Here is an article from Dr. Keith Ablow of FoxNews.com stating that Dr. Ben Carson should not apologize for his comments at the National Prayer Breakfast due to the fact that his profession, a neurosurgeon, requires him to be fully honest with his patients:
http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2013/02/14/dr-ben-carson-doesnt-need-to-apologize-to-obama-simply-delivered-his-diagnosis/?intcmp=HPBucket
Ben Carson, MD, the head of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins, 
has done as much with one speech to present his bonafides for president 
of the United States as a man can do—not least of all because he 
delivered that speech at the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, in
 front of President Obama, with whose policies he obviously disagrees.
Carson’s ideas about how the flat tax mirrors the biblical notion of 
tithing, his mention of “ObamaCare” and how it has put America’s health 
care system on the road to ruin, how political correctness is stifling 
honest dialogue and the national debt being immoral could not have sat 
well with President Obama.  Many have mistakenly argued that the Prayer 
Breakfast was an inappropriate forum for such unadorned, challenging 
statements.
Well, let me tell you something about Ben Carson and other surgeons I
 was privileged to train with at Johns Hopkins during my medical and 
surgical rotations before I chose to become a psychiatrist:  They don’t 
pull punches when a battle needs to be joined, and they don’t hate the 
people to whom they have to deliver bad news. 
Ben Carson has sat with many, many families and told them that their 
children had tumors growing inside their heads and that he would need to
 cut open their skulls and remove those malignancies. 
He has told fathers and mothers and brothers and sisters that there 
was a chance that the people they loved the most in the world would not 
survive the next six or twelve hours in the operating room. 
And, in 1987, Carson had to have told the parents of twins joined at 
the head that they both might perish under the knife, before he made 
history by walking into an operating room and separating them from one 
another, in a 22-hour procedure that left both alive.
So anyone who tells Ben Carson that he ought not tell the truth 
because his words will be heard in a traditionally “non-partisan” arena 
ought to reconsider. 
What America needs is a great surgeon who doesn’t much care whether 
you ask him what ails you and how fix it even if that question comes in 
the hallway, the waiting room, in the cafeteria, in the street, over 
breakfast or in a chapel. Why? Because, for him, the truth is the only 
thing worth speaking, no matter the audience. 
No mother wants to hear that her 2-year-old might die, no 11-year-old
 wants to hear that if he survives he might never walk again, and no 
president wants to hear that his policies are bankrupting a nation, both
 fiscally and psychologically.  But the truth is the truth, and there’s 
no sense withholding it when the patient is a kid who needs saving or a 
family that needs courage or a country that needs both. 
Another thing about Ben Carson and other surgeons I scrubbed in with:
  They like to leave clean margins. That means that when they see 
pathology—like cancer—they want to cut it away so that only healthy 
tissue is left behind.  They have to be willing to make people bleed, in
 order to make them live. 
They aren’t afraid of fallout. No half-measures will do. And the 
specimens sent off to pathology tell the truth every time.  Either they 
got it all, or they didn’t.  There’s no spin involved.
So, Ben Carson need not apologize to President Obama. The surgeon 
made his diagnosis.  He enunciated a treatment plan that could save the 
life of this nation.  And anyone who argues that he should have held his
 tongue out of “respect” doesn’t understand that telling the truth to a 
man, however powerful, is still the ultimate form of respect.
 
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