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The Westboro Baptist Church is a group of homosexual Americans. They fully support our troops and are very open minded. Oh and they eat poop.

{{dablink|This article refers to the Westboro Baptist Church of [[Topeka, Kansas]], and is not related to the Westboro Baptist Church of [[Westboro, Ontario]].}}

[[Image:WBC protest.jpg|frame|WBC member Jael Phelps (right) and an unidentified WBC child protesting in [[Tulsa, Oklahoma|Tulsa]], [[Oklahoma]] ]]
'''Westboro Baptist Church''' (WBC) is a controversial church, considered by many to be a [[hate group]] and a [[cult]], headed by [[Fred Phelps]], and based in [[Topeka, Kansas]], [[United States|U.S.]]. It runs the websites GodHatesFags.com,<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com "GodHatesFags.com"]</ref> GodHatesAmerica.com and others expressing condemnation of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender people ([[LGBT]]), [[Roman Catholics]], [[Muslims]] and [[Jews]], as well as populations it considers to support the forementioned groups, including [[Swedish people|Swedes]], [[Canada|Canadians]], [[Irish]] and [[United States|Americans]].

The organization is monitored by the [[Anti-Defamation League]],<ref name="adl-phelps">
{{cite web|url=http://www.adl.org/special_reports/wbc/default.asp|title=Fred Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church|author=[[Anti-Defamation League]]|year=2006|accessdate=2007-02-23}}</ref> and classified as a [[hate group]] by the [[Southern Poverty Law Center]].<ref name="splc-hate">[[Southern Poverty Law Center]].[http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=627 " The Year in Hate:2005".] Accessed 5 October 2006.</ref><ref>[[Southern Poverty Law Center]]. [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/map/hate.jsp?T=29&m=4 Active U.S. Hate Groups in 2005.] Accessed 5 October 2006.</ref> The group has achieved national notoriety in recent years due to its picketing of funeral processions for soldiers killed in combat,<ref name="funeral">
{{cite web|url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,305279,00.html|title=Father of Marine Killed in Iraq Sues Church for Cheering Death|publisher=Associated Press via Fox News|year=2007|accessdate=2007-10-26}}</ref> which functions as an extension of the Phelps' anti-United States beliefs.

While its members identify themselves as [[Baptist]]s, the church is an independent church not affiliated with any known Baptist conventions or associations, nor does any Baptist institution recognize the church as a Bible believing fellowship. The church describes itself as following [[Primitive Baptist]] and [[Calvinism|Calvinist]] principles. Its first public service was held on the afternoon of Sunday, [[27 November]] [[1955]].<ref name="date-sermon">{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesamerica.com/sound/ghfsermons/OSBH19880131.mp3|title=Sermon preached by Fred Phelps|year=1987|accessdate=2007-05-10}}</ref>

The church bases its work around the belief expressed by its best known slogan and the address of its primary website, "God hates fags", and expresses the idea, based on its Biblical [[eisegesis]], that nearly every tragedy in the world is linked to [[homosexuality]] &ndash; specifically society's increasing tolerance and acceptance of the so-called "Homosexual Agenda." The group maintains that God hates homosexuals above all other kinds of "sinners"<ref name="wbc-faq">[http://www.godhatesfags.com/main/faq.html#Focus "Westboro Baptist Church FAQ".]</ref> and that homosexuality should be a [[capital punishment|capital crime]].<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/dec2002/Outlaw_Sodomy_12-3-2002.pdf "Outlaw Sodomy"], [[December 3]] [[2002]]</ref>

On October 31, 2007 the church was ordered to pay $10.9M to the family of a dead soldier by a Maryland court. The court agreed that the funeral was a private event and should not have been sullied by protests. The judgment "far exceeds the net worth of the defendants" and is likely meant as a message to terminate all such future protests. http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/law/10/31/funeral.protests.ap/index.html

==Composition==
[[Image:PhelpsPulpit.jpg|thumb|Fred Phelps at his pulpit]]



[[Sky News]] claims that WBC consists of "about 150 members".<ref name="sky-video">[http://www.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,91136-1200311,00.html "Inside The Church Of Hate"], [[Sky News]], [[October 25]] [[2005]]</ref> [[BBC Two]] claims there are 71 members.<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/proginfo/tv/wk14/unplaced.shtml#unplaced_Louisth_mosthated "The Most Hated Family In America"], [[BBC Two]]</ref> A compilation of the names of Phelps' grandchildren and great-grand-children, combined with his nine "loyal" children and their spouses, though, numbers 90{{Fact|date=August 2007}}. Individuals who followed Phelps Sr. after he was voted out of his old congregation, Eastside Baptist Church (a traditional Baptist church), consisted of the Hockenbargers (whose offspring later married into the Phelps clan), George Stutzman, Chris Davis (who also married into the Phelps clan) and Theresa Davis (whose relationship, if any, to Chris Davis is unknown). Around 2000, another family (Steve and Luci Drain, along with daughters Lauren, Taylor and Faith and son Boaz) joined the group after Steve Drain, while taping a documentary on religious groups, interviewed several Westboro members and came to accept their theology. The Drains are not related to either the Phelpses or the Hockenbargers, nor to anyone else from the original group.

The Hockenbarger family that left Eastside to follow Phelps is headed by Charles William "Bill" Hockenbarger, allegedly a member of [[Christian Identity]]. Hockenbarger has been a friend of Phelps Sr. since the two men were in their twenties. In 2002, one of Phelps Sr.'s grandsons married one of the Hockenbarger granddaughters, with Phelps performing the ceremony. Karl Hockenbarger, the son of Bill Hockenbarger (and also an alleged Identity member) worked for [[Washburn University]] (where Phelps Sr. graduated in 1962).

In addition, at the outset several other Eastside members joined Westboro, but after Phelps began his activities (most notably his shooting of a dog that was irritating him{{Fact|date=February 2007}}), those members returned to Eastside or went elsewhere.

Phelps does not permit Westboro members to marry persons outside the church. As relatively few individuals have joined Westboro, there have been at least two marriages between the Phelps and Hockenbarger clans, resulting in some members having dual genealogical relationships (ex. married the brother or sister of their father or mother). In the documentary ''The Most Hated Family in America'', the young girls in the church express a disinterest in getting married, because "that's not what we are about" and "we're living in the last of the last days, times are very short".<ref>''[[The Most Hated Family in America]]''</ref>

[[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] [[esq]]., daughter of Rev. Fred Phelps and an attorney at the Phelps Chartered Law firm, is a prominent member of WBC and often a spokesperson for WBC. For the last couple of years, she has been running the day-to-day operations of the church.<ref>''The Most Hated Family in America''</ref>

==Activities and statements==
{{seealso|Targets of Westboro Baptist Church}}
The group carries out daily picketing in [[Topeka, Kansas|Topeka]] (purportedly six per day with fifteen on Sunday, "Lord willing", per the index page of its main website<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com/main/index.html "The Westboro Baptist Church Home Page"]</ref>) and travels nationally to picket the [[funeral]]s of homosexual victims of [[murder]], homosexual-bashing or death related to [[AIDS]], as well as other events related or appearing to be related to homosexual people. They have been known to protest outside theaters in Topeka, under the premise that live theatre (especially [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] [[Musical theatre|musical productions]]) is a haven of homosexuality, as well as [[Kansas City Chiefs]] [[American football|football]] games, and live [[pop music|pop]] concerts in Topeka. They have also shown interest in picketing productions of the play ''[[The Laramie Project]].''<ref>[http://www.godhatesamerica.com/ghfmir/fliers/oct2005/20051018_university-of-michigan-laramie-project.pdf "WBC to picket The Laramie Project fag play..."], [[October 18]] [[2005]]</ref> Recently, they have shifted their interest to picketing the funerals of soldiers killed in the [[2003 Invasion of Iraq|Iraq War]], believing this to be more of "God's judgment" on America. The FAQ section of the website states that, in their view, soldiers didn't join the military out of a sense of patriotism, but because they are "lazy, incompetent idiots" unable to find work elsewhere.<ref name="wbc-faq"/> Some states, including Kansas, have passed laws prohibiting picketing at funerals. Westboro has also protested funerals of people ranging from [[Fred Rogers]] to [[Coretta Scott King]].

One of Westboro's followers estimated that the church spends $250,000 a year traveling around the world to picket<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1755712,00.html</ref>. In the 1990s the church won a series of lawsuits against the City of Topeka and [[Shawnee County]] for efforts taken to prevent or hinder WBC picketing. As a result, the church was awarded approximately $200,000 in [[attorney's fee]]s and costs associated with the litigation. Otherwise, all of the church's money comes from the combined income of its congregants and money won in lawsuits against their opponents.

Phelps Sr., his supporters and members of his church attend the aforementioned gatherings, as well as other homosexual-related events, with signs bearing anti-homosexual slogans. Phelps Sr. has characterized the [[NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt|AIDS Memorial Quilt]] as "100,000 living fags slobberin' around 45,000 dead fags" and declared [[Elizabeth Taylor]], a fundraiser for AIDS research, to be a "world-famous filthy Jew whore." Other regular anti-homosexual slogans of Westboro include "Homosexuality = Death," "Fags Die, God Laughs," "[[Matthew Shepard]] Rots in Hell," "AIDS: Kills Fags Dead" and "[[Ellen DeGeneres]] is a [[Lesbian]] Slut." (The latter was carried at an "Equality Rocks" rock concert and fundraiser; at the event DeGeneres commented that she wasn't offended so much by the slogan as the fact that they had drawn [[pockmark]]s all over her face on the poster.)

A collection of Westboro signs and slogans can be seen at their website called [http://www.thesignsofthetimes.net/watchsignmovies.html "The signs of the times"].

Other slogans are<ref>WBC. [http://www.thesignsofthetimes.net/watchsignmovies.html]. Accessed [[April 4]] [[2007]]</ref>
* God Hates You<ref name="signtimes">{{cite web|url= http://www.thesignsofthetimes.net|title=The Signs of the Times|author=Westboro Baptist Church|accessdate=2007-02-23}}</ref>
* God Hates Your Tears<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.huntingtonnews.net/state/060113-woolum-picket.html|title= Controversial Kansas Church to Picket January 15 Sago Disaster Memorial Service in Buckhannon|author= Brandon Woolum|work= Huntington News Network|accessdate=2007-02-23|date=2006-01-13}}</ref>
* God Hates Fag Enablers<ref name="signtimes"/>
* God Is Your Enemy<ref name="signtimes"/>
* Thank God for 9/11<ref name="signtimes"/>
* Thank God for the [[2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake|Tsunami]]<ref>{{cite news|work=Santa Fe Reporter|url=http://sfreporter.com/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi?archive=1&num=90|title= Father Knows Best|author=Nathan Dinsdale|accessdate=2007-02-23|date=2005-04-20}}</ref>
* Thank God for [[Hurricane Katrina|Katrina]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/featured/20050831_thank-god-for-katrina.html|title=Thank God for Katrina|author=Westboro Baptist Church|accessdate=2007-02-23}}</ref>
* Thank God for Dead Soldiers<ref name="signtimes"/>
* Thank God for [[Improvised explosive device|IED]]s<ref name="signtimes"/> (improvised explosive devices)
* Thank God for California fires[http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/oct2007/20071024_california-fires.pdf]
* Thank God for AIDS<ref name="wbc-faq"/>
* Fag [[Santa]] (carried at Christmas time)
* Fag Flag (with an American flag)<ref name="signtimes"/>
* Fags Doom Nations ([[:Image:Westboro - Sows Wed.jpg|Image]])
* Fags Are Worthy of Death ([[:Image:Westboro - Fags Are Worthy of Death.jpg|Image]])
* Fags Eat Feces = Scat
* Fag Troops<ref name="signtimes"/>
* [[Menninger Foundation|Menninger]] Therapy (complete with two stick figures mounting)
* Repent or Perish<ref>{{cite paper|author=Westboro Baptist Church|title=Rejoice, Because Your Names are Written in Heaven|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/featured/epics/2006/20060115_buckhannon-wv-prose-epic.pdf|format=PDF|accessdate=2007-02-23|date=2006-01-15}}</ref>
* Dyke [[nun]]s and Fag [[Priest]]s (carried outside Catholic churches)
* Dyke Sows Wed Here (complete with pictures of pigs in wedding dresses covered with feces; carried at lesbian weddings)
* Brides of [[Satan]] (referring to lesbian weddings)
* Don't Worship the Dead<ref name="signtimes"/>
* Disney Fags (used during [[Disney on Ice]] at the Expo Center.)
* Your Pastor Is A Whore<ref name="signtimes"/>
* Semper Fi Semper Fag

When [[Kevin Oldham]], a homosexual [[musician]], died of AIDS-related causes in 1993, Phelps Sr. sent a photo of Kevin to his parents. The photo contained the caption: "Kevin Oldham: Dead Fag".<ref>[http://cjonline.com/webindepth/phelps/stories/080394_phelps06.shtml Grieving family forced to deal with Phelps.] 'The Capital Journal''. (August 3, 1994).</ref>

The group came into the national spotlight in 1998, when they were featured on [[CNN]] for picketing the funeral of [[Matthew Shepard]], a young man from [[Wyoming]] who was [[strike (attack)|beaten]] to death by two men because of his homosexuality.{{Fact|date=September 2007}} Though Phelps Sr. claimed that Shepard's murder was unjust (and the Westboro's website states that Shepard's murderers face the same fate as Shepard &ndash; eternity in hell unless they repent), his overt activism against Shepard's sexual orientation, regardless of the [[mourning]] of Shepard's [[family]] and [[friends]] (he called Shepard's mother, Judy, a whore and a "mother from Hell" during the memorial service and told her she'd "soon be joining Matthew").

On Westboro's website, Phelps Sr. maintains a "Perpetual Gospel Memorial" to Shepard. There is a similar "memorial" to [[Diane Whipple]], a lesbian woman killed in a dog attack. Some direct quotes/images from the Shepard page:
* A photograph of Matthew Shepard's face with animated flames dancing across it. When the cursor is moved across his face, viewers with a sound card will hear screams and a high-pitched voice shrieking "For God's sake, listen to Phelps!"
* A counter which displays how many days Matthew Shepard has "Been in Hell".
* "WBC does not support the murder of Matthew Shepard: 'thou shalt not kill.' Unless his killers repent, they will receive the same sentence that Matthew Shepard received &ndash; eternal fire. However, the truth about Matthew Shepard needs to be known. He lived a [[Satanism|Satanic]] lifestyle. He got himself killed trolling for anonymous homosexual sex in a bar at midnight".<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com/memorial.html "Perpetual Gospel Memorial to Matthew Shepard"]</ref>

On [[January 25]] [[2004]], Phelps picketed five churches (three [[Catholic]] and two [[Episcopalian]]) and the Federal Courthouse for allegedly legalizing same sex marriages in [[Iowa]]. Two women married in Vermont had their marriage mistakenly annulled by a federal judge in [[Sioux City, Iowa]]. The ruling was quickly reversed. The community response was to hold several counter-protests and hold a large multi-faith service in the town's city auditorium.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}

The group has also picketed [[Billy Graham]] revivals, alleging that the [[evangelist]] will burn in Hell for failing to propagate the "God Hates Fags" doctrine. In October 2004, the group protested Graham's mass meetings, calling the 85 year-old preacher a "Hell-bound [[false prophet]]".

In press releases, WBC referred to [[Topeka]] mayor [[James McClinton]] as a "[[spousal abuse|wife-beating]] tyrant". McClinton, who is black, was portrayed in the press release as a gorilla in a suit with a [[swastika]] armband.<ref>GodHatesFags.com.[http://www.godhatesfags.com/images/2004/McClinton_11-16-2004.jpg James McClinton presiding over city council during public hearing on fag ordinance: jpg.] Accessed October 5, 2006.</ref>

[[Image:WBC - Dead Miners 2006.jpg|thumb|A WBC member picketing the memorial in [[Buckhannon, West Virginia|Buckhannon]], [[West Virginia]]]]
On [[January 15]] [[2006]], Westboro members protested the memorial of [[2006 Sago Mine disaster]] victims claiming that the mining accident was God's revenge against America for its tolerance of homosexuality.<ref>[http://www.kake.com/news/headlines/2206092.html "Controlling Funeral Protests?"]</ref> Footage of the protest, including several members dancing, was later shown on [[Fox News]].

In July 2005, the Westboro Baptist Church declared its intention to picket the memorial service of Cpl. [[Carrie French]] in [[Boise, Idaho|Boise]], [[Idaho]]. French, aged 19 years old, was killed on [[June 5]] in the [[Iraq]]i city of [[Kirkuk]], where she served as an ammunition specialist with the 116th Brigade Combat Team's 145th Support Battalion. Her death is seen by the church as divine punishment of the United States. Phelps Sr. was quoted as saying, "Our attitude toward what's happening with the war is [that] the Lord is punishing this evil nation for abandoning all [[Morality|moral imperatives]] that are worth a dime."<ref>Oxley, Chuck. [http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/228401_westboro14.html His church was bombed, and now he protests funerals of the war dead.] Seattlep.com. Accessed October 5, 2006.</ref>

The Westboro Baptist Church declared its intention to picket the funerals of other soldiers as well and did so in August 2005. A group from the church protested at the funeral of Spc. Edward Myers, a soldier from [[St. Joseph, Missouri|St. Joseph]], [[Missouri]], who died in Iraq. [[Shirley Phelps]]-Roper (one of Phelps Sr.'s daughters and main author of the WBC Epics and Hate Letters) told a television reporter, "Who would serve a nation that is Godless and has flipped off, defiantly defied, defiantly flipped off, the Lord their God?" She then reiterated her belief that Myers was burning in Hell.<ref>KMBC-TV.[http://www.thekansascitychannel.com/news/4816699/detail.html Phelps' Group Protests At Soldier's Funeral.] (August 5, 2005).</ref>

After [[University of Missouri–Columbia|University of Missouri]] coach [[Kyle Hawkins]] "came out" as openly homosexual, WBC members announced plans to picket the University and all Missouri's lacrosse games.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}

In the wake of the tragic Amish school house shooting, members of Westboro Baptist Church planned on picketing the funerals of the five girls killed in the shooting. Their signs were going to call the girls "whores" and that they are "burning in hell". In an attempt to stop them, news radio personality/host [[Mike Gallagher]] attempted to dissuade them. After first rejecting a monetary offer, Gallagher offered them an hour of unrestricted airtime on his show. WBC accepted, and the picket was called off.<ref>[http://www.theage.com.au/news/world/insane-amish-protest-dropped/2006/10/05/1159641433255.html 'Insane' picketers cancel Amish funeral protest], ''The Age'', October 5, 2006</ref> On [[October 5]] [[2006]], members of WBC were "hosts" of the Mike Gallagher's radio show, with Gallagher giving periodic warnings to listeners that they (the members of WBC) did not represent the views of him or the station.

In February of 2007, the WBC threatened to picket the funeral of ten [[Bardstown, Kentucky]] family members who died in a fire as well as a similar one in Tennessee where four children died in a fire. In both instances, fliers were sent to the communities stating that God “hates” both states “for promoting sodomy and immorality” and for the states “rabidly persecuting” the church. However, on the Friday before the Bardstown funerals, the church elected to use an hour of radio time to promote their message.<ref>[http://www.kentucky.com/mld/kentucky/16663183.htm Group drops protest plan at fire victims' funeral], ''Lexington Herald Leader'', February 7, 2007</ref>

Recently the WBC has also been picketing against [[Sweden]] because the pastor [[Åke Green]] was convicted for hate speech after having called homosexuality a cancer in one of his sermons. WBC has also been sending abusive faxes to [[Princess Madeleine of Sweden]].[http://www.thelocal.se/6877.html]

On the day of the April 16, 2007 campus massacre on the [[Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University|Virginia Tech]] campus, the church declared its intent to protest the funerals of the students killed. This was announced on the church's www.godhatesamerica.com website. On April 19, 2007, [[GoDaddy]], the Internet registrar responsible for that website and its associated domain had suspended its registration, returning a "[[whois]]" [[Domain name system|DNS]] server entry of "suspended for spam and abuse". Within hours, however, the domain had been restored.{{Fact|date=April 2007}} In a deal similar to that struck for the victims of the [[Amish]] school shooting, Gallagher and the church have independently announced that the church has agreed to not protest these funerals in lieu of three hours of unrestricted airtime on his show. [http://mikeonline.com/images/linksandinfo/WBC_message070420.htm] [http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/apr2007/20070420_mike-gallagher-virginia-tech.pdf]

On [[August 2]], [[2007]] they have announced they will be picketing those who have died when the [[I-35W Mississippi River bridge]] collapsed. <ref>http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/aug2007/20070802_minneapolis-bridge-collapse.pdf</ref>.

===Criminal record===
In 1993, Charles F. Hockenbarger, Karl Hockenbarger, Timothy Phelps, Jonathan Phelps, Phelps Sr. and Margie Phelps were brought up on a variety of criminal charges stemming from information gathered following a raid of Westboro. Several charges were later dropped; the trials that followed saw every member of Westboro Baptist Church over the age of fifteen testifying in the defense of their family and fellow congregants; over 100 defense witnesses were called in all. Timothy Phelps, Charles F. Hockenbarger and Karl Hockenbarger were all found not guilty. Jon Phelps was found guilty of witness intimidation and misdemeanor battery, and has defended the actions that led to that arrest and guilty verdict as recently as [[October 11]] [[2006]] on [[Midweek Politics]], while Margie Phelps was found guilty of filing a false report and Phelps Sr. was found guilty of disorderly conduct as defined by aggravated intimidation of a witness; all three lost their appeals. All six filed lawsuits against the city and took their cases to appeals court, where their lawsuits were dismissed.

[[Image:BenPhelps.JPG|thumb|200px|[[Fred Phelps]]' grandson Benjamin Phelps, convicted of assault and disorderly conduct in 1995. He was the person who informed his grandfather about the existence of the [[Internet]] and made the first "GodHatesFags" page. The cited Bible verse, Romans 9:13, has nothing to do with homosexuality, but rather is simply a biblical example of God hating a certain person (in this case, [[Esau]]).]]

In 1995, Phelps Sr.'s eldest grandson, Benjamin Phelps, was convicted of assault and disorderly conduct after spitting into the face of a passerby during a picket and then laughing. The [[security camera]]s of a nearby business caught the incident on tape.<ref>[http://www.cjonline.com/indepth/phelps/stories/052497_phelps.shtml "Appeals court upholds Phelpses' convictions"], Roger Myers, ''The Topeka Capital-Journal'', [[May 24]] [[1997]]</ref>

Also in 2004, Margie Phelps and her son Jacob were arrested for [[trespassing]], disorderly conduct and failure to obey after disregarding a police officer's order that they were not allowed to enter a company's private property with chairs and stand on them with an upside down flag and a picket sign.<ref>[http://www.rickross.com/reference/westboro/westboro21.html "Two Phelpses arrested at Brown dedication], Tim Hrenchir and Cait Purinton, ''The Topeka Capital-Journal'', [[May 17]] [[2004]]</ref>

In June 2007, Shirley Phelps-Roper was arrested in [[Nebraska]], after demonstrating at the funeral of a soldier, and charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The arrest resulted from her allowing her eight-year-old son to step on the American flag during the demonstration, an act which is illegal under Nebraska law. The defense contends that the child's actions were protected speech, and that the state law is unconstitutional. The prosecution, however, claims that the demonstration was not intended as political speech, but as an incitement to violence, and that Phelps-Roper's conduct may also constitute child abuse.
<ref>[http://www.ketv.com/news/13569930/detail.html "Nebraska's Flag Desecration Law Faces Challenge"], , ''KETV NewsWatch 7'', [[June 26]] [[2007]]</ref>

==Other prejudices==
The Westboro Baptist Church attributes membership of most religious groups, such as the [[Roman Catholic Church]] or [[Islam]], as akin to [[Theistic Satanism|devil worship]]. All non-Christian entities, non-Protestant Christian churches, as well as all Protestant Christian churches which do not strongly condemn homosexuality, are said to be sending their members to Hell.

While the Westboro Baptist Church says that [[Racism|racial discrimination]] is a sin,<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com/msnbctownhall.html "WBC Picketing MSNBC Town Hall"]</ref> it and Phelps Sr. have been accused of various racist acts, including using racist imagery in its fliers and using racial epithets.<ref name="On blacks">[http://www.adl.org/special_reports/wbc/wbc_on_blacks.asp "Fred Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church: In Their Own Words, On Blacks".]</ref>

A compilation of Westboro Baptist Church's various racial and political views:

===Racism===
The [[Anti-Defamation League]] has accused Westboro of racism toward blacks, based on numerous racially-offensive quotes from the church and its leaders.<ref name="On blacks"/>

[[Image:WBC McClinton.jpg|200px|thumb|WBC portrayal of Topeka mayor [[James McClinton]] (an [[African-American]]) {{puic|Image:WBC McClinton.jpg|log=2007 October 23}}]]

In the documentary ''Hatemongers'', Phelps and his children quote Bible verses denouncing racism and saying that it is a sin. He says that it differs from homosexuality in that "God never said it is an abomination to be Black."<ref>[http://www.hatemongers.com/ "Hatemongers"], Steve Drain</ref>

===Anti-Islamic stance===
In response to a [[Newsweek]] article alleging that American soldiers flushed copies of the Quran down the toilet at [[Camp X-Ray]] in [[Guantanamo Bay detainment camp|Guantanamo Bay]], Fred Phelps released this statement:<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/may2005/20050519_week-726.pdf PDF Statement from God Hates Fags.]</ref>

{{cquote|So what if our guys flushed copies of the Quran down the toilet? We hope they did. They probably did; We hope they flush more. Mohammed was a demon-possessed whoremonger and pedophile who contrived a 300-page work of Satanic fiction: The Quran! Like America's own whoremonger and pedophile wangled his own hokey [[Book of Mormon]]!}}

Phelps went on to give a brief literary dissection of the Quran, using nearly identical grammar and language to his and his children's (likewise identical) dissections of ''The Laramie Project'':

In relation to the war in Iraq a WBC flier implies that God has sided with the Muslims: {{cquote| In His retaliatory rage God is killing Americans with Muslim IEDs: "Saying Touch not my anointed, and do my prophets no harm." 1 Chron 16:22. [http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/mar2007/20070318_angel-rosa-funeral.pdf]}}

===Anti-semitism===
In the section about Jews the WBC FAQ states: "...the only true Jews are Christians. The rest of the people who claim to be Jews aren't, and they are nothing more than typical, impenitent sinners ... the vast majority of Jews support fags. In fact, it is the official policy of Reformed Jews to support same-sex marriage. Of course, there are Jews who still believe God's law, but most of them have even departed from that. It doesn't matter if you're a Jew or a Gentile...as long as you believe in Christ."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.godhatesfags.com/main/faq.html#Jews|title=Westboro Baptist Church FAQ: What do you think of Jews?|accessdate=2006-12-02}}</ref>

On the subject of Nazis, KKK, and other violent extremist groups:
"We don't believe in physical violence of any kind, and the Scripture doesn't support racism. ... The only true Nazis in this world are fags."<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.godhatesfags.com/main/faq.html#Militia|title=Westboro Baptist Church FAQ: Are you associated with a militia, Aryan Nation, Nazi, KKK, or any other similar group?|accessdate=2006-12-02}}</ref>

Phelps refers to [[the Holocaust]] as "minuscule" and led a protest at the [[United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] in 1996, proclaiming:

{{cquote|Whatever righteous cause the Jewish victims of the 1930s-40s Nazi Holocaust had... has been drowned in sodomite semen. American taxpayers are financing this unholy monument to Jewish mendacity and greed and to filthy fag lust. Homosexuals and Jews dominated Nazi Germany.... The Jews now wander the earth despised, smitten with moral and spiritual blindness by a divine judicial stroke.... And God has smitten Jews with a certain unique madness... Jews, thus perverted, out of all proportion to their numbers energize the militant sodomite agenda... Jews are the real Nazis.}}

Also in 1996, Phelps began a campaign called "Topeka's Baptist Holocaust", whereby he attempted to draw attention to attacks perpetuated against WBC picketers, saying that they were not random but organized attacks orchestrated by Jews and homosexuals. Phelps announced, "Jews killed Christ", and:

{{cquote|Fag Jew Nazis are worse than ordinary Nazis. They've had more experience. The First Holocaust was a Jewish Holocaust against Christians. The latest Holocaust is by Topeka Jews against Westboro Baptist Church.}}

In another statement, he said:

{{cquote|Topeka Jews today stir up Kansas tyrants in persecuting Westboro Baptists. They whine about the Nazi Holocaust, while they perpetrate the Topeka Holocaust.}}

WBC was present at a 2002 Holocaust memorial dedication in Topeka, proclaiming "God Hates Reform Judaism".<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/may2002/Holocaust_5-11-2002.pdf Flier from God Hates Fags (PDF)]</ref>

During the [[U.S. presidential election, 2004|2004 United States presidential election]], Phelps campaigned against [[United States Senate|Senator]] [[John Kerry]], claiming that his affiliation with Judaism made him unfit to run the country, and on his webpage gave a lengthy recitation of Kerry's family tree, naming all of his Jewish ancestors.

A [[March 25]] [[2006]] flier regarding a Jewish adversary of Phelps uses the phrase "bloody Jew" four times and the phrase "evil Jew" more than once every twelve sentences. A sampling of WBC's fliers regarding Judaism can be found at the ADL's website.<ref name="On Jews">[http://www.adl.org/special_reports/wbc/wbc_on_jews.asp Sample WBC fliers from ADL]</ref> Phelps has also been targeted by the [[Anti-Defamation League]] for his anti-Semitic statements.<ref name="On Jews"/><ref>[http://www.rickross.com/reference/westboro/westboro1.html ADL report says homophobic 'church' espouses anti-semitism, racism.]</ref>

===Anti-Catholicism===
Westboro is also anti-Catholic, claiming that the [[Roman Catholic Church]] is a "fag" church and that a third of Catholic priests are active homosexuals, seducing helpless children and women; Westboro refers to priests as "vampires" and "Draculas," and talks of Catholic priests sucking semen out of children's genitals like vampires suck blood from their victims. Phelps has also reproduced an alleged "Diary of Another Fag Catholic Priest" on Westboro's homepage and claims that "fag priests and dyke nuns is the order of the day for Kansas Catholics. They deserve the sick, perverted leadership that now dooms and damns them". About Catholics, he says "They're mean. Mean as Hell. Headed for Hell. The meanest, most hateful people on Earth."

The day after the death of Pope John Paul II, Phelps held a service to "celebrate his entrance into Hell", during which he boasted, "You don't think he split Hell wide open? We're the only ones telling the truth about that son of a bitch!" That evening he posted a flier on his webpage showing a doctored photo of a screaming John Paul II with horns coming out of his forehead, with the caption:

{{cquote|Deal with it, you idolatrous morons! The pope is in Hell. Westboro Baptist Church members are competent expert witnesses, having picketed hundreds of Catholic churches in all fifty states over the past fourteen years. We will bear witness on Judgment Day: Catholics are the meanest, most violent people on Earth, and their churches are filled with filthy fag priests. On John Paul II's watch, the Catholic Church became the CHURCH OF THE HOLY PEDOPHILES and sodomite feces and semen replaced bread and wine.}}

Westboro operates three separate websites related to this issue, though two are not yet operational (see below).

On June 5th 2007, on [[ITV]]'s [[Jeremy Kyle Show]], Shirley Phelps told a Catholic member of the audience that the Catholic church is "the largest paedophile machine in the whole world, and God hates them"; the satellite link was then broken.

==Responses==
===Laws Prohibiting Funeral Protests===
In response to the protests conducted by Westboro members at [[Indiana]] funerals, a bill was introduced in the [[Indiana General Assembly]] that would make it a [[felony]] to protest within 500 feet of a funeral. The bill provides penalties of up to three years in prison in addition to a $10,000 fine for those found to be in violation of the law. Shortly before this bill was signed, members of the church had threatened to protest in [[Kokomo, Indiana]], at a funeral service that was being held for a soldier who was killed in Iraq. On [[January 11]] [[2006]] the bill unanimously (11-0) passed a committee vote,<ref>[http://www.wndu.com/news/012006/news_47194.php "Funeral protest bill passes out of committee, 11-0"]</ref> and while members of the church had showed up in Kokomo, Indiana, to protest, they were nowhere to be seen during or after the funeral service.

Several other states have adopted similar legislation, such as [[South Dakota]]. Some have been critical of these laws, however, saying that they could prevent other protests as well, and may possibly violate the [[First Amendment]] right to freedom of speech. WBC has expressed their intention to contest these laws, and if victorious collect damages while the Phelps Chartered law firm collects attorney's fees under the [[Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Award Act of 1976]].<ref name='fees paid to Phelps Chartered'/>

On 5/23/2006 the state of Michigan banned any intentional disruption of funerals within 500 feet of the ceremony. Violating the statute would be a felony, punishable by up two years in prison and a $5,000 fine for the first offense and up to four years and $10,000 for a repeat offense. [http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/news.aspx?id=16931]

===Use of Child Endangerment Laws to Prevent Westboro from Picketing===
The church recently avoided a funeral in [[McDonald County, Missouri]], due to a recently enacted law. Juvenile court authorities stated that using their children in their protests (as they often do) constituted child endangerment and the children could be put into foster homes. WBC often issues press releases claiming they will show up to protest an event but do not show up.

[[Shirley Phelps-Roper]], daughter of [[Fred Phelps]], was arrested on June 5th, 2007 on suspicion of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Police alleged that she allowed her son to trample an American flag while protesting the funeral of a soldier in Bellevue, Nebraska, which is a misdemeanor in the state. She is the first member of the Westboro Baptist Church to be arrested while protesting a funeral<ref>http://www.beatricedailysun.com/articles/2007/06/05/ap-state-ne/d8piudo80.txt</ref>

=== [[Personal injury]] lawsuit===
At least one family outraged by WBC's behavior has sued[http://www.matthewsnyder.org/] them for defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Albert Snyder, the father of [[United States Marine Corps|Marine]] Lance Cpl. Matthew A. Snyder[http://www.militarycity.com/valor/1582584.html], testified:
<blockquote>"They turned this funeral into a media circus and they wanted to hurt my family. They wanted their message heard and they didn't care who they stepped over. My son should have been buried with dignity, not with a bunch of clowns outside."<ref>[http://www.eveningsun.com/ci_7277523 "Father: Funeral protest made him sick."] EveningSun.com. [[October 25]], [[2007]].</ref></blockquote>

In his instructions to the jury U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett stated that the First Amendment protection of free speech has limits, including vulgar, offensive and shocking statements. And that the jury must decide "whether the defendant's actions would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, whether they were extreme and outrageous and whether these actions were so offensive and shocking as to not be entitled to First Amendment protection."<ref>[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,305279,00.html Father of Marine Killed in Iraq Sues Church for Cheering Death, Appeals to Public Online for Help] ''Fox news'' October 26, 2007</ref>

The lawsuit named Albert Snyder as the plaintiff and [[Fred Phelps|Fred W. Phelps]], Sr.; Westboro Baptist Church, Inc.; Rebekah Phelps-Davis; and [[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] as defendants, alleging they were responsible for publishing defamatory information about the Snyder family on the Internet, including statements that Albert and his wife had "raised [Matthew] for the devil" and taught him "to defy his Creator, to divorce, and to commit adultery." Other statements denounced them for raising their son Catholic. Snyder further complained the defendants had intruded upon and staged protests at his son's funeral. The claims of invasion of privacy and defamation arising from comments posted about Snyder on the Westboro website were dismissed on first amendment grounds, but the case proceeded to trial on the remaining three counts.<ref>[http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/carroll/bal-md.funeral16oct16,0,1389208.story "Suit OK'd against anti-gay group."] Baltimore Sun. [[October 16]], [[2007]].</ref><ref>[http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2007/10/federal-judge-approves-limited-lawsuit.php "Federal judge approves limited lawsuit against military funeral protesters."] The Jurist, [[University of Pittsburg]] School of Law. [[October 16]], [[2007]].</ref>

On 31 October 2007, the Church, Rev. [[Fred Phelps]] and his two daughters, [[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] and Rebecca Phelps-Davis, were found liable for invasion of privacy and intent to inflict emotional distress. A federal jury awarded Mr. Snyder USA$2.9 million in compensatory damages, then later added a decision to award $6 million in punitive damages for invasion of privacy and an additional $2 million for causing emotional distress (A total of USA$10,900,000). <ref>[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21566280/ "Father wins millions from war funeral picketers" - MSNBC, 31 October 2007]</ref> <ref>[http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSN3134225120071031 "Kansas church liable in Marine funeral protest" - Reuters, 31 October 2007]</ref>

WBC is seeking a mistrial based on alleged prejudicial statements made by the judge and violations of the gag order by the prosecutor.<ref>[http://www.kbsd6.com/Global/story.asp?S=7291990 Church seeking mistrial in lawsuit over funeral protests] ''Associated Press'' October 31, 2007</ref> An appeal is also likely.

As of October 31, 2007 godhatesamerica.com and godhatesfags.com appear to be offline. It is unknown if the outage was caused by an unusually large number of hits on their website, or if WBC took the web sites offline as a result of the lawsuit,

See Also: [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/privacy/Privacy_R2d_Torts_Sections.htm Intrusion Upon Seclusion]

===Other Legal Responses===
On [[July 14]] [[2006]], [[Mundy Township, Michigan]] billed the WBC $5,000.
The Westboro church had informed township authorities on [[June 28]] that a protest was planned at the Swartz Funeral Home. The bill to the church ensued, according to the local police chief, because the congregation failed to keep a verbal contract for security. Fred Phelps' daughter claimed that the Holy Ghost had informed them not to fly to Michigan even though they had already purchased airline tickets. Security at the Webb funeral was high: fifteen fire trucks were involved as well as numerous police officers from nearby jurisdictions.<ref>[http://www.pridesource.com/article.shtml?article=19573 "Michigan town bills Phelps' church over protest no-show".]</ref> The township has now stated that it will not pursue the
matter.

===Counter Protests===
[[Counter protest]]s are generally organized to provide an opposing viewpoint at sites that Westboro pickets. In some cases counter protesters have lined up and turned their backs on the Westboro pickets or encircled them in a ring, explaining that they want to symbolically shield the community from the hate. This has become frequent with Westboro's picketing of the funerals of soldiers killed in Iraq; veterans' associations and biker groups such as the [[Patriot Guard]] have led the counter protests in recent months.

Two days after the September 11th attacks, a 19-year old man named Jared Dailey stood on the street corner facing the church holding up a plywood sign that said "Not today Fred." Within two days, 86 people joined him, waving American flags and anti-hate signs.<ref>http://www.kshs.org/cool3/nottodaysign.htm</ref> Since then, "Not today Fred" has become a commonly used motto for counter protests against Phelps.

===Violence directed against Westboro===
* During a [[March 26]] [[1993]] protest at Topeka's Vintage Restaurant, a riot broke out and eight WBC members were hospitalized for various minor injuries; WBC now pickets the restaurant every day, as well as the places of business where employees went after leaving the Vintage in an attempt to escape Westboro. In addition, the congregants hold a memorial service every year on the 26th, commemorating what they refer to as "the Vintage Massacre".
* In 1994, a woman tried to run down protesters in Topeka after one of them screamed obscenities at her while her pick-up truck was parked at a stop light. She was arrested, but was later found not guilty due to temporary insanity.
* In 2002 [[Blue Valley North High School]] held productions of [[The Laramie Project]] play. Westboro members made it known that they were coming to picket the school. To their surprise many students cut class to meet the picketers and a small riot ensued with a few instances of car vandalism. The school later made tickets to the shows "buy ahead" in order to keep Westboro members from interrupting the play. Subsequently Phelps' website started declaring that "God Hates Blue Valley North" and proceeded to picket every year's graduation ceremony following the event.
* In 2003, WBC member Charles Hockenbarger, who was in his 70s at the time, had his face crushed in a beating after standing on a street corner holding a sign reading "THANK GOD FOR SEPT. 11". Hockenbarger was recovering from [[open heart surgery]] at the time and ignoring the usual doctor's orders for bed rest. Westboro posted photos of the aftermath of the attack on its homepage, claiming that the (still unidentified) perpetrator was a homosexual and that the attack had been part of a murder conspiracy to kill Hockenbarger, though offering no proof of these allegations.
* During a protest at the 2005 presidential inauguration of [[George W. Bush]], WBC protesters were slapped, kicked and had their signs forcefully taken by other protesters.
* There have been differing reports on actions at an [[October 5]] [[2005]], picket of a [[Wisconsin]] soldier's funeral. One report was that Dodge County Sheriff Todd Nehls asked Paulette Phelps to move so he could protect her. Her group called him a [[Nazism|Nazi]] and refused to comply. A conflicting claim put forth by members of the WBC alleges that Sheriff Nehls punched Paulette Phelps in the face. Video of the purported incident at godhatesfags.com — which claims to show Nehls striking one of the church members — is ambiguous, and at the point the purported attack takes place, the camera is pointed at the ground (indeed, large portions of the video are made up of shots of Westboro members' feet and the ground).<ref>[http://www.godhatesfags.com/video/20051005_mayville-wisc.html "Video footage of Mayville, WI (Dodge County) - October 5, 2005"]</ref>
* During a picket in [[Seaford, Delaware]] on [[May 21]] [[2006]], a mob broke through police lines and tried to assault WBC members who fled into a police van. Some of the mob then began banging on the van attempting to get inside. Two windows of the van were shattered before the van could get away. Five people face criminal charges.<ref>[http://animation.speakfree.net/video/20050521_seaford-de.wmv Animation speakfree video.]</ref>
* It has suggested that a [[Liberty University]] student who intended to bring a bomb to the funeral of [[Jerry Falwell]] may have intended to use the device against a WBC protest at the funeral.[http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2003719590_falwell24.html][http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=3201543]

===Spoof Web Sites===
Responses include the creation of an opposing website, [http://www.godlovesfags.com godlovesfags.com], a pro-[[gay rights]] website, launched by Kris Haight on [[March 1]] [[1999]]. The site focuses on the debate surrounding [[religion and homosexuality]] and especially [[homosexuality and Christianity]].

On [[August 18]] [[1999]], an unidentified [[Hacker#Hacker: Intruder and criminal|hacker]] transferred ownership of the domain godhatesfags.com to Kris Haight. Apparently, this was done by forging an [[email]] message from Phelps. Haight promptly redirected all traffic to godlovesfags.com. After much media attention, Phelps threatened to sue and the domain name was returned on [[August 21]].

In 2006 [http://www.godhateswbc.com godhateswbc.com], as well as [http://www.godhateswbc.net godhateswbc.net], were created, focusing on the debate surrounding religion and homosexuality.

A satire website called [http://www.godhatesshrimp.com/ God Hates Shrimp] was created in 2004 in response to WBC's inflammatory website. The website cites Leviticus 11:10, the same book and section that labels sodomy as an abomination, where it says "And all that have not fins and scales in the seas, and in the rivers, of all that move in the waters, and of any living thing which is in the waters, they shall be an abomination unto you". The website argues that this means Long John Silver's and Red Lobster restaurants should likewise be picketed by WBC. Another satirical site, [http://www.godhatesfigs.com/ God Hates Figs], was created noting that Jesus struck a fig tree dead in one biblical account.

[[Image:charlesfirth.JPG|thumb|right|Charles Firth (right) interviewing Fred Phelps Jr. of the Westboro Baptist Church. Firth provoked Phelps for comedy by flirting with him throughout the interview]]

===Ridicule===
Journalist [[Charles Firth]] of Australian television enterprise [[The Chaser's War on Everything]] appeared with members of Westboro Baptist Church, at the picket of an [[USMC|U.S. Marine]]'s funeral, in early 2006. With the camera rolling, he proceeded to ask a male member of the church several questions about his motivations. Firth then started complimenting the man on his appearance, following him around as he avoided the camera, and stroked his shoulder lamenting how he wished they could be a couple. Other members of Phelps' congregation then turned on the reporter and cameraman when the homosexual innuendos became obvious.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://youtube.com/watch?v=S8cN2pB3MCE|title=YouTube: Flirting with a Westboro Church man| accessdate=2006-12-02}}</ref>

[[Michael Moore]] organized a humorous counterprotest to the church for his TV Show ''[[The Awful Truth (TV series)|The Awful Truth]]''. He followed Phelps around the country in "the Sodomobile," a pink bus filled with homosexuals.

A growingly popular joke centering around the church is that Phelps is a closeted homosexual. Clips of Phelps have been frequently edited to provide a voiceover that depicts him as wanting to engage in homosexual acts.

===Parodies===
[[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] and her children have also been parodied many times on ''[[The Howard Stern Show]]'', where their extreme views are used to contribute to the environment of the program.

Periodically, [[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] and her daughters are call in guests on [[The Adam Carolla Show]] morning radio show. They would call in and sing hateful songs but would be insulted by Adam and company with the insults going right over their heads.{{Fact|date=October}}

===Criticism===
A small number of Phelps' critics have suggested, however, that the actions of the Westboro Baptist Church are a ploy to receive attention above all else. Counter-protesting against the group, they suggest, gives them attention and incentive they do not deserve; and a more effective response against Phelps would be to ignore his congregation completely.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.modemac.com/wiki/Westboro_Baptist_Church|title=The High Weirdness Project: Westboro Baptist Church|accessdate=2006-12-02|date=2006-11-03}}</ref> WBC, through the closely related Phelps Chartered law firm, has collected fees under the [[Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Award Act of 1976]] when their protests have been unlawfully disrupted. [http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/jan2006/20060114_pandering-demagogic-legislatures.pdf]

The [[Anti-Defamation League]] (ADL) describes the Westboro Baptist Church as "virulently [[Homophobia|homophobic]]", whose anti-homosexual rhetoric they say is often a cover for [[anti-Semitism]], [[Anti-Americanism]], [[racism]], and [[anti-Catholicism]].<ref name="adl-phelps"/> The [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] (SPLC), an anti-hate group, has added the Westboro Baptist Church to its list of hate groups.<ref name="splc-hate"/> Many mainstream conservative and fundamentalist Christians (including those who oppose homosexuality, such as [[Jerry Falwell]]), have denounced Phelps' remarks as hateful and un-Christian, and in general oppose Phelps' view that homosexuals cannot repent (the traditional view is that homosexuality is not the "unpardonable sin"; homosexuals may "renounce their ways" as may any other "sinner"). Falwell is often credited with referring to Phelps as "a first-class nut". WBC picketed the funeral service of Falwell on May 22, 2007. <ref>http://content.hamptonroads.com/story.cfm?story=125215&ran=72205&tref=y</ref>

In 2004, [[Libertarian]] columnist Keith R. Wood suggested that the Westboro Baptists are actually trying to create sympathy for homosexual activism and to engender anti-Christian sentiment due to the offensive nature of their activities and Phelps' own statements regarding tactics.<ref>http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:oBZKU6DfFi8J:www.sierratimes.com/04/10/27/critic.htm+Keith+R.+Wood+phelps&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=firefox-a
</ref>

===Opposition to Westboro's theology===
Mainstream Calvinist churches have claimed that Westboro's agenda and its message of hate are at variance with Calvinism, as well as all fundamental, Bible-believing Christian theology.

Westboro has been labeled as a [[cult]] by many Christian, God-honoring ministries; and even some of the more extreme "anti-cult" figures such as [[Rick Ross (consultant)|Rick Ross]].<ref>[http://www.rickross.com/reference/westboro/westboro7.html An overview of Phelps.]</ref> Also, another church, considered very extremist and outside of mainstram Christian churches, stating God hates homosexuals, [[A True Church]], claims that "God Hates Phelps."<ref>[http://www.atruechurch.info/godhatesphelps.html God Hates Phelps (The "God Hates Fags" Preacher)] Darwin Fish, 9-23-06</ref>
The WBC is recognized by the Anti-Defamation League as a racist organization, and registered by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group.

===Media Coverage===
For such a small group WBC receives attention from major media organizations. WBC is proud of their media coverage and comments on most media coverage, no matter how negative, on their web site.

[[Fred Phelps]] appeared on ''Scarborough Country'' on [[April 11]] [[2006]] and his microphone was promptly cut after ranting about God's damnation of the U.S. instead of answering a question.<ref>[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12285618 'Scarborough Country' for April 11.]</ref>
His daughter, [[Shirley Phelps Roper]] appeared on [[Fox News]]' ''[[Hannity & Colmes]]'' show on [[April 18]] [[2006]] to defend the WBC protests.<ref>[http://www.exposetheleft.com/2006/04/19/phelps-troop-hating Troop Hating Church Confronted By H&C, Exposed For Who They Are (VIDEO).]</ref> On the June 10, 2006 edition of ''The Big Story Weekend'', host Julie Banderas exclaimed to Shirley Phelps-Roper, "You are the devil! If you believe in the Bible, miss, you're going to hell!"<ref>[http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=50603 Fox News host to guest: 'You're going to hell!']</ref> Another [[Fox News]] host, [[Bill O'Reilly (commentator)|Bill O'Reilly]] often has guests on his show, ''[[The O'Reilly Factor]]'', who speaks out against the church and its tactics, while steadfastly refusing requests by church members to appear and defend themselves. His tactics provoked the appearance of a video on the church's website proclaiming O'Reilly's inevitable damnation as a result of his "persecution". Shirley Phelps Roper also appeared with her two daughters on ''[[The Tyra Banks Show]]'' and on ''[[The Jeremy Kyle Show]]'' in the UK, Shirley being frequently appearing unreasonable and belligerent.

===BSkyB report===
In 2005, the [[United Kingdom|British]] TV network [[British Sky Broadcasting]] produced an [[investigative journalism|investigative]] piece using [[hidden camera]]s, which included footage of two of Phelps' granddaughters, Libby and Jael.<ref name="sky-video"/> In the testimonial, Libby and Jael explain that they hope and pray that no one outside of Westboro becomes "elect,"<ref name="sky-video"/> because they want everyone else in the world to die horribly and burn in Hell,<ref name="sky-video"/> and that even if they didn't believe their actions were dictated by God, they would still do and enjoy them anyway.<ref name="sky-video"/> The interview was not part of the hidden camera segment, and although much of the footage was taken without the knowledge or permission of Westboro, the church maintains a link to the entire report on its website.

===BBC Two, Louis Theroux===
On [[April 1]] [[2007]], the British television channel [[BBC Two]] broadcast a documentary by [[Louis Theroux]] about WBC and the Phelps Family, called ''[[Louis Theroux]]: [[The Most Hated Family in America]]''.<ref>Theroux, Louis. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=66W_yGUERjY Trailer] on [[YouTube]]. [[BBC Two]]</ref> Theroux has presented a number of documentaries about unusual or unconventional people and groups in the UK, the US, and elsewhere.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/6507971.stm The Most Hated Family in America] (interview with Louis Theroux). [[BBC News]], [[March 30]] [[2007]]</ref>

===ITV coverage in the United Kingdom===
On [[June 5]] [[2007]] the website godhatesfags.com was prominently featured in The [[Jeremy Kyle Show]], a talk show aired on the [[ITV]] network in the United Kingdom. Church members Shirley and her daughters were protesting about their beliefs live via satellite to the UK. Jeremy Kyle and the audience in its entirety were in strong opposition of the family's views on the church.

===Channel 4 coverage in the United Kingdom===
On [[June 21]] [[2007]], WBC featured in the [[Channel 4]] documentary ''Keith Allen Will Burn In Hell''. It showed [[Keith Allen]] profiling the Church. Allen took a very pugnacious stance, repeatedly called one of the Phelps family a fool (in response to when a member of the church stated "don't believe everything you read"), and labeled certain sections of the Bible, particularly [[Leviticus]], "absolutely fucking vile". He attempted to argue against the church's beliefs when he questioned [[Shirley Phelps-Roper]] about her illegitimate son, asking why ''her'' sins should be forgiven by Jesus if others' were not.

==References==
{{reflist|2}}

==See also==
* [[Hephzibah Baptist Church]]
* [[Independent Baptist]]
* [[List of purported hate groups]]
* [[Warren Carter]]

==External links==
{{commons|Westboro Baptist Church}}
{{wikiquote|The Most Hated Family in America}}
<!-- See talk. This offensive group's website is relevant to article and must be included. See comment below re: [[Wikipedia:External Links]] -->
* [http://www.godhatesfags.com/ WBC's Official Website]

<!-- Please read the guidelines at [[Wikipedia:External Links]] BEFORE adding new links here. Keep in mind that Wikipedia is not a collection of links, that's what Google is for. New links should provide an essential supplement to the content and links already in the article; if it's not something new and significantly different than what is here already, please don't add it on. Thanks. -->

===Criticism of WBC===
<!-- Please read the guidelines at [[Wikipedia:External Links]] BEFORE adding new links here. Keep in mind that Wikipedia is not a collection of links, that's what Google is for. New links should provide an essential supplement to the content and links already in the article; if it's not something new and significantly different than what is here already, please don't add it on. Thanks. -->
* [http://www.patriotguard.org/ Patriot Guard Riders], a group of motorcycle enthusiasts who often "counter-protest" Westboro picketings
* [http://www.rickross.com/groups/westboro.html Westboro Baptist Church], a collection of material by the Rick Ross Institute
* [http://www.cousincreep.com/westboro Audio interview with Westboro Baptist Church spokesperson Shirley Phelps-Roper] with Roland Davis from KERN Bakersfield, in relation to picketing military funerals
* [http://www.godhateswbc.net/ GodHatesWBC.net], a website protesting Westboro Baptist Church

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===Defenses of WBC===

* [http://www.therighttobewrong.net/ In Defense of WBC Pickets]

===Parodies===
<!-- Please read the guidelines at [[Wikipedia:External Links]] BEFORE adding new links here. Keep in mind that Wikipedia is not a collection of links, that's what Google is for. New links should provide an essential supplement to the content and links already in the article; if it's not something new and significantly different than what is here already, please don't add it on. Thanks. -->
* [http://www.godhatesfigs.com God Hates Figs], a parody protesting the eating of figs, claiming that they are "cursed by God" based on a Biblical passage in which Jesus smites a fig tree
* [http://www.godhatesshrimp.com God Hates Shrimp], a parody protesting the eating of shrimp and similar sea creatures, based on Old Testament provisions that such animals were unclean
* [http://www.landoverbaptist.org Landover Baptist Church], a satirical website that parodies fundamentalist Christianity and the religious right in the USA
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[[Category:Racism]]
[[Category:Homophobia]]
[[Category:Antisemitism]]
[[Category:Holocaust denial]]
[[Category:Christian fundamentalism]]
[[Category:Religiously motivated violence in the United States]]
[[Category:Shawnee County, Kansas]]
[[Category:Westboro Baptist Church]]
[[Category:Mormonism-related criticism]]

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Revision as of 03:18, 1 November 2007

WBC member Jael Phelps (right) and an unidentified WBC child protesting in Tulsa, Oklahoma

Westboro Baptist Church (WBC) is a controversial church, considered by many to be a hate group and a cult, headed by Fred Phelps, and based in Topeka, Kansas, U.S.. It runs the websites GodHatesFags.com,[1] GodHatesAmerica.com and others expressing condemnation of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender people (LGBT), Roman Catholics, Muslims and Jews, as well as populations it considers to support the forementioned groups, including Swedes, Canadians, Irish and Americans.

The organization is monitored by the Anti-Defamation League,[2] and classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.[3][4] The group has achieved national notoriety in recent years due to its picketing of funeral processions for soldiers killed in combat,[5] which functions as an extension of the Phelps' anti-United States beliefs.

While its members identify themselves as Baptists, the church is an independent church not affiliated with any known Baptist conventions or associations, nor does any Baptist institution recognize the church as a Bible believing fellowship. The church describes itself as following Primitive Baptist and Calvinist principles. Its first public service was held on the afternoon of Sunday, 27 November 1955.[6]

The church bases its work around the belief expressed by its best known slogan and the address of its primary website, "God hates fags", and expresses the idea, based on its Biblical eisegesis, that nearly every tragedy in the world is linked to homosexuality – specifically society's increasing tolerance and acceptance of the so-called "Homosexual Agenda." The group maintains that God hates homosexuals above all other kinds of "sinners"[7] and that homosexuality should be a capital crime.[8]

On October 31, 2007 the church was ordered to pay $10.9M to the family of a dead soldier by a Maryland court. The court agreed that the funeral was a private event and should not have been sullied by protests. The judgment "far exceeds the net worth of the defendants" and is likely meant as a message to terminate all such future protests. http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/law/10/31/funeral.protests.ap/index.html

Composition

Fred Phelps at his pulpit


Sky News claims that WBC consists of "about 150 members".[9] BBC Two claims there are 71 members.[10] A compilation of the names of Phelps' grandchildren and great-grand-children, combined with his nine "loyal" children and their spouses, though, numbers 90[citation needed]. Individuals who followed Phelps Sr. after he was voted out of his old congregation, Eastside Baptist Church (a traditional Baptist church), consisted of the Hockenbargers (whose offspring later married into the Phelps clan), George Stutzman, Chris Davis (who also married into the Phelps clan) and Theresa Davis (whose relationship, if any, to Chris Davis is unknown). Around 2000, another family (Steve and Luci Drain, along with daughters Lauren, Taylor and Faith and son Boaz) joined the group after Steve Drain, while taping a documentary on religious groups, interviewed several Westboro members and came to accept their theology. The Drains are not related to either the Phelpses or the Hockenbargers, nor to anyone else from the original group.

The Hockenbarger family that left Eastside to follow Phelps is headed by Charles William "Bill" Hockenbarger, allegedly a member of Christian Identity. Hockenbarger has been a friend of Phelps Sr. since the two men were in their twenties. In 2002, one of Phelps Sr.'s grandsons married one of the Hockenbarger granddaughters, with Phelps performing the ceremony. Karl Hockenbarger, the son of Bill Hockenbarger (and also an alleged Identity member) worked for Washburn University (where Phelps Sr. graduated in 1962).

In addition, at the outset several other Eastside members joined Westboro, but after Phelps began his activities (most notably his shooting of a dog that was irritating him[citation needed]), those members returned to Eastside or went elsewhere.

Phelps does not permit Westboro members to marry persons outside the church. As relatively few individuals have joined Westboro, there have been at least two marriages between the Phelps and Hockenbarger clans, resulting in some members having dual genealogical relationships (ex. married the brother or sister of their father or mother). In the documentary The Most Hated Family in America, the young girls in the church express a disinterest in getting married, because "that's not what we are about" and "we're living in the last of the last days, times are very short".[11]

Shirley Phelps-Roper esq., daughter of Rev. Fred Phelps and an attorney at the Phelps Chartered Law firm, is a prominent member of WBC and often a spokesperson for WBC. For the last couple of years, she has been running the day-to-day operations of the church.[12]

Activities and statements

The group carries out daily picketing in Topeka (purportedly six per day with fifteen on Sunday, "Lord willing", per the index page of its main website[13]) and travels nationally to picket the funerals of homosexual victims of murder, homosexual-bashing or death related to AIDS, as well as other events related or appearing to be related to homosexual people. They have been known to protest outside theaters in Topeka, under the premise that live theatre (especially Broadway musical productions) is a haven of homosexuality, as well as Kansas City Chiefs football games, and live pop concerts in Topeka. They have also shown interest in picketing productions of the play The Laramie Project.[14] Recently, they have shifted their interest to picketing the funerals of soldiers killed in the Iraq War, believing this to be more of "God's judgment" on America. The FAQ section of the website states that, in their view, soldiers didn't join the military out of a sense of patriotism, but because they are "lazy, incompetent idiots" unable to find work elsewhere.[7] Some states, including Kansas, have passed laws prohibiting picketing at funerals. Westboro has also protested funerals of people ranging from Fred Rogers to Coretta Scott King.

One of Westboro's followers estimated that the church spends $250,000 a year traveling around the world to picket[15]. In the 1990s the church won a series of lawsuits against the City of Topeka and Shawnee County for efforts taken to prevent or hinder WBC picketing. As a result, the church was awarded approximately $200,000 in attorney's fees and costs associated with the litigation. Otherwise, all of the church's money comes from the combined income of its congregants and money won in lawsuits against their opponents.

Phelps Sr., his supporters and members of his church attend the aforementioned gatherings, as well as other homosexual-related events, with signs bearing anti-homosexual slogans. Phelps Sr. has characterized the AIDS Memorial Quilt as "100,000 living fags slobberin' around 45,000 dead fags" and declared Elizabeth Taylor, a fundraiser for AIDS research, to be a "world-famous filthy Jew whore." Other regular anti-homosexual slogans of Westboro include "Homosexuality = Death," "Fags Die, God Laughs," "Matthew Shepard Rots in Hell," "AIDS: Kills Fags Dead" and "Ellen DeGeneres is a Lesbian Slut." (The latter was carried at an "Equality Rocks" rock concert and fundraiser; at the event DeGeneres commented that she wasn't offended so much by the slogan as the fact that they had drawn pockmarks all over her face on the poster.)

A collection of Westboro signs and slogans can be seen at their website called "The signs of the times".

Other slogans are[16]

  • God Hates You[17]
  • God Hates Your Tears[18]
  • God Hates Fag Enablers[17]
  • God Is Your Enemy[17]
  • Thank God for 9/11[17]
  • Thank God for the Tsunami[19]
  • Thank God for Katrina[20]
  • Thank God for Dead Soldiers[17]
  • Thank God for IEDs[17] (improvised explosive devices)
  • Thank God for California fires[2]
  • Thank God for AIDS[7]
  • Fag Santa (carried at Christmas time)
  • Fag Flag (with an American flag)[17]
  • Fags Doom Nations (Image)
  • Fags Are Worthy of Death (Image)
  • Fags Eat Feces = Scat
  • Fag Troops[17]
  • Menninger Therapy (complete with two stick figures mounting)
  • Repent or Perish[21]
  • Dyke nuns and Fag Priests (carried outside Catholic churches)
  • Dyke Sows Wed Here (complete with pictures of pigs in wedding dresses covered with feces; carried at lesbian weddings)
  • Brides of Satan (referring to lesbian weddings)
  • Don't Worship the Dead[17]
  • Disney Fags (used during Disney on Ice at the Expo Center.)
  • Your Pastor Is A Whore[17]
  • Semper Fi Semper Fag

When Kevin Oldham, a homosexual musician, died of AIDS-related causes in 1993, Phelps Sr. sent a photo of Kevin to his parents. The photo contained the caption: "Kevin Oldham: Dead Fag".[22]

The group came into the national spotlight in 1998, when they were featured on CNN for picketing the funeral of Matthew Shepard, a young man from Wyoming who was beaten to death by two men because of his homosexuality.[citation needed] Though Phelps Sr. claimed that Shepard's murder was unjust (and the Westboro's website states that Shepard's murderers face the same fate as Shepard – eternity in hell unless they repent), his overt activism against Shepard's sexual orientation, regardless of the mourning of Shepard's family and friends (he called Shepard's mother, Judy, a whore and a "mother from Hell" during the memorial service and told her she'd "soon be joining Matthew").

On Westboro's website, Phelps Sr. maintains a "Perpetual Gospel Memorial" to Shepard. There is a similar "memorial" to Diane Whipple, a lesbian woman killed in a dog attack. Some direct quotes/images from the Shepard page:

  • A photograph of Matthew Shepard's face with animated flames dancing across it. When the cursor is moved across his face, viewers with a sound card will hear screams and a high-pitched voice shrieking "For God's sake, listen to Phelps!"
  • A counter which displays how many days Matthew Shepard has "Been in Hell".
  • "WBC does not support the murder of Matthew Shepard: 'thou shalt not kill.' Unless his killers repent, they will receive the same sentence that Matthew Shepard received – eternal fire. However, the truth about Matthew Shepard needs to be known. He lived a Satanic lifestyle. He got himself killed trolling for anonymous homosexual sex in a bar at midnight".[23]

On January 25 2004, Phelps picketed five churches (three Catholic and two Episcopalian) and the Federal Courthouse for allegedly legalizing same sex marriages in Iowa. Two women married in Vermont had their marriage mistakenly annulled by a federal judge in Sioux City, Iowa. The ruling was quickly reversed. The community response was to hold several counter-protests and hold a large multi-faith service in the town's city auditorium.[citation needed]

The group has also picketed Billy Graham revivals, alleging that the evangelist will burn in Hell for failing to propagate the "God Hates Fags" doctrine. In October 2004, the group protested Graham's mass meetings, calling the 85 year-old preacher a "Hell-bound false prophet".

In press releases, WBC referred to Topeka mayor James McClinton as a "wife-beating tyrant". McClinton, who is black, was portrayed in the press release as a gorilla in a suit with a swastika armband.[24]

A WBC member picketing the memorial in Buckhannon, West Virginia

On January 15 2006, Westboro members protested the memorial of 2006 Sago Mine disaster victims claiming that the mining accident was God's revenge against America for its tolerance of homosexuality.[25] Footage of the protest, including several members dancing, was later shown on Fox News.

In July 2005, the Westboro Baptist Church declared its intention to picket the memorial service of Cpl. Carrie French in Boise, Idaho. French, aged 19 years old, was killed on June 5 in the Iraqi city of Kirkuk, where she served as an ammunition specialist with the 116th Brigade Combat Team's 145th Support Battalion. Her death is seen by the church as divine punishment of the United States. Phelps Sr. was quoted as saying, "Our attitude toward what's happening with the war is [that] the Lord is punishing this evil nation for abandoning all moral imperatives that are worth a dime."[26]

The Westboro Baptist Church declared its intention to picket the funerals of other soldiers as well and did so in August 2005. A group from the church protested at the funeral of Spc. Edward Myers, a soldier from St. Joseph, Missouri, who died in Iraq. Shirley Phelps-Roper (one of Phelps Sr.'s daughters and main author of the WBC Epics and Hate Letters) told a television reporter, "Who would serve a nation that is Godless and has flipped off, defiantly defied, defiantly flipped off, the Lord their God?" She then reiterated her belief that Myers was burning in Hell.[27]

After University of Missouri coach Kyle Hawkins "came out" as openly homosexual, WBC members announced plans to picket the University and all Missouri's lacrosse games.[citation needed]

In the wake of the tragic Amish school house shooting, members of Westboro Baptist Church planned on picketing the funerals of the five girls killed in the shooting. Their signs were going to call the girls "whores" and that they are "burning in hell". In an attempt to stop them, news radio personality/host Mike Gallagher attempted to dissuade them. After first rejecting a monetary offer, Gallagher offered them an hour of unrestricted airtime on his show. WBC accepted, and the picket was called off.[28] On October 5 2006, members of WBC were "hosts" of the Mike Gallagher's radio show, with Gallagher giving periodic warnings to listeners that they (the members of WBC) did not represent the views of him or the station.

In February of 2007, the WBC threatened to picket the funeral of ten Bardstown, Kentucky family members who died in a fire as well as a similar one in Tennessee where four children died in a fire. In both instances, fliers were sent to the communities stating that God “hates” both states “for promoting sodomy and immorality” and for the states “rabidly persecuting” the church. However, on the Friday before the Bardstown funerals, the church elected to use an hour of radio time to promote their message.[29]

Recently the WBC has also been picketing against Sweden because the pastor Åke Green was convicted for hate speech after having called homosexuality a cancer in one of his sermons. WBC has also been sending abusive faxes to Princess Madeleine of Sweden.[3]

On the day of the April 16, 2007 campus massacre on the Virginia Tech campus, the church declared its intent to protest the funerals of the students killed. This was announced on the church's www.godhatesamerica.com website. On April 19, 2007, GoDaddy, the Internet registrar responsible for that website and its associated domain had suspended its registration, returning a "whois" DNS server entry of "suspended for spam and abuse". Within hours, however, the domain had been restored.[citation needed] In a deal similar to that struck for the victims of the Amish school shooting, Gallagher and the church have independently announced that the church has agreed to not protest these funerals in lieu of three hours of unrestricted airtime on his show. [4] [5]

On August 2, 2007 they have announced they will be picketing those who have died when the I-35W Mississippi River bridge collapsed. [30].

Criminal record

In 1993, Charles F. Hockenbarger, Karl Hockenbarger, Timothy Phelps, Jonathan Phelps, Phelps Sr. and Margie Phelps were brought up on a variety of criminal charges stemming from information gathered following a raid of Westboro. Several charges were later dropped; the trials that followed saw every member of Westboro Baptist Church over the age of fifteen testifying in the defense of their family and fellow congregants; over 100 defense witnesses were called in all. Timothy Phelps, Charles F. Hockenbarger and Karl Hockenbarger were all found not guilty. Jon Phelps was found guilty of witness intimidation and misdemeanor battery, and has defended the actions that led to that arrest and guilty verdict as recently as October 11 2006 on Midweek Politics, while Margie Phelps was found guilty of filing a false report and Phelps Sr. was found guilty of disorderly conduct as defined by aggravated intimidation of a witness; all three lost their appeals. All six filed lawsuits against the city and took their cases to appeals court, where their lawsuits were dismissed.

Fred Phelps' grandson Benjamin Phelps, convicted of assault and disorderly conduct in 1995. He was the person who informed his grandfather about the existence of the Internet and made the first "GodHatesFags" page. The cited Bible verse, Romans 9:13, has nothing to do with homosexuality, but rather is simply a biblical example of God hating a certain person (in this case, Esau).

In 1995, Phelps Sr.'s eldest grandson, Benjamin Phelps, was convicted of assault and disorderly conduct after spitting into the face of a passerby during a picket and then laughing. The security cameras of a nearby business caught the incident on tape.[31]

Also in 2004, Margie Phelps and her son Jacob were arrested for trespassing, disorderly conduct and failure to obey after disregarding a police officer's order that they were not allowed to enter a company's private property with chairs and stand on them with an upside down flag and a picket sign.[32]

In June 2007, Shirley Phelps-Roper was arrested in Nebraska, after demonstrating at the funeral of a soldier, and charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The arrest resulted from her allowing her eight-year-old son to step on the American flag during the demonstration, an act which is illegal under Nebraska law. The defense contends that the child's actions were protected speech, and that the state law is unconstitutional. The prosecution, however, claims that the demonstration was not intended as political speech, but as an incitement to violence, and that Phelps-Roper's conduct may also constitute child abuse. [33]

Other prejudices

The Westboro Baptist Church attributes membership of most religious groups, such as the Roman Catholic Church or Islam, as akin to devil worship. All non-Christian entities, non-Protestant Christian churches, as well as all Protestant Christian churches which do not strongly condemn homosexuality, are said to be sending their members to Hell.

While the Westboro Baptist Church says that racial discrimination is a sin,[34] it and Phelps Sr. have been accused of various racist acts, including using racist imagery in its fliers and using racial epithets.[35]

A compilation of Westboro Baptist Church's various racial and political views:

Racism

The Anti-Defamation League has accused Westboro of racism toward blacks, based on numerous racially-offensive quotes from the church and its leaders.[35]

File:WBC McClinton.jpg
WBC portrayal of Topeka mayor James McClinton (an African-American) Template:Puic

In the documentary Hatemongers, Phelps and his children quote Bible verses denouncing racism and saying that it is a sin. He says that it differs from homosexuality in that "God never said it is an abomination to be Black."[36]

Anti-Islamic stance

In response to a Newsweek article alleging that American soldiers flushed copies of the Quran down the toilet at Camp X-Ray in Guantanamo Bay, Fred Phelps released this statement:[37]

So what if our guys flushed copies of the Quran down the toilet? We hope they did. They probably did; We hope they flush more. Mohammed was a demon-possessed whoremonger and pedophile who contrived a 300-page work of Satanic fiction: The Quran! Like America's own whoremonger and pedophile wangled his own hokey Book of Mormon!

Phelps went on to give a brief literary dissection of the Quran, using nearly identical grammar and language to his and his children's (likewise identical) dissections of The Laramie Project:

In relation to the war in Iraq a WBC flier implies that God has sided with the Muslims:

In His retaliatory rage God is killing Americans with Muslim IEDs: "Saying Touch not my anointed, and do my prophets no harm." 1 Chron 16:22. [6]

Anti-semitism

In the section about Jews the WBC FAQ states: "...the only true Jews are Christians. The rest of the people who claim to be Jews aren't, and they are nothing more than typical, impenitent sinners ... the vast majority of Jews support fags. In fact, it is the official policy of Reformed Jews to support same-sex marriage. Of course, there are Jews who still believe God's law, but most of them have even departed from that. It doesn't matter if you're a Jew or a Gentile...as long as you believe in Christ."[38]

On the subject of Nazis, KKK, and other violent extremist groups: "We don't believe in physical violence of any kind, and the Scripture doesn't support racism. ... The only true Nazis in this world are fags."[39]

Phelps refers to the Holocaust as "minuscule" and led a protest at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. in 1996, proclaiming:

Whatever righteous cause the Jewish victims of the 1930s-40s Nazi Holocaust had... has been drowned in sodomite semen. American taxpayers are financing this unholy monument to Jewish mendacity and greed and to filthy fag lust. Homosexuals and Jews dominated Nazi Germany.... The Jews now wander the earth despised, smitten with moral and spiritual blindness by a divine judicial stroke.... And God has smitten Jews with a certain unique madness... Jews, thus perverted, out of all proportion to their numbers energize the militant sodomite agenda... Jews are the real Nazis.

Also in 1996, Phelps began a campaign called "Topeka's Baptist Holocaust", whereby he attempted to draw attention to attacks perpetuated against WBC picketers, saying that they were not random but organized attacks orchestrated by Jews and homosexuals. Phelps announced, "Jews killed Christ", and:

Fag Jew Nazis are worse than ordinary Nazis. They've had more experience. The First Holocaust was a Jewish Holocaust against Christians. The latest Holocaust is by Topeka Jews against Westboro Baptist Church.

In another statement, he said:

Topeka Jews today stir up Kansas tyrants in persecuting Westboro Baptists. They whine about the Nazi Holocaust, while they perpetrate the Topeka Holocaust.

WBC was present at a 2002 Holocaust memorial dedication in Topeka, proclaiming "God Hates Reform Judaism".[40]

During the 2004 United States presidential election, Phelps campaigned against Senator John Kerry, claiming that his affiliation with Judaism made him unfit to run the country, and on his webpage gave a lengthy recitation of Kerry's family tree, naming all of his Jewish ancestors.

A March 25 2006 flier regarding a Jewish adversary of Phelps uses the phrase "bloody Jew" four times and the phrase "evil Jew" more than once every twelve sentences. A sampling of WBC's fliers regarding Judaism can be found at the ADL's website.[41] Phelps has also been targeted by the Anti-Defamation League for his anti-Semitic statements.[41][42]

Anti-Catholicism

Westboro is also anti-Catholic, claiming that the Roman Catholic Church is a "fag" church and that a third of Catholic priests are active homosexuals, seducing helpless children and women; Westboro refers to priests as "vampires" and "Draculas," and talks of Catholic priests sucking semen out of children's genitals like vampires suck blood from their victims. Phelps has also reproduced an alleged "Diary of Another Fag Catholic Priest" on Westboro's homepage and claims that "fag priests and dyke nuns is the order of the day for Kansas Catholics. They deserve the sick, perverted leadership that now dooms and damns them". About Catholics, he says "They're mean. Mean as Hell. Headed for Hell. The meanest, most hateful people on Earth."

The day after the death of Pope John Paul II, Phelps held a service to "celebrate his entrance into Hell", during which he boasted, "You don't think he split Hell wide open? We're the only ones telling the truth about that son of a bitch!" That evening he posted a flier on his webpage showing a doctored photo of a screaming John Paul II with horns coming out of his forehead, with the caption:

Deal with it, you idolatrous morons! The pope is in Hell. Westboro Baptist Church members are competent expert witnesses, having picketed hundreds of Catholic churches in all fifty states over the past fourteen years. We will bear witness on Judgment Day: Catholics are the meanest, most violent people on Earth, and their churches are filled with filthy fag priests. On John Paul II's watch, the Catholic Church became the CHURCH OF THE HOLY PEDOPHILES and sodomite feces and semen replaced bread and wine.

Westboro operates three separate websites related to this issue, though two are not yet operational (see below).

On June 5th 2007, on ITV's Jeremy Kyle Show, Shirley Phelps told a Catholic member of the audience that the Catholic church is "the largest paedophile machine in the whole world, and God hates them"; the satellite link was then broken.

Responses

Laws Prohibiting Funeral Protests

In response to the protests conducted by Westboro members at Indiana funerals, a bill was introduced in the Indiana General Assembly that would make it a felony to protest within 500 feet of a funeral. The bill provides penalties of up to three years in prison in addition to a $10,000 fine for those found to be in violation of the law. Shortly before this bill was signed, members of the church had threatened to protest in Kokomo, Indiana, at a funeral service that was being held for a soldier who was killed in Iraq. On January 11 2006 the bill unanimously (11-0) passed a committee vote,[43] and while members of the church had showed up in Kokomo, Indiana, to protest, they were nowhere to be seen during or after the funeral service.

Several other states have adopted similar legislation, such as South Dakota. Some have been critical of these laws, however, saying that they could prevent other protests as well, and may possibly violate the First Amendment right to freedom of speech. WBC has expressed their intention to contest these laws, and if victorious collect damages while the Phelps Chartered law firm collects attorney's fees under the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Award Act of 1976.[44]

On 5/23/2006 the state of Michigan banned any intentional disruption of funerals within 500 feet of the ceremony. Violating the statute would be a felony, punishable by up two years in prison and a $5,000 fine for the first offense and up to four years and $10,000 for a repeat offense. [7]

Use of Child Endangerment Laws to Prevent Westboro from Picketing

The church recently avoided a funeral in McDonald County, Missouri, due to a recently enacted law. Juvenile court authorities stated that using their children in their protests (as they often do) constituted child endangerment and the children could be put into foster homes. WBC often issues press releases claiming they will show up to protest an event but do not show up.

Shirley Phelps-Roper, daughter of Fred Phelps, was arrested on June 5th, 2007 on suspicion of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Police alleged that she allowed her son to trample an American flag while protesting the funeral of a soldier in Bellevue, Nebraska, which is a misdemeanor in the state. She is the first member of the Westboro Baptist Church to be arrested while protesting a funeral[45]

At least one family outraged by WBC's behavior has sued[8] them for defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Albert Snyder, the father of Marine Lance Cpl. Matthew A. Snyder[9], testified:

"They turned this funeral into a media circus and they wanted to hurt my family. They wanted their message heard and they didn't care who they stepped over. My son should have been buried with dignity, not with a bunch of clowns outside."[46]

In his instructions to the jury U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett stated that the First Amendment protection of free speech has limits, including vulgar, offensive and shocking statements. And that the jury must decide "whether the defendant's actions would be highly offensive to a reasonable person, whether they were extreme and outrageous and whether these actions were so offensive and shocking as to not be entitled to First Amendment protection."[47]

The lawsuit named Albert Snyder as the plaintiff and Fred W. Phelps, Sr.; Westboro Baptist Church, Inc.; Rebekah Phelps-Davis; and Shirley Phelps-Roper as defendants, alleging they were responsible for publishing defamatory information about the Snyder family on the Internet, including statements that Albert and his wife had "raised [Matthew] for the devil" and taught him "to defy his Creator, to divorce, and to commit adultery." Other statements denounced them for raising their son Catholic. Snyder further complained the defendants had intruded upon and staged protests at his son's funeral. The claims of invasion of privacy and defamation arising from comments posted about Snyder on the Westboro website were dismissed on first amendment grounds, but the case proceeded to trial on the remaining three counts.[48][49]

On 31 October 2007, the Church, Rev. Fred Phelps and his two daughters, Shirley Phelps-Roper and Rebecca Phelps-Davis, were found liable for invasion of privacy and intent to inflict emotional distress. A federal jury awarded Mr. Snyder USA$2.9 million in compensatory damages, then later added a decision to award $6 million in punitive damages for invasion of privacy and an additional $2 million for causing emotional distress (A total of USA$10,900,000). [50] [51]

WBC is seeking a mistrial based on alleged prejudicial statements made by the judge and violations of the gag order by the prosecutor.[52] An appeal is also likely.

As of October 31, 2007 godhatesamerica.com and godhatesfags.com appear to be offline. It is unknown if the outage was caused by an unusually large number of hits on their website, or if WBC took the web sites offline as a result of the lawsuit,

See Also: Intrusion Upon Seclusion

On July 14 2006, Mundy Township, Michigan billed the WBC $5,000. The Westboro church had informed township authorities on June 28 that a protest was planned at the Swartz Funeral Home. The bill to the church ensued, according to the local police chief, because the congregation failed to keep a verbal contract for security. Fred Phelps' daughter claimed that the Holy Ghost had informed them not to fly to Michigan even though they had already purchased airline tickets. Security at the Webb funeral was high: fifteen fire trucks were involved as well as numerous police officers from nearby jurisdictions.[53] The township has now stated that it will not pursue the matter.

Counter Protests

Counter protests are generally organized to provide an opposing viewpoint at sites that Westboro pickets. In some cases counter protesters have lined up and turned their backs on the Westboro pickets or encircled them in a ring, explaining that they want to symbolically shield the community from the hate. This has become frequent with Westboro's picketing of the funerals of soldiers killed in Iraq; veterans' associations and biker groups such as the Patriot Guard have led the counter protests in recent months.

Two days after the September 11th attacks, a 19-year old man named Jared Dailey stood on the street corner facing the church holding up a plywood sign that said "Not today Fred." Within two days, 86 people joined him, waving American flags and anti-hate signs.[54] Since then, "Not today Fred" has become a commonly used motto for counter protests against Phelps.

Violence directed against Westboro

  • During a March 26 1993 protest at Topeka's Vintage Restaurant, a riot broke out and eight WBC members were hospitalized for various minor injuries; WBC now pickets the restaurant every day, as well as the places of business where employees went after leaving the Vintage in an attempt to escape Westboro. In addition, the congregants hold a memorial service every year on the 26th, commemorating what they refer to as "the Vintage Massacre".
  • In 1994, a woman tried to run down protesters in Topeka after one of them screamed obscenities at her while her pick-up truck was parked at a stop light. She was arrested, but was later found not guilty due to temporary insanity.
  • In 2002 Blue Valley North High School held productions of The Laramie Project play. Westboro members made it known that they were coming to picket the school. To their surprise many students cut class to meet the picketers and a small riot ensued with a few instances of car vandalism. The school later made tickets to the shows "buy ahead" in order to keep Westboro members from interrupting the play. Subsequently Phelps' website started declaring that "God Hates Blue Valley North" and proceeded to picket every year's graduation ceremony following the event.
  • In 2003, WBC member Charles Hockenbarger, who was in his 70s at the time, had his face crushed in a beating after standing on a street corner holding a sign reading "THANK GOD FOR SEPT. 11". Hockenbarger was recovering from open heart surgery at the time and ignoring the usual doctor's orders for bed rest. Westboro posted photos of the aftermath of the attack on its homepage, claiming that the (still unidentified) perpetrator was a homosexual and that the attack had been part of a murder conspiracy to kill Hockenbarger, though offering no proof of these allegations.
  • During a protest at the 2005 presidential inauguration of George W. Bush, WBC protesters were slapped, kicked and had their signs forcefully taken by other protesters.
  • There have been differing reports on actions at an October 5 2005, picket of a Wisconsin soldier's funeral. One report was that Dodge County Sheriff Todd Nehls asked Paulette Phelps to move so he could protect her. Her group called him a Nazi and refused to comply. A conflicting claim put forth by members of the WBC alleges that Sheriff Nehls punched Paulette Phelps in the face. Video of the purported incident at godhatesfags.com — which claims to show Nehls striking one of the church members — is ambiguous, and at the point the purported attack takes place, the camera is pointed at the ground (indeed, large portions of the video are made up of shots of Westboro members' feet and the ground).[55]
  • During a picket in Seaford, Delaware on May 21 2006, a mob broke through police lines and tried to assault WBC members who fled into a police van. Some of the mob then began banging on the van attempting to get inside. Two windows of the van were shattered before the van could get away. Five people face criminal charges.[56]
  • It has suggested that a Liberty University student who intended to bring a bomb to the funeral of Jerry Falwell may have intended to use the device against a WBC protest at the funeral.[10][11]

Spoof Web Sites

Responses include the creation of an opposing website, godlovesfags.com, a pro-gay rights website, launched by Kris Haight on March 1 1999. The site focuses on the debate surrounding religion and homosexuality and especially homosexuality and Christianity.

On August 18 1999, an unidentified hacker transferred ownership of the domain godhatesfags.com to Kris Haight. Apparently, this was done by forging an email message from Phelps. Haight promptly redirected all traffic to godlovesfags.com. After much media attention, Phelps threatened to sue and the domain name was returned on August 21.

In 2006 godhateswbc.com, as well as godhateswbc.net, were created, focusing on the debate surrounding religion and homosexuality.

A satire website called God Hates Shrimp was created in 2004 in response to WBC's inflammatory website. The website cites Leviticus 11:10, the same book and section that labels sodomy as an abomination, where it says "And all that have not fins and scales in the seas, and in the rivers, of all that move in the waters, and of any living thing which is in the waters, they shall be an abomination unto you". The website argues that this means Long John Silver's and Red Lobster restaurants should likewise be picketed by WBC. Another satirical site, God Hates Figs, was created noting that Jesus struck a fig tree dead in one biblical account.

File:Charlesfirth.JPG
Charles Firth (right) interviewing Fred Phelps Jr. of the Westboro Baptist Church. Firth provoked Phelps for comedy by flirting with him throughout the interview

Ridicule

Journalist Charles Firth of Australian television enterprise The Chaser's War on Everything appeared with members of Westboro Baptist Church, at the picket of an U.S. Marine's funeral, in early 2006. With the camera rolling, he proceeded to ask a male member of the church several questions about his motivations. Firth then started complimenting the man on his appearance, following him around as he avoided the camera, and stroked his shoulder lamenting how he wished they could be a couple. Other members of Phelps' congregation then turned on the reporter and cameraman when the homosexual innuendos became obvious.[57]

Michael Moore organized a humorous counterprotest to the church for his TV Show The Awful Truth. He followed Phelps around the country in "the Sodomobile," a pink bus filled with homosexuals.

A growingly popular joke centering around the church is that Phelps is a closeted homosexual. Clips of Phelps have been frequently edited to provide a voiceover that depicts him as wanting to engage in homosexual acts.

Parodies

Shirley Phelps-Roper and her children have also been parodied many times on The Howard Stern Show, where their extreme views are used to contribute to the environment of the program.

Periodically, Shirley Phelps-Roper and her daughters are call in guests on The Adam Carolla Show morning radio show. They would call in and sing hateful songs but would be insulted by Adam and company with the insults going right over their heads.[citation needed]

Criticism

A small number of Phelps' critics have suggested, however, that the actions of the Westboro Baptist Church are a ploy to receive attention above all else. Counter-protesting against the group, they suggest, gives them attention and incentive they do not deserve; and a more effective response against Phelps would be to ignore his congregation completely.[58] WBC, through the closely related Phelps Chartered law firm, has collected fees under the Civil Rights Attorney's Fees Award Act of 1976 when their protests have been unlawfully disrupted. [12]

The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) describes the Westboro Baptist Church as "virulently homophobic", whose anti-homosexual rhetoric they say is often a cover for anti-Semitism, Anti-Americanism, racism, and anti-Catholicism.[2] The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), an anti-hate group, has added the Westboro Baptist Church to its list of hate groups.[3] Many mainstream conservative and fundamentalist Christians (including those who oppose homosexuality, such as Jerry Falwell), have denounced Phelps' remarks as hateful and un-Christian, and in general oppose Phelps' view that homosexuals cannot repent (the traditional view is that homosexuality is not the "unpardonable sin"; homosexuals may "renounce their ways" as may any other "sinner"). Falwell is often credited with referring to Phelps as "a first-class nut". WBC picketed the funeral service of Falwell on May 22, 2007. [59]

In 2004, Libertarian columnist Keith R. Wood suggested that the Westboro Baptists are actually trying to create sympathy for homosexual activism and to engender anti-Christian sentiment due to the offensive nature of their activities and Phelps' own statements regarding tactics.[60]

Opposition to Westboro's theology

Mainstream Calvinist churches have claimed that Westboro's agenda and its message of hate are at variance with Calvinism, as well as all fundamental, Bible-believing Christian theology.

Westboro has been labeled as a cult by many Christian, God-honoring ministries; and even some of the more extreme "anti-cult" figures such as Rick Ross.[61] Also, another church, considered very extremist and outside of mainstram Christian churches, stating God hates homosexuals, A True Church, claims that "God Hates Phelps."[62] The WBC is recognized by the Anti-Defamation League as a racist organization, and registered by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a hate group.

Media Coverage

For such a small group WBC receives attention from major media organizations. WBC is proud of their media coverage and comments on most media coverage, no matter how negative, on their web site.

Fred Phelps appeared on Scarborough Country on April 11 2006 and his microphone was promptly cut after ranting about God's damnation of the U.S. instead of answering a question.[63] His daughter, Shirley Phelps Roper appeared on Fox News' Hannity & Colmes show on April 18 2006 to defend the WBC protests.[64] On the June 10, 2006 edition of The Big Story Weekend, host Julie Banderas exclaimed to Shirley Phelps-Roper, "You are the devil! If you believe in the Bible, miss, you're going to hell!"[65] Another Fox News host, Bill O'Reilly often has guests on his show, The O'Reilly Factor, who speaks out against the church and its tactics, while steadfastly refusing requests by church members to appear and defend themselves. His tactics provoked the appearance of a video on the church's website proclaiming O'Reilly's inevitable damnation as a result of his "persecution". Shirley Phelps Roper also appeared with her two daughters on The Tyra Banks Show and on The Jeremy Kyle Show in the UK, Shirley being frequently appearing unreasonable and belligerent.

BSkyB report

In 2005, the British TV network British Sky Broadcasting produced an investigative piece using hidden cameras, which included footage of two of Phelps' granddaughters, Libby and Jael.[9] In the testimonial, Libby and Jael explain that they hope and pray that no one outside of Westboro becomes "elect,"[9] because they want everyone else in the world to die horribly and burn in Hell,[9] and that even if they didn't believe their actions were dictated by God, they would still do and enjoy them anyway.[9] The interview was not part of the hidden camera segment, and although much of the footage was taken without the knowledge or permission of Westboro, the church maintains a link to the entire report on its website.

BBC Two, Louis Theroux

On April 1 2007, the British television channel BBC Two broadcast a documentary by Louis Theroux about WBC and the Phelps Family, called Louis Theroux: The Most Hated Family in America.[66] Theroux has presented a number of documentaries about unusual or unconventional people and groups in the UK, the US, and elsewhere.[67]

ITV coverage in the United Kingdom

On June 5 2007 the website godhatesfags.com was prominently featured in The Jeremy Kyle Show, a talk show aired on the ITV network in the United Kingdom. Church members Shirley and her daughters were protesting about their beliefs live via satellite to the UK. Jeremy Kyle and the audience in its entirety were in strong opposition of the family's views on the church.

Channel 4 coverage in the United Kingdom

On June 21 2007, WBC featured in the Channel 4 documentary Keith Allen Will Burn In Hell. It showed Keith Allen profiling the Church. Allen took a very pugnacious stance, repeatedly called one of the Phelps family a fool (in response to when a member of the church stated "don't believe everything you read"), and labeled certain sections of the Bible, particularly Leviticus, "absolutely fucking vile". He attempted to argue against the church's beliefs when he questioned Shirley Phelps-Roper about her illegitimate son, asking why her sins should be forgiven by Jesus if others' were not.

References

  1. ^ "GodHatesFags.com"
  2. ^ a b Anti-Defamation League (2006). "Fred Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church". Retrieved 2007-02-23.
  3. ^ a b Southern Poverty Law Center." The Year in Hate:2005". Accessed 5 October 2006.
  4. ^ Southern Poverty Law Center. Active U.S. Hate Groups in 2005. Accessed 5 October 2006.
  5. ^ "Father of Marine Killed in Iraq Sues Church for Cheering Death". Associated Press via Fox News. 2007. Retrieved 2007-10-26.
  6. ^ "Sermon preached by Fred Phelps". 1987. Retrieved 2007-05-10.
  7. ^ a b c "Westboro Baptist Church FAQ".
  8. ^ "Outlaw Sodomy", December 3 2002
  9. ^ a b c d e "Inside The Church Of Hate", Sky News, October 25 2005
  10. ^ "The Most Hated Family In America", BBC Two
  11. ^ The Most Hated Family in America
  12. ^ The Most Hated Family in America
  13. ^ "The Westboro Baptist Church Home Page"
  14. ^ "WBC to picket The Laramie Project fag play...", October 18 2005
  15. ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,,1755712,00.html
  16. ^ WBC. [1]. Accessed April 4 2007
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Westboro Baptist Church. "The Signs of the Times". Retrieved 2007-02-23.
  18. ^ Brandon Woolum (2006-01-13). "Controversial Kansas Church to Picket January 15 Sago Disaster Memorial Service in Buckhannon". Huntington News Network. Retrieved 2007-02-23.
  19. ^ Nathan Dinsdale (2005-04-20). "Father Knows Best". Santa Fe Reporter. Retrieved 2007-02-23.
  20. ^ Westboro Baptist Church. "Thank God for Katrina". Retrieved 2007-02-23.
  21. ^ Westboro Baptist Church (2006-01-15). "Rejoice, Because Your Names are Written in Heaven" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-02-23. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  22. ^ Grieving family forced to deal with Phelps. 'The Capital Journal. (August 3, 1994).
  23. ^ "Perpetual Gospel Memorial to Matthew Shepard"
  24. ^ GodHatesFags.com.James McClinton presiding over city council during public hearing on fag ordinance: jpg. Accessed October 5, 2006.
  25. ^ "Controlling Funeral Protests?"
  26. ^ Oxley, Chuck. His church was bombed, and now he protests funerals of the war dead. Seattlep.com. Accessed October 5, 2006.
  27. ^ KMBC-TV.Phelps' Group Protests At Soldier's Funeral. (August 5, 2005).
  28. ^ 'Insane' picketers cancel Amish funeral protest, The Age, October 5, 2006
  29. ^ Group drops protest plan at fire victims' funeral, Lexington Herald Leader, February 7, 2007
  30. ^ http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/aug2007/20070802_minneapolis-bridge-collapse.pdf
  31. ^ "Appeals court upholds Phelpses' convictions", Roger Myers, The Topeka Capital-Journal, May 24 1997
  32. ^ "Two Phelpses arrested at Brown dedication, Tim Hrenchir and Cait Purinton, The Topeka Capital-Journal, May 17 2004
  33. ^ "Nebraska's Flag Desecration Law Faces Challenge", , KETV NewsWatch 7, June 26 2007
  34. ^ "WBC Picketing MSNBC Town Hall"
  35. ^ a b "Fred Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church: In Their Own Words, On Blacks".
  36. ^ "Hatemongers", Steve Drain
  37. ^ PDF Statement from God Hates Fags.
  38. ^ "Westboro Baptist Church FAQ: What do you think of Jews?". Retrieved 2006-12-02.
  39. ^ "Westboro Baptist Church FAQ: Are you associated with a militia, Aryan Nation, Nazi, KKK, or any other similar group?". Retrieved 2006-12-02.
  40. ^ Flier from God Hates Fags (PDF)
  41. ^ a b Sample WBC fliers from ADL
  42. ^ ADL report says homophobic 'church' espouses anti-semitism, racism.
  43. ^ "Funeral protest bill passes out of committee, 11-0"
  44. ^ Cite error: The named reference fees paid to Phelps Chartered was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  45. ^ http://www.beatricedailysun.com/articles/2007/06/05/ap-state-ne/d8piudo80.txt
  46. ^ "Father: Funeral protest made him sick." EveningSun.com. October 25, 2007.
  47. ^ Father of Marine Killed in Iraq Sues Church for Cheering Death, Appeals to Public Online for Help Fox news October 26, 2007
  48. ^ "Suit OK'd against anti-gay group." Baltimore Sun. October 16, 2007.
  49. ^ "Federal judge approves limited lawsuit against military funeral protesters." The Jurist, University of Pittsburg School of Law. October 16, 2007.
  50. ^ "Father wins millions from war funeral picketers" - MSNBC, 31 October 2007
  51. ^ "Kansas church liable in Marine funeral protest" - Reuters, 31 October 2007
  52. ^ Church seeking mistrial in lawsuit over funeral protests Associated Press October 31, 2007
  53. ^ "Michigan town bills Phelps' church over protest no-show".
  54. ^ http://www.kshs.org/cool3/nottodaysign.htm
  55. ^ "Video footage of Mayville, WI (Dodge County) - October 5, 2005"
  56. ^ Animation speakfree video.
  57. ^ "YouTube: Flirting with a Westboro Church man". Retrieved 2006-12-02.
  58. ^ "The High Weirdness Project: Westboro Baptist Church". 2006-11-03. Retrieved 2006-12-02.
  59. ^ http://content.hamptonroads.com/story.cfm?story=125215&ran=72205&tref=y
  60. ^ http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:oBZKU6DfFi8J:www.sierratimes.com/04/10/27/critic.htm+Keith+R.+Wood+phelps&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=firefox-a
  61. ^ An overview of Phelps.
  62. ^ God Hates Phelps (The "God Hates Fags" Preacher) Darwin Fish, 9-23-06
  63. ^ 'Scarborough Country' for April 11.
  64. ^ Troop Hating Church Confronted By H&C, Exposed For Who They Are (VIDEO).
  65. ^ Fox News host to guest: 'You're going to hell!'
  66. ^ Theroux, Louis. Trailer on YouTube. BBC Two
  67. ^ The Most Hated Family in America (interview with Louis Theroux). BBC News, March 30 2007

See also


Criticism of WBC

Defenses of WBC

Parodies

  • God Hates Figs, a parody protesting the eating of figs, claiming that they are "cursed by God" based on a Biblical passage in which Jesus smites a fig tree
  • God Hates Shrimp, a parody protesting the eating of shrimp and similar sea creatures, based on Old Testament provisions that such animals were unclean
  • Landover Baptist Church, a satirical website that parodies fundamentalist Christianity and the religious right in the USA