WASHINGTON β Ben Carson made his debut as secretary of Housing and Urban Development Monday by telling agency employees about the virtues of the βcan-doβ American society. Carson said this value system was best exemplified by slaves, whom he characterized as immigrants who came to the United States with very little and worked very hard.
βThatβs what America is about,β Carson said. βA land of dreams and opportunity. There were other immigrants who came here in the bottom of slave ships, worked even longer, even harder for less. But they too had a dream that one day their sons, daughters, grandsons, granddaughters, great grandsons, great granddaughters might pursue prosperity and happiness in this land.β
One HUD employee who was in the room for Carsonβs speech said there was no audible reaction to Carsonβs slave ship remark, although she was shocked by it and immediately recognized that itβd be a problem. She added that overall, people at the agency are excited about their new boss.
The Senate approved Carson, a neurosurgeon with no experience in housing policy, to the job last week.
In 2013, Carson said Obamacare was βthe worst thing that has happened in this nation since slavery.β
βAnd it is in a way, it is slavery in a way, because it is making all of us subservient to the government, and it was never about health care,β he added. βIt was about control.β
Carson also spent part of his speech to agency employees Monday talking about the human brain.
β[E]very human being, regardless of their ethnicities, or their background, they have a brain, the human brain,β he said, later adding, βYou canβt overload [the brain]. Have you ever heard people say, βDonβt do that or youβll overload your brainβ? You canβt overload the human brain. ... So we need to concentrate a little less on what we canβt do and a little more on what we can do.β
Later Monday, Carson defended his comments in an interview with SiriusXMβs βUrban View,β arguing that a person βcan be an involuntary immigrant.β
βI think people need to actually look up the word βimmigrant,ββ Carson told host Armstrong Williams. βWhether you are voluntary or involuntary, if you come from outside to the inside, youβre an immigrant. Whether youβre legal or youβre illegal, you come from the outside to the inside, youβre an immigrant. Slaves came here as involuntary immigrants, but they still had the strength to hold on.β
Carson also put up a statement on Facebook Monday night, saying the βslave narrative and immigrant narrative are two entirely different experiences.β
This story has been updated to include Carsonβs later comments.
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