Amid a rash of nasty-grams, vandalism, and threats against House members who voted for the health care bill this week, there have been no public reports so far out of Minnesota.

Capitol Police and the FBI are taking special measures to protect vulnerable lawmakers and their families as they head home for a two-week spring recess. Not surprisingly, the ugliness has bled into the political debate. Democrats have accused Republicans and their Tea Party allies of using overheated rhetoric to fan the flames of fanaticism across the nation. Republican leader John Boehner has called the incidents "unacceptable. " But with Texas Republican Randy Neugebauer heard shouting "baby-killer" from the House floor during the debate, tensions have been palpable. In Tucson, somebody shattered the glass-door to the office of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz. (Pictured here). Of particular concern have been death threats against anti-abortion Democrats like Michigan's Bart Stupak, who was involved in a last-minute deal intended to maintain restrictions on federal funding for abortion. Some Republican opponents of the health care bill still call the abortion deal a sham. Among the anti-abortion Democrats who sided with Stupak is Minnesota's Jim Oberstar, who held out for a while but then pronounced himself satisfied with the abortion language in the bill. But despite the controversy, Oberstar's office reports no deviations from Minnesota Nice. "Nothing out of the ordinary," said Oberstar spokesman John Schadl. "Just a few comments that would embarrass the mothers and aunts of the callers or e-mailers, and those tend to come from outside of the district. "