
Mbattles65
1.1K posts



Why are people lying about Erica Kirk? For the grift of course. Oh lookie, @baroncoleman and @RealCandaceO debunked again. All this took was a simple phone call to ASU: Erika Kirk did not lie about her ASU degrees and here's the University itself explaining it: Arizona State University’s own materials make this crystal clear. Critics claim a "double major in political science and international relations" wasn't possible around 2012 because a standalone International Relations major didn't exist yet. That's technically true on the naming but completely misses how ASU actually structured the programs. Here’s what ASU says: The School of Politics and Global Studies was formed in 2010 (right before Erika’s time there), combining Political Science and Global Studies. From ASU’s site: "Majoring in political science or global studies provides students with a better understanding of our world..." (Current SPGS homepage) The Global Studies BA (available in 2010–2012 and still today) is explicitly the program that covers international relations content: "In the Bachelor of Arts program in global studies, you examine the causes and consequences of problems that cross national boundaries, and the governance of these problems in social, cultural and economic contexts." "It includes topics like global governance, international organizations, foreign policy, ethnoreligious conflicts, global justice, and more exactly what people mean by "international relations." Students routinely double-majored in Political Science and Global Studies. This was (and is) a standard, overlapping path at ASU. The University itself describes Global Studies as providing the international/global affairs focus. ASU only launched a dedicated standalone International Relations BA/BS major in fall 2024. In other words: Before 2024, the Global Studies major (especially paired with Political Science) was how ASU delivered what is now called the International Relations major. Describing the double major as "Political Science and International Relations" is a common, accurate shorthand AND NOT A FABRICATION. Erika graduated around 2012 with exactly that combination: a double major that gave her full coursework in both political science and the international/global studies track. No rules were broken. No classes were invented. The education was real and available. This is how universities work — fields evolve in naming, but the content and double-major options existed for years. Calling normal shorthand "lying" is just bad-faith nitpicking. Facts from ASU’s own catalog, program descriptions, and news releases confirm it. The underlying degree checks out. SORRY HATERS. YOU LOSE AGAIN






Why are people lying about Erica Kirk? For the grift of course. Oh lookie, @baroncoleman and @RealCandaceO debunked again. All this took was a simple phone call to ASU: Erika Kirk did not lie about her ASU degrees and here's the University itself explaining it: Arizona State University’s own materials make this crystal clear. Critics claim a "double major in political science and international relations" wasn't possible around 2012 because a standalone International Relations major didn't exist yet. That's technically true on the naming but completely misses how ASU actually structured the programs. Here’s what ASU says: The School of Politics and Global Studies was formed in 2010 (right before Erika’s time there), combining Political Science and Global Studies. From ASU’s site: "Majoring in political science or global studies provides students with a better understanding of our world..." (Current SPGS homepage) The Global Studies BA (available in 2010–2012 and still today) is explicitly the program that covers international relations content: "In the Bachelor of Arts program in global studies, you examine the causes and consequences of problems that cross national boundaries, and the governance of these problems in social, cultural and economic contexts." "It includes topics like global governance, international organizations, foreign policy, ethnoreligious conflicts, global justice, and more exactly what people mean by "international relations." Students routinely double-majored in Political Science and Global Studies. This was (and is) a standard, overlapping path at ASU. The University itself describes Global Studies as providing the international/global affairs focus. ASU only launched a dedicated standalone International Relations BA/BS major in fall 2024. In other words: Before 2024, the Global Studies major (especially paired with Political Science) was how ASU delivered what is now called the International Relations major. Describing the double major as "Political Science and International Relations" is a common, accurate shorthand AND NOT A FABRICATION. Erika graduated around 2012 with exactly that combination: a double major that gave her full coursework in both political science and the international/global studies track. No rules were broken. No classes were invented. The education was real and available. This is how universities work — fields evolve in naming, but the content and double-major options existed for years. Calling normal shorthand "lying" is just bad-faith nitpicking. Facts from ASU’s own catalog, program descriptions, and news releases confirm it. The underlying degree checks out. SORRY HATERS. YOU LOSE AGAIN















@DOCMAGA1 @PerceptionCorr @TammaJoe1024 @MrsErikaKirk @imelizabethlane @grok You are about to be real embarrassed along with a few others. Yall are so stupid not to realize Candace told us months ago she is sitting on all the evidence to prove what happened. Sent to her by Charlie Kirk and of something happened to open it. I’ve never seen anyone so dumb














@PBDsPodcast The video is real, not AI. Correct the record for your audience.





