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Another doozy: Elizabeth Warren makes another outrageous claim

Another doozy: Elizabeth Warren makes another outrageous claim


First she's a Native American. Now, she was apparently "the first nursing mother to take a bar exam in the state of New Jersey."

Cue campaign backpedal"clarification":

When asked how Warren knows that, her campaign said: “Elizabeth was making a point about the very serious challenges she faced as a working mom — from taking an all-day bar exam when she was still breast-feeding, to finding work as a lawyer that would accommodate a mom with two small children.”

Ah, so she was merely "making a point," not telling actual truth.  I love it when liberals "make points."

The Boston Herald did some digging and found that Warren's "point" isn't even accurate.  While the state (thankfully) doesn't track whether female law students are breastfeeding while studying for the bar exam, the suggestion that Warren was a trailblazing woman in the field of law is outrageous (emphasis mine):

Winnie Comfort of the New Jersey Judiciary, which administers that state’s bar exam, said there’s no way to verify Warren’s claim. Comfort said women have been taking the New Jersey bar exam since 1895, but she’s not aware their nursing habits were ever tracked.

This is pretty typical behavior for a liberal.  As Legal Insurrection's Williams Jacobson noted on this story, Warren is merely playing another "victim" card: "It is classic Warren," Jacobson writes, "an unverifiable and unrefutable claim in which the truth doesn’t matter, only whether the statement serves a political purpose."

Further, Commentary's Alana Goodman adds:

Politicians are politicians because they self-promote and puff up their accomplishments shamelessly. Al Gore’s infamous claim that he created the Internet is one extreme example, and the same goes for most of the assertions that come out of Joe Biden’s mouth. The problem is when they cross the line into downright lies, like Richard Blumenthal’s false claim that he served in Vietnam. Was Warren’s assertion a lie, an exaggeration, or was she simply mistaken? We don’t know, and the issue is so minor and obscure that it’s probably not even worth investigating.

If the Cherokee controversy didn’t hurt Warren in the polls, it’s possible the nursing mother story won’t have an impact either. In fact, the nursing mother story probably wouldn’t even be an issue if not for the ancestry claims. On its face, Warren’s comments seem to be silly but harmless self-congratulation, and that’s how a lot of voters will probably see it. But it does speak to a pattern of exaggerating and stretching biographical details. It’s not just the substance of Warren’s claims that’s troubling, but the habit.

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