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    Bachmann Under Fire for 'Pray Away the Gay' Clinic

    Bachmann and Her Husband's Minnesota Clinic Accused of Practicing Fringe Conversion Therapy

    ANALYSIS | As Rep. Michele Bachmann rides high in the polls in the nation's first primary and caucus state, she has drawn the attention of the nation toward her beliefs and her husband's faith-based counseling service. She and her husband, Marcus, run a clinic in Minnesota that was featured on ABC's "Nightline" Monday night. In a hidden camera segment, "Nightline" broadcast a counselor at the Bachmann & Associates facility advocating what has become known as reparative therapy, something that Marcus Bachmann has stated in the past was not part of the clinic's various therapeutic schedules.

    Although asked and prompted by the media, Bachmann has refused to talk about it.

    But future presidential candidate Michele Bachmann has had no trouble talking about it publicly in the past, such as during the first Republican presidential debate in New Hampshire in early June. She told an Illinois ABC affiliate news station that she was "proud" of the work done at their family-owned clinic.

    Truth Wins Out, an organization formed to combat the distortion of gay-related research, filmed a counselor telling an undercover client that he could convert from a homosexual to a heterosexual via prayer. Colloquially, the idea is known as "praying the gay away," and is a pillar of reparative therapy, which is just another name for conversion or reorientation therapy, methods of dealing with gay issues that have been opposed by the American Psychological Association.

    Andrew Ramirez, who was 17 at the time he sought help at the Bachmann clinic, told "Nightline" that he would be "re-oriented."

    "[One counselor's] path for my therapy would be to read the Bible, pray to God that I would no longer be gay," Ramirez said of his 2004 counseling. "And God would forgive me if I were straight."

    Ramirez' account, which was first reported by The Nation last week, corroborated the more recent video taken from within the clinic by a Truth Win Out staffer.

    In one portion of the video, the counselor told the staffer that "God has designed our eyes (for you) to be attracted to (a) woman's body."

    The Bachmanns have issued a joint statement concerning release of information about the clinic: "Those matters are protected by patient-client confidentiality. The Bachmann's [sic] are in no position ethically, legally, or morally to discuss specific courses of treatment concerning the clinic's patients."

    Bachmann's anti-gay stance is well known. She recently signed a pledge designed by a conservative Iowa group that called for presidential candidates to support a Constitutional amendment that defined marriage as a heterosexual union. Besides gay rights activists protests, the pledge soon came under fire from freedom of speech advocates (the document also insinuated that pornography be banned), and civil rights groups that noted a statement that stated African American children born in the Obama administration were less likely to have a two-parent household enjoyed by slaves (removed after the protests erupted).

    At an Right Online convention in mid-June, a gay rights activist threw glitter (part of an awareness effort) at the presidential candidate as she exited the stage.

    Reparative or conversion therapy has been touted by the evangelical community for some time, even though the American Psychiatric Association opposes it as a therapy. In a scathing 2009 rebuttal article against the conversion therapy-espousing "Love Won Out" program of Focus on Family, Wayne Besen, founder or Truth Wins Out, asserted: "Most gay people -- just like heterosexuals -- instinctively know their sexual orientation is natural and there was no "choice" in the matter." He added that scientific studies, regardless of statements to the contrary by such faith-based groups employ "pray away the gay" methods, pointed to a biological or genetic factor in gay sexual orientation.

    As the "pray away the gay" controversy lingers, the increased scrutiny on the Bachmann family's business could negatively affect the Minnesota Congresswoman's presidential campaign. And history indicates that the media, once attracted by the scent of scandal or controversy, is not easily diverted -- by prayer or anything else.

     

    10 comments

    • illitrt  •  10 mths ago
      She has the same rights to her beliefs as the sodomizers.
      • Golden Crust 10 mths ago
        But should they really be getting our tax $$$ for it? I think it's BOGUS!
    • ben  •  10 mths ago
      They are trying to help homsexuals that want help. There is nothing gay about the patients.
      • Chazz 10 mths ago
        they do not want help they are trying to be socially accepted by their peers.. if their peers were okay with them being gay, or if gay was the norm, the patients wouldn't give a crap about therapy.
    • Betsy  •  10 mths ago
      Rather have her then the present creep in the white house now. But the bible says I should pray for my leaders so my prayer is from Psalm 109:8 ~ "Let his days be few and brief; and let others step forward
      to replace him."
      • jimbob 10 mths ago
        you really don't understand he's living off your taxes, do you?
      • Chazz 10 mths ago
        @ betsy, you should never bring religion into politics it shows you have a deep sentiment for a man you never met.. go back and pray and ask god to heal the way you perceive the world.. You claim to read the bible but you would rather have a nutty woman and her gay husband lead you than an olive tone man with hair like wool? sounds familiar??? be ashamed.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      Personally as long as she is for the GOP pledge for Slavery I will vote for her - anyone that twisted would bring 4 years of great late night TV with them.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      I prayed away the hate and no longer was a GOPer so maybe this works.
    • Freethought  •  10 mths ago
      What a better way for Marcus to meat gay men without much curiousity from his peers. I am sure that there is more of this story to unfold. 13 kids and not one from his loins. Sounds like he is barking up the wrong hole!
      • PhyllisP 10 mths ago
        I can not get over her agreeing that children born into slavery to two parent households are better off then children born in to a single parent home today under Obama. What kind of rasict mess is that. If she was willing to sign a pledge agreeing to this she not the one to be running a nation of people from all walks of life, cultures and beliefs. Can you imagine what type mess we would be with that type of thinking. Having her as a presidential canidate will set our nation back 200 years. Hot mess. I do think we need Bachmanns kind of politics
    • Dina Montgomery  •  10 mths ago
      :o)
    • Zaruk Acerbus  •  10 mths ago
      I think I'm going to start a "Pray the Ignorance Away" clinic, would anyone like to help me set that up?
    • Grace  •  10 mths ago
      Question: is this the kind of people we need running our country. If it walks like a duck, quack like a duck, it is a duck. She needs to duck out of the political race and seek help for her and her family.
    • gregh  •  10 mths ago
      Bachmann is a joke but she fits well into the GOP's group of lunatics

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