
Rep. Michelle Bachmann chats with a supporter at an Independence Institute fundraiser in Denver. Photo: Ernest Luning, Colorado Independent
DENVER — In a speech markedly less moderate than her Thursday forum in Lake Elmo, U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann railed against the dangers of health care reform and other Democratic initiatives at a fundraiser for a Colorado conservative group Monday, warning the proposals “have the strength to destroy this country forever.”
“This cannot pass,” the 6th District Republican told a crowd at a Denver gathering sponsored by the Independence Institute. “What we have to do today is make a covenant, to slit our wrists, be blood brothers on this thing. This will not pass. We will do whatever it takes to make sure this doesn’t pass.”
“Something is way crazy out there,” Bachmann said in her remarks, billed as a “personal legislative briefing” by the Golden-based Independence Institute, which bills itself as a “free market think tank.”
“This is slavery,” Bachmann said after claiming many Americans pay half their income to taxes. “It’s nothing more than slavery.”
In a speech filled with urgent and violent rhetoric, Bachmann — who proudly acknowledges she is the country’s “second-most hated Republican woman,” behind only former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin – drew a clear line on health care reform.
“You’re either for us or against us on this issue,” she said after deriding U.S. Rep. Betsy Markey, a Fort Collins Democrat, for “[sitting] on the fence” about health care proposals at recent town halls.
Bachmann earlier this month joined former U.S. Rep. Marilyn Musgrave, the Republican ousted from office last year by Markey, in a telephone town hall where she told abortion opponents the health care “battle will be won – on our knees in prayer and fasting.”
At times, Bachmann’s legislative briefing sounded more like the plot of a slasher movie.
“Right now, we are looking at reaching down the throat and ripping the guts out of freedom,” she said. “And we may never be able to restore it if we don’t man up and take this one on.”
While Bachmann didn’t ask this audience to “rise up” against President Barack Obama’s tyrannical rule, they stood anyway and applauded when she announced she was No. 1 on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s list of “top targets.”
Despite health care reform proponents recently facing “the summer of discontent for Democrats,” Bachmann predicted Pelosi has the muscle to keep the legislation on a fast track.
“[Pelosi] will slam this through in the month of September,” Bachmann said, even if she has to “break the arms of the Blue Dogs.” Then it comes down to the Senate, where Bachmann said “the lobbyists and special interests only have to hover around 15 senators,” with a bill expected by the end of the year.
Bachmann urged those opposed to Democratic plans for health care reform to keep applying pressure.
“This has to be defeated,” she said. “Cap and Trade has to be defeated. Those two alone have the strength to destroy this country forever, so we have to defeat them.”
Rather than hand over the health care industry’s “18 percent” of the economy to control by the federal government, which Bachmann warned would create “a critical mass [where] you are no longer a free-market economy,” she offered her own set of proposals to fix the system:
• “Erase the boundaries around every single state when it comes to health care,” enabling consumers to purchase insurance across state lines;
• increase the use of health savings accounts and allow everyone to “take full deductibility of all medical expenses,” including insurance premiums;
• and throw in tort reform.
“Do a few other tweaks and you’re there,” Bachmann said. “Your whole crisis is gone.”
Bachmann closed by urging the audience at the nonpartisan group’s fundraiser to defeat Democrats at the ballot box.
“You can win these seats back,” she urged the audience. “Hey, I got elected in Franken country!”
Noting that she heard plenty of carping about Markey over the weekend when she spoke at a conference in Steamboat Springs, Bachmann zeroed in on a vulnerability the freshman Democrat might face.
Even though professional organizers packed Markey’s recent town halls with reform advocates “all paid to be there,” Bachmann claimed, “regular normal Americans were allowed in too.” This left Markey no choice but to straddle the issue, her colleague suggested.
“She sat on the fence,” Bachmann said. “She didn’t say she’d support Obama-care or not. That’s her Achilles heel, that’s where you go after her. Because this is so clear, you’re either for us or against us on this issue.”
Ernest Luning is a reporter for the Colorado Independent.











21 Comments »
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 7:55 am
How does someone who says she is pro life:
—Promise to pray and fast so that working class people cannot get health coverage
—Promise to slit her wrist to stop working class people from getting medical treatment
—Defend a system that is almost dead last in infant mortality for modernized countries
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 9:23 am
I can help but think that we all are some how responsible for someone like her getting elected. She clearly is imbalanced and that makes her dangerous. The years we have spent patting ourselves on the back and believing in our myths (like “freedom”) and letting the rich and powerful manipulate our thinking are now having the effect of ruining the country. Reality and rationality seem to have no place in our thinking and discussion. The extreme right, which is way to influential, seems only to want to damage the Democrats and maintain their rather childish beliefs no matter how much it damages the country.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 9:53 am
@Alex
You don’t understand. The policies of the current administration and congress are the most destructive to working class people and will further increase the cost of health care.
Without freedom capitalism will fail and we will all end up living in poverty without the ability to afford any medical care or create new wealth to pay for the debts that we already have.
Government healthcare will enslave us all and empower the government to confiscate the savings of everyone to pay the bill. It will be a disaster unlike anything you can imagine.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 9:56 am
There are plenty of other options to reduce healthcare costs that have been discarded by the powers that be. Here is a video clip of some much better solutions that have been proposed.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHbwdZXeUFo
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 10:13 am
No Curt, you don’t understand.
There is no proof that “capitalism will fail” if we stop allowing health care mega-companies to gouge the hell out of the public. You have no proof that “we will all end up living in poverty” if health care reform is enacted.
Bachmann propagandizes like Joseph Goebbels. And her followers seem to be eager to mimic her.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 11:05 am
This is not funny. Her words should be taken seriously. She is inciting people like Timothy McVeigh.
I can not believe how much violence she advocates. You can be against another party, you can be against bills or policy.. But Bachman crossed the line awhile ago as far as ethics. She is moved into advocating violence. If anyone should be arrested for conspiracy to incite riots and acts of terrorism, it is Michelle Bachman. She should not only be a censored and removed from office, but her computers and correspondence should seized by the FBI and investigated for futher calls for violence that she isn’t saying on public.
We as the citizens of the country should not have to tolerate having such congress person’s in office. Other countries must think we have lost our minds to allow such hate be advocated from the steps of our Capitol.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 11:06 am
Curt, your response here and in the earlier post on the Bachmann Lake Elmo rally reveals you to be a blind, fanatical follower of the demagogue, Bachmann. You say that Bachmann’s HR 636 (or really in the current Congress HR 502 which is the same thing) is a better solution. Explain how my being able to deduct the cash outlay for overpriced health insurance is going to reduce the monopoly power of these health insurance cartels and their prices and costs? There is a reason most other countries have nationalized health care and it’s not because of ideology. It’s because it works and works reasonably well so that all people can get decent health care. It’s the present system that enslaves us, not a system that would allow all reasonable access to health care. The disaster which is going to happen is if we don’t adopt the public option.
You are being simply manipulated by the big insurance companies which are using their monopoly profits, to spin lies and propaganda to defeat what they realize will be an end to their monopolies. Don’t be a dupe.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 12:10 pm
The only “Freedom” being curtailed here is the freedom to let poor people go without health care and the freedom of HMOs to totally screw their policy-holders.
I say those are some freedoms we can afford to lose.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 12:37 pm
@jonerik
I completely agree with you, as Machmman does, that the insurance monopoly is part of the health care problem and that the we need to reduce their costs.
How that is done is the only question and I’m not work a government run system of confiscating savings to pay an even bigger prise. I want lower costing health care so that more people can afford it.
Most other countries that have nationalized health care have suffered with massive shortages of doctors which translates into a much lower quality of care. Take Canada for example; Their costs of health care is lower only because the government does not have to include much of the actual costs that are paid for by the many of the public that travels to the US for surgical procedures and better care, which they pay for out of pocket.
The Canada government also don’t account for the loss of work that many suffer from when their medical treatment it delayed or rationed. That is how the Canada government gets away with saying their costs are lower, then they are actually much higher. The burden of the most expensive medical treatmens have been shifted to the public, so that the govenrment can lower their head-count cost.
The Obamacare plan is attempting to do the same thing, but if you were to add the costs of new government employees, shortages of docs, increased costs of regulations and the loss of the private insurance industry, not to mention the loss of pay from time away from work we will all suffer when waiting to see a doc or get a medical treatment, the total cost of healthcare will be triple what it is today.
This is not a good idea. Obamacare is a very bad plan for the health of everyone and will hurt the economy even more.
You are one that is caught up in your party in support of Obamacare out of obligation for voting for him and unable to realize that you may have made a very bad decision as the Dems continue to block good ideas for health care reform and instead push for Obamacare.
I want lower cost health care and I’m not going to trade the only source of economic growth (free market capitalism) for a bad idea that will triple my costs.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 12:40 pm
Curt, you are regurgitating the talking points well. Specifically how has the administration hurt the middle class? How can making insurance affordable for the poor and middle class hurt the poor and middle class (specifically based on sound economic reason please, not something you heard on the radio)?
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 1:30 pm
“Take Canada for example; Their costs of health care is lower only because the government does not have to include much of the actual costs that are paid for by the many of the public that travels to the US for surgical procedures and better care, which they pay for out of pocket.”
No one who repeats that statement with your evident sincerity can be taken seriously on this subject. The fact is, the stories of mass migrations of Canadians to US health care providers is not true. Most of the Canadians treated in the US were here anyway (you don’t go back to Moose Jaw to see a doctor when you’re wintering in Scottsdale) or were sent here by their provincial plans because the facilities in the US were closer and it saved on transportation costs.
There has been a detailed study on this very question: http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/21/3/19.
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 1:39 pm
Curt,
It pains me to read your drivel, but at least you could spare the few minutes to read through your BS and use your spell checker before you post.
I know you are busy responding to numerous websites with your GOP spam talking points, but you would be more effective if your posts were organized and coherent.
Keep up the posting, I hear you get 25 cents for each one.
HA!
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 1:48 pm
“Something is way crazy out there” Michele Bachmann said.
Friendly amendment? “someONE is crazy out there” makes more sense … and it’s the Representative from the Minnesota 6th suggesting people slash their wrists to stave off needed health care reform
Comment posted September 1, 2009 @ 10:17 pm
I wonder if she has always talked like this and all because of the web and blogs we are finally getting to hear it.
Comment posted September 2, 2009 @ 2:31 pm
I don’t get how all the chicken little’s have been able to hijack this entire discussion so successfully. Don’t worry about things like facts, truth or the greater good of our country. Socialism and capitalism have been working fine in this country together! Socialism is not evil, people are!
We have entirely socialized security, from national defense down to local PD’s. I cannot think of one country that has not socialized their security. It’s a basic need that we are all paying for and very proud of. Think of all the private industries (defense contractors…) that support our security, works pretty well doesn’t it?
K-12 Education, another basic need that is socialized, yet there are many private schools that do quite well.
Another basic need is healthcare, which is already partially socialized. Private industry profits immensely off this sector even the socialized part!
It seems like we are living in hypocrisies finest day’s. People pay lip sevice to J.C. and then turn around and spread hate and fear. People accept medicare/medicade… and rail about socialized medicine. For the record, Michelle Bachman is currently benefiting from socialized medicine and is trying to deny it for everyone else. I have not heard of one Canadian or European that would trade their system for ours. I know a lot of Americans that would trade theirs though.
/rant
Pingback posted September 3, 2009 @ 9:34 am
[...] paraphrasing from a speech Rep. Bachmann (MN) recently gave. And I’m only barely exaggerating what she said. I swear. I think she meant that people should make a covenant, slit their wrists and become blood [...]
Comment posted September 3, 2009 @ 10:45 am
The only hope to get rid of Michele is that Rapture sucks up 144,000 voters from our district, and that people donate to Tarryl Clark (her opponent this time around), at http://www.tarryclark.com.
Comment posted September 3, 2009 @ 2:51 pm
Just remember, Michelle dear, “up the track” and not “across the street”!
Comment posted September 3, 2009 @ 5:13 pm
“Government healthcare will enslave us all and empower the government to confiscate the savings of everyone to pay the bill. It will be a disaster unlike anything you can imagine.”
Replace ‘government healthcare’ with ‘Wall Street greed and corruption’ and you’d be correct. Secondly, every other industrialized country in the world does this and not only do they rank higher in almost every category you can measure health standards by, they also do it for half the cost or less than what we do it for. We have an expensive and useless system that leaves 1 in 6 people without any care at all. And of the people that ARE insured, 1 in 4 are turned down for procedures by insurance companies.
Pingback posted September 3, 2009 @ 7:35 pm
[...] talking to God reeks of religiosity. But more chilling are the words she delivered on September 1, 2009: What we have to do today is make a covenant, to slit our wrists, be blood brothers on this [...]
Pingback posted September 15, 2009 @ 11:29 am
[...] Bachmann feels pretty strongly about health care reform legislation. Speaking in Colorado recently, she made these remarks about extending health care coverage for Americans: This is slavery. It’s nothing more than [...]
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