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Ben Carson stands by U.S., Nazi comparisons

The Fox News contributor doesn't regret drawing a parallel between American life and Nazi Germany -- and it won't stop his presidential campaign.
Dr. Ben Carson speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, March 8, 2014.
Dr. Ben Carson speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland, March 8, 2014.
Remember neurosurgeon-turned-conservative-activist Ben Carson? He's apparently still around, still making needlessly provocative remarks, and still moving forward with his presidential plans.
 
In fact, Ben Terris reported from Iowa yesterday on a Carson event in Des Moines.

He's inside this meeting hall, before a sellout crowd of nearly 400 people at the Polk County Republicans' end-of-summer fundraiser, to discuss bullies of a different order. He wants to talk about the "secular progressives" in the news media, politics and academia who will stop at nothing to change the nation as we know it. He also wants to do this in Iowa, while raising money for local Republicans, coinciding with the start of his new PAC, which will "lay the groundwork" should he decide to run for president. [...] He speaks softly, almost as though he's reading a child to sleep. But this is a scary story. If Republicans don't win back the Senate in November, he says, he can't be sure "there will even be an election in 2016." Later, his wife, Candy, tells a supporter that they are holding on to their son's Australian passport just in case the election doesn't go their way.

Just so we're clear, the implication here is that Carson believes President Obama, tyrant that he is, may not allow elections in 2016. It's why Carson's family is preparing to flee the United States, just in case.
 
As for Carson arguing earlier this year that contemporary American life as "very much like Nazi Germany," the right-wing doctor told Terris, "You can't dance around it.... If people look at what I said and were not political about it, they'd have to agree. Most people in Germany didn't agree with what Hitler was doing.... Exactly the same thing can happen in this country if we are not willing to stand up for what we believe in." 
 
I guess that means he's not sorry?
 
Fox News' Chris Wallace said yesterday that Carson, himself a Fox contributor, probably doesn't have a "serious chance" to actually be elected president, but Wallace added he'd "love" to see Carson run anyway.
 
It's not clear why.
 
For those who've forgotten Carson's rise to Tea Party notoriety, Carson last year equated homosexuality with pedophilia and bestiality. He soon after started comparing the Affordable Care Act to slavery, before comparing Americans to Nazis.
 
I swung by the page Right Wing Watch set up to document Carson's more notable remarks and I was amazed at some of the recent entries. Carson said political correctness contributed to Michael Brown's death in Ferguson, and those who protested the shooting reminded him of Hamas.
 
Last month, Carson characterized the debate over marijuana legalization as a distraction from Benghazi. Seriously.
 
He'll be quite a candidate.