San Francisco's Answer to the Westboro Baptist Church

This is great!

It is my understanding that civil rights litigation is the major source of the hate group's income. The military has a set of very specific standing orders on how to deal with these people when they show up at military funerals and outside bases. You can imagine the temptation to just give them a severe thrashing.
 
Last edited:
Not to condone the actions of the Westboro Baptists, but those losers in SF have way too much free time on their hands if they're dignifying the WBC with a response of any kind.
 
Not to condone the actions of the Westboro Baptists, but those losers in SF have way too much free time on their hands if they're dignifying the WBC with a response of any kind.

The military has a set of very specific standing orders on how to deal with these people when they show up at military funerals and outside bases. You can imagine the temptation to just give them a severe thrashing.

This was my first exposure to the WBC - since, they've come all the way back to the Midwest and protested at a high school down the street from my own. The disrespect they show is nearly unbearable, and the temptation everyone feels to give a severe thrashing is almost impossible to quell. I don't know what the military's standing is, or whether it was in place in 2005, but maybe you should take a look at this article, from the LA Times no less, about the funeral of Christopher Piper, a special forces soldier from Marblehead killed in Afghanistan a few years back. KMP, this is why people should take the time to protest against these assholes.

Protest at Soldier's Funeral Brings a Massachusetts Town Together
A big turnout and police bagpipes drown out a Kansas group opposed to homosexuality.

June 28, 2005 Elizabeth Mehren, Times Staff Writer

MARBLEHEAD, Mass. ? This proud old seaport, whose sons and daughters have fought in every American war, was grieving for Army Staff Sgt. Christopher Piper. The 43-year-old Green Beret died after his Humvee hit a roadside bomb June 3 in Afghanistan.

When word got out that demonstrators from Kansas planned to disrupt Piper's funeral Monday, residents vowed not to let them interfere with the tribute to their hometown hero.

"I was worried that it would fester anger," said Louise Moore, 39, fighting back tears and waving a small American flag. "Instead it got everyone together."

The 14 demonstrators from Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan., picketed Monday on a corner near the Old North Church, a Congregational parish founded in 1635, soon after Marblehead was settled. The followers of the Rev. Fred Phelps, who blame American tolerance of homosexuality for the Sept. 11 attacks and the resulting U.S. military casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan, have targeted Massachusetts for protests because it is the only state where same-sex marriage is legal.

Shirley Phelps-Roper, a lawyer for the Kansas church, said Monday that the funeral demonstration was nothing personal against Piper, who was not gay.

"We are protesting the sins of this nation," Phelps-Roper said. "That doesn't exclude him."

The group also has demonstrated at high school and middle school graduations across Massachusetts, contending that school curricula promote homosexuality.

On the corner of a narrow street lined with Colonial-era buildings, the Kansas contingent tried shouting its anti-homosexual message at mourners who overflowed from the church. But every time demonstrators spoke out, the 14-man Boston Police Department bagpipe band broke into thunderous sound.

"I thought that was cool," said Day Newburg, 34, who stood outside the church with her husband, mother-in-law and 2-year-old daughter. "Those bagpipers drowned them right out."

The Kansas group, which had been issued a two-hour protest permit, was escorted out of town by police minutes before the horse-drawn caisson carrying Piper's flag-draped coffin arrived at the church.

"When we heard about the protesters, we became very angry," said Bill Audette, a retired police officer and organizer of a central Massachusetts group called Blackstone Valley Nam Vets. Audette, 55, said even though he did not know Piper, he considered it his duty to attend the funeral.

Standing among a group of veterans, Audette said that each U.S. military death in Iraq hit hard.

"When we organized 20 years ago," he said, "we always said there would never be another Vietnam. Enough is enough. This is another war just like Vietnam, where you may be winning the battles but you are not winning the war. We just want them to come home, all of them."

He said the Kansas group owed its freedom to protest to soldiers like Piper.

"If they want to protest, they have every right under the Constitution," Audette said. "That is what this boy died for -- the 1st Amendment."

But, he added: "Don't do it here. This is not the place for it."

Trooper 1st Class Timothy Donahue of the Connecticut State Police played on the Marblehead High School football team with Piper.

"The protesters can't take away from the fact that this is a celebration of Chris' life -- what he did and how he lived," said Donahue, 43. "The roots of this town predate our own country. Men from Marblehead have fought in every war. And that was what Chris was all about."

Piper's family, veterans from every U.S. military conflict since World War II and the 1,000 or so people who lined Washington Street outside the church formed a procession to Waterside Cemetery. On the milelong route, several thousand others stood on sidewalks, waved flags and held hands over their hearts. Many wept.

Marblehead is a community of 20,000 people, "and truly, in a small town like this, it is like losing a family member," said Massachusetts State Trooper John Morris, another of Piper's high school teammates. Morris coaches 12-year-old Christopher Piper Jr. in youth football.

Morris marched behind the boy, who wore his father's military medals on a black knit shirt.

"Chris was proud to be overseas. He loved it. He believed in this country, and he loved what he was doing," Morris said. As the bagpipes played "It's a Grand Old Flag," Morris' eyes welled up.

"Chris would have loved this," Morris said. "There would be tears in his eyes if he were here to see this."
 
The thing is, these San Francisco hippies don't give a shit about the soldiers' funerals. It's all about the homosexuality issue to them. If it was "God Hates Soldiers" instead of "God Hates Fags" do you think those asshats would be out there doing anything? These jesus freaks have been around forever and this is the kind of publicity they feed on. When they're finally ignored, they'll go away, but so long as those with the most delicate sensibilities give them an outlet, we're stuck with them.
 
On the contrary kmp, no matter what happens, the WBC will be publicized because of what they are protesting. The best way to counter that is to troll them. If they did show up in Boston and there was a protest like that, you know I'll be there trolling them. Besides, nobody, and I mean nobody, should be protesting a soldier's funeral, whether you are opposed to the war or not, against homosexual or not, these men and women gave their lives for our country, and the only reason why WBC have the right to protest is them. If you want to protest, do it against the politicians.
 
Thebest reaction to the WBC was actually done in Boston, when the WBC was in town to protest a production of the Laramie Project:

Meanwhile, Pro-GLBT equality group Driving Equality held a counter-protest, dubbed a "Phelps-a-thon," which sought donations for every minute the Phelps protest continued.

Carrying signs reading "God is Your Enemy," and "America is Doomed," the Westboro protestors numbered less than ten, but included Shirley Phelps, daughter of Fred Phelps.
The group raised over $4600 for their efforts to organize a 85-day tour of the lower 48 states to raise awareness of GLBT-equality issues.

That was brilliant. The longer the WBC stayed, the more money was raised to help their opposition. :D
 
Thirty miles south...

4313681367_bd4893c34e.jpg


4313683157_bdc9c8160a.jpg

A bandie demonstrates his incisive wit

photos courtesy of ralphamale
 
Hey guys, on June 7th the Westboro Baptist Church are picketing in front of BLS "to remind this nation that God is cursing Doomed america because parents raise their children for the devil and teachers teach them the twin lies that "God loves everyone" and "it's OK to be gay!" Romans 9:13 As it is written, Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated. The hatred of God is not some petty human emotion, but rather assured, eternal, well-deserved damnation. Likewise, the love of God is not some sappy sentiment but rather eternal salvation."

If anyone wants to counter protest, it will happen at around 7-8 am. I wish I could go but I will be in NYC that day. Fight aginst ignorance!
 
The thing is, these San Francisco hippies don't give a shit about the soldiers' funerals. It's all about the homosexuality issue to them. If it was "God Hates Soldiers" instead of "God Hates Fags" do you think those asshats would be out there doing anything? These jesus freaks have been around forever and this is the kind of publicity they feed on. When they're finally ignored, they'll go away, but so long as those with the most delicate sensibilities give them an outlet, we're stuck with them.

Does it really matter what the motivations are, if they are right?

History tells us that hate groups do not "go away."
 
Someone should fill a SuperSoaker with urine and do a drive-by on these clowns.
 
Someone should fill a SuperSoaker with urine and do a drive-by on these clowns.

SUPPORT.



I'd go, but I honestly do not think I could refrain from punching these losers in the face until they're unconscious.
 

Back
Top