
Republican presidential candidate, Dr. Ben Carson speaks at a rally, Monday, Nov. 23, 2015, in Pahrump, Nev. Carson attended a briefing on Yucca Mountain and federal lands at the Nye County commissioner鈥檚 office in Pahrump before holding the rally. AP Photo
PAHRUMP, Nevada, United States鈥擱epublican presidential candidate Ben Carson said Monday mosques, schools, supermarkets, car repair shops and 鈥渁ny place where radicalization is going on鈥 should be monitored in light of terrorist threats.
Campaigning in Nevada, the retired neurosurgeon addressed the need for increased surveillance of people in the United States during an appearance about an hour west of Las Vegas.
鈥淚 would say we use our intelligence and we monitor anything: our mosques, a church, a museum, a supermarket,鈥 he said, later adding that monitoring would come after multiple reports or indications of radical activity. 鈥淲e live in a very different time right now.鈥
National security has become a focus in the presidential race over the last week after terrorists launched a series of deadly attacks in Paris.
READ: More than 120 people killed in Paris 鈥榯error鈥 attacks
Carson on Monday also backed up claims by Republican rival Donald Trump, who has repeatedly charged that he saw video footage of thousands of Muslims in New Jersey cheering the Sept. 11 attacks. The claim has been refuted by local officials as untrue. But asked Monday if he had seen footage of cheering Muslims in New Jersey, Carson said he had seen it on the news.
READ: Trump wants waterboarding torture of terror suspects
鈥淭here are going to be people that respond inappropriately,鈥 he said, adding that characterizing all Muslims as 鈥渂ad people鈥 because of the alleged reaction would be a stretch.