The Montpelier High School students who chose fundraising as their form of protest against the Westboro Baptist Church on Tuesday (you can read about it
HERE) have updated their take:
The group, started by Montpelier High student Joe Carlomagno and which spread wild-fire like on Facebook, has raised $6,250 and counting, for GLAD, a New England gay rights organization. Donations are accepted through Sept. 10. (Other groups were also raising money for other organizations Tuesday.)
Joe listed some other numbers Here are some numbers:
Number of WBC members who protested outside MHS: 4 (5, if you count 7-year-old Luke)
Number of legal same-sex marriages that took place today in Vermont: 5
Number of states that have won marriage equality through the legislature: 1 (Vermont!)
Number of minutes the WBC protested outside MHS: 27 minutes
He also wrote:
"At Montpelier High School, you helped change what might have been a tense, frustrating, and disheartening school day into one filled with positive thoughts, unity, and hope. Thank you, thank you, everyone!"
- Terri Hallenbeck
Labels: Montpelier High School, politics, same-sex marriage, Vermont, Westboro Baptist Church
As you may have heard, the Westboro Baptist Church plans a series of protests in Vermont on Sept. 1.
The group, which sums up much of its point of view with the very title of its Web site (
www.GodHatesFags.com), says it will make three stops in Montpelier and three in Burlington on that day, apparently to mark the first day that same-sex marriage will be legal in Vermont.
Here's the dilemma: What is the best response - do the media ignore the group or cover them so people know what it's all about?
It is truly a dilemma. As I mulled this today, an article came across my computer screen by Charles Davis, an assistant professor at the Missouri School of Journalism and executive director of the National Freedom of Information Coalition, prompted by the recent rage at health-care forums:
"Hate, shuffled off stage in the post-racial haze of the election of the
nation’s first black president, is back with a vengeance. Hate, if it ever truly
threatened to leave the political stage, is most definitely back, larger and
nastier than ever.
As a near-absolutist First Amendment advocate, my prescription for hate
speech is always more speech: Give the bigot a microphone as big as the hatred,
I say, and watch as the marketplace of ideas works its magic.
Perhaps that’s why I worry, as I watch an emboldened mob grow more
irresponsible with each passing day, that the mainstream media fails to give
hate the coverage it deserves today.
"My proposition is simple: Major news organizations need to cover hate the
way they once did — as a standalone beat."
I don't know that we're talking about hate as a full-time beat, but there's an argument for shining the spotlight, just as there are surely arguments for ignoring it.
- Terri Hallenbeck
Labels: hate, journalism, same-sex marriage, Westboro Baptist Church