The
retired neurosurgeon and Republican presidential contender insisted at a
political rally and on three morning news shows that reports about his
claims about a violent youth, a Politico report about a scholarship
offer to West Point and a story about a Yale class are actually helping
his campaign.
Speaking to reporters
after a political rally in Puerto Rico Sunday morning, Carson pushed
back on the notion that the scrutiny on his past is "getting under his
skin" -- but then launched into an angry and mocking critique of the
media coverage this week.
"It's not particularly getting under my skin, obviously it's helping me," said Carson, who on Saturday thanked a "biased media"
for helping him fundraise $3.5 million last week. "But I simply cannot
sit still and watch unfairness. I am always going to call that out when I
see it."
On Thursday, CNN's Scott Glover and Maeve Reston reported
that nine friends, classmates and neighbors who grew up with Carson
could not confirm accounts from his 1990 autobiography "Gifted Hands" of
a childhood of violence, including an attempted stabbing and punching a
classmate in the face with his hand wrapped around a lock. The next
day, Politico published a story
claiming that the Carson campaign admitted that he "fabricated" an
account of applying and being admitted to West Point -- a headline the
outlet later softened.
And
late Friday, the Wall Street Journal reported that it couldn't confirm
Carson's account of protecting white students during a race riot back
when he was a high school junior or a story involving a psychology exam
while at Yale.
"Obviously, the Politico
thing was a hit job, no question about that," Carson said in Puerto
Rico. "The kind of investigations that were done, talking to the wrong
people. Not going to Wilson Junior High School where the lock incident
occurred. But talking to other people and saying, 'See we can't find
them' -- I mean this is just stupid, and I mean if our media is no
better than investigating than that, it's sick. The Wall Street Journal
thing coming out and saying 'there's no such course, obviously this is
all fabricated' how come -- with all their tools they can't find it, but
we can? That doesn't make any sense, does it?"
He
added: "The burden of proof is not going to be on me to corroborate
everything I have ever talked about in my life, because once I start
down that road, from now until the election, you're going to be spending
your time doing that and we have much more important things to do,"
Carson said. "You're asking me about something that occurred 50 years
ago. And you expect me to have the details about that? Forget about it.
It's not going to happen."
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