University Of South Carolina Wants To Become First University To Abolish Pledging, It Won’t Work

c77919ec5f7f43b43b7ee3aefd3ebc8e

During a summit last month, Greek leaders at the University of South Carolina proposed a radical new plan to ban pledging at the college.

Their goal is to cut the period of time between rush and initiation from ten weeks to one week, a plan they say will remove power from actives to blackball initiates who fail to carry out orders that may be considered hazing.

While some fraternities, like Sigma Alpha Epsilon, have abolished pledging from their organizations nationwide, USC would become the first university to abolish pledging.

From Free Times:

“We want the University of South Carolina to be the non-pledging university,” Jerry Brewer, USC’s associate vice president for student affairs, tells Free Times.

“If you associate pledging with abusive behavior, with servitude and all that,” Brewer says, “people are going to come here and they’re going to say, ‘Hey, let’s go to South Carolina. They’ve got a great Greek system. They’ve got no servitude.’

The plan comes on the heels of a slew of hazing, alcohol, and drug violations. A total of 18 fraternities – nearly 75 percent – have been shut down or placed on probation over the past three years.

Joe Stuhrenburg, the president of USC’s fraternity council, says that a ban on pledging would not decrease instances of hazing or alcohol violations.

“It’s overreach and overreaction in my opinion,” the senior finance major from Atlanta tells Free Times. “We understand we have to clean up. This is a possible solution, but it’s the wrong way to get the outcome they want.”

He is also absolutely correct in saying the plan is an “overreach” and an “overreaction.” While 18 fraternities racking up violations in three years may sound out of control, the numbers are wildly misleading. Thirteen of the 18 violations were handed down during the rush week fiasco from last fall, where fraternities were forced to cease rush activities for throwing parties that served alcohol. No alcohol poisonings. No hazing. Just serving alcohol. Is serving alcohol at a rush party cause to abolish pledging from the entire university? Because I fail to see the connect between rush activities and the pledge process.

Those 13 violations shouldn’t even count. The IFC president who called for the punishment was promptly impeached and removed from office, and the fraternities were allowed to resume rush as planned. Every single violation should have been scrubbed from the record when it was found that the president who issued them was drastically overstepping his bounds.

But not to fear, South Carolina Greeks. Even if the measure is passed, pledging will still exist. You’ll hold your “initiation ceremony” with nationals one week after rush, then you’ll begin the pledge process as usual. You just have to be a little more cautious about it. No blazers on campus. No late night runs through the village. Text each other “sober driver lists” as opposed to “pledge driver lists.” Then, at the end of the semester, you’ll hold your real initiation underground.

Nice try, USC.

[via Free Times]

Image via YouTube

      1. That Last Beer

        Yeah I wasn’t comparing the circumstances I just didn’t think USC was the first.

        10 years ago at 2:30 pm
      2. Parker27

        You’re correct. They ended the “pledging” process and immediately had all pledges initiated, but it was only for this semester.

        10 years ago at 9:07 am
    1. Hotrod

      Sigma Phi Epsilon dropped pledging in ’91 and Alpha Gamma Rho dropped pledging in ’92. Just a few more examples of where dropping pledging has made a “huge difference” to stop hazing.

      10 years ago at 12:51 pm
      1. SP1897

        The AGR at my alma mater does a 72 hour pledging process, from what I’ve heard. I can only imagine it’s a semester compacted into three days of a shitshow.

        10 years ago at 2:33 pm
  1. VandyConservative

    Fraternities can always initiate, go about pledging JIs, then vote to expel any that don’t live up to their standards. It’ll be a tightrope with Nationals and a few will fuck up. But it’s pretty doable. Prohibitions have always worked right?

    10 years ago at 12:22 pm
  2. MelGibsonsWrinklyNuts

    Hit the nail on the head with that last paragraph Boosh. This would simply be an empty formality, it would change nothing. That’s why we aren’t really worried about it. Greek life will all be underground by the time our kids are in college anyway, and college administration is going to be utterly shocked when alcohol related deaths skyrocket. Yes let’s force everything to happen underground with zero supervision and extremely harsh sanctions and punishments. That’ll solve the problem.

    10 years ago at 12:32 pm
    1. 1_Rugey_Jentelman

      Don’t forget to blindly punish all, regardless of involvement, and ignore due process outright. Oh, and any accusation of sexual assault should be viewed as truth and hastily posted online to begin public shaming. Do we really need the cops involved?

      10 years ago at 1:44 pm
  3. Four twenty yolo

    why don’t they make college 2 weeks too if hard work is allegedly pointlesd

    10 years ago at 4:32 pm