I'm assuming you are trying to link Terry Jones with the Westboro protests at US soldier burials. Where is your proof?
You assume wrong, heavy on the ASS part.
Reading before linking is your friend
Oh, my. I didn't realize you were that dense.
From the horse's own mouth: This is Google's cache of http://www.doveworld.org/blog/in-support-of-westboro-baptist. It is a snapshot of the page as it appeared on Sep 5, 2010 05:15:03 GMT. Excerpt:
In Support of Westboro Baptist
By Fran Ingram - Posted on 21 April 2010
On Sunday April 18, Westboro Baptist Church came to Gainesville. One of their stops was a liberal "Open doors, open hearts, open minds," church near us, so we took part of our Sunday Service time and went as a church to stand with them.
We have also learned that when you speak out about what God hates, you will be hated. We do not agree with all of Westboro's methods, but we admire their determination to find radical ways to preach the truth of the Bible, as we do. Most churches and Pastors in America try to stand on neutral ground. They are lost, weak and sick and need to repent.
Excerpt from April 21, 2010: Vicious Kansas Gay-Bashers Finally Find a Friend
Westboro Baptist Church, a Kansas-based group notorious for turning tragedies into gay-bashing opportunities, is pretty much universally reviled. Even an Arizona-based Ku Klux Klan group forcefully (if ungrammatically) rejected the group in a “disclaimer” published on its website. “The Ku Klux Klan, LLC, has not or EVER will have ANY connection with The ‘Westboro Baptist Church,’” it said. “We absolutely repudiate their activities.”
Not the Dove World Outreach Center, a Gainesville, Fla., church that has used similar tactics to attack both gays and Muslims. “We support Westboro who [sic] came to Gainesville because of its ‘Gay’ reputation,” the church states on its website.
In fact, Dove became virtually the only group in the history of Westboro’s anti-gay and anti-Jewish campaigning to join forces with the Topeka, Kan., church. Dove enthusiastically took part in Westboro’s Sunday protest against Gainesville’s tolerance of homosexuality. About 30 members of Dove World Outreach Center joined fewer than 10 Westboro representatives outside Trinity United Methodist Church in Gainesville, according to the Gainesville Sun. Many of the Dove protesters wore their signature “Islam is of the Devil” T-shirts — a message they’ve also promoted on signs outside the church.
Excerpt from the Florida Alligator, April 26, 2010:
But Wayne Sapp, a pastor with the Dove World Outreach Center stood with members of his congregation alongside the Westboro Baptist Church members at Trinity United Methodist Church.
Sapp's group and Westboro Baptist members sang songs such as “This Land is Going Straight to Hell” and “I’m Ashamed to Be an American,” to the tune of “This Land is Your Land” and “I’m Proud to Be an American” respectively.
According to Sapp, the Westboro Baptist Church teaches the whole Bible.
“Churches like to talk about love and acceptance, but they forget to talk about rebuke and correction,” Sapp said. “The world has rejected God. Now God is rejecting the world.”
BUT WAIT, EVEN BETTER! Here's Dove's Facebook photo album, Marching with the Westboro Baptist Church. How's that for proof?
Dark Side, it's humorous that you go around the board feebly asking Link? Link? Link? and then when graciously provided links, cherry-pick to change the subject. This is the mark of a total pu$$y.
You must have made a fine JW: Absolutely no reading comprehension, too damn lazy to do your own research, and combative when the facts challenge your closely-held beliefs.
~Sue