What’s With Tiananmen Tim’s Love for Chinese Communism? Congressional Investigators Aim to Find Out
Tim Walz is under investigation for his cozy relationship with China while in the military.
Tim Walz served in the Army National Guard from 1981–2005. In 1993, he took a group of high school students on a trip to China whose expenses were reportedly covered by the Chinese government. Walz has acknowledged traveling to China over 30 times. Now multiple Congressmen are questioning whether he violated any laws.
Now the House Oversight Committee has opened an investigation into whether Walz violated any laws pertaining to his business dealings with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) while serving as a non-commissioned officer in the military.
On Aug. 13, Rep. Jim Banks (R) sent a letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin asking if Walz filed the proper disclosures and notifications for foreign travel required as a member of the military. Austin failed to respond by Congress’ deadline of Aug. 20.
Article I, Section 9, Clause 8 of the Constitution prohibits any “person holding any office of profit or trust” from accepting any “gift, emolument, office, or title” from any foreign state “without the consent of Congress.” This includes members of the military who are required to give disclosures and receive permission for certain types of foreign travel. There are additional reporting requirements for those with secret clearances. There are also restrictions on employment with foreign governments while also being a military member.
Walz and his wife formed a company called Educational Travel Adventures, Inc. in 1995 and used it to lead students on trips to China. A public forum advertisement with the Humphrey School of Public Affairs in April 2007, when Walz was in Congress, touts his small business that “conducts educational trips to China”—in the present tense.
According to a press release, during the 1980s Walz was one of the “first government-sanctioned American high school educators to teach in China.” In a letter to a former college professor, Walz said he was “treated like a king” in China. Walz claimed he received a salary that was double the pay of Chinese teachers and was given a decorated apartment and color TV. He further admits “they gave me more gifts than I could bring home.”
Were these gifts disclosed to the Department of Defense?
As a teacher Walz appeared to praise communism, telling his students that communism is a system where “everyone shares” and gets free food and housing. A student who traveled to China with him said Walz is Maoist to the core. When they would go shopping in China, Walz would buy the “little red book” and proudly gave them as gifts.
Mao killed more people than Hitler and Walz seems enamored by him. No one thinks Walz should’ve passed out copies of Mein Kampf as gifts when he visited Germany—so why does the media give him a pass with the equally murderous CCP?
Walz’s Weird Obsession with Communism
Chinese Communist leader Mao Tse-Tung was a mass murderer. It is estimated he killed 65 million people from execution, imprisonment, or forced famine. Mao was reportedly revered by Tim Walz as evidenced by his distribution of Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung—also known as the “little red book.”
Here are some quotes from Mao in the book valued by Walz:
Socialism must be developed in China, and the route toward such an end is a democratic revolution, which will enable socialist and communist consolidation over a length of time. It is also important to unite with the middle peasants, and educate them on the failings of capitalism.
The Chinese Communist Party is the core of the Chinese Revolution, and its principles are based on Marxism-Leninism. Party criticism should be carried out within the Party.
Walz was so enamored by communist China that he brought its policies to Minnesota and now wants to expand his mission to the entire nation. His views haven’t changed. Most recently in August, he participated in an online forum called “white dudes for Harris” and encouraged the other white dudes to stick with their progressive values saying: “One person’s socialism is another person’s neighborliness.”
Mao sought to break down the family structure because it was a threat to his communist agenda. Children were raised at daycare centers rather than in homes. Families ate in cafeterias rather than a home kitchen and all decisions on what children were taught came from the CCP.
Xi Van Fleet grew up in Mao’s China and said children were instructed that Mao and the CCP were their true parents. They were taught to sing “Father is dear. Mother is dear. But neither is as dear as Chairman Mao.” Children turned against their own parents for not being loyal to Mao.
In line with his Maoist anti-family views, Tim Walz supported a law that allows the government to take away custody of children from parents who don’t consent to their children receiving harmful cross-sex hormones or sex change procedures.
Dissidents are not permitted in China and during COVID, dissidents were punished in Minnesota.
During the COVID lockdowns in Minnesota, Walz’s administration set up a hotline for neighbors to snitch on one another. Many were brainwashed by the government and snitched on their neighbors for things such as playing a pick-up basketball game and working out in a park.
A Minnesota grandmother was put in jail over the Walz lockdown policies. Her family was struggling to keep their business going so in December 2020 they defied Walz’s closure orders and opened their restaurant. She spent 60 days in jail for simply trying to keep her business alive.
Tim Walz has been very public about his pro-communist views and every voter should understand the harmful ramifications of a Walz vice presidency.