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How Democratic-Leaning Detroit Helped Shape Ben Carson's Conservative Views

Ben Carson is the only African American major candidate running for president in 2016. He grew up poor in Detroit in the 1960s and paved his own path.
Jonathan Bachman AP
Ben Carson is the only African American major candidate running for president in 2016. He grew up poor in Detroit in the 1960s and paved his own path.

The sign out front of Benjamin Carson High School of Science and Medicine, named after presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson.
Brakkton Booker NPR
The sign out front of Benjamin Carson High School of Science and Medicine, named after presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson.

Dr. Ben Carson, right, posing with Dr. Mark Rogers and one of the Binder twins whom Carson surgically separated in a first-of-its kind operation. The twins were born conjoined at the head.
Ben Carson memoir "Gifted Hands"
Dr. Ben Carson, right, posing with Dr. Mark Rogers and one of the Binder twins whom Carson surgically separated in a first-of-its kind operation. The twins were born conjoined at the head.

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Ben Carson in his first year at Yale.
Ben Carson memoir "Gifted Hands"
Ben Carson in his first year at Yale.

Long before Benjamin Carson was a Republican presidential candidate, he was a hero and a role model.

For a generation of black parents, the retired neurosurgeon's life's story was used to inspire their children. He grew up a poor kid in Detroit. His mother had a third-grade education and could not read. Carson himself initially didn't do especially well in school. His poor grades led some of his classmates to refer to him as "dummy."

Carson would eventually overcome all those obstacles. He became a stellar student and went on to Yale and then to University of Michigan medical school before becoming the head of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore at just 33 years old. He would later receive international recognition for leading a surgical team in what was the first operation to separate twins conjoined at the back of the head.

But despite his success, the scars of growing up in poverty left their mark on Carson.

"One of the things that really bothered me when I was a kid was poverty. I didn't like being poor," Carson said to a room full of mostly black high-school students at Detroit's Benjamin Carson High School of Science and Medicine (named for him) on the day of his presidential announcement in May. "I remember we used to have popcorn balls at school. And they looked so good, but they cost a nickel. And I never had a popcorn ball, the whole time."

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Carson, the only black candidate in the 2016 presidential race, grew up in Detroit during the 1960s. It was not — and is not — exactly known as a haven of conservatism, especially in the black community. Back then, the civil rights movement was gaining momentum, the "Motown Sound" became synonymous with the Motor City and the Vietnam War had no end in sight. Going to where Carson grew up and talking to former classmates and friends revealed a young man determined not to allow the grip of poverty to keep him bound to southwest Detroit.

By 1967, riots erupted in Detroit over four days prompting then-Michigan governor George Romney to call in the National Guard. Forty-three people died. Amidst the unrest in the streets and the rise of the Black Panther Party, Carson chose a different path. To a degree, Carson insulated himself from the movement going on around him by joining ROTC, a something that subjected him to the taunts of his peers.

Kevin Fobbs, who, like Carson, is African-American and also joined ROTC remembers them being called "sell-outs" and "uncle Toms," because "we were putting the uniform of 'the man' on."

As an adult, Fobbs became vice chairman of the Republican Party of Michigan, but he met Carson in ROTC in 1969. Carson was a senior colonel and Fobbs was a freshman cadet. Fobbs said the discipline ROTC instilled, coupled with Carson's Seventh Day Adventist Faith, helped solidify his conservative views.

"You have all those things working at the same time and then you have a few of us that decided there had to be another way," Fobbs said. "And the other way was ROTC."

'An easy mark'

Timothy McDaniel first met Carson in junior high school. And he remembers around the lunch table and after school, Carson was taunted for far less political reasons.

"He was an easy mark because he wore these big glasses," McDaniel said. "He wasn't considered a very sharp dresser—mostly plain clothes, thick-soled shoes. His hair wasn't really stylish."

McDaniel said "capping," also known as "playing the dozens," was big in their junior high school days. It's when two competitors, typically males go back and forth and try to out-do one another in comedic trash talk. McDaniel said Carson was the brunt of many jokes at first. But he soon overcame that too.

"Towards the end of the school year, he had become amazing at capping," McDaniel said. "To the point where all the people who used to cap on him stopped doing it, they didn't want to say a word about him."

A changed view

Carson and McDaniel remain close to this day. But McDaniel said he has noticed a difference in the way people view his friend since Carson began signaling he was considering a run for the White House.

"Before he announced his run for politics," McDaniel said, "he was considered one of America's heroes and darlings by all the people."

But that's not the case anymore.

McDaniel noticed this last year when he was organizing the reunion for 45th anniversary of his Southwestern High School class. In 2013, while speaking the conservative Values Voter Summit, Carson compared Obamacare to slavery.

"You know Obamacare is really, I think, the worst thing to happen in this nation since slavery. And it is in a way, it is slavery in a way, because it is making all of us subservient to the government. And it was never about health care, it was about control."

Those comments didn't sit well with many of their classmates, McDaniel said.

"Some wanted to tell him about the fact that, you know we all grew up together, poor," he said. "And now that he's no longer poor, they wanted to remind him that we all came from the same place."

Carson did not end up going to the reunion.

And even though McDaniel said nearly 99 percent of their classmates are Obama supporters, they are proud of Carson's success in life. Many just don't agree with his politics.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.