrawal, conservatives can surely fight back with patronage. Here are a few of our favorite restaurants who have been accused of having a conservative, nut job agenda, which we stand behind 100 percent."
Hat tip to Reece Coble at TEA Party Conservatives for America

Besides restaurants, here are other businesses with a Christian point of view.
Longhorn Steakhouse
 Lefties got the horn when they messed with Longhorn Steakhouse  over the
 Obamacare mandate. As soon as the ACA was implemented,  the restaurant chain
 announced they would be cutting staff hours to  compensate for the pricey healthcare.
 
... "Forever 21 prints “John 3:16” on the bottom of its shopping bags. Covenant Transport, founded in 1985 by David A. Parker, an evangelical, wears its Christianity on the side of its trucks: in its name, which refers to the many covenants made with God in the Bible, and in its logo, a scroll that recalls the parchment on which biblical texts would first have been written." ...
 
 ... "Philip J. Clements, the founder of the Center for Christian Business Ethics Today, tells a story to illustrate how Judeo-Christian principles make business run smoothly. He once met with a group of businessmen in Africa, most of them Muslim, who complained of the corruption in their countries. So he shared with them Jesus’ parable of the talents, from the Book of Matthew, in which a master offers his servants some money for their use. When the master returns much later, two of the servants have made a profit and pay him back. They could have simply absconded with it." ...
...
"Mr. Hicks did not object to burger-wrapper or shopping-bag evangelism. But he cautioned that the businesses that behave in the most Christian manner may not have visible marketing plans. “It’s the actions,” he said, not the branding." 
 

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