Republican presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson said he would “love” to see Roe vs. Wade overturned, giving states free rein to ban abortion, with almost no exceptions.
“I’m a reasonable person and if people can come up with a reasonable explanation of why they would like to kill a baby, I’ll listen,” Carson said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
While the Republican candidate said he opposes abortions for unwanted pregnancies and in cases of rape and incest, the retired neurosurgeon told moderator Chuck Todd he might be open to allowing abortions to preserve the life and health of the mother.
“That’s an extraordinarily rare situation,” Carson said. “But if in that very rare situation it occurred, I believe there’s room to discuss that.”
On “Meet the Press,” the soft-spoken candidate said his past controversial comments have become flash points because they resonate with “people who aren’t really thinking deeply.”
Carson was asked how he would respond if he became the GOP nominee and those contentions remarks are used to attack him. His response: “As people get to know me, they know that I’m not a hateful, pathological person like some people try to make me out to be. And that will be self-evident. So I don’t really worry about that.”
Although Dr. Carson has walked back some of his most controversial statements, in the past he has called President Barack Obama a “psychopath.” He suggested that being gay is a choice because people “go into prison straight — and when they come out, they’re gay.” And on “Meet the Press” earlier this year, he said he would not advocate for a Muslim president.
And after the mass shooting at Umpqua Community College in Oregon, Carson linked gun control to the Holocaust, saying Hitler’s goals would have been diminished if people were armed. “There’s a reason these dictatorial people take the guns first,” Carson said to intense criticism.
On “Meet the Press,” Carson defended those comments. “I think it is generally agreed that it’s much more difficult to dominate people who are armed than people who are not armed,” he said.
“Some people will try to take that and, you know, make it into an anti-Jewish thing, which is foolishness.” He added that many in the Jewish community have told him he was exactly right.









