


While Walz was "teaching in China," he was apparently learning a lot from his Chinese masters, too. I missed this -- he didn't just say "one man's socialism is another man's neighborliness."
He also explicitly praised communism itself, calling it "a system where everyone shares."
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.
"It means that everyone is the same and everyone shares," Walz said during a lesson on China's communist system in November 1991. "The doctor and the construction worker make the same. The Chinese government and the place they work for provide housing and 14 kg or about 30 pounds of rice per month. They get food and housing."
This was when he was still a member of the National Guard.
Walz's remarks were reported in a 1991 article in Nebraska's Alliance Times-Herald that focused on his work on student exchange programs in China. At the time, Walz was teaching social studies at a Nebraska high school.
A man who traveled with Walz on some of his 30+ trips to Communist China calls Walz "maoist to the core" and says that Walz could just not stop praising China's Communist system.
A man who says he joined Tim Walz on a trip to communist China is speaking out about his experience of traveling to the country with the future vice-presidential candidate.
"It was almost a daily revelation of how much he adores the communist regime," the former student told Alpha News.
For over a decade, Tim Walz traveled to and from China. First arriving in the country in 1989, Walz taught at a high school in partnership with a nonprofit program affiliated with Harvard University. During this first trip, Walz was visiting Hong Kong when the Tiananmen Square protests began in April. Those protests ended in June when the communist government massacred protestors on June 3-4, 1989.
After the massacre, Walz later took a train to Beijing to visit the square, according to the New York Times.
Upon returning to the United States after that first trip, Walz told local newspapers how much he enjoyed his time in China. On June 4, 1994, Walz married Gwen Whipple on the fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre. Gwen told a local newspaper that Walz "wanted to have a date he'll always remember," the Wall Street Journal reported. The couple spent their honeymoon in China, according to local reports from the time.
After this first trip to China, Walz founded a company that took students on summer trips to China. Walz said in a 2016 interview that he has traveled to China "about 30 times" as a teacher and member of Congress. The New York Post recently reported that Walz was a visiting fellow at a state-run university in China as recently as 2007.
Now, a former student who says he joined Walz on a 1995 trip to China is speaking to Alpha News about the experience. That student, Shad, asked that we not use his last name.
For several weeks, Walz and his group of students explored China together in the summer of 1995, Shad said. They saw Tiananmen Square, walked along the Great Wall of China, and traversed the country. However, the former student says he was struck by Walz's adoration for China and its communist ideology.
"There was no doubt he was a true believer," Shad said. "I've been trying to tell people this for 30 years. Nobody wanted to listen.
"At night, we'd go out, we'd walk the street fairs. We'd be buying souvenirs and Tim was always buying the little red book. He said he gave them as gifts ... I saw him buy at least a dozen on the trip," he said.
"It would be like in Germany and buying copies of Mein Kampf," the then student told Alpha news.
"If there was any doubt about what I'm saying just look at the policies enacted by his administration like the country's worst abortion law, anti-free speech, the riots," Shad pointed out. "He's a Maoist to the core and should not be underestimated."
Shad drew attention to the similarities between the messaging of Walz and Kamala Harris--including phrases like "the politics of joy" and "unburdened by what has been"--and the propaganda materials used by Mao.
"People need to have their eyes wide open," Shad said. "The snitch hotline in Minnesota is straight out of CCP. Tim Walz is a very bright guy. None of this by accident."
Kyle Smith
@rkylesmith
Walz and his wife Gwen held their wedding on the fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre--with Gwen Walz saying her husband "wanted to have a date he'll always remember." Kristallnacht was booked?
Jesse Watters asked James Comer if the Chinese would have videotaped this American on his wedding night, and if they may have groomed him as an agent-of-influence. Comer allowed it was possible. He's demanding the FBI turn over its records about Walz and his trips to China.
You know that the criminal Christopher Wray will shred them before he gives those up.
They're openly saying at the DNC that if Walz is elected, he'll be the first "Chinese Vice President."
A Chinese woman calls Walz a Maoist, and an agent of China, and points out how strange it is to specifically plan a honeymoon in China on the anniversary of the Tianamen Square massacre.