TRUE? – AT 8:07 A.M. ET: Dr. Ben Carson has become a favorite speaker among conservative Republicans. I don't think he can get the presidential nomination, but might just pull out the vice-presidential nod, depending on circumstances.
He made some comments on where blacks stand politically that I thought were worth noting. I don't know if he's accurate, but I hope he is. From The Hill:
Ben Carson on Saturday said African-American voters are "waking up" to the possibility of supporting GOP candidates for office like himself.
"I think there's a lot of people who are waking up," the neurosurgeon-turned-presidential candidate said at the Family Leadership Summit in Ames, Iowa.
"I met with a group of black pastors yesterday and people are waking up in droves," he continued. "I think they're realizing what's been happening here."
Carson said he converted to the Republican Party after growing up and going to school in Democratic strongholds during the Reagan administration.
"I started listening to Ronald Reagan … and I said he doesn't doesn't sound like that," he said, noting he had heard horror stories about conservatives during his entire upbringing.
Carson criticized President Obama for shrinking the size of the U.S. military in the face of terrorism threats in the Middle East.
"Our military is shrinking while our enemies are growing and metastasizing," he said. "It seems like we're trying to destroy ourselves. We've got to do better than that."
The Republican presidential hopeful said he would prepared to fight Islamic State in Syria and Iraq if successful in his bid to become commander-in-chief.
"We have radical Islamic jihadists who want to destroy us and they want to destroy our way of life," he said. "And their existence is a threat to us. We cannot be in that mindset that we made a mistake and we spent a bunch of money, so let's just get into our little cocoon. That's not going to work."
COMMENT: I would love to see some serious polling in black America to determine actual attitudes, rather than the attitudes assigned to African-Americans by the media and their own self-appointed "leaders."
For example, we're told that blacks hate the police, feel "oppressed" by authority. And yet, when New York City's former, and great, police commissioner, Ray Kelly, went to black churches to speak, he always got a standing ovation. I wonder why. I also wonder why the press is so uninterested in the answer.
July 20, 2015 |