Democrat presidential nominee Kamala Harris’s running mate Tim Walz has been caught in yet another lie.
The Democrat vice presidential nominee claimed he was in China during the infamous massacre at Tiananmen Square.
However, documents reportedly contradict Walz’s story.
The revelation is just the latest in a series of exaggerations and falsehoods pushed by the stolen valor villain.
Minnesota’s Democrat governor has been caught promoting outright fabrications as he tries to inflate his political resume.
The latest discrepancy was first reported by Minnesota Public Radio’s APM Reports.
The outlet revealed that the Walz campaign was unable to “produce documentation to back up Walz’s statement that he was there during the uprising.”
Walz had frequently claimed that he was visiting China when the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) violently crushed a pro-democracy uprising.
However, local news reports show that he was actually at home in Nebraska during the historical event.
One local news report placed Walz at a National Guard storeroom in the city of Alliance in May 1989.
The reports said he didn’t leave for China until August.
By that time, the protests in China had already ended.
Democrat-allied corporate media outlets, including the New York Times, CBS News, and National Public Radio, have all repeated Walz’s story without scrutiny.
“As the events were unfolding, several of us went in,” said Walz at a congressional hearing in 2014.
“And I still remember the train station in Hong Kong.
“There was a large number of, especially European, I think, very angry that we would still go after what had happened, but it was my belief at that time that the diplomacy was going to happen on many levels.”
The Walz campaign has already admitted to exaggerating the number of times he had visited China.
Walz claimed he made 30 visits to China.
However, it was actually about half that number.
Walz also extolled the virtues of the communist system when he returned to the U.S.
He taught at a high school after receiving favorable treatment that he compared to being treated “as a king.”
The communist regime in China was condemned for the military action against the protests, including the use of People’s Liberation Army tanks.
It is estimated that as many as 10,000 people may have been killed during the uprising.