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Bachmann Charity Work: Christian And Controversial

Bachmann

First Posted: 08/18/11 05:37 PM ET Updated: 10/18/11 06:12 AM ET

This article is part of a series in which HuffPost is taking a close look at the charitable giving of Republican presidential candidates. How much and to whom did they give? How does their giving compare with their fellow Americans? And what impact did they ultimately have?

Michele Bachmann loves to regale voters with examples of how her Christian faith informs her choices. It has also influenced the groups she has chosen to support over the years, and nearly all of them have shared her evangelical view of the world.

When on the stump she is by turns humble and righteous. She rarely lets more than a few minutes pass without a quote from scripture or a reference to the Divine. But for all her emphasis on Christian virtue, and the Bible's directive to "honor the Lord with your wealth" [Proverbs 3:9], there is scant record of donations Bachmann has made to charity.

The winner of the Iowa Republican Straw Poll has never released her income tax returns, nor has she been known to have acknowledged making a single charitable contribution. According to her most recent financial disclosure forms, Bachmann's net worth is between $912,000 and $2.1 million.

But questions about her personal charitable activities remain unanswered -- neither Bachmann's congressional office nor her campaign staff responded to repeated calls and emails from The Huffington Post about this story.

This information blackout is surprising, says Steven Schier, a political science professor at Minnesota's Carleton College. "It's unusual for a prominent candidate for a major party's presidential nomination to try to prevent serious scrutiny of her/his personal and public life as an adult," he explained in an email to The Huffington Post. "Such resistance merely invites more media scrutiny and will raise questions among contributors and voters about the candidate. It's also a certain loser as a general election strategy after the nomination, when the public wants to get to know a candidate."

Without records from Bachmann, The Huffington Post analyzed hundreds of public documents and interviewed more than a dozen veteran nonprofit and civic leaders in and around her hometown of Stillwater, Minn. The investigation reveals a long record of Bachmann's personal involvement -- as opposed to financial support -- with advocacy groups, foster care programs, Christian ministries and, briefly, with a charter school she helped to start. The documents, which include Bachmann's state and federal disclosure forms, congressional records and prior interviews, span nearly 20 years and feature organizations whose philosophies largely align with the lawmaker's evangelical principles.

Prior to her 2006 election to Congress, when she served in the State Senate, Bachmann poured most of her energies into groups within her Minnesota community. Since arriving in Washington, however, Bachmann's fan base and her pet causes have grown broader and more sophisticated.

In the coming months her life will be put under a microscope. "As Hillary Clinton observed almost twenty years ago, there is no 'zone of privacy' for presidential candidates," Schier observed.

Given this much attention, one thing is clear: The people and causes Bachmann has championed throughout her career will themselves become an issue in her campaign.

Close to Home

In 1993, Bachmann was instrumental in founding the New Heights charter school for at-risk children in Stillwater. While required to be non-denominational in order to receive taxpayer funding, complaints from parents began soon after it opened about strong Christian overtones in the curriculum. Fearing the school would lose its accreditation, Bachmann resigned from the board less than six months after the school started.

At the same time, Bachmann and her husband opened their home to a series of foster children -- 23 girls in all, she has said. Along with the couple's five children, they lived in the same house at various times over the course of six years. Former social services case worker George Hendrickson has said he found her to be "relaxed, organized and engaging."

Despite Bachmann's near refusal to go beyond her usual talking points about being a foster parent, as a presidential candidate she will find it difficult to keep the curtains completely drawn over this part of her life. The Associated Press recently reported on inconsistencies in Bachmann's tally of the number of girls who stayed at her home. The congresswoman has said 20 in some cases, 23 in others and has yet to clarify her statements.

There have also been questions about Bachmann's church, which along with her work on the charter school and her care for foster children accounted for most of her community involvement in her home state of Minnesota. Bachmann was a longtime member of Salem Lutheran Church, a conservative evangelical Lutheran institution belonging to the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod. The denomination has angered Catholics with its doctrine that "sees the characteristics of the Antichrist in the Roman Catholic Papacy." In June, just days before she announced her run for president, Bachmann resigned from Salem Lutheran. Her church pastor said the Bachmanns stopped attending in 2009 and that their departure was a mere formality.

Bachmann has refused to reveal the name of the church she currently attends. However, HuffPost has confirmed that she has attended services at Stillwater's Eagle Brook Church, an evangelical mega-church that draws about 15,000 people each weekend.

Eagle Brook Executive Pastor Scott Anderson told HuffPost that Bachmann and her family "have been known to attend services" and "they've been seen around campus." As a church founded on Baptist principles, Anderson explained that the worship services have music and stage production, a style he described as "real and relevant."

Like other evangelical Christian ministries, Eagle Brook encourages members to donate part of their gross income -- usually 10 percent -- to the church, a practice known as tithing. "We believe it's part of living a generous life," Anderson said.

The Eagle Brook website links to a Christian financial counselor who offers biblical verses and basic advice about managing family household expenses. Anderson declined to say whether Bachmann donates to Eagle Brook, but estimated that around 60 percent of attendees are "regularly participating financially."

Bachmann's congressional salary is $174,000. According to her most recent disclosure forms, Marcus Bachmann's Christian psychotherapy business last year grossed between $100,002 and $200,000.

In the Nation's Capital

When Bachmann arrived in Washington in 2007, she came as a lowly House freshman but quickly became a favorite on cable news shows when her raw and unbridled outspokenness made for great television. As the Tea Party rose to prominence during the 2008 election cycle, her stock rose with it.

Over time, Bachmann's presence at charity fundraisers became known as a surefire way for organizations to garner big buzz and draw in more paying guests. Without donating a nickel of her own money, Bachmann found she could be a big contributor to the success of any gala dinner she attended.

In the past 12 months, Bachmann has lent her star power to several causes sure to stir controversy in her campaign.

Last year, the presidential hopeful graced the podium for the Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion rights group. She also accepted an "A in English" award from USA English, Inc., which wants to mandate the use of English in the United States.

In November, Bachmann spoke at an awards dinner for the David Horowitz Freedom Center. The evening honored Pamela Geller, the notorious anti-Muslim blogger who stirred up opposition to an Islamic center near Ground Zero in New York. Horowitz himself is the author of The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America, which singles out liberals in academia and prompted death threats against the people he named.

Bachmann more recently presented a Citizens United award to anti-feminist activist Phyllis Schlafly, who in 2007 argued that there could be no such thing as rape within marriage because, "by getting married, the woman has consented to sex, and I don't think you can call it rape."

Susan B. Anthony List Award
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Bachmann received the pro-life group's "Distinguished Leader" award at their 2010 gala in Washington, D.C. Her former GOP presidential rival, Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty gave the keynote address. Bachmann is flanked by by SBA List execs Marjorie Dannenfelser and Marilyn Musgrave. (Credit: Susan B Anthony List)
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And, in less than two weeks, Bachmann is scheduled to be the keynote speaker at the annual fundraising dinner of the Florida Family Policy Center, an arm of the conservative Family Research Council that opposes abortion, taxes, divorce and the teaching of evolution in public schools. A $25,000 donation will net two seats at Bachmann's table.

All these appearances may help explain Bachmann's conspicuous absence from volunteer and donor lists in her district for such mainstream local nonprofits as the United Way, the Salvation Army or the Rotary Club.

Joanne Honsvall-Berg heads the campaign for the United Way of Washington County, the largest charitable organization in the St. Croix Valley area. "Bachmann has never donated to the United Way that I know of -- and I've been around a long time," she told HuffPost. "She's never participated in our programs."

Representatives for the Salvation Army and the Stillwater Sunrise Rotary Club gave similar responses. Spokesmen from Bachmann's alma maters -- Winona State University and Regents University -- declined to comment.


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This article is part of a series in which HuffPost is taking a close look at the charitable giving of Republican presidential candidates. How much and to whom did they give? How does their giving comp...
This article is part of a series in which HuffPost is taking a close look at the charitable giving of Republican presidential candidates. How much and to whom did they give? How does their giving comp...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
morgansher
just disgusted in general
07:33 PM on 09/29/2011
Tithing to one's church is NOT giving to charity. Sorry. Tithing is to support the church, maintain it's infrastructure, pay the pastor(s), assistants, utilities, etc. It is NOT charitable giving.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Grace Hulbert
Get your Bichon!
05:11 PM on 09/27/2011
I would like to see Bachmann face some serious questions about Peter Waldron.

Waldron, the evangelical organizer who helped Michele Bachmann win the Ames Straw Poll in Iowa was previously charged with terrorism in Uganda after being arrested for possession of assault rifles and ammunition in February 2006, just days before Uganda's first multi-party elections in 20 years.

A deeply religious born-again Christian, Waldron traveled to Uganda in 2004 to sell HIV-monitoring computer software to the government and preach on the weekends. There, he attended and was featured in the Church services of Ugandan pastor Martin Ssempa, “the prominent supporter of Uganda’s draconian Anti-Homosexuality Bill, which calls for the death penalty for LGBT people under certain circumstances.”
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
morgansher
just disgusted in general
07:35 PM on 09/29/2011
Well, I think her association with Waldron indicates that she approves of his pro death penalty view toward the world's gays. Preying on Africans is some kind of perverted though.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
01:30 AM on 09/01/2011
I was enticed here by that caption, "Bachmann's Pet Causes, Christian Controversy" and expected to find that Ms. Bachmann had a real Tasmanian Devil. I hoped to see it here on a leash snarling and making all sort of aggressive moves. Oh well, can't have everything you want, I guess.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
morgansher
just disgusted in general
07:36 PM on 09/29/2011
Well, go make do with some milk and cookies to console those failed expectations.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GoodbyeRubyTuesday
Daring Denouncer of Dominionists
03:17 PM on 08/31/2011
Michelle Bachmann is a Christian supremacist and a do.min.ion.ist. Argue all you want but she maintains no separation between her political views and her religious views.
This country was not founded to be a Christian-only nation; Americans have the rights of religious freedom; our leaders should know that.
researcher
researcher
09:14 PM on 08/30/2011
I will vote for her over perry because she is prettier.

signed
your average america voter that watchs fox noise daily.

the world is living proof of what occurs in a nation where the religious take over the gov and it aint pretty like bachmann. our framers of the consitution knew this full well. most christians do not and the evangels really dont know.

the evangels have made a god in their image which they have every right to do but when they try to control gov using that false god it is a threat to the republic. the capitalists are doing a good enough job of destroying the republic they dont need the evangels support.

look close the evangels are pawns of this capitalism american style of profits over people even sick people.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iknowscottyknows
09:46 PM on 08/31/2011
"I will vote for Obama because he's black."

signed,
your average feel-good think-little liberal.
12:23 AM on 09/01/2011
"I will vote for Obama because the leading Republican candidates seem mentally ill."

Signed,
A rather discouraged moderate
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
philszed
less disgruntled more sad
06:02 AM on 09/01/2011
"I will vote for Alan West because he's black"

signed: your average brain-damaged insomniac doo-doo head time wasting huff.po posting libero-hetero-impoto-yeah-thatguy
06:20 PM on 08/26/2011
If you read your bible, you'll know that she stands for what God would have her to do. The bible is very clear about helping others who can't help themselves, such as the children she took into her home. It is very clear that homosexuality is wrong. It is very clear that we are to tell people about Jesus and what he's done for us.
Argue against how God tells us how to live if you wish, but I'll stand for her. He's a lot bigger than the person writing this article and anyone else who would persecute her for her beliefs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
r henry
I live between concrete walls
09:44 AM on 08/31/2011
This is not a Christian nation. This is a secular nation. People are free to believe as they wish, including Ms. Bachmann. However, she should not be placed in a position of political authority where she is free to enforce her religious beliefs onto those who do not subscribe to them. God would have her preach, sure, but the presidential office is not and never should be the appropriate venue for her preaching. If your Bible says that homosexuality is wrong, then you are free to believe that. You should not be free to inflict that belief onto the citizens of this country who are homosexual, though. That is simply wrong.
01:10 PM on 08/31/2011
I guess what you're saying then, is that it's ok to force your non-Christian or gay beliefs on Christians?

Hmmmm...that is simply wrong.
05:36 PM on 08/31/2011
I've never gotten a clear answer on why the prohibition against homosexuality is taken as law, but not the prohibition against shellfish in the same chapter. This is a serious question - I am honestly interested in the reasoning behind this.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iknowscottyknows
06:44 PM on 08/31/2011
I'll waste some time with you.

The Old Test. was written for the Jews, and we are not under that law. With Jesus came grace; short definition, we are no longer under the immediate consequences of the law, but we are told to be "holier." An example: Jesus said, "The law says Do not murder, but I say, Don't be angry." Another: "The law says, Do not commit adultery. I say, Do not lust."

In other words, He expects a deeper degree of holiness.

Even though we are not under the law and immediate consequences thereof, it reveals God's heart for his people. Prohibition of shellfish was one of cleanliness, but so was prohibition of sex with anyone but a husband and wife. That is God's Holy Bond which He created in the beginning and the only one He recognizes.

Jesus confirmed as much in Matthew 19.
08:02 PM on 08/31/2011
Iknowscottyknows just below my reply explains it very well. Many laws changed from the Old to the New Testament, but homosexuality wasn't one of them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
travelingblogger
10:48 AM on 08/26/2011
Bachmann is no christian. She hates gays but is married to one. She is her own charity, charging speaking fees of $50,000 plus expenses (she only stays in 5 star hotels). She accepts government subsidies (Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac loans, programs she wants to eliminate), employs illegals, and her husband runs a clinic where 80% of his clients are on Medicare and Medicaid (yet she wants to eliminate these programs). She has never dontated anything to any group at any time.
07:00 PM on 09/29/2011
Why do you think all the adoptees were female?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pmoschetta
Where are the Jobs, Speaker Boehner?
07:14 AM on 09/30/2011
She also receives $25k a year for her family's farm in forms of subsidies
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rndidonato
02:50 AM on 08/26/2011
I have never heard so many people attacking Christians as there on this site. You want to discuss politics, fine. But, is it really necessary to be so insulting? Whatever happened to letting people have an opinion different from yours? Couldn't you try to be civil? Most of the criticism is of a personal nature. Can you talk about the issues like the economy, etc.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
travelingblogger
10:52 AM on 08/26/2011
When christians start acting like Jesus, who NEVER discriminated against anyone for any reason, was a truely humble man, grateful for everything and everyone, and never exploited, harmed, threatened, killed, nor intimidated anyone, then perhaps the "attacks" on christians will stop.

Christians go so far as to murder people when those people reject the christians' theology (killing in the name of their god is the christian's defense) and tell the christians to go away. Christians are hell-bent on dominating the world and forcing their religion on everyone (making christianity no better than Islam).

If they really want to stop being "attacked" then keep they need to keep their religious views to themselve, or at least stop preaching. It really is annoying.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rndidonato
02:46 PM on 08/28/2011
I really think your reation is a little over the top. The Founders of our country came here to escape religious discrimination but it seems it has reared it's ugly head in this country. What you see as forcing religion on "everyone" is merely an attempt to maintain the foundations upon which this country was founded. It is very distressing to face the fact that today's soociety thinks that was once thought to be wrong is now okay. It's a lot to take. You're probably much too young to know what life was like in the 50's. While it wasn't perfect (civil rights for all Americans had yet to come), there was less animosity between citizens. The country had just recovered from WW II and was still celebrating the end of the war. Life was a lot happier without all the tension that exists today. Political correctness is the sign of the times. Too much attention to the trivial and not enough to what is really imnportatn.
08:07 PM on 08/31/2011
Have you really considered that one day when you meet God face to face, that it might help to know what God has for a salvation plan? Or maybe that you might wish you had listened to one of those annoying Christians?

Sorry to preach, my friend.
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12:53 PM on 08/26/2011
Sure can, just as soon as Xtians like Bachmann stop trying to turn the US into a theocracy. It isn't one and the rest of us are sick and tired of them trying to make it one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alisa Neely
i SUPPORT GAY RIGHTS....EQUAL RIGHTS really....i f
01:28 PM on 08/26/2011
well said.....i'm SICK of bible people ALWAYS trying to force GOD down everyone's throats....we DON'T want to be PREACHED at.....and GOD has NO PLACE in politics.....there is MORE to life then the GOOD BOOK......STOP living with your heads in the sand and in the DARK AGES.

alisa
10:38 AM on 08/25/2011
WHO CARES? It is time to get little "o" 's records which should include his college transcripts. Oh yea, he was a foreign student receiving government money for his education. Why can no one recall him at Columbia? Let's forget about Michelle, we need BHO's records now!!!
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Redhunteur
If I damn yer POV will u turn the other cheek?
04:43 AM on 08/31/2011
Well, he's OBVIOUSLY a hologram then...

Conspiracy theories are a lot of fun though, huh?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JeffWayne
01:37 PM on 08/31/2011
He graduated and recieved the honor of Magna cum Laude from Harvard in 1991. Magna cum Laude is based on both a high class ranking and a high grade point average.
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newamericanliberal
Facts don't stop being true by your disbelief
04:45 PM on 08/24/2011
" I love your Christ, but I do not love your Christians" True then and true now.

NAL
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newamericanliberal
Facts don't stop being true by your disbelief
04:31 PM on 08/24/2011
Ahh, and such a saint she be. Talk but No Money, please.

And, this is just what we need, such a loving woman.

In November, Bachmann spoke at an awards dinner for the David Horowitz Freedom Center. The evening honored Pamela Geller, the notorious anti-Muslim blogger who stirred up opposition to an Islamic center near Ground Zero in New York. Horowitz himself is the author of The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America, which singles out liberals in academia and prompted death threats against the people he named.

NAL
10:42 AM on 08/25/2011
So what's your point? We are trying to get funding for a Piggy Park BBQ restaurant across from the new Mosque. Smoke that pork 24/7/365 will be open early and closed late. I can't wait to eat their...how 'bout you? Go Bachmann...
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Redhunteur
If I damn yer POV will u turn the other cheek?
04:46 AM on 08/31/2011
Wow, there's some great tolerance for you. Who Would Jesus Offend?

And your sociopathetic rants are nullified when you fail to properly use there/their not to mention you said this restaurant will be open 24/7/365 and then in the very next sentence say it will open early and close late. Brilliant.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
travelingblogger
11:02 AM on 08/26/2011
Bachmann got $75,000 to make that speech along with expenses.

Originally, the group had her booked into the Greenwich Hotel, but she had a fit and demanded to be put into the presidential suite at the Millenium Hilton.
04:01 PM on 08/24/2011
I give her credit for taking in so many foster children. Too many are left in the system. Despite her political/religous beliefs, this is very admirable.
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newamericanliberal
Facts don't stop being true by your disbelief
04:32 PM on 08/24/2011
Ya, the money was just, well, because.

NAL
10:43 AM on 08/25/2011
Get your thought together before posting...you sound stupid.
09:23 AM on 08/27/2011
She got paid for every girl she took into her home. She didn't do it for nothing.
05:38 PM on 08/31/2011
It still matters. She did a good thing.

However, it's hard to support the placement of children with a woman who otherwise, is clearly mentally disturbed.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dengal
11:09 PM on 08/22/2011
she scares the beejeebus outta me
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GDWhiteman
Christian mystic iconoclast
07:33 PM on 09/30/2011
Relax. She's got as much change of being president as I do - and I haven't even declared.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sivachok
05:42 PM on 08/22/2011
It is blasphemy to take the name of the Lord (or His Words) unwarrantably.
Repu(bully)canism rejects all that the Son of God wanted to be done to the poor and unlucky.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RussianEconomics
Elementary, my dear Liberal.
02:40 PM on 08/24/2011
To that I believe she might say, it's the job of the Church to care for people, not the government. Where is the charitable spirit in forcing others (through taxes) to give? Man looks upon the money. God looks upon the heart.

(This is not even mentioning that the most successful mechanism throughout history in promoting the progression of the poor has been the free enterprise system.)
08:46 PM on 08/24/2011
Dear Mr. RussianEconomics:
You have not related your comment to my comment. My comment is on what the son of God wants us to do. You have aired your opinion that is at odds with the Scripture. About the hypothetical answer of the lady: You mean that the government need not toe the line of the Church. Don't you see how it goes against the much-brayed evangelism of some of your Repu(bully)cans?

The government need not force rich people to give more taxes. Do you read news from all sources? Don't you know that a few days ago Mr. Warren Buffet deplored the low taxes on the 'ultra-rich' even in these hard times. Didn't you read the news of a one-day conference of a few hundreds of super-rich in which they expressed their readiness to pay more taxes.

It is very funny to read your dictum that "God looks upon the heart". So you only feed your heart to exist; you don't spend anything to feed your stomach! Perhaps you don't have a stomach!

Only a heartless Repu(bully)can like you can think and write like this even at the same time as one out of every four children in this 'leader nation of the world' cannot have just one good meal a day.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pmoschetta
Where are the Jobs, Speaker Boehner?
07:21 AM on 09/30/2011
Read our Constitution some time, Russian......there is a specific article, one I cannot recall at the moment, that states to the effect taxes will be raised upon every citizen in the event it is necessary to bring in new revenue during an economic crisis

So, why won't our Republicant Congress members uphold our Constitution?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
keezze
09:25 AM on 08/22/2011
greed will be her down fall
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
travelingblogger
11:03 AM on 08/26/2011
As will her lies.