What’s going on at the Bachmann clinic?

What’s going on at the Bachmann clinic is that you have evangelical Christian Bible-freaks who are obsessed with homosexuality trying to convert gays and lesbians to heterosexuals. The ignorance of these morons is alarming, particularly since they may end up in the White House given the stupidity of the American masses, many of whom are equally obsessed with Jesus.

Maybe there’s something people in this country are eating which kills their brain cells; could be all those ‘Whoppers’ and ‘Quarter Pounders’ people guzzle down each week (the same ones that are turning Americans into small cars). I don’t know what it is, but the obsession that many individuals in this country have with Biblical fairy-tales is at an all-time high. One would think that with modern technology and the scientific advancements that most people enjoy each and every day that they would be more receptive to leaving superstitious nonsense behind and instead open their minds to new ideas and concepts, focusing on the known instead of the unknown, yet the opposite seems to be true.

As it stands right now, the Republican party has Sarah Palin, Mitt Romney, Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum as the popular frontrunners for the nomination. If this group of dim-wits isn’t enough to scare the crap out of intelligent people, I don’t know what is? TGO

Refer to story below. Source: CNN

By: CNN’s Jim Acosta and Erika Dimmler

Lake Elmo, MN (CNN) – In her campaign for president, Michele Bachmann touts her background as a small business owner.

“A small business job creator,” is how the Minnesota Congresswoman and Republican Presidential candidate described herself in her first campaign ad in Iowa.

That business is Bachmann and Associates. It’s a Christian counseling service located outside Minneapolis. Bachmann started the center with her husband, Marcus who is the lead counselor at the clinic. The aspiring First couple and their children are pictured on the center’s web site.

For at least five years, Bachmann and Associates has faced accusations it uses a controversial therapy that encourages gay and lesbian patients to change their sexual orientation.

Andrew Ramirez, a former patient at Bachmann and Associates, said in an interview with CNN he witnessed the practice first-hand. In 2004, Ramirez turned to the clinic at the urging of his mother who wanted him to talk about his homosexuality.

Just 17 at the time, Ramirez said he was immediately skeptical of what one of the clinic’s counselors told him.

“It was therapy that would help me change from being homosexual to straight,” Ramirez said. “If I did this and worked his therapy program, God would perform a miracle and I could no longer be gay,” Ramirez added he was told.

Ramirez was assigned a therapy program consisting of prayer, reading Bible passages, and mentoring with an ex-lesbian minister. If none of that worked, Ramirez said the counselor had another suggestion.

“Not acting out on my same sex attractions and living a life of celibacy,” Ramirez said.

After the second session, Ramirez told his mother, Beth Shellenbarger, he wanted to stop the therapy.

“And I could just hear his voice quiver and I just said, ‘you know, Andy, if you’re good with being gay then I am too,'” Shellenbarger said.

The American Psychological Association is sharply critical of efforts by counselors to change a patient’s sexual orientation, what’s known in the mental health community as “reparative therapy.”

“There is insufficient evidence to support the use of psychological interventions to change sexual orientation,” one APA report said.

Marcus Bachmann has suggested parents of gay teenagers can turn to religion for help.

In an interview last year with the “Point of View” talk radio program, Bachmann was asked how parents should deal with a teenager who thinks he or she is gay.

“I think you clearly say ‘what is the understanding of God’s word on homosexuality,'” Bachmann said. “We have to understand barbarians need to be educated. They need to be disciplined and just because someone feels it or thinks it doesn’t mean we’re supposed to go down that road,” he continued.

In 2006, Bachmann denied his clinic engaged in reparative therapy to “City Pages,” a Minneapolis newspaper. “That’s a false statement,” Bachmann said. “If someone is interested in talking to us about their homosexuality, we are open to talking about that. But if someone comes in a homosexual and they want to stay homosexual, I don’t have a problem with that,” he continued.

This week, a gay rights group called “Truth Wins Out” released to CNN a hidden camera video recorded by one of its activists who posed as a patient at Bachmann and Associates.

In the video reviewed by CNN, a counselor can be heard suggesting homosexuality can be treated at the center, to varying degrees of success.

“You can actually leave homosexuality completely and become heterosexual?” the undercover activist asked on the video. “Definitely,” the counselor responded. “It’s happened before. It really has,” the counselor added.

But the counselor cautioned he is not an expert on the subject.

“I don’t have a ton of experience with this. I mean, a little bit here and there,” the counselor added.
Michele Bachmann has a long history of controversial views on homosexuality.

As a senator in the Minnesota legislature in 2004, Bachmann called for an amendment to the state constitution that would block gay marriages in other states from being recognized in Minnesota.

“If we allow this to happen, group marriage, polygamy, and much worse would not be far behind,” Bachmann said in a video to her supporters.

In an appeal to socially conservative Iowa voters earlier this month, she signed a “Marriage Vow” pledge that also equated same sex couples with polygamists.

Both Bachmann and her husband declined to discuss the clinic’s practices. A secretary at the clinic referred all questions to the Bachmann presidential campaign. A sign on the center’s door says “no media.”

A statement released by her presidential campaign said the Bachmanns were unable to comment on the clinic’s practices out of respect for its patients.

“The Bachmann’s are in no position ethically, legally, or morally to discuss specific courses of treatment concerning the clinic’s patients,” the statement said.

The issue has followed Bachmann onto the campaign trail. Asked about the clinic’s practices at an event in Iowa Monday, Bachmann dodged the question.

“Well, I’m running for the presidency of the United States. And I’m here today to talk about job creation,” Bachmann told WHO-TV. “We’re very proud of the business that we’ve created,” she added.

About The Great One

Am interested in science and philosophy as well as sports; cycling and tennis. Enjoy reading, writing, playing chess, collecting Spyderco knives and fountain pens.
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One Response to What’s going on at the Bachmann clinic?

  1. GhostRider says:

    WOW… As per article below, it means if she becomes our next president: Las Vegas would have to win it’s independence from the U.S., Elton John return his Baby, and the “Don’t ask, don’t tell” ban repealed (and on the last one I quote her, read the article for yourself – against “intrusively intimate cunnilingus among attracteds” in the military”) PRETTY RAD!

    http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/08/just-sign-here/

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