Interesting story. Just loving the claims associated with it, that everyone seems to take as read. Unevidenced, unattributed and unclear claims like this one, for instance;
"The Topeka News reports that since the booths were installed just a few months ago, they have been receiving over 100,000 callers each week."
The Topeka news reports it? Where did they get the figures from? What do they mean when they say 100,000 callers? Is that 100,000 callers using these prayer booths? Prayers to God? Calls to Topeka News? What?
Its the same about the claims of reduced crime rates, too. Who says the crime rates have been reduced? What's the evidence to support it? How have they demonstrated causation over simple correlation? I do know that such installations would be the target for just about every bored vandal out there, and does anyone else think its creepy to show women on their knees when showing pictures of how this prayer booth works?
As Vulcan referred to in his post, it also illustrates just how selfish and petty and vindictive some christians can be. One woman, without any sense of apparent irony, exercised her christian principles to pray that an opposing quarterback on a football team opposing her own suffer from a more serious ankle injury!
The author of the piece in the Topeka News, the rather grandly named Haywood Bynum III+ "leads the charge of faith at Bible Fellowship Church". Hardly an impartial observer then :) And some of his previous stories raise eyebrows;
A story, carried nowhere else, that scientists in fukushima have developed a chimera between bird and dog as a pet; That a recent massive coronal sun activity was caused "by the gays", and some weird diatribe about evolution being wrong "because squirrels have not developed mecha-armour to cross the road".
I mean the man reads like a satirical invention. If he is real and genuine, I fear for rationality in small town USA, I really do :)