American Values

“Our First Chinese Vice President”

That’s how Tim Walz was introduced at the Asian American and Pacific Islanders’ meeting in Chicago this week. And why wouldn’t he be given his history with communist China?

 

We know that communist China has been trying for years to influence American young people to accept Marxism and Maoism and to hate capitalism and America. That’s what the Confucius Institutes on our college campuses are all about. That’s what TikTok is all about. (Here and here.)

 

Now, a former student, Shad, who went on one of Walz’s academic trips to China in 1995, has come forward with details of what he saw. He said the trip was “almost a daily revelation of how much he [Walz] adores the communist regime.” 

 

Shad went on to describe Walz as a “true believer” and “Maoist to the core.” Pointing to Walz’s leftist policies, he added, “The snitch hotline in Minnesota is straight out of [communist China]. Tim Walz is a very bright guy. None of this is by accident.”

 

By the way, Walz’s “academic” trips to China were heavily subsidized by Beijing.

 

Noting Walz’s service at the time in the National Guard, John Schindler, a former NSA counterintelligence officer Schindler wrote:

 

“It’s certain that Walz was vetted by the Ministry of State Security, the regime’s powerful secret police, because that’s how China works. No American would be allowed to run academic exchanges for a couple of decades, on the CCP’s dime, without MSS approval. It just wouldn’t happen. . .

 

“A young American with an affection for China, who was also a part-time member of the U.S. military, would have been a tempting recruiting target for Chinese intelligence.”

 

And here’s how Walz described Chinese communism to his students:

 

“It means that everyone is the same and everyone shares. The doctor and the construction worker make the same. The Chinese government and the place they work for provide housing and about 30 pounds of rice per month. They get food and housing.”

 

Millions of people were murdered in communist China so everyone could “share” and “make the same” amount of money.