The estranged son of the founder of the Westboro Baptist Church said his father is "on the edge of death."Read the rest here.
Fred Phelps Sr. became famous for organizing picket lines of brightly-colored signs carrying hateful messages against tolerance during the funerals of military personnel and famous figures. His actions led to at least two federal and several state laws restricting protests during military funerals.
In a statement on his Facebook page, Nathan Phelps, who has been estranged from his father for 30 years, said the senior Phelps was dying in hospice care in Topeka, Kan., and that he had been excommunicated from his own church in August of 2013.
"I'm not sure how I feel about this. Terribly ironic that his devotion to his god ends this way. Destroyed by the monster he made," Nathan Phelps wrote.
A Correct Way to Correct
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1 comment:
Gosh, one imagines others of the faithful processing through the halls of the facility with signs reading "Thank God for Dementia!", for alzheimer's, for kidney failure, for cancer, diabetes. So many opportunities to spread the good news. How to rehabilitate such people? They've broken no laws.
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