Doc - The Most Hated Family in America (2007)

The documentary focuses on the Westboro Baptist Church, headed by Fred Phelps and based in Topeka, Kansas.[19] Born in 1929 in Meridian, Mississippi,[20] Phelps conducts himself under the belief that he is a prophet chosen by God "to preach his message of hate".[21] Phelps was ordained a Southern Baptist in 1947.[20][21] The Westboro Baptist Church was started by Phelps in 1955.[21] Members of the church meet in Phelps's residence; the majority of the group's adherents are his family.[20] Phelps received an associate's degree from John Muir Junior College in 1951,[20] a bachelor's degree in 1962 and a degree in law in 1964 from Washburn University.[20][21] He formed a "crusade for righteousness", attempting to abolish Jim Crow laws in Topeka.[21]
In 1991 when a local park started to serve as a meeting place for homosexual men, Phelps began to protest against homosexuality.[21] Phelps subsequently enlarged the scope of his activities and formed protests in areas where civil rights were being debated for LGBT people.[21] Phelps received criticism in 1998 when he repeatedly exclaimed "Matt is in hell" during the funeral of Matthew Shepard, a man murdered for being homosexual.[20]
Westboro Baptist Church bases its work around the belief that "God Hates Fags",[22] and expresses the opinion, based on its Biblical interpretation, that nearly every tragedy in the world is God's punishment for homosexuality – specifically society's increasing tolerance and acceptance of gay, lesbian, and bisexual people.[23] It maintains that God hates homosexuals above all other kinds of "sinners"[24] and that homosexuality should be a capital crime.[25] The church runs the website GodHatesFags.com, and GodHatesAmerica.com, and websites expressing condemnation of LGBT people, Roman Catholics, Muslims, Jews, Sweden, Ireland, Canada, the Netherlands, and the United States.[26] The organisation is monitored by the Anti-Defamation League[27] and is classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center.[28][29] The group has achieved notoriety because of its picketing of funeral processions of U.S. soldiers killed in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan.[30][31]
Controversial acts of Phelps and the Westboro Baptist Church resulted in litigation and the formation of groups which counter-protest against its efforts.[20] President George W. Bush signed the Respect for America's Fallen Heroes Act into law in on Memorial Day in May 2006.[20] An organisation, FreeRepublic.com, formed demonstrations against pickets by the church.[20] Groups of American Legion members formed motorcycle honor guards with the intention of safeguarding funerals of U.S. military from the church protesters.[20]
