Leap of Faith: The making of a Republican front-runnerBachmann, a two-term member of Congress from Stillwater, Minnesota, is an ideologue of the Christian-conservative movement. Her appeal, along with her rapid ascent in the polls, is based on a collection of right-wing convictions, beliefs, and resentments that she has regularly broadcast from television studios and podiums since 2006, when she was first elected to Congress. Often, she will say something outrageous and follow it with a cheerful disclaimer. During the last Presidential campaign, she told Chris Matthews, on MSNBC, that Barack Obama held "anti-American views" and then admitted, "I made a misstatement." (In 2010, she said that she had been right about Obama's views all along: "Now I look like Nostradamus.") In the spring of 2009, during what appeared to be the beginnings of a swine-flu epidemic, Bachmann said, "I find it interesting that it was back in the nineteen-seventies that the swine flu broke out then under another Democrat President, Jimmy Carter. And I'm not blaming this on President Obama—I just think it's an interesting coincidence."
Yeah. It's a coincidence that you are republican tea partier AND a fucking moron too. But no one is pointing that out. Well. Almost no one. :)
Bachmann belongs to a generation of Christian conservatives whose views have been shaped by institutions, tracts, and leaders not commonly known to secular Americans, or even to most Christians. Her campaign is going to be a conversation about a set of beliefs more extreme than those of any American politician of her stature, including Sarah Palin, to whom she is inevitably compared. Bachmann said in 2004 that being gay is "personal enslavement," and that, if same-sex marriage were legalized, "little children will be forced to learn that homosexuality is normal and natural and that perhaps they should try it." Speaking about gay-rights activists, that same year, she said, "It is our children that is the prize for this community." She believes that evolution is a theory that has "never been proven," and that intelligent design should be taught in schools.
She was performing religious brainwashing on kids in a private charter school and got fired when she refused to stop.
I didn't know I wasn't a believer. But they knew I wasn't a believer, and they started praying for me. And all of a sudden the holy spirit started knocking on my heart's door and I could hear the Lord tug me and call me to Himself, and I responded on November 1st of 1972, and I knew that I knew that I knew that I had received Jesus Christ as my lord and savior and that my life would never be the same after I made that commitment, because I knew what darkness looked like. I knew it from my home life. I absolutely understood sin, and I wanted no part of it. When Jesus Christ came in and cleaned out this dark heart, that was light. That was rest. That was peace. It was refreshment. Why would I ever want the world? I knew what that had to offer. This was great. That didn't mean that I woke and all of a sudden I had money, all of a sudden I had position, all of a sudden I had education. It didn't. But what it meant was that all of a sudden I had a father.
Oh. No. Oh fucking no.
In 1981, three years before he died, Schaeffer published "A Christian Manifesto," a guide for Christian activism, in which he argues for the violent overthrow of the government if Roe v. Wade isn't reversed. In his movie, Schaeffer warned that America's descent into tyranny would not look like Hitler's or Stalin's; it would probably be guided stealthily, by "a manipulative, authoritarian élite."
This is referring to Francis Schaeffer, evagelical nutbag father of Francis, anti-evangelical author who had to run screaming from his father and his house of loony toon.
Read it. If you dare.
Leap of Faith: The making of a Republican front-runner