Meeting Ben Carson 

We met in the speaker’s lounge. A good-looking man, about my age. Strong handshake. Gentle smile. Good first impression.

At that time, I knew two things about him. He was a famous neurosurgeon… and he was running for president. Since he was the keynote speaker at Freedom Fest, 2020, I figured he had conservative or libertarian views.

His speech was presidential in the old style. Solid. Serious. Sensible. His demeanor was polished. His performance was practiced. His speech was mostly memorized, but he extemporized several times, including making a little joke about something I had said to him in the lounge, something he apparently disagreed with. But when he said it, he smiled at me. I was flattered. “This guy’s good,” I thought.

Why Do Liberals Hate Ben Carson?

It was only after the symposium that I did some research on him. His life story is impressive and inspiring.

Ben Carson was born into poverty and a broken home, grew up in the streets of Detroit, and spent his formative years at a time when “systemic” racism was a reality in much of the USA.

But thanks to the tough love of his mother, he graduated third in his high school class, got a BS from Yale, and went to the University of Michigan Medical School, where he graduated with honors.

His professional career is a tale of overcoming obstacles, accomplishing ambitious goals, and achieving recognition. Some of his accomplishments:

* At 33, he became the director of pediatric neurosurgery at the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center.

* In 2000, he received the Award for Greatest Public Service Benefiting the Disadvantaged.

* In 2001, he was elected by the Library of Congress as one of the 89 who earned the designation Library of Congress Living Legend.

* In 2005, he received the William E. Simon Prize for Philanthropy.

* In 2008, he was named by US News & World Report as one of “America’s Greatest Leaders.”

* In 2010, he was elected into the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine, considered one of the highest honors in the fields of health and medicine.

* He has 38 honorary doctorate degrees and dozens of national merit citations.

You would think that a Black man that did so much with so little would be a hero to the liberal establishment. And for many years he was – sort of. Then he made the mistake of publicly criticizing President Obama. That got him chastised. But when he decided to run for president on a moderately conservative platform, the gloves came off. From then on, he’s been characterized, along with other accomplished Black conservatives as a “black face of White racism.”

He’s been called a “liar” for minor discrepancies between some of his speeches and his autobiography. He’s been called sexist and transphobic. He’s even been criticized for the revolutionary surgery that made him famous (separating twins joined at the head) because the patients survived with some brain damage.

No, Ben Carson gets no kudos from the NYT, The Washington Post, CNBC, and the others. And my White liberal friends tell me he’s a “sellout to his people.” As if they represent his people. I keep wondering how much more civil society would be if – against all odds – he had become our 45th president.

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Voter Fraud Charged in Michigan 

A Michigan county elections official and former township clerk was charged with ballot tampering related to the Aug. 2020 primary election, according to State Attorney General Dana Nessel. Nessel alleged that Kathy Funk purposely broke a seal on a container for ballots so that the votes couldn’t be totaled during an anticipated recount. She narrowly won reelection in the unofficial count, the AG’s office said. Ballot tampering is a felony in Michigan, carrying a maximum sentence of five years in prison upon conviction. Click here.

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St. Augustine, Florida

There are some international cities I can’t get enough of. Rome is at the top of the list. And then there’s Paris, Barcelona, Mumbai, and Madrid. In the US, New York and Chicago used to be my favorites. But recently, they’ve fallen off the list. Three of my current favorites are in Florida: Miami, Key West, and St. Augustine.

St. Augustine is America’s oldest city. It was established by the Spanish in 1565. The city offers most of what you’d want from an old Florida city: a well-preserved “old town” featuring colonial architecture, galleries, gardens, gift shops, and plenty of good restaurants. It also has something you wouldn’t expect: 43 miles of beautiful white-sand beaches.

My favorite place to stay in St. Augustine is the Casa Monica Resort and Spa (pictured above).

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After Spike Milligan published “Monty,” the third installment of his memoirs, a reader wrote to praise the book, but added that he was bothered by a reference Milligan made about “cowardice in the face of the enemy.” 

Milligan’s Reply:

“Well, the point is, I suffered from cowardice in the face of the enemy throughout the war – in the face of the enemy, also in the legs, the elbows, and the wrists; in fact, after two years in the front line a mortar bomb exploded by my head (or was it my head exploded by a mortar bomb), and it so frightened me, I put on a tremendous act of stammering, stuttering, and shivering. This mixed with cries of ‘mother’ and a free flow of dysentery enabled me to be taken out of the line and down-graded to B2. But for that brilliant performance, this letter would be coming to you from a grave in Italy.

“Any more questions from you and our friendship is at an end.

 (Source: Letters of Note)

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“Achieving big goals requires you to become a bigger person. You must develop new habits, abilities, skills, and attitudes. You must stretch yourself, and in so doing, you will be forever stretched.” – Vic Johnson

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To conflate is to fuse or confuse. To bring different things together and fuse them into a single entity – and, by extension, mistakenly treat them as equivalent. Example: “It is easy for those who conflate religion with government to interpret any criticism of government or policy as an ‘attack’ on their ‘faith’.” (Christina Engela in Loderunner)

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Re Critical Race Theory:

“Have you read How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi or White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo?” – AG

My response: 

Yes. I read both of them. And I’ve mentioned both of them here on the blog.

They are… how shall I put it? Just plain dumb.

CRT attributes all racial inequities to racism. Not work. Not study. Not integrity. Not ambition. The only reason one ethnic group is richer or poorer than another is because of institutional racism.

But don’t ask a proponent of CRT why it is that Blacks from Nigeria or many parts of the Caribbean outperform African Americans, Hispanics, and even White Americans in many important financial metrics. Just asking the question, they will tell you, means you are racist.

Click here for John Stossel’s comments on these two books.

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