Candidate
Carson tours Ferguson, says lack of 'respect,' not race is issue
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[September 12, 2015]
By Patricia Rice
FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) - Republican
presidential candidate Ben Carson toured Ferguson, Missouri on Friday,
looking into efforts to rebuild the riot-weary St. Louis suburb and
offering advice on how to mend racial divisions in the United States.
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Carson, a retired pediatric neurosurgeon who has seen his
popularity surge recently in opinion polls, visited with business
owners, community leaders, clergy and others who have been working
to heal Ferguson and the surrounding St. Louis area after months of
sometimes violent protests.
Ferguson and surrounding communities were thrust into the national
spotlight in August 2014 after a white Ferguson policeman shot and
killed unarmed black teenager Michael Brown.
The killing exposed a deeply ingrained racial divide in the region
and in many other parts of the country, and helped spur a national
debate on police treatment of minorities.
On Friday, Carson, who is African-American, said he does not see
racial issues as being as much of a problem for America as other
social problems, including education inequities and a breakdown in
values.
"Education is the great divide," Carson said. "Children need to
understand that they have to get a good education."
He also said that mutual respect - across races and between police
and civilians - should be a focus.
"We need to de-emphasize race and emphasize respect for each other,"
he said. "If we respect people, we can begin to understand them. Our
strength is in our unity."
Carson said he was raised to respect the police and "never had any
problem."
The candidate held a news conference and gave a speech at Republican
activist Phyllis Schlafly's national Eagle Forum convention in St.
Louis.
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Carson also took the opportunity to underscore his anti-abortion
position, saying that the "Black Lives Matter" movement that grew
out of the Brown killing should include "black lives taken by
abortion."
Some Republican presidential candidates have criticized the
movement, saying it has encouraged anti-police violence.
A Quinnipiac University poll released on Friday showed Carson second
only to Donald Trump in garnering favor from likely Republican
voters in the Iowa caucus. The survey put support for Trump at 27
percent, followed by Carson at 21 percent.
Patricia McNeal, 75, who works in Ferguson but lives in nearby
Florissant, said she sees Carson as a "man of integrity."
"He does not try to degrade other people," she said.
For more on the 2016 presidential race, see the Reuters blog, “Tales
from the Trail” (http://blogs.reuters.com/talesfromthetrail/)
(Writing by Carey Gillam; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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