Dragonlayer said:
I don't really get this kind of attitude, it seems a lot like a very disingenuous attempt to foist shame on the non-aggressor in a situation: "Yeah well, this guy might have broken into funerals to insult grieving families as their mourn their recently dead children in an utterly despicable fashion, but you called him a mean word! So whose the real monster here, huh!?"
Since he was a hateful twat who dedicated his life to protesting soldier's funerals (which I consider to be absolutely fucking disgusting) and despising gays, I can happily say: "Woohoo! Rot in Hell you complete scumbag." I can also happily say I am so much better then him at the same time, because for one thing I don't interrupt a goddamn funeral with placards saying just how grand it was that that person died!
It seems your attitude is basically what he was referring to, and I'll add that the entire Internet sounding off trumpets for his death, in as much as the outraged web has been the Westboro Baptist's biggest trumpet (ironically giving it a voice exponentially greater than it could ever achieve on its own) is completely in the wrong here.
It's wrong to be gleeful and take satisfaction in someone's death; you should wish for people to stop doing evil (i.e. do good), not want them dead.
While it can be a good thing to raise awareness, it's wrong to draw too much attention and effectively stir up hatred. The other irony isn't lost on people, either, to see these e-celebrations for a death in a group that, you know,
is happy to see certain people die.
But this is nothing new on the Internet, where people let their true feelings fly. It's why thousands on social media cheered when a woman lured and murdered her rapist with her family. Margaret Thatcher's death also featured people showing their ugly sides, made all the more baffling that she hadn't been in politics for more than twenty years. Old hatreds die hard with some people, I guess.
If you ultimately take pleasure in death you're psychologically damaged. Stop being proud of it and realize you have a problem.