Front Office Football Central

Front Office Football Central (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//index.php)
-   FOFC Archive (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//forumdisplay.php?f=27)
-   -   (REL) Student planned to napalm protesters at Falwell funeral (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//showthread.php?t=58906)

SirFozzie 05-23-2007 05:22 PM

(REL) Student planned to napalm protesters at Falwell funeral
 
.... I'm sorry, I have to do it. Guess this gives new meaning to the phrase "Religious Flame War", huh?

http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=3201543&page=1

Bomb Plot Thwarted at Falwell's Funeral

Student Arrested With Homemade Bombs, Three Other Suspects Sought


Even in death, the Rev. Jerry Falwell rouses the most volatile of emotions.

A small group of protesters gathered near the funeral services to criticize the man who mobilized Christian evangelicals and made them a major force in American politics -- often by playing on social prejudices.

A group of students from Falwell's Liberty University staged a counterprotest.

And Campbell County authorities arrested a Liberty University student for having several homemade bombs in his car.

The student, 19-year-old Mark D. Uhl of Amissville, Va., reportedly told authorities that he was making the bombs to stop protesters from disrupting the funeral service. The devices were made of a combination of gasoline and detergent, a law enforcement official told ABC News' Pierre Thomas. They were "slow burn," according to the official, and would not have been very destructive.

"There were indications that there were others involved in the manufacturing of these devices and we are still investigating these individuals with the assistance of ATF [Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms], Virginia State Police and FBI. At this time it is not believed that these devices were going to be used to interrupt the funeral services at Liberty University," the Campbell County Sheriff's Office said in a release.

Three other suspects are being sought, one of whom is a soldier from Fort Benning, Ga., and another is a high school student. No information was available on the third suspect.

Authorities were alerted to the potential bomb plot after relative of Uhl called to say that he had homemade bombs in his possession. Officials searched Uhl's car where they found five incendiary devices in the trunk.

Uhl is currently being held under no bond at the Campbell County Adult Detention Center.

Thousands Came to Honor Man Who Mobilized Christian Evangelicals

Falwell, often called the father of the Christian conservative movement, died suddenly last week at age 73.

Thousands flocked to the Thomas Road Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Va., which Falwell founded 50 years ago, for the funeral service.

The church had just 35 parishioners when Falwell began preaching there in 1956. At Tuesday's service, its 6,000 seats were filled by people who'd come to say goodbye.

"Almost every single person gathered here today is really here because on a real and personal level you and Dr. Jerry Falwell were friends," said Ronald S. Godwin, executive vice president of Liberty University.

To the end, though, Falwell inspired strong feelings. He launched an evangelical movement that changed the face of American religion and politics and catapulted him to national prominence from his "Old Time Gospel Hour" television show.

Falwell's Moral Majority, a group he founded in the 1970s, broke new ground in mobilizing evangelical Christians in the political arena, helping Ronald Reagan win the White House in 1980.

As time went on, however, Falwell's influence waned, partly due to his own penchant for controversy.

But his comments in the days after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks made it nearly impossible for mainstream politicians to associate with him.

No national Republicans attended Tuesday's funeral, including none of the GOP presidential candidates. All said they were too busy.

NoMyths 05-23-2007 05:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SirFozzie (Post 1470600)
Falwell's Moral Majority, a group he founded in the 1970s, broke new ground in mobilizing evangelical Christians in the political arena, helping Ronald Reagan win the White House in 1980.
[...]
No national Republicans attended Tuesday's funeral, including none of the GOP presidential candidates. All said they were too busy.


There's a lesson in this.

primelord 05-23-2007 05:44 PM

Nothing says I am a good Christian like throwing homemade napalm on people.

Surtt 05-23-2007 06:16 PM

I guess it never occurred to him that throwing napalm bombs at the protesters might disrupt the service more then the protesters.

timmynausea 05-23-2007 06:16 PM

It reminds me of that story about how Jesus took a few fishes and loaves and made napalm.

JPhillips 05-23-2007 06:38 PM

Turn the other cheek, to shade your eyes from the explosion.

cartman 05-23-2007 06:39 PM

Hmmm, no mention in the article of how the Patriot Act has saved us from another terror attack by a group of religious extremists.

bhlloy 05-23-2007 11:34 PM

I'm no supporter of what Falwell stands for, but isn't the first problem that it is now seems to be a perfectly acceptable thing nowadays to picket funerals? Have some class and make your point in some other way.

albionmoonlight 05-24-2007 07:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cartman (Post 1470628)
Hmmm, no mention in the article of how the Patriot Act has saved us from another terror attack by a group of religious extremists.


Yeah, I dislike playing the race/religion card, but it seems to fit here.

If this had been an Arab-American Muslim kid with napalm planning to use it on people who wanted to disrupt a religious service, it would be the biggest story of the year. The word "terrorism" would have already been uttered on FoxNews eleventy-billion times.

albionmoonlight 05-24-2007 07:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NoMyths (Post 1470605)
There's a lesson in this.



Live by politics, die by politics (somewhat literally).

miami_fan 05-24-2007 08:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bhlloy (Post 1470793)
I'm no supporter of what Falwell stands for, but isn't the first problem that it is now seems to be a perfectly acceptable thing nowadays to picket funerals? Have some class and make your point in some other way.


I agree with you. When did this become a popular thing to do?

SirFozzie 05-24-2007 09:55 AM

since Fred Phelps did it at the funeral for Matthew Sheppard. That's the first thing I can think of.

stevew 05-24-2007 10:28 AM

I'm willing to make an slight exception if the Fred Phelps band was his intended target. Otherwise, shit, wtf are you thinking?

Greyroofoo 05-24-2007 11:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bhlloy (Post 1470793)
I'm no supporter of what Falwell stands for, but isn't the first problem that it is now seems to be a perfectly acceptable thing nowadays to picket funerals? Have some class and make your point in some other way.


I never knew picketing at funerals was perfectly acceptable.

It seems funeral picketers are generally abhorred and apparently now greeted with napalm.

BrianD 05-24-2007 11:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 1470879)
Yeah, I dislike playing the race/religion card, but it seems to fit here.

If this had been an Arab-American Muslim kid with napalm planning to use it on people who wanted to disrupt a religious service, it would be the biggest story of the year. The word "terrorism" would have already been uttered on FoxNews eleventy-billion times.


You do understand that we only use the word "terrorist" for people we don't like, right?

Telle 05-24-2007 11:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BrianD (Post 1471038)
You do understand that we only use the word "terrorist" for people we don't like, right?


Soo.. we like the napalm kid?

BrianD 05-24-2007 12:05 PM

An American kid can be a criminal or be "disturbed", but you will never see him described as a terrorist...unless he recently converted to Islam. "Terrorist" isn't really a word that describes anything, it is a word meant to evoke an emotional response.

Surtt 05-24-2007 12:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bhlloy (Post 1470793)
I'm no supporter of what Falwell stands for, but isn't the first problem that it is now seems to be a perfectly acceptable thing nowadays to picket funerals? Have some class and make your point in some other way.


I agree.
Picketing a funeral is about the most disgusting thing you can do, no mater who's it is.
I guess that is the whole point, the shock value.

It is getting to be a very sad world we live in.
I keep hoping it is just me getting older, but I really don't think so.

Klinglerware 05-24-2007 04:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevew (Post 1470989)
I'm willing to make an slight exception if the Fred Phelps band was his intended target. Otherwise, shit, wtf are you thinking?


Interestingly enough, it might be the Phelps guys since they were planning a protest...

http://www.49abcnews.com/news/2007/m...t_westboro_ba/
hxxp://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,273313,00.html

path12 05-24-2007 05:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BrianD (Post 1471046)
An American kid can be a criminal or be "disturbed", but you will never see him described as a terrorist...unless he recently converted to Islam. "Terrorist" isn't really a word that describes anything, it is a word meant to evoke an emotional response.


Aren't they calling the radical ecological groups terrorists now?


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:32 AM.

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.