At this point, we should assume that anything Tim Walz says about his biography and achievements is a lie, until proven otherwise.
As Ben Domenech observed, Walz was a more calculating career liar than Joe Biden:
“the stories Joe Biden told were mostly of the Big Fish variety, the exaggerations of grampa. Walz’s lies are constantly in service of career advancement or injecting personal experience with partisan relevance.”
He’s like Elizabeth Warren in that regard.
Here comes another, described by Alex Thompson:
‘In his 06 campaign, Walz boasted “that in 1993, he ‘was named the Outstanding Young Nebraskan by the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce for his service in the education, military, and small business communities.’” But he wasn’t.’
From The Free Beacon:
When Tim Walz launched his 2006 campaign for Congress in rural Minnesota, he boasted in his public biography that in 1993, he “was named the Outstanding Young Nebraskan by the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce for his service in the education, military, and small business communities.” That was not true.Walz’s 2006 boast about being named “Outstanding Young Nebraskan” can still be found in an archived version of his campaign website. That November, the president of the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce, Barry Kennedy, wrote Walz to object. “It has come to my attention that as part of your campaign for U.S. Congress, you have posted your biography on your website that claims you received an award from the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce for your service to the business community,” he stated plainly. “We researched this matter and can confirm that you have not been the recipient of any award from the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce.”Kennedy asked that Walz remove the reference from his website and noted that the Chamber had endorsed his opponent, Gil Gutknecht, the Republican incumbent who’d held the seat since 1995. Kennedy could not be reached for comment and the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce did not respond to calls or emails seeking comment. The Harris-Walz campaign did not respond to a request for comment.But Gutknecht, who lost to Walz that year, did speak to the Washington Free Beacon. “It fits a pattern of misleading and fabricated statements he has made throughout his political and personal life,” he recalled. “All political figures are guilty of a bit of puffery. He frequently went well beyond that into prevarication.”
There’s something very strange and very off about this guy. He’s weird.
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