How Fred Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church Duped the World

How Fred Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church Duped the World

Fred Phelps was born in 1929.  He founded the Westboro Baptist Church in 1955.  He died in 2014.

Phelps was a Democrat politician who ran for several different offices, including an attempt to run for the US Senate and three attempts to run for Governor of Kansas.  

Phelps was also a civil rights lawyer who at one point was working on one third of Kansas’ docket for civil rights cases.  He received awards from the NAACP for his work.

It is especially notable that Fred Phelps had connections to Al Gore.  Phelps even provided rooms for Gore’s campaign workers at one point; and at another point Gore held a fundraiser at Fred Phelps’ home in Topeka, KS. 

Though the official narrative is that Phelps turned on Gore after Gore’s political stances changed, some may see this connection, and its later alleged dissolution, as circumstantial evidence in making the case that Fred Phelps’ Westboro Baptist Church was a government snow job (look up the term).  Some may say the same over how Westboro defectors Megan and Grace Phelps-Roper have been guest speakers at a private conference on hate and hate speech sponsored by the ADL, the FBI, and the US Attorney’s Office.

Westboro’s caricature opposition to gays through the blatantly obnoxious, rude behavior of the Phelps-trained church members, as well as its utterly disrespectful protests of dead US military veterans, was picked up heavily by the mainstream media.  This has caused multitudes to automatically associate Christian opposition to gay pride, and to even associate all Christian public preaching and sign holding, with the outrageous behavior of the Westboro Baptist members.  This in turn provided an excuse to call all Christian opposition to homosexuality hateful; and to equate acceptance thereof with “real Christianity” and “genuine compassion.”

The media coverage of Westboro Baptist Church protests also garnered sympathy for the Roman Catholic Church, the modern nation of Israel, and the cause of Zionism overall due to the Westboro Baptist Church’s caricature opposition to these as well.  

Yet perhaps there really is nothing highly suspicious about the untold national and international media coverage of a small group from Kansas with a founder with involvement in high level politics, in notable Leftist legal activism, and a connection to a politician who would have to be part of the deep state if such a thing exists at all.  Perhaps it is reasonable to conclude that Phelps wasn’t part of a twisted agenda to socially engineer sympathy for gay pride, to pave the way for an ecumenical one world church under the control of the Pope, and to give cover for the banking cartel which some believe is ruling the world through its hold on deep state political operations guiding most national governments.  Perhaps there is nothing to see besides a crazy pastor and his cult group which ended up having such great influence that the crazy pastor’s very powerful connections had absolutely no bearing at all on.  

It’s not like there is any evidence here that you really ought to beware of (wink).

Aaron’s email is: [email protected]

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Much more complete expose here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nJECKKprpLs