Health

Psychologists Debunk Tim Walz’s Lies as a Debate with JD Vance Exposed the Vice Presidential Candidate’s Tall Stories

Tim Walz was left red-faced during last night’s debate after being challenged over a lie about being in Hong Kong during the Tiananmen Square massacre.

“I got there that summer and was wrong about this,” the Democratic vice presidential hopeful said before leaving in confusion.

For years, he had claimed he was there when the Chinese government violently suppressed the pro-democracy movement in June 1989.

But it recently emerged that although he was actually in Hong Kong that year, he would not arrive there until August at the earliest.

It’s just the latest in a series of ‘mispeaks’ from Walz and psychologists tell DailyMail.com that there now appears to be a pattern.

Walz is pictured above trying to dodge a question about why he lied about his presence in Tiananmen Square during the pro-democracy protests

Walz is pictured above trying to dodge a question about why he lied about his presence in Tiananmen Square during the pro-democracy protests

Dr. Christian Hart, a psychologist at Texas Woman’s University who has previously written about why politicians lie, offered two theories for Walz’s embellishments.

He said: ‘When we look at lying, we see that people only lie when they think they can get something useful out of it.

‘If no potential benefit is perceived, research shows people are almost exclusively honest.

“For Walz, he may think he’s getting some kind of favor out of it, whether that’s by burnishing his reputation or by appearing as someone who has more expertise on a subject than he actually has.”

The governor of Minnesota has repeatedly said that he used IVF to conceive his two children, which is in fact not true.

He most recently made this claim at a joint meeting with Kamala Harris in August, when there were concerns about the legality of IVF.

He also made this claim in fundraising letters posted in April that began, “My wife and I used IVF to start a family.”

But when he pressed the claims, it emerged that he had actually used intrauterine insemination, or IUI, a different treatment.

In another instance, Walz said in 2018, while running for Congress, that he had used “weapons of war, which I carried in the war” when discussing gun regulation.

But this was not true. Walz, who served in the National Guard for 26 years, was never deployed in combat or overseas — and retired from his battalion shortly before they were sent to fight in Iraq.

Another theory is that Walz, who comes from a small town in Nebraska and has been catapulted onto the national stage, is insecure and therefore exaggerates his achievements to make him appear more presidential.

Many viewers concluded after last night's debate that Republican vice-presidential rival JD Vance had performed more strongly

Many viewers concluded after last night’s debate that Republican vice-presidential rival JD Vance had performed more strongly

Dr. Hart added: ‘One thing we also see is that people with low self-esteem lie significantly more than people who are more secure.

“It could be that he may not consider himself quite at the level you would expect from a presidential candidate, and so he’s making exaggerated claims to look more like him.”

During his 2006 campaign for Congress, his team claimed that his DUI arrest was not the result of alcohol consumption, but that he had instead failed the alcohol test due to a misunderstanding related to hearing loss from his time at the National Guard.

However, court records show he was stopped for driving at 96mph in a 55mph zone and then taken to a local hospital, where a test showed his blood alcohol level was 0.128 – above the legal limit. limit of 0.1.

Also in the 2006 campaign, he claimed that he had received an award from the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce in 1993 for his work in the business community.

A blistering House letter, revealed in August and sent to the Walz campaign at the time, refuted this, saying he had never received an award.

Ryan Waite, vice president of public affairs at marketing firm Think Big, told DailyMail.com that a “worrying” pattern appeared to be emerging in Walz’s lies.

He said: ‘I would have put this down a bit to inexperience, but there’s also a pattern now that’s starting to deepen a bit, I think.’

However, he said Walz did not appear to lie any more than other politicians, although he added that politicians normally learn not to make these types of claims during the primary process. But with Walz, he added, there were no primaries.

“Normally, these types of issues would be resolved during the primary process before they reached the national stage,” he said.

“But with Walz, he’s been catapulted forward without the normal ramp.”

During the debate, Walz criticized for appearing nervous and making unusual facial expressions.

Body language experts also noted how Walz’s eyes seemed to open “wide as saucers” at some points.

Joe Navarro, a published author and body language expert, shared Politics it was a ‘dynamic and emphatic facial movement that captured the viewer’s attention’.

‘Early humans would have made such facial gestures to convey strong emotions, such as ‘danger is near’.

“For Walz, it added weight to his feelings and kept our focus.”

On the debate stage, Walz mainly faced criticism for the suggestions he had made during the democracy protests on Tianamen Square.

He glossed over his response, calling himself a “knucklehead” and then adding that he gets “caught up” in the moment.

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