By Star Parker
Regardless of how Dr. Ben Carson chooses to try to convince Republican voters that he should be their candidate for president Carsons personal story is particularly worthy of the attention of all Americans during these troubled times.
His story defies much of the conventional wisdom we get from both the left and the right to explain the grave social problems in our poor minority communities and the seemingly insurmountable obstacles to success facing poor black children.
From the left we hear that black life in America would have no hope but for government programs to ease the burdens of an unfair hand dealt by the past and an unwelcoming and racist present.
But Carson is a poster child for the American dream. Born poor in a black ghetto in Detroit and raised by a divorced uneducated mother he rose to the pinnacle of the medical profession becoming director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital. The fuel for his success was not government programs but a stern and caring mother who refused to accept excuses for failure Christian values of right and wrong and personal responsibility and an ethic for work learning and achievement.
From the right we hear that the rampant problems with young black men today stem from the collapse of the black family and the absence of fathers.
But Carson was raised without a father at home.
So what can we learn from Carsons experience that could point to what is wrong in America today?
One thing wrong is that it has become politically incorrect to talk about the importance of religion.
It is impossible to explain Carsons remarkable life and achievements without the Christian faith and values that guided his mother and have served him throughout his life.
Human life -- personal or social -- cannot exist without rules. The question is never whether we have rules but what they are and where we get them.
As religion has weakened in America the rules rooted in biblical tradition that enable virtue and self-governance have been increasingly displaced by government and moral relativism.
When asked in a Gallup poll in 1952 how important would you say religion is in your own life 75 percent said very important. By 1976 this was down to 52 percent and has remained approximately at that level.
Over the same period the role of government in individual lives has exploded. Government payments to individuals made up a little more than 15 percent of the federal budget in 1952. Today it is around 70 percent.
This is not just a minority thing. Americans of all backgrounds increasingly have turned over their lives to rules created by politicians rather than the wisdom of tradition.
Black out-of-wedlock births in 2012 at 72.2 percent of all black births were three times their 1965 rate of 24 percent. White out-of-wedlock births in 2012 at 29.4 percent of all white births were almost 10 times their 1965 rate of 3.1 percent.
The over-criminalization of our society and the transformation of police from peace officers to law enforcers are symptoms of a nation that has lost its moral moorings and is trying in vain to invent social justice through government and political action.
Its not an accident that during the week that Baltimore was exploding the very city in which Carson made his career at Johns Hopkins the U.S. Supreme Court was hearing arguments to redefine marriage.
We are a free country. We are free to choose meaninglessness and secular humanism over religion and tradition. But that choice means a nation that looks more like the rioting in Baltimore than the life Dr. Ben Carson represents.
Star Parker is founder and president of CURE the Center for Urban Renewal and Education a 501c3 think tank which explores and promotes market based public policy to fight poverty as well as author of the newly revised Uncle Sams Plantation: How Big Government Enslaves Americas Poor and What We Can do About It.