When I think of my home state of Kansas, I think of a place where people are
friendly, work hard, and moreover believe in the Christian values that this
great nation was founded upon. I have always thought that the Kansas designation
as part of the Bible belt was a badge of honor that many of the blue states just
don’t often understand. However, there has been for some time a pestilence
walking the flatlands of Kansas, a scourge that brings only pain and sorrow to
all that find themselves within its path. I am talking about the members of the
Westboro Baptist Church. The Westboro Baptist Church which comprises the
immediate family of Fred Phelps and is based out of Topeka Kansas has made it
their mission to spread a twisted religious philosophy of God’s damnation on the
world one protest at a time.
I ran across the Phelps clan a few years ago when they were protesting a
church I was attending in Wichita Kansas. I had never heard of the group before
and I suddenly found myself within swinging distance without any context of who
I was dealing with. I assumed from their colorful "GOD HATES FAGS" signs that
they were a pro-homosexual advocacy group possibly angry about a bible lesson on
Sodom and Gomorrah that they might have heard at the church that did not fit
their lifestyle. I later found that the Westboro Baptist Church was a small,
crazy, dysfunctional family group turned cult that liked to travel to
the funerals of dead soldiers to tell their families that their child was in
hell due to the evils of homosexuality. These acts of lunacy and open displays
of pure hate earned the Westboro Baptist Church the designation as a hate
group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, a designation that these folks have
worked hard to earn.
Some might ask the question, why give this group any recognition? Is it not
recognition that they seek? Is this not why this group will protest any event
that brings more than three people together? I have thought hard about this
because there are some valid truths to these questions. However, I think
silence can also be construed as a validation. Silence can also be seen as a
weakness. It seems to me that many in Kansas have been using silence as the
weapon of choice against Fred Phelps and family for far too long. Like
disregarding a cancerous tumor in the hopes that it will die off by itself, the
death of the entire body is the most likely result. The reality is that the
tumor must be removed and this is always bloody work. Listening to the boastful
exclamations of Fred Phelps when he says that his cult group has performed
30,000 protests in the last seventeen years with no signs of slowing down brings
me to a reality that this group has to be dealt with.
What do I mean by that? Aren’t the Phelps group afforded the same free speech
rights that I have to disseminate this article? The ACLU who always jumps to the
aid of those who would undermine this country says so. In reality, the ACLU’s
aid to the Phelps clan, which is part of the selective aid the organization
gives those that they wish to assist, reflects only the anti-American agenda of
the ACLU, not the championing of free speech. The reasons the Phelps
congregation has no legal right to vomit their hatred of America upon military
families in mourning is that hate speech has no protection under the
constitution. The October 31, 2007 civil ruling against the group which amounted
to the original sum of $11 million in damages is an example of the courts
ability to distinguish free speech from the willful intention to inflict
emotional distress on the families of fallen American soldiers. Now that was a
happy day.
For Kansas, the Phelps cult makes our progressive state appear mindless,
backward, and racist. Those who would like to continue the stereo types often
identified with small rural states simply need to inject the Phelps cult into
the debate. For Christians in general, The Westboro Baptist Church is a blight
on the name of true religion. When Christians tackle the true social issues that
face this country they must not only battle the secular liberal opposition that
is always prevalent but also the damage to the credibility of Christian values
itself brought forth by the evil labors of the Westboro Baptist Church. Lastly,
the war effort itself is undermined by the treasonous acts of protests by this
group. While legislation has been adopted to raise the penalties for funereal
protests, this is only a mild rebuke compared to past war time legislation
toward treasonous acts. It is in this arena that I believe that further
action should be explored.
Over the long haul, Kansas will survive having these folks in their state,
the good will win over the bad. Over the long haul, judgment will be handed down
by a higher power for all of us including the Phelps clan. I could lament about
the special place in hell I believe the members of the Westboro Baptist Church
will be given but it would add nothing new from what so many others in this
country have already thought of before me. Over the long haul, the United States
will continue to champion freedom and protect this country by way of the proud
men and women who serve and sometimes make the ultimate sacrifice to keep us
safe. What do we the American people, who are protected every minute of the day
by men and women of the military, owe to them as they are being heckled and
verbally damned as they are laid to rest. You see, it’s not that legal action
should be taken against the Westboro Baptist Church to simply restore the
greatness of Kansas, or the true nature of Christianity, or even for the
protection of the families of fallen soldiers to have peaceful, respectful
funerals. I would submit that is because of the culmination of all three of
these factors that the time is now for the collective effort of all Americans to
call for the end of the mission of hate brought forth by the Westboro Baptist
Church.