© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com
Officials at Baylor University told the Starbucks store
on its Waco, Texas, campus to remove a cup said to promote
homosexuality.
The offending cup, part of a series with quotes from
various American thinkers called "The Way I See
It," features the words of homosexual novelist
Armistead Maupin. It reads:
"My only regret about being gay is that I repressed
it for so long. I surrendered my youth to the people I
feared when I could have been out there loving someone.
Don't make that mistake yourself. Life's too damn
short."
Baylor University, the world's largest Baptist school,
refused to comment on the issue, said KCEN-TV in central
Texas. Employees at the campus Starbucks said none of their
customers had complained about the cup, but they removed it.

Cup part of Starbucks'
'The Way I See It' campaign (courtesy: Seattle
Times) |
The cup also has drawn the attention of a national
Christian women's organization, which accuses the
Seattle-based coffee maker of promoting a homosexual agenda.
Concerned Women for
America, which says most of the quotes are liberal,
believes corporations have a responsibility to reflect the
diversity of their customers by taking a balanced approach
or staying out of divisive social issues altogether, the
Seattle Times reported.
"Corporations have deeper pockets and therefore more
influence than individuals do," said Maureen
Richardson, director of Concerned Women for America of
Washington.
"I think it's wiser for them to stay out of these
issues so that they don't offend conservatives and people of
faith."
Starbucks spokeswoman Audrey Lincoff told the Times the
campaign is only to encourage discourse, not to take a
political stand.
"If you think back to the history of the old coffee
houses, before the Internet, these were places to
converse," she said. "That's part of what the
coffee culture has been for a century or more."
The artists include actor Quincy Jones, New Age author
and alternative-medicine doctor Deepak Chopra, radio host
and film critic Michael Medved, rap artist Chuck D, Olympic
medalist Michelle Kwan and National Review editor Jonah
Goldberg.