Thursday, February 5, 2015

Stolen valor: another lib fabricates a lie surrounding their experience with our military

Misremembering or something. Tell me again why we continue to tolerate these LIARS?
Townhall: It’s confession time for NBC’s Brian Williams. The story about Williams and his news team riding in a Chinook helicopter that was shot down by a rocket-propelled grenade in Iraq 12 years ago was a lie. It never happened.

Here's what Williams and the network had been saying about the event until recently:



Williams has since apologized for this fabrication twice, once on Facebook; and most recently on last night’s broadcast of NBC’s Nightly News.



Uh, wait a second; for years, Williams–and NBC–made the claim that the now-discredited “RPG took down my chopper” story had happened. Yet, did Williams lie again in his on air apology? Lance Reynolds, whom Williams addressed in his Facebook apology and was onboard the downed Chinook, wrote on the social media site that Williams left after he had asked what happened on another flight of Chinook's heading into Kuwait; they had to do their Nightly News report. I'm sure we'll find out more in due time.
Sounds ALOT like this LIAR:



Sleep deprived, riiight...

Or how could we ever forget this consummate SELLOUT?



From our news sources to those supposedly viable for higher office, we're just supposed to put up with this? Because they're liberals? All the more reason not to believe them, America!


Related links: UPDATE: APOLOGY – NBC’s Brian Williams admits he’s been LYING about being attacked in Iraq after soldiers PROTEST!
‘Even lying in his apology’: Brian Williams slammed after recanting personal story about RPG attack in Iraq
Stars And Stripes: Brian Williams Never Anywhere Near Enemy Fire
Hillary Clinton calls Bosnia sniper story a mistake
FLASHBACK: Hillary Lied About Taking Fire Before It Was Cool

ADDENDUM: Rush's prediction...
"Look for reports in days ahead of other anchors at other networks doing the same thing. Not to embarrass or get those other anchors in trouble, but to create the impression, “Hey, everybody does it, and so what?"