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Ben Carson: ‘I think poverty to a large extent is also a state of mind’

Yale University alumnus Dr. Benjamin Carson, President-elect Donald Trump's pick for secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, speaks at Yale on Thursday, Dec. 8, 2016. AP Photo/Stephen Dunn

Housing Secretary Ben Carson says poverty is a “state of mind.”

In a radio interview Wednesday, the former neurosurgeon said parents need to instil in their children the “mindset of a winner.”

“If you take somebody with the wrong mindset,” Carson says, “you can give them everything in the world and they’ll work their way back down to the bottom.”

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He made the remarks in an interview with Armstrong Williams on SiriusXM.

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Carson, who grew up poor in inner-city Detroit with a single mother who had a third-grade education, says if people don’t have a defeatist attitude, then there’s hope.

“I think the majority of people don’t have that defeatist attitude, but they sometimes just don’t see the way, and that’s where government can come in and be very helpful.”

The soft-spoken Carson, the only black major-party candidate in the 2016 presidential race, was the first African-American named as head of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore. After being tapped by former GOP rival Donald Trump, Carson took the helm at the Department of Housing and Urban Development in March.

The department’s name, he said in the interview, is something he’d like to see changed.

READ MORE: Ben Carson says slaves immigrated to U.S. during speech

Carson says he has a plan for eventually changing the name to “Housing and Community Development” to reflect the agency’s broad mission, which extends beyond cities and urban areas and deep into small towns and rural areas. A name change for the agency would require congressional approval.

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