The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Once champions, now demons

- Christine Flowers Columnist

The Southern Poverty Law Center was founded in 1971 by Morris Dees to combat the rise in violence perpetrate­d by the KKK. The organizati­on won significan­t legal victories against the hate group, including civil judgments which virtually crippled the group.

Their motives were noble, their methods effective, their morals unimpeacha­ble.

That organizati­on no longer exists. Today, the SPLC has become a weaponized arm of the progressiv­e movement, seeking out groups and individual­s who violate their standards of tolerance, virtue, justice and enlightenm­ent.

They need to be called out for what they truly are: Charlatans.

If you are not on board with same-sex marriage, genderneut­ral bathrooms, the Stalinist straight jacket of gendersens­itive pronouns and allowing toddlers to choose their sexual identities, you are a member of a hate group.

If you are not aware that you belong to such a group, the SPLC will help you. They will put you on its “Hate Watch.”

If that sounds a bit Big Brotherish, it is. The SPLC publishes a list of organizati­ons that deviate from its unique and unsurprisi­ngly narrow view of what is virtuous in this evolved society.

It is called the Hate Map, and it includes such organizati­ons and individual­s as the Family Research Council (because, among other things, it supported Bill Clinton’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy for the military); the Alliance Defending Freedom, a legal advocacy group that has represente­d students, free of charge, who have argued that their right to free exercise has been threatened by government encroachme­nt; Charles Murray, who believes that the welfare state is harmful and the Ruth Institute, a religious-based, ecumenical organizati­on that actively combats the victimizat­ion of children and opposes the more strident advocacy of some LGBT groups.

Last week, the Ruth Institutes online donation system was shut down by Vanco, the organizati­on which handled that service because it learned of Ruth’s inclusion on the SPLC hate map.

Only the most radical proLGBT activist could find anything vaguely “hateful” about their philosophy.

But the SPLC has decided that Christian organizati­ons are, by definition, hateful, and there is in fact a whole separate section on their website devoted to groups that advance a “Christian Identity.” Other threatenin­g groups are “Racist Skinheads,” “Neo Nazis,” “White Nationalis­t,” “Black Separatist” (well at least there’s that …) “Ku Klux Klan,” “Anti Muslim,” “Anti Immigrant” and when all else fails, “General Hate.”

It’s hard to quibble with most of the groups listed.

But the idea that people who have a Christian identity that might lead them to oppose homosexual­ity, same-sex marriage, gender-reassignme­nt surgery, same-sex adoptions or even baking cakes for people who commit sodomy (which is now legal, in case you were wondering) is more than a bit troubling.

Sure, you can disagree with certain Christian principles that do not align well with those espoused by the LGBT advocates, and you have every right to lobby your legislator­s to make sure those Christian principles are not codified in the civil law, but to defame people of faith as members of a “hate group” simply because you find their beliefs abhorrent is, well, abhorrent.

It is particular­ly troubling that the organizati­on that is raising its ideologica­l torches against those with whom it disagrees is the same group that stared down the Klan, and brought them to heel with the power of their moral coherence.

Now, the SPLC has become a pale shadow of its former self, and has sold whatever is left of its soul to the nihilists of Antifa and Black Lives Matter (ironically not listed as a “hate group” by our Klan-hating friends) and Planned Parenthood and all the other progressiv­e darlings who pull its strings.

The “Poverty” in the “Southern Poverty Law Center” must now refer to the content of its character.

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