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"A University of Vermont fraternity has been suspended while school officials...
investigate allegations that a survey was circulated among members asking them who they would like to rape"
why
Comments
It's like TVTropes in real life.I'm not as surprised as I feel I should be.
This is pretty sick stuff (that should go without saying).
It also amuses me that the fraternity has its own website and goes on about developing balanced men (perhaps by making sure they always have an equal amount of change in each pocket). I thought fraternities were clubs in which male students drank too much, dicked around and enhanced their social status by hanging around with rich kids, not some kind of moral crusade.
Rich, not really so much anymore. With dues, rent, and food put together, it was about the same as if I'd roomed off campus and wasn't in a fraternity (the rent was really, really cheap).
Stuff like the OP...greatly depresses but really doesn't surprise me. Both campuses I've been to have had about two houses that were absolute festering hives, and every other house on campus knows exactly who they are.
Wow, classy.
Curious as to how exactly the survey was formulated, which I hope will appear in follow-up stories. A checklist of famous people? An essay on how they would go about the crime? Edit: Ninja. That was rather basic.
I'd also step up to defend the idea of a frat, but the difference between the American and the Dutch model is so large that I really don't need to bother.
Work contacts is...shaky. A few decades ago it was definitely the case, but mine got utterly left out to dry by all but about five of the alumni, none of whom were employers. The only one who got anything resembling a work contact out of it was the one who was the liaison to nationals and already doing half their desk work.
Really, a group to plan large-scale parties and a building big enough to hold it is like 80% of what people get out of it at the moment.
British universities don't have fraternities or sororities in the same way (I think they do exist in continental Europe). The nearest equivalent are drinking societies, which are pretty blatantly all about, well, drinking, although at some of the older universities some do have undertones of privilege, having been educated at elite schools and so on.
David Cameron was in the Bullingdon Club at Oxford, which is basically posh boys drinking to excess, smashing stuff up and paying their way out of trouble, and you wouldn't believe the amount of flak he's taken for it. Of course, George Bush used to get criticism for having been in the Skull and Bones at Yale, so maybe that's not so different.