Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Brody's Scribbles... LA Times Opines: Supreme Court Must Rule In Favor Of Phelps Clan

By Brody Levesque (Washington DC) OCT 6 | As much as what I am about to say pains me- especially as a Gay man who has watched with utter disgust and dismay at the anti-Gay antics of the Clan Phelps from Topeka, Kansas, ever since that snowy day in Laramie, Wyoming, when Judy & Dennis Shepard along with their surviving son Logan, held a funeral for their murdered son and brother, Matthew, and Fred and crew protested at the funeral with very loud, garish, neon orange/green signs. That was also my first exposure to the Clan Phelps that wintry October day in 1998.
That day, directly across the street from the church where the services were held, dear old Reverend Fred Phelps and clan were holding up disturbing signs that have now become burned into the memory of most Americans alive then and indeed the world who saw them on television news reports and in print. Signs that gave immediate offence filled with reprehensible messages not to mention appalling graphic depictions of stick figures having anal sex underscored by the slogan Fags + Aids  = Death.  
Yup, real classy human beings Fred & his kiddies were at that particular moment... Of course, in the intervening years since then, not much has improved as far as The Westboro Baptist Church is concerned as far as I can tell.
The United States Supreme Court today is scheduled to hear a case involving Fred's Clan and their right to picket U. S. Military funerals, and well other public events with what could be best described as pretty nasty rhetoric. The Phelps lost one case, involving a U. S. Marine lost in combat from Maryland,  which would have meant millions of dollars to be paid to the family of the slain service member that sued them, which in turn literally would have driven them and their church into bankruptcy and probable extinction as an viable entity. 
However, that decision was set aside by the 4th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals getting them off the hook as it were. Naturally, the case moved up and now the essence of the arguments, free speech v. hate speech and First Amendment issues will be heard and a decision rendered.  
Here's the painful part  and quite frankly distasteful for me; To be absolutely and constitutionally right [correct], and uphold the tenets of that venerable document, the high court needs to uphold the lower court's decision and side with Freddie and his demented band of homophobes.
The Los Angeles Times offered this editorial in this morning's edition and I support the arguments that the paper's editorial staff make:
The Supreme Court will hear arguments Wednesday that sorely tests the principle, articulated by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. nearly a century ago, that "we should be eternally vigilant against attempts to check the expression of opinions that we loathe."
The case involves the Westboro Baptist Church, a deranged anti-gay religious group that routinely shows up at the funerals of American soldiers to express its bizarre belief that U.S. combat deaths are divine retribution for America's tolerance of homosexuality. In 2006, the group picketed the funeral of Lance Cpl. Matthew A. Snyder, a Marine killed in Iraq. The protesters held signs reading "Thank God for Dead Soldiers," "You're Going to Hell' and "Semper fi Fags."
Snyder's father sued the church for "intentional infliction of emotional distress" and other civil wrongs, but a lower court held that the picketers were protected under the 1st Amendment. The Supreme Court is now being asked to reverse that decision.
The justices may be tempted to rule against the protesters out of understandable sympathy for Snyder's father. They should resist the temptation. Allowing even private figures to recover damages for distress caused by the political or religious speech of others would be a dramatic departure from the court's protection of free expression no matter how offensive. And it would have reverberations in settings far removed from military funerals.
This case is not about whether protesters can be prevented from engaging in face-to-face harassment of mourners. The picketers complied with local ordinances and police instructions and stood a safe distance — 1,000 feet, according to an appeals court judge — away from the Catholic church where Snyder's funeral took place. Albert Snyder, the dead Marine's father, didn't see their signs until he watched television later in the day. As a brief from a group of 1st Amendment scholars puts it, Snyder is complaining not of physical interference but of "psychological intrusions stemming from the content of the protesters' message."
That's clear from the fact that Snyder's suit is also based on a screed posted on the Internet by a church member several weeks after the funeral. It alleged that the elder Snyder and his ex-wife had "taught Matthew to defy his creator," "raised him for the devil" and "taught him that God was a liar." 
The U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled, correctly, that a reasonable reader "would understand it to contain rhetorical hyperbole, and not actual, provable facts about Snyder and his son."The appeals court's most important finding was that the church, however outrageously, was addressing matters of public concern, just as Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson were when they suggested that the 9/11 terrorist attacks were God's punishment for toleration of abortion and homosexuality. No doubt that statement caused emotional distress for relatives of 9/11 victims, but it was constitutionally protected. 
The court should rule that the 1st Amendment also protects the ravings of the Westboro Baptist Church.

2 comments:

Trab said...

Of course if they do, it opens the door for every other nutjob to do the same to anyone else they feel they wish to attack. Maybe, if that is the way of the decision, it will be time to do the very same thing to the WBC and the 'clan', and maybe every other bigoted right wing zealot out there. After all, you'd be taking advantage of the same loophole in decency that the Phelps clan does.

Remember the old kids chantt, "Sticks and stones will break my bones, but words will never hurt me." It was a lie then, and it is a lie now. Verbal and written attacks of this nature, legal or not, are assault with weapons that strike even more deeply than a knife, much less a stick or stone.

There's something fundamentally wrong (no pun intended) when protection of speech is given greater strength than protection from speech. It is not much different from the right to shoot being greater than the right to not be shot. I'm sad to conclude that the American Constitution and Amendments have stacked the deck for the strong and aggressive and left the considerate and decent in the lurch.

Desmond Rutherford said...

Q. Does the first amendment protect the ravings of an insane person?

A. If the ravings are considered religious, then, yes they do seem to be protected.

The difficulty is showing that the insane person is by definition, unable to distinguish what is real from the unreal, when they claim that their holy texts are real to them.

By this tactic, they have in effect turned the protective nature of the first Amendment into a circular argument to defend their belief.

Such is the price of freedom of religion. What seems to be more important is that religions must realise that freedom of religion also means, freedom from religion, even if their holy text demands them to go forth and spread the word.

Somehow we need to curb the lunatics from offending the rights of others to be free from religious insanity as well.