JMU Student Unloads On Fraternities And Sororities
As soon as I came across this opinion piece in JMU’s student newspaper, I knew what it was all about. Its title is “Some Organizations Are Giving JMU A Bad Name.” Would anyone care to guess which organizations the author is referring to? Did you guess fraternities and sororities? If so, you are correct.
It’s the easy answer, really. Whenever GDIs talk about their schools’ problems, it seems as if they always blame the Greek community. I didn’t stop reading just because of the title, though. I stuck around and saw what the author had to say. She could have been on to something, right? No, not really. Not at all, actually.
She starts off with a bit of truth, which is good, considering the majority of her column is absolute bullshit.
When I think of JMU, I think of its overall emphasis on giving back to others, to the university and to the community.
Hell yeah. JMU is all about giving back to the community? Sounds good to me. Let’s keep reading.
However, as a senior on the cusp of graduation, I am worried about the future attitude portrayed by my fellow Dukes creating a negative legacy. I have recently been subject to the most shocking and rude behaviors I have ever encountered at JMU by those proudly representing their campus or Greek organizations etched onto their oversized sweatshirts and quarter-zips.
To be fair, she didn’t exclusively single out Greek organizations–but I think we can all agree the Greeks are exactly who she’s talking about. So, is she some anti-Greek activist or something? According to her, she’s far from that.
I have no problem with Greek organizations in general. In fact, to be clear, I have many friends in social sororities.
That’s an interesting way to establish rapport. I don’t necessarily buy it, but at least she’s not outright bashing us.
I think it’s great that each social Greek organization is heavily involved with its philanthropy, representing an amazing cause. I also recognize the importance of sisterhood and brotherhood within these organizations; without a college family how can you really enjoy the “best four years of your life?”
Hell, it almost sounds like she’s cool with us. Almost.
Many involved with these organizations, however, send devastatingly wrong messages to other students.
Damn it. Here we go–here comes the rant.
I have tried extremely hard not to allow my prejudices to blur my vision of many of the students on campus, but unfortunately, I find myself rolling my eyes, thinking “My God, they are clones of each other. Shallow clones.” It does not need to be this way though. The actions I have witnessed all four years at JMU have put me in this predicament.
Well, at least she tried not to let her prejudices get in the way of actual, sound judgment. Unfortunately, trying doesn’t always equal success, and the author certainly didn’t succeed. As a matter of fact, it seems as though all she has really done is make assumptions and come to conclusions based off the very prejudices she has tried to avoid during college.
Only days ago in Carrier Library I was studying in a designated quiet area. A group of Greek letter-clad female students spoke as if they were the only ones in the building. Politely, I went up to their conversation, which had been going on for a total of 45 minutes, and told them I was trying to study. Appalled that I had interrupted them, one replied with a snide, sour tone, “We’ll be done soon.”
Oh shit! It’s on now. They were loud in the quite zone! String ’em up and let ’em hang in the public square, guys. Seriously though, is that really such a big deal? Don’t get me wrong, it sounds like those girls were being assholes. I get that. I get that completely. But is it fair to judge Greek life, an entire institution, off the actions of a few jerks? Does the fact that those few individuals were loud in the study area mean that all Greeks are douchebags? Basic argumentative logic tells me no, but for some reason, I get the feeling that the author wasn’t using too much of that. It’s okay, though. We’re all guilty of letting our emotions get the best of us at times. Let’s keep chugging along here.
A similar instance caught me off guard while in line for food. A tall young man decorated in his social fraternity letters nudged me out of the way to see if his food was ready. No apology, no “Excuse me.” This person treated me as if I were invisible. I remember muttering under my breath, “Umm. I’m a person. I exist.”
Wow. That guy sounds like a tool–I agree with the author on that. Somebody make sure this kid has to pledge again so he can learn to be a gentleman. But again, I have to ask myself if it’s really fair to judge all Greek life, or even this guy’s chapter, just because of the actions of one person? I don’t think so. Why is the author so pissed off? Maybe she feels left out.
I feel this way often with those in Greek and other popular campus organizations. I feel that I don’t matter as a fellow Duke because I don’t have the right letters or logo mounted on my chest. I write about these two specific instances because they are the most fresh in my mind. Unfortunately however, I witness these instances constantly.
That’s a bummer. Unfortunately for the author, this kind of whining about feeling left out just makes her look like she’s bitter. I’m not trying to be disrespectful, ma’am. I’m just saying.
Well, she gave Greek life a bashing, but at least she didn’t say anything about hazing, right? Wait, she did? Fuck.
From time to time, I think about the conversation I witnessed last year, shortly after the chaos known as Rush was over.
While standing in line, minding my own business, two girls in front of me very audibly began speaking about the sorority they had recently joined; they were talking about hazing.
“I know JMU is super anti-hazing,” the girl on the left said. “But, oh my God, it definitely happens.”
To which the girl on the right replied, “Yeah, I was literally forced into the trunk of a car last night.”
Hazing doesn’t happen at JMU. I say again: all fraternities and sororities at JMU are non-hazing organizations. Forced into a trunk? Something like that would never happen. Again, all JMU Greek organizations have strict non-hazing policies. Every chapter sends its members to anti-hazing seminars and each chapter requires its members to sign an anti-hazing petition.
Even if someone was allegedly shoved in a trunk–the key word here being allegedly–that doesn’t mean the organization is all about hazing and forcing people into the trunks of cars. Like I said before, you can’t judge an entire organization based solely off the actions of a few individuals.
How can you even try to say JMU’s Greek life is giving the school a bad name? While Springfest was before the author’s time, let’s not forget that the rioting and destruction was mostly caused by people unaffiliated with Greek organizations. What about all the service and philanthropy? I can think of a few JMU chapters that have raised a shit ton of money for good causes. They have also raised awareness about key issues, and they have served those in need. And, of course, who could forget JMU Greek life’s most recent service to the school? JMU fraternities and sororities sent the folks from I’m Shmacked running–and if anything, they ought to receive a medal for that.
JMU is a friendly school, which, as the author states, is all about serving others and bettering the world in which we live. However, it seems as though some Dukes are not friendly. Some people, like the author, are extremely prejudiced. Who would have thought that today, we’d still have this kind of flagrant prejudice on our college campuses? Seriously, the author has decided that certain organizations at JMU, particularly fraternities and sororities, are giving the school a bad name solely because her interactions with a few individuals weren’t great. Riddle me this, people: in what other scenario would it be rational or reasonable to judge a huge group of people based on the actions of a few? I thought that we, as a society, are better than this kind of behavior. I guess not.
We shall overcome.
[via The Breeze]
Image via jmu.edu
TL; DR
11 years ago at 11:02 amSomeone ball this guy
11 years ago at 11:41 amThis is why women and GDIs, especially woman GDIs, should not be allowed to contribute to school newspapers.
11 years ago at 11:06 amThe girl said “many involved with these organizations,” not “all greek people and the whole establishment” particularly right after she wrote a bit about recognizing all the good that comes from Greek organizations. So I don’t get why the author is almost forcing himself to believe that the girl wants to “judge Greek life, an entire institution, off the actions of a few jerks”.
She gave a few examples from her life, she didn’t go off on some philosophical rant with no backing. The author then contradicts himself by agreeing that yes, the douchebag actions of some of the ppl in her examples were not cool, but then laugh them off and insists that she’s taking stuff too seriously.
And lastly, the whole “maybe she feels left out” thing made me actually laugh. This author (and many Greeks I’ve encountered at UVA) seem to always believe that ill feelings towards their organization ALWAYS branch from someone being bitter about not getting a bid. They love to call non-Greek people “GDIs” or “geeds” as if everyone needs to be either labeled by some Greek letter, or defaulted into GDI….there’s no category for regular student. These claims she is making aren’t so far-fetched because I, too, witness cases like these all the time at UVA. Maybe it’s the Greeks inherently, maybe it’s the pretentious and entitled attitudes you find commonly at UVA in general, but the two often overlap at UVA.
And I’m not even going to start with the hazing rebuttal because that was just ridiculous and not that relevant to me anyway. ALSO so nobody jumps to conclusions and assumes “i hate all greek life as an institution in general” let me flat out say that’s false. This was just a very poorly poorly written rebuttal, which is obviously still going to receive overwhelmingly positive reviews because it was posted on TFM, where the majority of audience is…..you guessed it: Greek.
11 years ago at 12:46 pmUmmm, like, fuck yea, and woohoo and shit. You go “student”! Wait a minute who let this UVA geed on TFM?
11 years ago at 1:04 pmBeat it, nerd.
11 years ago at 1:50 pmStrap yourself to some cinder blocks and jump in a lake.
11 years ago at 2:08 pmA fraternity humor website has an audience that is mostly Greek?? WHO LET THIS HAPPEN??
11 years ago at 2:10 pmCongratulations for missing the point entirely
11 years ago at 2:42 pmDoes anybody want to offer a real counter argument since it seems you’re all chock full of reasons why I am wrong..?
11 years ago at 2:38 pmNo
11 years ago at 3:18 pmYour opinion on the matter is irrelevant.
11 years ago at 3:26 pmYou’re gay
11 years ago at 3:51 pmhey geed, here’s a nice frock slap across your face for the walk home
11 years ago at 5:28 pmFuck a cheese grater
11 years ago at 6:14 pmConsider chugging bleach
11 years ago at 7:31 pm100 dollars says this is the girl that wrote the article!
11 years ago at 3:24 pmTL;DR keep trying sport
11 years ago at 3:25 pm“She gave a few examples from her life, she didn’t go off on some philosophical rant with no backing. The author then contradicts himself by agreeing that yes, the douchebag actions of some of the ppl in her examples were not cool, but then laugh them off and insists that she’s taking stuff too seriously.” lol wut. that’s what we’re laughing about. how she took it too seriously. she got bumped by some random dude who probably didn’t notice her, and some girls that were one octave too loud in a library. so, in turn, she writes a rant about the greek community. And while she didn’t name the greeks specifically, we’re all smart enough to see what she’s alluding to. scrub.
11 years ago at 3:50 pm‘Student’, stop trying to foster a reasonable discussion in the comments section of a humor website, you will find no such thing here. Now go home and hate your life while I keep enjoying mine.
11 years ago at 8:03 pmTywin Lannister said it best when he said “A Lion does not concern himself with the opinions of the sheep”
11 years ago at 11:16 amIf it’s any consolation to her, when I think of JMU grads I mostly think to myself….”There goes some one who could not get into UVa or Virginia Tech.”
11 years ago at 11:20 amwhat is that dog doing in that photo?!?
11 years ago at 11:53 amConsidering I know people in my chapter at tech, who did not get into JMU, I have a funny feeling that you’re wrong.
11 years ago at 12:17 pmI along with a few others in my chapter got into UVA and Va tech and still chose JMU because it really is a phenomenal school; everyone truly is as friendly and happy as people say. Anyways this article sucks the author pretty much says explicitly the writing is a manifestation of her prejudice. Definitely didn’t get a bid
11 years ago at 12:49 pmLiberals enjoy profiling the wealthy or privileged into one big group. As soon as you profile gays, middle eastern, Asians, or blacks. You are a racist. When it suits their agenda, the’ll use it.
11 years ago at 11:29 amGuess there’s no problem complaining about loud sorority girls in the library, but the second I complain about the loud “we know who” in the library, I’m the bad guy?
11 years ago at 1:47 pm11 years ago at 3:31 pm
The author is still salty for not getting a bid freshman year
11 years ago at 11:38 amHer opinions are dumb.
11 years ago at 11:42 amI’m getting tired of reading articles on this stuff, its all the same and who really cares what the endless parade of loner geeds think
11 years ago at 11:45 amPeople have fun and party and are going to get a better job than me… You’re a loser, this article is jealousy based
11 years ago at 11:50 amSomeone didn’t get a bid.
11 years ago at 11:56 am