Walz Says He Lied About Going To War Because He Struggles With Grammar
Gov. Tim Walz, D-Minn., has made a political career out of âmisspeaking.â Why stop now?
The No. 2 on the Democratic Partyâs forced dream team campaign ticket, featuring the joyous empty vessel Vice President Kamala Harris, was back to doing what he seems to do best Thursday night. After several weeks of evading actual questions, Harris and her running mate sat down with CNNâs Dana Bash for the first semi-substantive interview of their honeymoon campaign â more than a month after President Joe Bidenâs political wake.
Bash was anything but browbeating in an edited, open-notebook test that was anything but adversarial. This is CNN after all, the network where journalistic ethics go to die. But when Bash wasnât watching Harris peeking at her notes to answer basic policy questions, the host of CNNâs âInside Politicsâ was attempting to show she could still ask a tough question or two.
âI want to ask you a question about how you described your service in the National Guard. You said that you carried weapons in war but you had never deployed actually in a war zone. A campaign official said you misspoke. Did you?â Bash posed.
First of all, Walz didnât misspeak about his military bravado. He lied. And, as The Federalist has reported, he has done so in the name of politics.
âIâm Incredibly Proudâ
In 2018, Walz, while talking about gun violence, said, âWe can make sure those weapons of war, that I carried in war, is the only place where those weapons are at.â
Problem is, Walz never served in a combat zone. His unit was called up early in the war in Iraq â to Italy. Later, in 2005, he abandoned his National Guard unit as it was preparing to deploy to Iraq. Walz, who opted to run for Congress at the time, retired not long before the deployment. He claimed to be a âretired Command Sergeant Major,â a top rank for an enlisted soldier. Except he wasnât.
Walz looked like he was tired of answering the question. He shook his ruddy head as if he hadnât used the lie for political currency and delivered what some have described as a âbizarreâ reason for why he âmisspoke.â
âWell, first of all, Iâm incredibly proud. Iâve done 24 years of wearing the uniform of my country. Iâm equally proud of my service in a public school classroom, whether itâs in Congress or the governor,â the VP candidate blathered. Spoiler Alert: Walz has no intention of answering this question.
He goes on to say that his ârecord speaks for itself.â It sure does. Itâs a record of lies and of extreme left-wing policies in a proud Midwest state shredded by such policies. A record of tyrannical rule during his draconian Covid lockdowns and of Minnesotaâs largest cities being set on fire during the 2020 race riots. But no one in the accomplice media wants to ask Walz about any of that.
He told Bash that he speaks âcandidly.â Clearly he does not know what the word âcandidâ means. He âwears his emotionsâ on his sleeve. So, thatâs where the lying comes from? Heâs passionate about children being shot in schools. Understandable. Still, no reason for the lies.
âI think people know me, they know who I am. They know where my heart is and, again, my record has been out there for more than 40 years to speak for itself,â Walz said.
So ⌠about the gun in a combat zone thing?
Bad Grammar, Awful Person
To her credit, Bash didnât demure on this one. She pressed.
âAnd the idea that you said you were in war, did you misspeak as the campaign has said?â the CNN anchor asked again.
Frustrated and caught in his obfuscation, Walz blustered, âYeah, I said we were talking in this case, this was after a school shooting, the ideas of carrying these weapons of war.â
And this is where the bizarre comes in.
âAnd my wife, the English teacher, told me my grammar is not always correct,â he said.
Grammar?! Itâs not like Walz mixed up the usage of lay and lie. He LIED.
Because heâs an awful liar and an awful human being, he blamed his political enemies â like some of the National Guard soldiers who served with him â for his shortcomings in âgrammar.â
âBut, again, if itâs not this itâs an attack on my children for showing love for me or itâs an attack on my dog,â the governor deflected. âIâm not gong to do that. And the one thing Iâll never do is demean another [service] memberâs service in any way. I never have and I never will.â
He demeaned the service of members of the military for years by claiming he was something he wasnât, in places he had not been. Itâs called stolen valor, and itâs a really lousy thing to do.
Just ask Kathy Miller, the mother of forever 19-year-old Sgt. Kyle Miller, who was killed in 2006 by roadside bomb in Iraq. He was member of the Guard unit Walz left behind.
âMy son wasnât even 21 years old. He couldnât even buy alcohol. Yet he took the step to serve our country while Walz found the best way to run away,â Kathy Miller told the Daily Mail earlier this month. âIt was the cowardâs way out.â