Dutch Uncle
* Tertia Optio * Defend the Constitution
You can attend a University and not graduate. I am just curious, are we all taking her at her word? She comes across as highly uneducated and incredibly anti-American.
QED
You can attend a University and not graduate. I am just curious, are we all taking her at her word? She comes across as highly uneducated and incredibly anti-American.
You can attend a University and not graduate. I am just curious, are we all taking her at her word? She comes across as highly uneducated and incredibly anti-American.
Dismissed. I refuse to continue arguing with someone so dishonest and stupid as to make one's head hurt. Weren't you going to stop responding to me? Another dumb lie.![]()
LOL. See? You are moving the goalpost.
That's Trumpian logic for ya!Have anyone seen Trump's degrees? What about Ted Cruz's? The entire GOP?
Well since nobody has ever seen them, they must be lying.![]()
She took coursework that is similar to a political science degree. That is, a minimum of math and science and mostly just having to write papers that are long on opinion and short on facts.
Bu..bu..but it makes him feel better.
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Hello evince,
That is the same post you responded to.
I have shown you two majors and yet you refuse to accept that. Why?
Have anyone seen Trump's degrees? What about Ted Cruz's? The entire GOP?
Well since nobody has ever seen them, they must be lying.
Because your version isn't what she did.
^Thinks he is an adult in the room. Yep, this is REAL grown up Dutch.![]()
Yes you're correct. It is a double major.
A spokesperson for the university told us: “She graduated in 2011 with a Bachelor of Arts degree with two majors in International Relations and Economics. Latin Honors awarded was cum laude that is not tied to an individual major but the degree.”
A spokesperson for the congresswoman added: “She was awarded a double major [degree] in both International Relations and Economics.”
International Relations is a major offered by the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies to students enrolled in the College of Arts & Sciences.
To study international relations is to learn how the world works. At Boston University, we take an interdisciplinary approach. Undergraduates studying international relations choose from a wide range of courses in international relations, history, economics, political science, anthropology, sociology, and religion, among other disciplines. The international relations major can be customized to fit individual students’ interests and goals. Students choose both a region of the world on which to focus their studies and a functional area, such as Foreign Policy and Security Studies or Environment and Development, that is a subfield of the larger discipline of international relations. In a globalizing world, the study of international relations provides a gateway into a variety of career fields as well as excellent preparation for further graduate or professional training.