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Mississippi Town Finds Solution To Westboro Baptist Church

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

****Update WBC Says It Isn’t So (‘The NonBeliever’ Raises The Ire Of Westboro Baptist Church)

On Saturday April 16,  USMC Staff Sgt. Jason Rogers, who was killed in action in Afghanistan April 7, was buried in Brandon, Mississippi.

That, by itself, is a sadly unremarkable – though certainly noteworthy and solemn – occasion for us to mark.

In fact when Sgt. Rogers’ body returned to Brandon it was greeted by hundreds, or perhaps even thousands, of well-wishers who gathered at the roadside to honor the fallen American hero.

What is most notable about Sgt. Rogers’ funeral in Brandon, however, is what didn’t happen.

You see, the troglodytes from Westboro Baptist Church had threatened to spew their poison at Sgt. Rogers’ funeral.

But the Westboro mob wasn’t on the scene, and Sgt. Rogers was laid to rest without incident – thank God.

Why weren’t there protestors?

Planning ahead by the locals, as it turns out.

From an Ole Miss sports message board, a tidbit of information…

A couple of days before, one of them (Westboro protestors) ran his mouth at a Brandon gas station and got his arse waxed. Police were called and the beaten man could not give much of a description of who beat him. When they canvassed the station and spoke to the large crowd that had gathered around, no one seemed to remember anything about what had happened.

Rankin County handled this thing perfectly. There were many things that were put into place that most will never know about and at great expense to the county.

Most of the morons never made it out of their hotel parking lot. It seems that certain Rankin county pickup trucks were parked directly behind any car that had Kansas plates in the hotel parking lot and the drivers mysteriously disappeared until after the funeral was over. Police were called but their wrecker service was running behind and it was going to be a few hours before they could tow the trucks so the Kansas plated cars could get out.

A few made it to the funeral but were ushered away to be questioned about a crime they might have possibly been involved in. Turns out, after a few hours of questioning, that they were not involved and they were allowed to go on about their business.

Fred Phelps, the disbarred lawyer and Democrat activist who leads the Westboro congregation, will undoubtedly pursue some form of legal action for the way his people were thwarted in Brandon. Let him try. There isn’t a jury in Mississippi which will see things his way.

This is a template for how to handle the Westboro people. If lawsuits don’t work, other means will. Whatever it takes to keep them from harassing bereaved military families on the day their fallen loved ones are laid to rest.

UPDATE: Some of the feedback we’ve received from this piece came along the lines that it’s inappropriate to refer to Fred Phelps as a “Democrat activist.”

We stand by that characterization. If anything, it’s an understatement.

Fred Phelps ran for major office in Kansas as a Democrat no less than four times. He ran for governor on the Democrat ballot in 1990, 1994 and 1998 and for senator in 1992. Phelps received 11,000 votes, or seven percent, in 1990, he received 5,000 votes, or three percent, in 1994 and he picked up 15,000 votes, or 15 percent, in 1998. And in the senatorial contest in 1992 he garnered 49,000 votes, or 30 percent. Phelps furthermore ran as a Democrat candidate for mayor of Topeka in 1993 and 1997.

Phelps also has been closely associated with Al Gore on several occasions throughout Gore’s career – Phelps’ son Fred, Jr. was a Gore delegate at the 1988 Democrat convention and the Phelpses hosted a Gore fundraiser in Topeka that year. Phelps claims that Westboro members “ran” Gore’s 1988 campaign in Kansas.

Phelps may not fit within the typical definition of “Democrat activist” some of our readers expect – but a six-time Democrat candidate is an activist Democrat. That is quite clear, as unknown to the public as it might be.

Source: The Hayride

 

 

Westboro Baptist Church To Picket Elizabeth Taylor’s Funeral

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

The Westboro Baptist Church announced that it planned to picket the funeral of Oscar-winning actress and anti-AIDS activist Elizabeth Taylor after she died Wednesday at age 79.

Taylor, arguably the last great star of Hollywood’s golden era, died six weeks after being admitted to Los Angeles’ Cedars-Sinai hospital with congestive heart failure, a condition she had struggled with for years.

“My mother was an extraordinary woman who lived life to the fullest, with great passion, humor, and love,” said her son Michael Wilding, adding that she was surrounded by her children when she died.

The Westboro Baptist Church has become infamous for picketing the funerals of U.S. soldiers and carrying signs that state “God hates fags.” In typical fashion Margie J. Phelps, daughter of the church’s leader Fred Phelps, said Taylor “joined Michael Jackson and Heath Ledger in hell.”

Taylor won two Academy Awards for best actress, including in the 1966 classic “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” one of many films she played opposite Richard Burton.

The Welsh-born actor was one of the great loves of Taylor’s life — she married and divorced him twice — but her stormy relationships off-screen and eight marriages often overshadowed her glittering film career.

In her later years, she blazed a trail as an activist to raise funds to fight AIDS/HIV, working hard to support research into a cure, and dispel the stigma surrounding the illness.

“Her legacy improved the lives of millions of people, and will continue for many generations to come,” longtime activist AIDS Kevin Frost who heads the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR), co-founded by Taylor, told AFP.

As her health failed in later years, she retired from the public gaze, although she notably attended the 2009 funeral of her longtime friend Michael Jackson.

Tributes poured in from across the world Wednesday, as actors and directors mourned Taylor’s passing.

Source: RawStory.com

 

Fallen Marine’s Father: Anti-Gay Church Pickets Will Draw Gunfire

Friday, March 4th, 2011

A day after the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed Westboro Baptist Church’s right to protest against homosexuality at military funerals, the fallen Marine’s father, who unsuccessfully sued the controversial Kansas congregation, warned that the church’s protests will eventually spark violence.

“Something is going to happen,” Albert Snyder told CNN Thursday. “Somebody is going to get hurt.”

“You have too many soldiers and Marines coming back with post-traumatic stress syndrome, and they (the Westboro protesters) are going to go to the wrong funeral and the guns are going to go off.”

“And when it does,” Snyder said. “I just hope it doesn’t hit the mother that’s burying her child or the little girl that’s burying her father or mother. It’s inevitable.”

In an 8-1 decision, the high court ruled Wednesday that Westboro Baptist Church has a First Amendment right to picket military funerals, no matter how “hurtful” the message may be. The decision ended Snyder’s five-year court fight on behalf of his late son, Matthew, a Marine lance corporal killed in Iraq, whose funeral was picketed by Westboro church members.

Albert Snyder again slammed the high court justices for not having “the common sense that God gave a goat.”

“I just can’t believe that there was no common sense used in this decision,” Snyder said.

Because of the ruling, Snyder will have to pay $116,000 in court costs to the Rev. Fred Phelps, the pastor of Westboro.

“The worst part of this,” Snyder said, “is I know they are going to use that money to do this to other soldiers.”

Snyder recalled his son’s funeral.

“When my son died, I knew two days ahead of time that they were coming,” Snyder said. “I had other children that I had to worry about that didn’t know what was going on.”

“Because of (the protesters’) presence, I had police coming out of the woodwork, I had sheriffs. I had a SWAT team. I had emergency vehicles. I had media coming in,” Snyder said. “All I wanted to do was have a private dignified funeral for my son.

“They turned it into a three-ring circus,” Snyder said.

When asked what his next step will be, Snyder replied. “The thing that just hits me the hardest is all the hatred in this country.”

“And I think if I wanted to look to what I’m going to do in the future, I feel like that maybe there’s where I need to be,” Snyder said, “to try do something with all the hatred that’s in this country.”

Source: CNN

US Supreme Court: ‘God Hates Fags’ Protected Speech

Wednesday, March 2nd, 2011

The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that a grieving father’s pain over mocking protests at his Marine son’s funeral must yield to First Amendment protections for free speech. All but one justice sided with a fundamentalist church that has stirred outrage with raucous demonstrations contending God is punishing the military for the nation’s tolerance of homosexuality.

The 8-1 decision in favor of the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kan., was the latest in a line of court rulings that, as Chief Justice John Roberts said in his opinion for the court, protects “even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate.”

The decision ended a lawsuit by Albert Snyder, who sued church members for the emotional pain they caused by showing up at his son Matthew’s funeral. As they have at hundreds of other funerals, the Westboro members held signs with provocative messages, including “Thank God for dead soldiers,” `’You’re Going to Hell,” `’God Hates the USA/Thank God for 9/11,” and one that combined the U.S. Marine Corps motto, Semper Fi, with a slur against gay men.

Justice Samuel Alito, the lone dissenter, said Snyder wanted only to “bury his son in peace.” Instead, Alito said, the protesters “brutally attacked” Matthew Snyder to attract public attention. “Our profound national commitment to free and open debate is not a license for the vicious verbal assault that occurred in this case,” he said.

The ruling, though, was in line with many earlier court decisions that said the First Amendment exists to protect robust debate on public issues and free expression, no matter how distasteful. A year ago, the justices struck down a federal ban on videos that show graphic violence against animals. In 1988, the court unanimously overturned a verdict for the Rev. Jerry Falwell in his libel lawsuit against Hustler magazine founder Larry Flynt over a raunchy parody ad.

What might have made this case different was that the Snyders are not celebrities or public officials but private citizens. Both Roberts and Alito agreed that the Snyders were the innocent victims of the long-running campaign by the church’s pastor, the Rev. Fred Phelps, and his family members who make up most of the Westboro Baptist Church. Roberts said there was no doubt the protesters added to Albert Snyder’s “already incalculable grief.”

But Roberts said the frequency of the protests – and the church’s practice of demonstrating against Catholics, Jews and many other groups – is an indication that Phelps and his flock were not mounting a personal attack against Snyder but expressing deeply held views on public topics.

Indeed, Matthew Snyder was not gay. But “Westboro believes that God is killing American soldiers as punishment for the nation’s sinful policies,” Roberts said.

“Speech is powerful. It can stir people to action, move them to tears of both joy and sorrow, and – as it did here – inflict great pain. On the facts before us, we cannot react to that pain by punishing the speaker,” Roberts said.

Snyder’s reaction, at a news conference in York, Pa.: “My first thought was, eight justices don’t have the common sense God gave a goat.” He added, “We found out today we can no longer bury our dead in this country with dignity.”

He said it was possible he would have to pay the Phelpses around $100,000, which they are seeking in legal fees, since he lost the lawsuit. The money would, in effect, finance more of the same activity he fought against, Snyder said.

Margie Phelps, a daughter of the minister and a lawyer who argued the case at the Supreme Court, said she expected the outcome. “The only surprise is that Justice Alito did not feel compelled to follow his oath,” Phelps said. “We read the law. We follow the law. The only way for a different ruling is to shred the First Amendment.”

She also offered her church’s view of the decision. “I think it’s pretty self-explanatory, but here’s the core point: the wrath of God is pouring onto this land. Rather than trying to shut us up, use your platforms to tell this nation to mourn for your sins.”

Veterans groups reacted to the ruling with dismay. Veterans of Foreign Wars national commander Richard L. Eubank said, “The Westboro Baptist Church may think they have won, but the VFW will continue to support community efforts to ensure no one hears their voice, because the right to free speech does not trump a family’s right to mourn in private.”

The picketers obeyed police instructions and stood about 1,000 feet from the Catholic church in Westminster, Md., where the funeral took place in March of 2006.

The protesters drew counter-demonstrators, as well as media coverage and a heavy police presence to maintain order. The result was a spectacle that led to altering the route of the funeral procession.

Several weeks later, Albert Snyder was surfing the Internet for tributes to his son from other soldiers and strangers when he came upon a poem on the church’s website that assailed Matthew’s parents for the way they brought up their son.

Soon after, Snyder filed a lawsuit accusing the Phelpses of intentionally inflicting emotional distress. He won $11 million at trial, later reduced by a judge to $5 million.

The federal appeals court in Richmond, Va., threw out the verdict and said the Constitution shielded the church members from liability. The Supreme Court agreed.

Forty-eight states, 42 U.S. senators and veterans groups had sided with Snyder, asking the court to shield funerals from the Phelps family’s “psychological terrorism.”

While distancing themselves from the church’s message, media organizations, including The Associated Press, urged the court to side with the Phelps family because of concerns that a victory for Snyder could erode speech rights.

Roberts described the court’s holding as narrow, and in a separate opinion Justice Stephen Breyer suggested that in other circumstances governments would not be “powerless to provide private individuals with necessary protection.”

But in this case, Breyer said, it would be wrong to “punish Westboro for seeking to communicate its views on matters of public concern.”

Source: Huffington Post

 

Rift Over Pastor Results In Brawl At NC Church

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

Some church members adamantly want longtime Pastor L.C. Ray to leave, while others ardently support him and say he’s not getting fair treatment.

“I would not say anything controversial about either group,” Ray, 71, said Monday. “I extremely regret that I was not there (Sunday), and I extremely regret that this took place. It is my prayer that the church, the whole church, will go in prayer for healing, because that is not the way for Christians to be Christians.”

What took place Sunday, after the 11 a.m. service, was a melee involving dozens of church members. Some church members threw punches, pulled hair and yelled at one another during the fracas, which was broken up by 30 police officers from five agencies. Members who support Ray wanted a congregational vote on whether to keep him or not, and when that didn’t happen, chaos ensued. A prominent religious leader in Asheville, Ray has been the pastor at Greater New Zion for 38 years.

Some members say he needs to go to make way for a pastor more open to new ideas, and a legal filing suggests Ray has not been forthcoming with the church’s financial information.

Keith Knox Jr., 29, a lifelong member of Greater New Zion, is among the church members who want new leadership, someone more open to a modern approach. He said the leadership had asked Ray to retire, but Ray declined. Also, some members were concerned about the manner in which funds were sometimes disbursed from the church, Knox said.

As far as the brawl is concerned, Knox said he was embarrassed for the church to be seen in such a light. But in his case, he reacted to a man striking one of his female cousins and another having her hair pulled during the ruckus.

“I’m not ashamed of what I did — I was taking up for my family,” Knox said, adding that the entire situation was “just crazy. I want to get the story out, because it’s just not right what happened.”

Ray acknowledged that some members of the church want him out, but he said the Baptist denomination calls for such matters to hinge on a vote of the entire congregation, not just a leadership board or other group. He would gladly abide by such a congregational decision, he said.

Church Treasurer Betty Garner last week filed a formal legal complaint against Ray and Johnnie L. Washington in Henderson County District Court, saying she was acting on behalf of the church in seeking church financial information she claimed Ray and Washington have but will not disclose.

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The Westboro Baptist: Santa Claus Will Take You To Hell

Thursday, December 23rd, 2010

The Westboro Baptist Church choir has a special Christmas message for you this season. It seems we have had it wrong all this time.

Wounded Combat Vet Stalks Reverend Fred Phelps’ Family

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

A 26-year-old double-amputee war veteran charged with the armed stalking of a controversial Kansas-based church group was released on his own recognizance Tuesday, but he must remain under the care of the Department of Veterans Affairs, his attorney said.

Retired Sgt. Ryan Newell of Marion, Kansas, has been charged with felony conspiracy to commit aggravated battery against leaders and members of Westboro Baptist Church, led by Pastor Fred Phelps of Topeka, Kansas. Phelps’ family members and church members were in Wichita, Kansas, when Newell allegedly stalked them, with weapons in his vehicle.

The Phelps family and their church have drawn controversy for their picketing at soldiers’ funerals and asserting that the soldiers’ deaths are God’s punishment for America’s “sin of homosexuality.”

Newell’s attorney, Boyd McPherson of Wichita, declined to disclose the treatment that Newell must receive as a condition of his release from jail. Newell was a turret gunner who lost both legs to an improvised bomb in Afghanistan in 2008.

“There’s not much I can say about treatment at this point,” said McPherson, who added that the district attorney’s office agreed with Newell’s release to the Veterans Affairs department. “Being out of custody has made Ryan — it put a smile on his face that I haven’t seen in a week. That’s probably the most important part of my day.”

Newell, his wife Carrie and their four children were the subject of media attention earlier this year when the national nonprofit Homes for Our Troops constructed a new house for the family. Local businesses donated construction materials.

Newell had been held for eight days in a Sedgwick County, Kansas, jail in lieu of $500,000 bail, which was dropped Tuesday, said McPherson.

Newell has also been charged with five misdemeanors: three counts of criminal use of weapons, stalking and false impersonation of a law officer.

Since Newell’s arrest November 30, McPherson’s office has been inundated with phone calls and emails from supporters of Newell or opponents of the Westboro Baptist Church.

When authorities arrested Newell last week, they found his car contained an M4 assault rifle, a .45-caliber Glock and a .38-caliber Smith & Wesson pistol, said Georgia Cole, spokeswoman for the district attorney’s Office in Sedgwick County. Also, 90 rounds of ammunition were found in the car, McPherson said.

Newell was arrested outside Wichita City Hall, where members of the Phelps family and their church were meeting inside with police officials about security issues, McPherson said.

The charges accuse Newell of making Phelps family and church members fear for their safety.

“I usually don’t have that high priority of a case,” said McPherson, a family law and criminal lawyer in Wichita, earlier this week. “This one is going to push the hot button of military personnel, and it’s going to hit the hot button of wounded soldiers. He lost his mother when he was 19 and was in Afghanistan, and he had to come back to bury her. So there’s a group of mothers who like him. And there are people who don’t like the Phelps group. There are so many different layers of society.”

On Monday, Shirley Phelps-Roper, the church pastor’s daughter, said a judge has ordered Newell not to go anywhere near members of her family and church.

“Isn’t this an amazing turn of events?” Phelps-Roper said. “These young people have gone to war with broken moral compasses and now they think they are in charge and that the mob is ruling the country.

“He comes with his cache of weapons and 90 rounds of ammunition, and he’s going to kill us because we’re simply saying that if you stop sinning, God will stop this pain in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Phelps-Roper said.

“He thinks (if he is released on bail), he is going to go back and try it again. He’s already had a God-smack, and he’s going to try to get another one again. This time he’s not going to lose his limbs. He’s going to lose his life. God is going to kill him. He warned, ‘Don’t touch my people,’” Phelps-Roper said.

She said she noticed that a stranger’s car was following her and other church members after they picketed the high school in Mulvane, Kansas, “where they are teaching rebellion against God,” she said. Phelps-Roper said she later learned that Newell was the driver of that car.

At the high school, there was a heated face-off with members of the Patriot Guard, which she described as a group of bikers who have opposed Westboro’s pickets, she said.

After the high school picket, she and other church members drove to nearby Wichita where they met downtown with a police deputy chief and a captain in a scheduled appointment about safety concerns.

“We wanted to talk about what we should do to try to eliminate some of the danger that they posed — those bikers, those vets,” said Phelps-Roper, who’s also an attorney for the church. Police then told the church members that they were arresting someone in the parking lot whose car contained weapons, she said.

McPherson said a soldier at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, has raised $3,500 since Thursday for Newell’s defense fund, and McPherson is receiving about 100 e-mails a day from supporters, as well as phone calls from Europe and Canada, he said. A local American Legion group in Wichita is also raising money for Newell, the attorney said.

Source: CNN

Christian Right Leader George Rekers Takes Vacation With ‘Rent Boy’

Sunday, May 9th, 2010

The pictures on the Rentboy.com profile show a shirtless young man with delicate features, guileless eyes, and sun-kissed, hairless skin. The profile touts his “smooth, sweet, tight ass” and “perfectly built 8 inch cock (uncut)” and explains he is “sensual,” “wild,” and “up for anything” — as long you ask first. And as long as you pay.

On April 13, the “rent boy” (whom we’ll call Lucien) arrived at Miami International Airport on Iberian Airlines Flight 6123, after a ten-day, fully subsidized trip to Europe. He was soon followed out of customs by an old man with an atavistic mustache and a desperate blond comb-over, pushing an overburdened baggage cart.

That man was George Alan Rekers, of North Miami — the callboy’s client and, as it happens, one of America’s most prominent anti-gay activists. Rekers, a Baptist minister who is a leading scholar for the Christian right, left the terminal with his gay escort, looking a bit discomfited when a picture of the two was snapped with a hot-pink digital camera.

Reached by New Times before a trip to Bermuda, Rekers said he learned Lucien was a prostitute only midway through their vacation. “I had surgery,” Rekers said, “and I can’t lift luggage. That’s why I hired him.” (Medical problems didn’t stop him from pushing the tottering baggage cart through MIA.)

Yet Rekers wouldn’t deny he met his slender, blond escort at Rentboy.com — which features homepage images of men in bondage and grainy videos of crotch-rubbing twinks — and Lucien confirmed it.

At the small western Miami townhome he shares with a roommate, a nervous Lucien expressed surprise when we told him that Rekers denied knowing about his line of work from the beginning. “He should’ve been able to tell you that,” he said, fidgeting and fixing his eyes on his knees. “But that’s up to him.”

For decades, George Alan Rekers has been a general in the culture wars, though his work has often been behind the scenes. In 1983, he and James Dobson, America’s best-known homophobe, formed the Family Research Council, a D.C.-based, rabidly Christian, and vehemently anti-gay lobbying group that has become a standard-bearer of the nation’s extreme right wing. Its annual Values Summit is considered a litmus test for Republican presidential hopefuls, and Sean Hannity and Ann Coulter have spoken there. (The Family Research Council would not comment about Rekers’s Euro-trip.)

He has also influenced American government, serving in advisory roles with Congress, the White House, and the Department of Health and Human Services and testifying as a state’s witness in favor of Florida’s gay adoption ban. A former research fellow at Harvard University and a distinguished professor of neuropsychiatry at the University of South Carolina, Rekers has published papers and books by the hundreds, with titles like Who Am I? Lord and Growing Up Straight: What Families Should Know About Homosexuality.

“While he keeps a low public profile, his fingerprints are on almost every anti-gay effort to demean and dehumanize LGBT people,” says Wayne Besen, a gay rights advocate in New York City and the executive director of Truth Wins Out, which investigates the anti-gay movement. “His work is ubiquitously cited by lobby groups that work to deny equality to LGBT Americans. Rekers has caused a great deal of harm to gay and lesbian individuals.”

Rekers is a board member of the National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH), an organization that systematically attempts to turn gay people straight. And the Huffington Post recently singled out Rekers as a member of the American College of Pediatricians — an official-sounding outfit in Gainesville that purveys lurid, youth-directed literature accusing gays of en masse coprophilia. (In an email, the college’sLisa Hawkins wrote, “ACPeds feels privileged to have a scholar of Dr. Rekers’ stature affiliated with our organization. I am sure you will find Prof. Rekers to be an immaculate clinician/scholar, and a warm human being.”)

Rekers lectures worldwide, from Europe to the Middle East, on teen sexuality. Yet during his ten-day sojourn with Lucien to London and Madrid, he had no lectures scheduled. Both men deny having sex on the trip, and emails exchanged between the two before their jaunt are cautiously worded.

“I’d like to propose another trip to Rome, Italy, for a week or more,” Rekers wrote in an email dated March 21 obtained by New Times. “This is so exciting to have a nice Travel Assistant and traveling companion! Wow! I’m so glad I met you.”

“I called and talked to the reservation guy in London and reserved a room with two twin beds,” Rekers wrote on March 26.

“Now that I’m packed, tomorrow I’ll work on completing my income tax return,” Rekers wrote two days later. “Not fun… But I’ll just remind myself that the fun trip is coming soon.”

In his interview with New Times, Lucien didn’t want to impugn his client, but he made it clear they met through Rentboy.com, which is the only website on which he advertises his services. Neither Google nor any other search engine picks up individual Rentboy.com profiles, any more than they pick up individual profiles on eHarmony or Match.com. You cannot just happen upon one.

Source: Miami New Times

Son of ‘God Hates Fags’ Preacher On Why He Left

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

When celebrity nonbeliever Richard Dawkins finished addressing his hundreds of Godless followers at the American Atheists Convention at Atlanta’s Emory Center last April, the follow up act was a man virtually no one in the room had ever heard of. Onto the dais walked a middle-aged, doleful-eyed cab driver from Cranbrook, B.C., by the name of Nate Phelps. He had come to talk about how his childhood in a religious household had brought him to atheism.

National Post Reporter Kevin Libin talks about Nate Phelps

Mr. Phelps was not from a typical churchgoing family, but from what a BBC documentary once called “the most hated family in America.” His father, pastor Fred Phelps, leads the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan. The family, and a handful of followers, has held nearly 43,000 demonstrations, mostly in U.S., a few in Canada, once in Iraq, picketing synagogues and Holocaust memorials, disrupting the funerals of American soldiers killed in action, and of murdered Amish schoolgirls. They are infamous for their hatred and cruelty. Their signs insist that “God Hates Fags,” and hates America, too, for tolerating homosexuality. They chant “Thank God for 9/11,” and for the bombs killing U.S. marines. They tried infiltrating the Winnipeg funeral in 2008 of Tim McLean, who was brutally murdered and decapitated on a Greyhound bus, calling it God’s punishment for Canadians’ sins, but backed off over fears for their safety. They march with broad smiles on their faces, their young children beside them, delighting in the outrage they provoke.

This is the family into which Nate Phelps was born 51 years ago and fled 33 years ago. At the time, his father had not yet graduated to street protests, but used a fleet of fax machines to broadcast his unabashedly hate-filled screeds to the world. Of his 12 brothers and sisters, only he and two others have deserted: The rest have grown Westboro with their own sons and daughters, inculcated in Pastor Phelps’ intolerant, Armageddonist preaching.

Nate Phelps was in Calgary this week, speaking to the University of Calgary’s Centre for Inquiry. Up until a year ago, he was driving a taxi in B.C.’s interior, quietly questioning God by soaking up in his off hours the anti-religion arguments of Mr. Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and Sam Harris. Today, as a faith-doubting refugee from Christianity’s ugliest extreme fringe, he has become, rather by accident, a figure in the North American atheist movement.

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Baptist Do-gooders Face Charges of Child Trafficking

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

It seems that overzealous do-gooders have gotten themselves in a bit of hot water by trying to circumvent Haitian law.  Regulations put in place to halt the trafficking of Haitian children have netted a bus load of  ”orphans” destined for the Dominican Republic.

The group detained at the border claims to be Baptist missionary group from Idaho.  They say the plan was to scoop up 100 kids and take them by bus to a rented hotel at a beach resort in the Dominican Republic, where they planned to establish an orphanage.

Haiti Detains Americans Taking Kids Over Border (AP)

10 American Baptists detained trying to take 33 children from quake zone across border (Chicago Tribune)

US citizens held over child trafficking allegations (Sidney Morning Herald)

8 Americans detained in Haiti freed on bail, 2 others to remain (CNN)