Here’s Everything Tim Walz Got Away With As Minnesota Governor
Concluding a tenure defined by controversies and missteps
"The future is certain," the Soviet joke goes. "It's the past that keeps changing." This wisecrack and its variants hit at one of communism's central absurdities: The doctrinaire Marxists believed they had the key to understanding all of human affairs, but they constantly had to conceal their many mistakes. As the party's ideologists understood well, reconstructing the past is one of the most powerful ways to shape how people understand their identity and influence what they will do. That's why China held a massive military parade this week commemorating the end of World War II and why so many of America's and Israel's critics are recasting that war as an American mistake. Both want to weaken American public support for the grand strategy that made the United States a superpower. Fresh off the Chinese-led Shanghai Cooperation Organization's latest meeting, Xi Jinping enjoyed a display of China's might on Wednesday. After arriving flanked by Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong Un, and Pakistani prime minister Shehbaz Sharif, Xi unveiled some of his country's newest weapons. Laser air-defense systems, air and underwater drones, and previously unseen intercontinental missiles rolled by them.
The post Propagandists on Parade appeared first on .
Saturday Night Live skewered Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz for lying about being in Hong Kong during the Tiananmen Square massacre.
The skit re-creates a question posed to Walz on the lie during Tuesday night's vice presidential debate. Walz, played by comedian Jim Gaffigan, blames the fib on a drunken trip to EPCOT.
The post WATCH: Tim Walz's Tiananmen Square Lie Gets the SNL Treatment: 'So I Think What Happened Is, I Went to EPCOT' appeared first on .
At a 2014 congressional hearing held to mark the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre, Tim Walz, then a congressman representing Minnesota’s first district, recalled being in Hong Kong when the Chinese Communist Party crushed the student protests that had roiled the country since mid-April of 1989. The unforgettable crackdown came on June 4 of that year.
The post Tim Walz Said He Was in Hong Kong During the Tiananmen Square Massacre. He Was Home in Nebraska. appeared first on .
As a high school teacher in the 1990s, Democratic vice presidential candidate and Minnesota governor Tim Walz appeared to extol life under Chinese communism, telling his students that it is a system in which "everyone shares" and gets free food and housing.
The post Walz Praised Chinese Communism as a System Where 'Everyone Shares' appeared first on .
A senior U.S. State Department official arrived in Beijing on Sunday with meetings planned for the coming week as Washington seeks to boost communication with China at a time of tense relations between the two countries.
The post Biden Diplomats Travel to Beijing To 'Thaw Relations' as CCP Cracks Down on Tiananmen Anniversary Protests appeared first on Washington Free Beacon.