December 12 2015
Should a Catholic vote for Ben Carson?
Edward Feser
Friday, December 11, 2015
During the second Republican presidential candidates debate in September, Ben Carson said that instead of invading Afghanistan after 9/11, President Bush should have used the “bully pulpit” and declare[d] that within five to 10 years we will become petroleum independent. The moderate Arab states would have been so concerned about that, they would have turned over Osama bin Laden and anybody else you wanted on a silver platter within two weeks.
Frankly, I think this is a completely nutty position. I can understand why someone would have opposed the invasion of Iraq. I can understand why someone would have opposed any attempt at nation-building in Afghanistan, or even a prolonged occupation. But not even a brief punitive strike? Not even the hunting down of bin Laden and his gang? That is what justice would call for, not to mention prudence. And how exactly was Carson’s policy supposed to have worked? How is Bush supposed to have guaranteed “petroleum independence”? What exactly is the mechanism by which moderate Arab states would have gotten the Taliban to turn over bin Laden? “Half baked” is too kind, and I was amazed that this response didn’t hurt Carson with Republican voters more than it did.
But as to why Carson would take such a position, I’m no longer puzzled. It was only after the debate that I found out that Carson is a Seventh-Day Adventist. Given his conservatism on moral and religious issues, I imagine he is fairly devout. Now, Adventists are not necessarily pacifist, but there is a tendency in that direction, and historically they have opted for conscientious objection to military service. Carson has to my knowledge not publicly linked his position on matters of war to his Adventism, but it is hardly implausible to suspect that there is a connection. (Note that I am not supposing that all Adventists would necessarily agree with Carson on this issue. The point is just that his preference for an extremely mild response to 9/11 is the sort that one might expect from someone having the traditional Adventist attitude toward matters of war and military service.)
If no one has asked him about this, someone should. Nor could he reasonably object to such a question. He has famously said that he would oppose a Muslim becoming president. Hence he implicitly accepts the principle that a candidate’s religious convictions are relevant to deciding whether or not one should vote for him.
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