Should they be discriminated against for tithings, donations, worship or activities different from ours or not having our approval? I don't know how it works in the US but it would violate our Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Well King, I guess I'm a bigot by Canadian standards. I don't do business with any other company that I know to be anti-gun, either, nor do I patronize businesses and organizations that are anti-hunting. If enough other shooters do the same, it's possible to force a few (like Smith & Wesson) to change their tune...and that change of direction usually necessitates some heads rolling. It's called free enterprise, and Cooper's BOD either gets it, or they don't. If they don't, the stockholders - the people the board is there to protect - AND the employees suffer because of one principal's callous disregard of the rights of the company's patrons, rights that he knew most of the patrons are sensitive about.
And BTW, I don't consider political contributions automatically "an act of citizenship", especially if they're to a candidate that opposes the Constitution.