• Walz, like Biden is just a constant liar about his past

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Tue Oct 1 14:56:14 2024
    XPost: seattle.politics, or.politics, ca.politics
    XPost: alt.law-enforcement

    Walz, like Biden is just a constant liar about his past.
    Constant!! "Weapons I carried in War" = Bullshit.

    True statement I can make = "I have walked across Tienanmen Square
    and looked marching Chinese troops in the eye." True, but thousands
    of normal peaceful time tourists can say the same thing.

    from https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/01/politics/tim-walz-china-tiananmen-square/index.html

    Walz’s claim that he was in Hong Kong during Tiananmen Square protests undercut by unearthed newspaper reports
    Aaron Pellish
    By Aaron Pellish, CNN
    5 minute read
    Updated 2:00 PM EDT, Tue October 1, 2024

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is interviewed by CNN’s Dana Bash in Savannah, Georgia, on August 29, 2024. Will Lanzoni/CNN
    CNN

    Newly unearthed reports contradict previous claims made by Minnesota
    Gov. Tim Walz about his travel to China, including a claim that the
    Democratic vice presidential nominee was in Hong Kong for a teaching
    position in 1989 during the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests that
    ended in hundreds of protesters killed by the Chinese government.

    The discrepancy over Walz’s relationship to China comes ahead of
    Tuesday’s vice presidential debate in New York, where Republican allies
    of Ohio Sen. JD Vance have signaled that the GOP vice presidential
    nominee may use Walz’s history in China to attack his rival. Walz
    regularly organized and chaperoned trips to China during his time as a
    teacher prior to entering politics.

    Walz had previously said he visited Hong Kong in “May of ’89,” weeks before the Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing. During a 2014 hearing
    of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China honoring the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests, Walz, then a Minnesota congressman, appeared to recall specific details of his trip to the
    region at that time.

    “As a young man, I was just going to teach high school in Foshan in Guangdong, and was in Hong Kong in May of ’89,” he said. “And as the events were unfolding, several of us went in. And I still remember the
    train station in Hong Kong.”

    “The opportunity to be in a Chinese high school at that critical time
    seemed to me to be really important. And it was a very interesting
    summer to say the least. Because if you recall, as we moved in that
    summer and further on and the news blackouts and things that went on,
    you certainly can’t black out news from people if they want to get it,”
    he continued.

    Democratic vice presidential nominee, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz
    delivers remarks at an election campaign event in Superior, Wisconsin,
    on September 14, 2024.
    Related article
    Heading into the vice presidential debate, Tim Walz is fighting nerves
    Walz’s 2014 claim that he was in Hong Kong during the Tiananmen Square protests has been repeated in media reports. But contemporaneous
    newspaper reports first resurfaced by the Washington Free Beacon, a conservative news outlet, place Walz in Nebraska around that time. An
    issue of the Alliance Times-Herald dated May 16, 1989, features a photo
    of Walz touring a Nebraska National Guard storeroom. In the photo’s
    caption, the paper notes that Walz “will take over the job” of staffing
    the storeroom from a retiring guardsman and “will be moving to
    Alliance,” Nebraska. A separate newspaper article about Walz’s planned
    trip to China published by a Nebraska-based outlet in April 1989
    reported that he planned to travel to China in early August of that year.

    When asked by CNN if Walz was in Hong Kong during the Tiananmen Square protests, the Harris campaign was unable to provide evidence to
    substantiate Walz’s claim.

    The contradiction was first reported by Minnesota Public Radio News and
    APM Reports.

    Walz also appears to have exaggerated the number of times he’s travelled
    to China. In a 2016 interview, he said he’s visited China “about 30 times.” In another meeting of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, in 2016, Walz claimed to have visited Hong Kong “dozens and
    dozens and dozens of times.”

    When asked for clarification on how many times Walz traveled to China, a
    Harris campaign spokesperson told CNN the number of trips Walz took to
    China is “likely closer to 15.”

    China has long held a significant place in Walz’s life since he first traveled to the country in 1989. Walz and his wife, Gwen Walz, were
    married on June 4, 1994 – the fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre and spent their honeymoon leading students in an educational
    trip to China, something Walz did regularly during his time as a teacher
    before joining Congress. Ahead of their wedding, Gwen Walz told the Nebraska-based Star-Herald newspaper that they planned to get married on
    the Tiananmen Square massacre anniversary because “he wanted to have a
    date he’ll always remember.”

    Since joining the Harris campaign, Walz has not spoken at length about
    China or his history of travel to the country.

    Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz speaks at a campaign rally in Bethlehem,
    Pennsylvania, on September 21, 2024.
    Related article
    Fact check: Walz makes false claims about Vance, Trump and Project 2025 Republicans in recent days have circled Walz’s ties to China as a target
    for further scrutiny. Jason Miller, a senior advisor to Donald Trump’s campaign, indicated Monday that he expects Vance to attack Walz for his
    history of trips to China.

    “Tiananmen Tim! Funny they’re changing this now – we were planning on calling him out for this at the debate tomorrow night! Anything else you
    want to fess up to, Tim???,” Miller said in a social media post in
    response to clarification offered by the Harris campaign about Walz’s
    trips to China.

    Congressional Republicans have joined the Trump campaign in calling into question Walz’s ties to China. House Oversight Chairman James Comer subpoenaed Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas on Monday for documents related to Walz as part of allegations made by “whistleblower disclosures” provided to the committee that Walz has ties to the Chinese Communist Party. The subpoena is the latest step by House Republicans to spotlight Walz’s ties to China through a probe that began in August
    shortly after he joined the Democratic ticket.

    The inconsistencies around Walz’s travel to China and Hong Kong mark the latest instance in which the governor’s past comments have been revealed
    to be inaccurate since he became the Democratic vice presidential
    nominee. In August, a Harris campaign spokesperson said Walz “misspoke”
    in a 2018 video in which he said he handled assault weapons “in war.”

    Later that month, Gwen Walz clarified that the couple had used a
    fertility treatment other than in vitro fertilization to conceive after
    her husband had suggested they had used IVF.

    CORRECTION: This story has been updated to accurately reflect Tim Walz’s
    past claims of travel to Asia in 1989. He claimed he was in Hong Kong
    during the Tiananmen Square protests.

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