Here is an article from David Limbaugh from Townhall.com stating that Dr. Benjamin Carson was right to challenge President Obama's policies at the National Prayer Breakfast and that it showed great courage to challenge his policies in public.  Dr. Benjamin Carson is a neurosurgeon and the Director of Pediatric Neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital and also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2008 from President George W. Bush.
http://townhall.com/columnists/davidlimbaugh/2013/02/12/dr-carsons-refreshing-jolt-of-good-societal-medicine-n1510008/page/full/  
 President Obama must have been stunned at the "audacity" of Dr. 
Benjamin Carson in challenging his core assumptions right to his face in
 front of thousands of people at the National Prayer Breakfast.
 
        Obama is not used to being challenged, especially in public, 
even if indirectly and without being specifically named. From the look 
on his face, it was obvious Obama was none too pleased with Carson's 
message or with his "presumptuousness" in presenting it in that forum, 
while he had to sit still and -- remain silent.
 
        I think we can best understand Carson's message in light of his 
opening statements, which laid the foundation for the thematic body of 
this speech.
 
        He began citing scriptural passages that he said would put his 
upcoming remarks into context. Three of the passages were wisdom sayings
 from the book of Proverbs, admonishing that the godless destroy their 
neighbor with their mouths, that a man who lacks judgment derides his 
neighbor and that a generous man will prosper.
 
        The final passage was God's promise in 2 Chronicles 7:14 that if
 his people will humble themselves and pray and seek his face and turn 
from their wicked ways, he will hear them, forgive their sins and heal 
their land.
 
        Carson also decried the chilling effect of political correctness
 that makes people afraid to express certain opinions on important 
issues, lest they incur the wrath of society's thought and speech police
 -- those who presume to be the guardians of all moral and acceptable 
opinions. He then proceeded to boldly articulate a number of ideas that 
clearly fall in this category of disfavored speech.
 
        Specifically, Carson offered a ringing endorsement of America's 
founding principles and its unique constitutional liberties. He decried 
the moral decay in our society and our government's grotesque fiscal 
irresponsibility.
 
        He took aim on our ever-expanding welfare state, not only by 
championing hard work, self-reliance and personal responsibility but 
also in invoking his own personal experience as an example.
 
        He related how his mother worked multiple jobs to provide for 
him and his brother and imparted critically important values to them. 
She made them read and improve themselves and absolutely refused to let 
them make excuses and claim victimhood for their plight.
 
        Carson, I believe, was illustrating that we have a moral problem
 in this nation and that the instilling of good values begins in the 
home and is neither the responsibility nor the prerogative of a 
caretaker government.
 
        He denounced the practice -- refined to an art form by President
 Obama -- of politicians employing class warfare to deride the wealthy 
with accusations that they don't contribute enough while treating the 
less fortunate as helpless and expecting no contribution from them at 
all. This, I think, is where he was dovetailing the scriptural texts 
warning against deriding one's neighbor. He was saying, in effect, that 
political demagogues who pit people against one another on the basis of 
income and wealth harm society, including the very people they pretend 
to help.
 
        In a television interview, Carson expanded on some of these 
thoughts, explaining that the Founding Fathers were afraid of an 
out-of-control government that would "get to the point where it couldn't
 subsist without taking everything from the people." Next, he linked, 
though not expressly, the scriptural passage on generosity in 
challenging today's conventional wisdom that the wealthy are necessarily
 greedy. He pointed to the remarkable generosity of some of America's 
historically wealthiest individuals. America, he said, "has always been a
 very generous nation. Look at all the foundations that have been 
created for the purpose of taking care of people."
 
        He also expounded on his comments on political correctness, 
apparently criticizing the president's selective assault on religious 
liberty. He said, "If the president would exercise anywhere near the 
sensitivity about religious freedom in this country as he does about 
Islam and offending them, we wouldn't even have these kinds of 
problems."
 
        There is also no question in my mind that in citing the passage 
from 2 Chronicles, Carson was expressing his view that America has 
strayed from its godly roots and replaced God's absolute moral standards
 with those that seem right to a man but are wholly destructive of our 
moral fabric. We must turn back to God, reject this man-made ethic 
grounded in covetousness, envy and greed, and recommit ourselves to 
godly values and right living.
 
        In his speech, Carson did not criticize President Obama by name,
 but he roundly condemned his philosophy of and approach to governance. 
He did so with abundant forcefulness but equally strong respectfulness.
 
        It was an admirable display of forthrightness and courage and a 
virtual seminar in how President Obama's political opponents should 
boldly, directly and publicly dispute his wrongheaded message and block 
his destructive agenda.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Dr. Carson's Refreshing Jolt of Good Societal Medicine
8:35 AM
  
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