You should look more closely Merryweather asked the same question, and I did answer her. But I suppose you want it in further blatent detail, for a lack of better term, it's petty, the way alot of gay people are acting. No Im not talking about this one situation, for a short time now I've grown to be very ashamed of how this situation (Prop. 8) has been handled by the "lgbt community". You make your list of enemies like that gives you some form of comfort, and that once you boycott all enemies big and small, eveything will be all-right? I just refuse to live under that sad delusion.
I was asking repeatedly because I didn't see your answer. I still don't see an answer, and I don't see any clues in the post that I quoted.
Its the same as the Cinemark situation which you said you didn't have a problem with and in fact would participate in. I would certainly try to boycott enemies! Why keep company or do business with enemies, at worst it could be dangerous! Why is this "petty" as you said, and not the Cinemark deal.
I'm not local by any means, but I was very impressed by how the lgbt community handled the hate and violence from the other side, even though they eventually lost the prop 8 battle

It further affirmed my theory, that the group in the right always handles their fight with class and dignity and never resorts to acts of violence.
No one is advocating censorship here.
No is advocating book burning.
Some people would simply not give there money to people who actively work to take away the rights of other people.
There's no dillusion here, just a couple of people who won't be buying a movie ticket.
Maybe I come at it from a different perspective, because usually when I feel discrimination its because of a real physical barrier. The Pizza Pizza near my apartment spent $250,000

scared1: ) renovating the front of their store, and didn't include a ramp. I wrote and asked them why, and they said that the structural changes weren't significant enough that they were required to add one. That wasn't the point, though. For $250,000 they could have incorporated a great ramp into the front of their store, they didn't even have to spend any extra money. I feel like they should have wanted me and other patrons who used wheelchairs and walkers to visit their store. But through dislike or indifference, they decided not to. I don't visit Pizza Pizza because their lack of consideration means I physically cannot. Its not a "petty" punitive boycott.
Likewise with the Cinemark and Meyer deals they could have made different choices, ones that did not work against a specific group (in this case to inact hateful legislation). There is no physical barrier here, but it doesn't make the environment any more hospitable. Once you're in you are doing business with someone that works against you.