Here is the link to my new video, which provides an overview of my report from August 2018, about Walberg's college credentials.
Link to original report: https://www.takecaretim.com/2018/08/investigation-walberg-lies-to-us-about.html
contents
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PART I - Table of Tim Walberg’s Claims about his College Credentials
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Date & Place
of Claim
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Claimed
Major / Minor
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College
|
Claimed Degree Type
|
Source:
| ||||||
Wednesday,
July 25, 2007 -
Saturday,
January 3, 2009
- Issue Position: Environment
- From Official House Webpage
|
Major: Forestry
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Original House Page
(link now broken):
| ||||||
Wednesday,
June 16, 2010
- Campaign Meet and Greet
- Marshall, MI
|
Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (1:35 mark):
| ||||||
Wednesday,
June 30th 2010
- Campaign Meet and Greet
- Jackson, MI
|
Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (04:20 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_pmH7GBwGU
| ||||||
Wednesday,
July 7, 2010
- Campaign Meet and Greet
- Chelsea, MI
|
Seminary Training
|
Moody Bible Institute
|
not specified
|
Video (4:10 mark):
| ||||||
Seminary Training
|
Wheaton Grad School
|
not specified
| ||||||||
Friday,
July 9, 2010
- Campaign Meet and Greet
- Eaton Rapids, MI
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Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
No degree
|
Video (0:45 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Cy0I4qCUEY
| ||||||
Wednesday,September 1, 2010
- Campaign Meet and Greet
- Jackson, MI
|
Major: Education
|
not specified
|
Bachelor’s
|
Video (2:00 mark):
| ||||||
Friday,
September 17, 2010
- Campaign Meet and Greet
- Manchester, MI
|
Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (2:40 mark):
| ||||||
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
- Interview
- WLMB, Main Street
- Toledo, OH
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Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
No degree
|
Video (09:15 mark): https://player.vimeo.com/video/84903757?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0
| ||||||
not specified
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Moody Bible Institute
|
not specified
| ||||||||
not specified
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Wheaton College
|
not specified
| ||||||||
Wednesday,
March 11, 2015
- Interview
- World News Group
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Major: Forestry and Land Management
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Western Illinois University
|
not specified
|
Article and Transcript:
| ||||||
not specified
|
Moody Bible Institute
|
not specified
| ||||||||
not specified
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Fort Wayne Bible College
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Undergrad
| ||||||||
Cross-Cultural Communications
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Wheaton College
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Masters
| ||||||||
Saturday,
May 16, 2015
- Graduation Commencement Keynote
- Spring Arbor, MI
|
Major: Biology
Major: Geology
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (45:30 mark):
| ||||||
Sunday,
July 5, 2015
- Testimony at Emmanuel Baptist Church
- Toledo, OH
|
Major: Forestry
Major: Biology
Minor: Geology
|
Western Illinois University
|
not specified
|
Audio Only (09:40 mark): http://www.sermonconnect.com/sermoninfo.php?church=151718&id=201507070807444718F9
| ||||||
not specified
|
Moody Bible Institute
|
not specified
| ||||||||
Cross-Cultural Communications
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Wheaton College
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Masters
| ||||||||
Friday,
May 6, 2016
- Speech to Student Athletes and TV Interview
- Spring Arbor, MI
|
Major: Biology
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (00:40 mark):
| ||||||
Wednesday,
September 14, 2016
- House Floor Speech on
H.R. 5226
- Washington, DC
|
Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Official Congressional Transcript:
C-SPAN Video (00:52:00 mark): https://www.c-span.org/video/?415242-102/us-house-legislative-business
| ||||||
Tuesday,
October 11, 2016
- NAACP Candidate Forum
- Adrian, MI
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Education
|
not specified
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Undergrad
|
Video (02:25 mark):
| ||||||
Communications
|
not specified
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Masters
| ||||||||
Friday,
March 3, 2017
- Coffee Hour
- Hillsdale, MI
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Major: Forestry and Land Management
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Western Illinois University
|
not specified
|
Video (05:50 mark):
| ||||||
Friday,
May 26, 2017
- Coffee Hour
- Coldwater, MI
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Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (46:50 mark):
| ||||||
Thursday,
June 1, 2017
- Radio Call-In
- Lansing, MI
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Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Audio (1:20 mark):
| ||||||
Monday,
August 7, 2017
- Coffee Hour
- Delta Township, MI
|
Major: Biology
Minor: Geology
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (23:30 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EeBuf0ZZkek
| ||||||
Tuesday,
August 8, 2017
- Coffee Hour
- Dundee, MI
|
Major: Forestry and Land Management
Major: Biology
Minor: Geology
|
not specified
|
not specified
|
Video (20:35 mark):
| ||||||
Tuesday,
August 8, 2017
- Coffee Hour
- Dexter, MI
|
Major: Education
Major: Biology
Minor: Geology
|
not specified
|
Undergrad degree in education
|
Video (43:50 mark) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94fkBUrU18Q
| ||||||
Saturday,
October 28, 2017
- Coffee Hour
- Spring Arbor, MI
|
Major: Forestry and Land Management
|
not specified
|
No degree
|
Video (59:25 mark):
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Summary and Fact Check of Walberg’s Claims
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Comparison of Walberg’s Claims to his Actual Record
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PART II - Conflicts in the Public Record
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PART III - Tim Walberg’s Actual College Credentials
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PART IV – Walberg’s lies and deflections
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Saturday, October 28, 2017
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Coffee Hour
Spring Arbor, MI
|
Video (59:25 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbFtd9wcWRg
|
[The moderator: Colleen Gibbs, Treasurer of Spring Arbor Township, did not read any of the three questions that I had submitted on different topics, so at the end of the event I heckled the following questions:]
Steven: Did you get a degree in biology, and uh, a minor in geology - did you get a major in biology and a minor in geology?
Walberg: No. I majored in forestry and land management. And I don’t have a degree in it.
Steven: You claimed at Delta Township, that you majored in biology with a minor in geology.
Walberg: No I didn’t.
Steven: Yeah you did. I have it on video.
Steven: You said, ‘I majored- [interruption]
Walberg: Go to my website, and you’ll find out what I majored in…[inaudible].
Steven: But why did you say that then? Why did you say it? You said, ‘I majored in biology, with a minor in geology’.
Walberg: Have a good day.
Steven: Why did you say it?
Walberg: Have a good day.
Steven: Why’d you say it? What was the context? What did I miss?
Walberg: You and I will have a time together sometime. [Walberg exits]
Steven: Please, no, but - yeah, I’d love it! Yeah, please. Holy moley. I can’t believe that.
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PART V - avoiding Accountability
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CONCLUSION
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additional SOURCES
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APPENDIX I – walberg’s Claims About his College Majors
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Wednesday, July 25, 2007 - Saturday, January 3, 2009 | Issue Position: Environment From Official HouseWebpage | Original Page (link now broken): http://walberg.house.gov/Issues/Issue/?IssueID=3562 Archived Page: https://web.archive.org/web/20070725193926/http://walberg.house.gov/Issues/Issue/?IssueID=3562 |
Screenshot of archived webpage from July 25, 2007 with enlargement and highlight by the author
| ||
NOTE 1: In Part II of this report I described how that Teddy Roosevelt quote is false.
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January 2008
|
Annual Report
To the People of
South-Central Michigan
| Original Page (link now broken): http://walberg.house.gov/UploadedFiles/Walberg2007AnnualReport.pdf Archived Page: https://web.archive.org/web/20080227185724/http://walberg.house.gov/UploadedFiles/Walberg2007AnnualReport.pdf |
Note: In the tabulation from Part I, I counted this as one occurrence, because this statement is so closely tied to the position statement that Walberg put on the House webpage, along with the same false Teddy Roosevelt quote. |
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
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Campaign Meet & Greet
Marshall, MI
|
Video (1:35 mark):
|
Walberg: “I consider myself an environmentalist”
| ||
[Walberg, describes his support for oil pipelines in Alaska:]
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Wednesday, June 30, 2010
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Campaign Meet and Greet
Jackson, MI
|
Video (4:20 mark) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_pmH7GBwGU
|
Walberg: “Can something be too clean?”
| ||
Walberg: “America can go past the points that generally we consider to be tipping points. We can turn things around without getting to that, but I think we need to have a mindset that says: Can something be too clean? Well, no, and yes. We have to move with the progress, and that environment issue has to move with a realistic progress as well. I majored in forestry and land management when I went to university out of high school. I’ll stand up to anybody in being the one who wants to be a good steward of the resources we have. |
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
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Campaign Meet and Greet
Chelsea, MI
|
Video (4:10 mark):
|
Live Question: “You mentioned you are, or were a minister. Where did you get your seminary training?”
Walberg: “Moody Bible Institute, and Wheaton Grad School.”
Live Follow-Up: “You’re ordained in any particular denomination?
|
Friday, July 9, 2010
|
Campaign Meet and Greet
Eaton Rapids, MI
|
Video (0:45 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Cy0I4qCUEY
Video (2:40 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7sN12N7dGQ
|
Walberg: “Environment and conservation’s almost become a religion”
| ||
Walberg: “We have huge reserves in Anwar. The Alaskans want us to use it. I would submit to you, though I can’t prove it – maybe my forestry brother here - I started out majoring in forestry and land management, but he went on and did it. But I think probably if we could find a way to communicate and record their statements, the caribou and the grizzly bears don’t mind either. In fact, we’re finding that they’re mating and they’re producing better around the pipeline.
[Later, Walberg interrupts a question about conservation and environmental responsibility:]
|
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
|
Campaign Meet and Greet
Jackson, MI
|
Video (2:00 mark):
|
Illustration Above:“When you illustrate something, it stays in their minds even longer.”
| ||
Walberg: “I want to remind you, having my bachelor’s degree in education, I like to think that teaching flows through my veins as well. And I know that when you say something, it’s reminded in people’s minds to a great degree, but when you illustrate something, it stays in their minds even longer.” |
Friday, September 17, 2010
|
Campaign Meet and Greet
Manchester, MI
|
Video (2:10 mark):
|
Walberg: “The League of Conservation Voters has a whole agenda way beyond what the normal citizen would ever want, accept, or dream about in the environment. And I majored in forestry and land management when I left high school and went to university. I love to stand in a free-flowing trout stream and be able to see my browns and the rainbows. I want to breathe the fresh air. I grew up on the south side of Chicago chewing the air, literally, with refineries and the steel mills. I worked in the steel mills.” |
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
|
Main Street, Episode 68
WLMB
Toledo, OH
|
Video (09:15 mark): https://player.vimeo.com/video/84903757?title=0&byline=0&portrait=0
|
Walberg: “I always believed that God would lead my life as long as my desire was to be in his will in doing that, so when I left high school I went to state university majoring in forestry and land management. I wanted to be in the US Forest Service. But it was while there during the Vietnam War, and the opportunity to really share my life and faith in a real way for the first time on my own, I was enthused with the fact that my college roommates and floor mates listened and excited me to the point that ultimately I left the university and went to Moody Bible Institute to prepare for ministry.”
|
Wednesday, March 11, 2015 | Interview with World News Group Washington, DC |
Full Interview Transcript: https://world.wng.org/2015/03/rep_tim_walberg_on_holding_fast_to_convictions
|
Did you go to a Christian college?
I went off, initially, to Western Illinois University, majoring in forestry and land management.That’s what I wanted to do. I didn’t feel any compulsion to do anything other than that. I was at Western Illinois University during the Vietnam War, the Kent State massacre, all of that going on at that time in the late ’60s. For the first time on my own, I got the opportunity to decide whether to follow my faith and carry it out on campus or go the opposite direction. I’m glad I chose to carry on my faith. It was a strengthening time to have to defend my faith and answer questions relative to the war. How could God allow this to go on? ... I became enthused with campus ministry through organizations like Campus Crusade, InterVarsity, Navigators, and a local church that I involved myself with on that campus. I ended up feeling the call to a ministry and left Westernand went to Moody Bible Institute. That’s where I spent the next three years of my life in training for, I thought, campus ministry. I ended up being called to pastor a church, and while there at my first church in the New Haven-Fort Wayne, Ind., area I completed my degree at then Fort Wayne Bible College, which became Taylor University Fort Wayne.
You went back to grad school as well, didn’t you?
I pastored for five years and felt a real need in the area of communications. So I left that church and went back to Wheaton College grad school with a wife and two kids at that time. I graduated with a master’s degree in cross-cultural communications.Then I was called to a church in, of all places, Tipton, Mich., and that’s what brought me to Michigan.
You have a master’s degree in cross-cultural studies. Did you just treat the liberal media and the folks that disagreed with you as a different culture?
I learned in survey research at Wheaton College that you had to know your audience, so take the time to know the audience and know those who would be putting you in front of the audience as well. That was a unique experience. |
Saturday, May 16, 2015
|
Graduation
Commencement Keynote
Spring Arbor University
|
Video (45:30 mark):
|
Walberg: “Sooner after I graduated back in the dark ages of 1969 from high school, I experienced that awesome experience of freedom and choice that I hadn’t had before. I wanted to seek seed in my chosen field of endeavor and began moving forward to university to major in biology and geology, planning for a career in forestry and land management, stewarding god’s wonderful creation, getting out of the city of Chicago where I was raised. Nothing wrong with that direction in life. Nothing sinful about doing that. It was a valued goal in my life at that time, but as time went by, and the world situation which included the Vietnam conflict, unrest on college campuses, Kent State massacre, free-love, the age of Aquarius, and all of those wonderful things, I began to see that mere success in what I wanted to do, seemed to lack something.” |
Sunday, July 5, 2015
|
Testimony at Emmanuel Baptist Church
Toledo, OH
| |
Walberg: “I remember as we were planning, Paul and I to go on for higher education after high school graduation, Paul had a football scholarship to Knox College and I didn’t get a wrestling scholarship to Wheaton, so I ended up going to Western Illinois University. My plans were to be in the US Forest Service, majoring in forestry and biology; geology minor. And I looked forward to doing that. I was raised on the south side of Chicago. So to get out of the city with coughing birds and to get into the wide open spaces, that was my dream. I had been in Christian Service Brigade and had taught woodsman-ship and all of that. So this is where I was going. So I didn’t feel a catch in my heart that this wasn’t something that God would not want me to do, so we headed toward that.”
“It was there at Western Illinois during the Vietnam War and the Kent State massacre, this was 1969, that all of a sudden, left alone in a college room with a drug-pusher for a roommate, psychedelic on one side and Rocky Mountains on the other side of the room, I had my first opportunity to pull my Scofield Bible out of the bolster and look at my roommate as he kind of gazed over at me as I had my first devotions the first night there, realizing if I didn’t start it then, I might not start it.”
“God began to work in my life, as I had opportunities to share Christ and share the authority of scripture. In simple ways with my roommate and with others that he would bring in, sometimes stoned and sometimes not, and then to talk to others on my floor who were wrestling with the concept of how a loving god could allow the atrocity of the Vietnam war and everything to go with it, and it excited me with campus ministry. I thank god for a wonderful Baptist church and that community that I went to, Pastor Wally Pyles [spelling?] of all things. He looked like a used car salesman, but he had a heart for God - impacted me. And then InterVarsity and Campus Crusade, and having opportunities to see some of my classmates come to know the lord as a result of the ministry there, and their campus work. Ultimately I felt the calling of God to go back and prepare for ministry. I thought it would be campus missionary work with Campus Crusade, or InterVarsity, or Navigators, something like that.”
|
Friday, May 6, 2016
|
Congressman Tim Walberg Visits Spring Arbor University to Honor National Champs
Spring Arbor, MI
|
Video (00:40 mark):
|
Walberg [speaking to students]: “What a delight to be here. Every time I have an opportunity to come to Spring Arbor it’s encouraging for me. It’s a great campus, a great faculty, great students, love the administration here, appreciate the commitment to the authority of god’s word and principles that really are foundational for our society.”
“’We wrestle not against flesh and blood1’Now I put that in there as I was talking to your first lady and asking if you have a wrestling program here, being a former wrestler in high school and college, it’s about time, because that’s a biblical sport. You need to have that. But it’s great to be with athletes, people who have been trained to be disciplined in order to succeed and have impact. I look back on coaches and some of those had the greatest impact in my life. I didn’t like it at the time, doing the meat grinders and whatever else, but nonetheless it prepared me in a great way, especially as a Christian.”
[Later] Interviewer, Bart Hawley: “Congressman Walberg, visiting the campus of Spring Arbor University and the student athletes, and I believe you were a student athlete in your day.”
|
Wednesday,
September 14, 2016
|
House Floor Speech on
H.R. 5226
Washington, DC
|
Video (00:52:00 mark): https://www.c-span.org/video/?415242-102/us-house-legislative-business
|
The Official Congressional Record, with enlargement and highlight by Author
|
Tuesday, October 11, 2016
|
NAACP Candidate Forum
Adrian, MI
|
Video (02:25 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2JbrHtU3IeA
|
Walberg: “I was a pastor for ten years before going to the dark side in politics, though I don’t think it’s a dark side. I think it’s a place of service, just like the pastor. I have an undergraduate degree in education. I have a master’s degree in communications. That comes in handy when you have to speak to 434 other members of Congress, many of whom aren’t listening to you, and try to make a point.” |
Friday, March 3rd, 2017
|
Coffee Hour
Hillsdale, MI
|
Video (05:50 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8TCySxLxT8
|
The moderator combined several constituents’ questions about the EPA:
|
Friday, May 26, 2017
|
Coffee Hour
Coldwater, MI
|
Video (46:50 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V7zz0ub4Ucw
|
Walberg: “I’m confident that if there’s a real problem, that he [God] can take care of it.”
| ||
Question Read by Moderator: ‘Please address your stand on climate warming’
|
Thursday, June 1, 2017
|
Radio Call-In
Michael Patrick Shiels
Lansing, MI
|
Audio (1:20 mark):
|
Shiels: “The headline this morning for you was your comment at a town meeting on May 26. This is a fascinating topic, and a compelling topic for me… It talked about Global Warming. And I’ll just read the quote. You said you believe there’s climate change. Is that still true?”
Walberg: “I said that.”
Shiels: And then you said, “As a Christian I believe there’s a creator, a God who’s bigger than us. And I’m confident that if there’s a real problem, he can take care of it.”
Walberg: “What’s wrong with that?”
Shiels: “Nothin’. But that’s what I want to hear you talk about, because they put this in the paper as if it’s silly.”
Walberg: “Yeah, and Chelsea Clinton clinted (sic) out something silly as well, on that. So -”
Shiels: “Really? What’d she say?”
Walberg: “She basically said the old joke, that a guy’s drowning out in the water. The floods comin’ up, and comes a helicopter, comes a boat - turns ‘em down, says, ‘God’s gonna take care of me.’ Drowns. Get to Heaven, and says, ‘Where were you God?’ And God says, ‘Helicopter and the boat’.”
Shiels: “Yeah, I sent you help.”
|
Monday, August 7th, 2017
|
Coffee Hour
Delta Township, MI
|
Video (23:30 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EeBuf0ZZkek
|
Moderated Question: “Do you believe in the scientific method as the avenue for determining what is true about the natural world? If yes, how do you reconcile that with your skepticism of global warming due primarily to industrial activity that began in the 19thcentury. If no, do you think we should drop science courses - physics, chemistry, biology – from high school curricula?:
Walberg: “That’s probably the most comprehensive question I ever heard in my life, other than, ‘When did you stop beating your wife?’. I never started. I majored in biology with a minor in geology in university. I believe in sciences. My best courses in high school and college were in the sciences. I’m a Christian. I believe in a god who created the universe. I believe in a god who wants me to be a good steward of his creation. That’s why science is important. So I combine those things – being a good steward of the resources that are here, knowing as much as I can about it, but never believing that I’m god in a legislative costume. So I guess that’s the best way I can answer it. I think it works together.”
[At this moment, a heckler asked Walberg why he voted for coal sludge. Then another heckler, William Lawrence, who introduced himself as a Christian, stepped to the microphone asking about special interest fossil fuel money that Walberg has accepted. Lawrence disobeyed requests for him to sit down and was escorted out by security. The incident was reported in the news. On August 8th, Walberg called in to the Michael Patrick Shiels radio show and discussed the incident:]
Walberg: “There are people that still can’t get over the fact that the election was accomplished back in November”.
[When Shiels asked specifically about the incident with Lawrence, Walberg said:]
|
Tuesday, August 8th, 2017
10:00 am – 11:00 am
|
Coffee Hour
Dundee, MI
|
Video (20:35 mark):
|
Moderated Question: “David Rank, most senior American diplomat in China resigned when the administration withdrew from the Paris Climate Agreement. He said, ‘As a Christian, if we are stewards of creation, then we are charged with taking care of this earth. That means doing things to make that happen.’ - Your thoughts?”:
|
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
|
Coffee Hour
Dexter, MI
|
Video (43:50 mark) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94fkBUrU18Q
|
Moderated Question: In 1970- what year did you get out of college Congressman Walberg, ’75 or ’73?
Walberg: ’73, out of undergrad, out of undergrad.
Continuing Question: In 1973, the year you graduated college, a minimum wage summer job was enough to pay for a year of tuition. Today, a student would have to work a 35-hour week, year-round to afford tuition. Do you support raising the minimum wage so that hard-working young people can get ahead in life, and get an education?
---[skip to 46:10 mark]---
Walberg: My undergrad degree is in education. My mother was a public school teacher.
Heckler: You said biology and geology yesterday.
---[skip to 51:30 mark]---
Moderated Question: Because you have done coursework in land management, could you apply the same principles to global land management?
Walberg: I would hope so.
---[skip ahead slightly]---
Live Constituent Question: So global climate change is more solid science than say, tectonic plates, or the relationship between tobacco and cancer and heart disease, and yet you say-[interruption]
Walberg: Who says?
Live Constituent: Not people with a degree in religious education. It’s people that have – scientists in the field.
|
APPENDIX II – walberg’s other college claims
|
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
|
Campaign Meet and Greet
Charlotte, MI
|
Video (4:45 mark):
|
[Walbergtells a story about advice he received when he first got elected to the State House]
|
Thursday, July 15, 2010
|
Campaign Meet and Greet
Jackson, MI
|
Video: (2:00 mark)
|
Walberg: “I was a pastor before going to the state legislature for ten years. I’ve worked in areas. I’ve been a union steel worker at US Steel, south ward, south side of Chicago. I’ve been in law enforcement while I was in graduate school. And we’ve done all sorts of things, but I look forward to going back and representing you.” |
Monday, September 13, 2010
|
Meet and Greet
Blissfield, MI
|
Video (0:35 mark):
|
Walberg: “That’s why I’m excited to go back. Not just because I was a wrestler and pugilist in high school and college, and I like a good fight at times, but this country is too great of a country not to fight for, and all of us need to be involved with it.” |
Saturday, July 9, 2013
(Recorded: June 2013)
|
Cole on Congress with guest Rep. Tim Walberg
|
Video (2:40 mark):
|
Rep. Tom Cole (OK-04): “Unlike Oklahoma, as I recall, Michigan doesn’t have a runoff primary, and weren’t successful the first time, came back, took out a sitting incumbent - never an easy thing to do - were immediately in a targeted race, had to run in a really bad year in 2008, and didn’t quite make it back, and then got up and came back in 2010, and now obviously again in 2012. Extraordinary, what gives you that kind of energy?”
|
Friday, April 25, 2014
|
Radio Call-in
“Washington Watch
with Tony Perkins”
Washington, DC
| |
Walberg: “It’s a place of service. Acts 20:24, a verse that I have taken since my days at Moody Bible Institute as a student, that says the apostle Paul said, ‘But I do not consider my life of any account as dear unto myself, that I might finish my course in the ministry I received the lord Jesus to testify solemnly of the gospel of the grace of God’. That doesn’t say where that’s done. It says, ‘in the course of my life to finish the purpose where God places me’.
|
Monday, August 7, 2017
|
Coffee Hour
Jackson, MI
|
Video (52:50 mark)
|
Walberg: “Bottom line is, we have to fix the system. We have to move forward. And I’ve taken enough courses in graduate school on survey research. In the past many years of my legislative life I’ve seen surveys and polls taken, and the polls that are taken- [heckle from crowd] Let me finish answering the question, and you can respond further. Anyone who wants to get a response that they want from a survey or poll can do that by the way they ask the questions” |
Tuesday, February 6, 2018
|
Radio Call-in
“Washington Watch
with Tony Perkins”
Washington, DC
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Walberg: “Truth is non-negotiable, it is or it isn’t. And what we’ve seen today is educationists who are trying to blockade off the free-exchange of ideas and control what goes on, not only in the minds of their students but also institutions, and taking institutions like Hillsdale College in my district, or Wheaton College, one of my alma maters, and saying to them, ‘you cannot stand for your distinctives and expect to be accredited. We’re gonna hold your feet to the fire until you acquiesce to what we want you to speak for’.”
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Wednesday, April 4, 2018
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Coffee Hour
Hillsdale, MI
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Video (27:45 mark) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TRWloBkAR0&t
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Walberg: “I generally don’t show up at my work site worried about my life. I generally don’t worry about showing up and being confronted by somebody in a violent way; but a law enforcement officer, every single day he or she puts on a uniform has that potential. I say that because I spent a year in law enforcement when I was in graduate school and got a little taste of those seven hours, or seven and a half hours of sometimes complete and utter boredom, interrupted by an hour or thirty minutes of complete terror.”
“I remember my first stat call to a hospital room in fact for a domestic dispute. And I had heard of, and trained about domestic disputes and violence, what could take place there, and generally the opportunity of that being turned on you as the law enforcement officer showing up. I remember fearing, remember how I shook as I ran to that room.”
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Saturday, April 7, 2018
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Coffee Hour
Palmyra Township, MI
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Video (1:07:00 mark): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMnPwEuwqNI
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[As the coffee hour wrapped up, Walberg looked over to his staff to see how they were doing on time.]
Walberg: “We only have to get to Monroe.”
Steven: “You haven’t asked any of my questions. Could you ask one of my questions?”
Constituent in the back: “One more!”
Steven: “Ask one of my –“
Walberg: “Ask one of Steve’s.”
Steven: “Ask the one about the police force. Or, can I ask it?”
Walberg: “Sure.”
Steven: “On Wednesday you said that you worked for a year in the police force while you were in grad school. [Walberg nods affirmatively]. So what was that, a private, or a public-?
Walberg: “Public.”
Steven: “What was your title-?
Walberg: “It was a municipal police force. I was a police officer. That’s all I was. I worked while I was in graduate school for that year. On the west side of Chicago.”
Walberg: “I was trained there by the force itself. I was assigned to a large county hospital, and I was trained by the police force themselves.”
Steven: “Was that the Wheaton-“
Walberg: “What do you care?! What big deal?!”
Steven: “Was that for the Wheaton municipality?”
Walberg: “No. It wasn’t for Wheaton. I went to Wheaton Graduate School.”
Steven: “Where could I look that up?”
Walberg: “You can look it up anywhere you want.”
Steven: “So what municipality was it though?”
Walberg: “Look it up anywhere you want.”
Steven: “Could you tell me?”
Walberg: “No.You can look it up anywhere you want.”
Steven: “What municipality was it?”
Walberg: “Next question. This guy, [Walberg gestures his hand toward Steven] this guy is looking for stuff, just niggle stuff.”
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