Carson compares slaves to immigrants coming to ‘a land of dreams and opportunity’
This story has been updated with
new comments from Ben Carson.
Ben Carson compared slaves to
immigrants seeking a better life in his first official address Monday as
Housing and Urban Development secretary, setting off an uproar on social media.
In what appears to be an
embarrassing pattern of missteps on race for the Trump administration, Carson
told a room packed with hundreds of federal workers that the Africans captured,
sold and transported to America against their will had the same hopes and
dreams as early immigrants.
“That's what America is about. A
land of dreams and opportunity. There were other immigrants who came here in
the bottom of slave ships, worked even longer, even harder for less,” said
Carson, speaking extemporaneously as he paced the room with a microphone. “But
they, too, had a dream that one day their sons, daughters, grandsons,
granddaughters, great-grandsons, great-granddaughters might pursue prosperity
and happiness in this land.”
Carson refers to slaves as
'immigrants,' says 'they too had a dream'
His comments were broadcast live
to all of HUD’s regional field offices as well as to the public.
A senior HUD official who spoke
on condition of anonymity said no one in the room interpreted Carson’s comments
as anything but a “heartfelt introduction to the HUD family.”
“He was making a point about
people who came to this country for a better life for their kids,” the official
said. “Nobody in that room put two and two together and came to five. Only the
most cynical interpretation would conflate voluntary immigration to this
country with involuntary servitude.”
Near the end of the town hall
event, during a question-and-answer session, one HUD staffer took the
microphone and thanked Carson for addressing the staff, noting that many in
attendance had been worried about how the Trump administration would approach
HUD and its work. The staffer said that she had been reassured by Carson’s
comments as others clapped.
But the reaction on social media
was swift and unforgiving.
On Twitter, users poked fun of the retired
neurosurgeon’s gaffe, questioning whether he needed a brain transplant. They
posted pictures of slave shackles on display at the National Museum of African
American History and Culture, sarcastically asking whether Carson would refer
to the instruments of bondage as “luggage.” Others said, using Carson's logic,
that internment camps should be called “summer retreats” and concentration
camps “diet facilities.”
The backlash caught several HUD
employees who attended the event off guard, including career professionals at
the department who said his speech was very well received internally. Carson’s
team walked away from the event thinking it had gone very smoothly.
“HUD has many employees who are
African American and at the end of his remarks they stood up and applauded for
the secretary. Many went to take pictures of him,” said one staffer, speaking
on background.
Another career staffer, who is
black, said he did not notice that Carson had referred to slaves as
"immigrants" until he read the media coverage hours later.
"That was lost on most
people in the room. He was making the point that people didn’t just come through
Ellis Island," the staffer said. "If anything, I thought someone may
have taken issue with the fact that he was pointing out it was rougher for
black people."
Carson weighed in on the
controversy Monday night, saying on Twitter that a person "can be an
involuntary immigrant," then proceeded to define an immigrant as "a
person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country."
"Slaves didn't just give up
and die, our ancestors made something of themselves," Carson wrote on
Twitter. His tweets included links to clips from a radio interview on the
Armstrong Williams Show, in which he tried clarifying his earlier comments and
repeated his use of the term "immigrant" to describe slaves. He also
accused the media of blowing his remarks into a controversy.
Carson struck a more conciliatory
tone later Monday night in a Facebook post on his personal page, writing that
immigrants and slaves went through "two entirely different
experiences."
"Slaves were ripped from
their families and their homes and forced against their will after being sold
into slavery by slave traders," he wrote. "The Immigrants made the
choice to come to America. They saw this country as a land of opportunity. In
contrast, slaves were forced here against their will and lost all their opportunities.
We continue to live with that legacy."
Just last week, U.S. Education
Secretary Betsy DeVos hailed historically black colleges and universities as
“pioneers” of “school choice” after meeting with a group of college presidents.
She made no mention of the fact that the schools were forged at the height of
racial segregation because black Americans were barred by laws in many states
from attending white institutions.
Instead, DeVos said in a
statement that HBCUs are “living proof that when more options are provided to
students, they are afforded greater access and greater quality."
Trump sparked outrage while
speaking at a Black History Month event in February when he referred to famed
abolitionist Frederick Douglass in the present tense, as though he were still
alive.
“Frederick Douglass is an example
of somebody who’s done an amazing job and is getting recognized more and more,
I notice,” Trump said.
Some critics seized upon the
statement and attacked Trump for apparently not really knowing who Douglass
was.
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