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Carson's Real Scandal is His Ignorance

Ruth Marcus on

WASHINGTON -- The vetting of Ben Carson is focused in the wrong direction. Yes, when a candidate's raison d'etre is biography, the accuracy of his purported life story is fair game -- even if some of the Carson flyspecking has been tendentious.

But the more fundamental question -- the scarier question -- about Carson isn't whether the retired neurosurgeon is a fabulist, and therefore whether he has the right character to be president. It's whether he has the knowledge and understanding to be president. The evidence is rather conclusive that he doesn't.

Why single out Carson? This is a fair question in a Republican race whose other front-runner is Donald Trump. But Trump's brand of blustery unpreparedness is more self-evident, more accessible, than Carson's. Trump will build a tremendous wall. He'll stop making stupid deals. If voters are credulous enough to be seduced by his supposed managerial skills and convinced by his grandiose promises -- well, that's on them, though woe to the rest of us.

Carson's ignorance is of a more subtle sort, delivered with his genial bedside manner. It unfolds not in indignant sound bites but in paragraphs of pure blather. Carson doesn't just need fact-checking. He needs thought-checking.

This unsettling truth has displayed itself throughout the Republican debates. Carson tends to be a lurker at these events; where others elbow for time, Carson seems happy, for the most part, to hold back and watch. His cumulative speaking time at the four debates so far has been 36 minutes and 21 seconds, compared with Donald Trump's 50 minutes and 24 seconds. Only Rand Paul has spoken less.

This may be a smart tactic. Because when Carson is questioned, he has a tendency to flail. The tripartite architecture of these non-answers has become apparent: duck the actual question; revert to a comfortable, if irrelevant talking point; finish with patriotic platitude. Carson's approach is effective because it is so hard to capture its inanity in the confined space of a televised sound bite or newspaper article.

 

Consider his answer during the Fox Business Network debate to a question from Wall Street Journal Editor-in-Chief Gerard Baker: "Do you think JPMorgan and the other big banks should be broken up?"

Carson went on for 344 words -- nearly half this column -- without answering. He denounced the "stampede of regulations, which is involved in every aspect of our lives." Such rules, he said, are driving up the cost of a bar of soap, hurting the poor. Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, he said, "say it's the rich, take their money, but that won't work." And, in conclusion, "We have to come back to the fundamental principles that made America great."

Baker persisted. "Just to be clear, you wouldn't favor breaking up the big banks?"

Carson: "I would have policies that wouldn't allow that to occur. I don't want to go in and tear anybody down. I mean, that doesn't help us. But what does help us is stop tinkering around the edges and fix the actual problems that exist that are creating the problem in the first place."

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