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April 24, 1997 6:30 PM PDT

Cyber Promotions hosts hate site

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Net censorship law under fire

January 30, 1997
One of the Net's most controversial Web sites has found a new place to call home: one of the Internet's most hated hosts.

Operated by the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas, Godhatesfags.com is now being hosted by junk emailer Cyber Promotions.

The site, which preaches virulent hatred against homosexuals, has inspired controversy from the moment Network Solutions accepted it as a registered name. While Network Solutions rejected other inflammatory names such as "nigger.com," it accepted "godhatesfags.com," prompting such groups such as the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation to cry foul.

Network Solution's policy was baffling at best, said Loren Javier, the interactive media director for GLAAD.

Cyber Promotions' policy is at least unambiguous. "We don't do censoring," said Cyber Promotions president Sanford Wallace. He said he didn't know his company was hosting that site but that the company doesn't screen sites anyway.

"We don't care about the content of Web pages. We don't draw the line anywhere. We're just the conduit. We don't support or condone any site that would involve hate."

Wallace added that if the hate were contained in an unsolicited email, he would feel differently. Cyber Promotions screens email because it is unsolicited, but he added that a Web site is different because a person must choose to go there.

Javier said he doesn't like Westboro's page, but he respects Cyber Promotions' position. "We actually respect that policy more than we do [that of] Network Solutions, which is really ambiguous and very hypocritical at times. Network Solutions says it doesn't take a stand. Obviously, it did.

"We strongly believe in the First Amendment right to say what you want to say," he added. "It's Ben Phelps's [the designer of the page] right to say what he feels." Yet "one has to question a company that chooses to amplify someone's hate."

Rev. Fred Phelps, the outspoken leader of Westboro, has dedicated his life to spreading his antihomosexual message anywhere he can get people to listen, including at funerals of gays who die of AIDS. He said finding a home on the Internet has been quite a challenge.

The page has been kicked off several host sites, including pair Networks and NetGate, according to Javier.

Phelps said he finds his plight ironic on the free-speech Internet. "Blazing idiots like the Heaven's Gate people, they're welcome. They're wanted. Let the imagination go wild. But you start saying in simple, unambiguous language that homosexuals are the lowest form of humanity, bottom rung on human depravity, and are headed straight to hell...then all bets are off."

But Phelps said all the trouble his group has had preaching its message on the Net was nothing compared with the trouble he's had on the streets. "We haven't had near as much trouble preaching this on the Web site as we have picketing these idolatrous parades and funerals. There they'll try to kill you."

The bottom line, however, is that the publicity generated by this fight "helps draw attention to what we're saying," he said. "Whether it's favorable attention or unfavorable attention, it's irrelevant."

Ironically, Wallace--known in some circles as the king of junk mail and, without a doubt, one of the most hated men on the Internet--has said essentially the same thing in a different context. All the negative publicity only helps people become more familiar with who he is and what he does.

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Phelps lies about violence in story
by woodrobin October 2, 2004 11:29 AM PDT
The "Rev." Fred Phelps lies in the above story. While some of his ranting is accurate (i.e. Christians do tend to hold anti-Gay beliefs, of which he is the most undiluted and unapologetic example), he lies about on very important fact near the end of the article. The reporter failed to provide any fact checking and let the inflammatory statement stand as if it were fact. Phelps claims that attempts have been made on his life and/or the lives of his family/followers during pickets of pride parades, funerals, police headquarters, businesses, etc. In fact, the only persons who have ever instigated violence during these pickets have been the Phelpses themselves. On one occasion, grieving relatives brought food out to the Phelpses, who were picketing the funeral of a child who had died of (non-AIDS-related) pneumonia. The Phelpses refused this act of charity, claiming the food had been contaminated with AIDS deliberately in an attempt to kill them. It is this delusional paranoia that is reflected in "Rev." Phelps' claim, not the actual reality. Floating an inflammatory claim like that without checking it is sloppy reporting.
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