Racism And Greek Life

Racism And Greek Life

I got asked by some comedian friends about my thoughts on the Oklahoma SAE story. That felt a little weird, but I’ve written for a site called TotalFratMove.com about rape, death, and Taylor Swift, so I guess I’ve put myself in the position to be asked. It’s like being the one Jewish guy in a fraternity: You’re basically the house rabbi. If I had a nickel for every time I was asked a question about Jews, I’d have a ton of nickels, and I’d save them appropriately in a Roth IRA. I just don’t know what opinion there is to have other than, “this sucks.” It sucks in the “I’m not mad, I’m disappointed” way that I’m pretty sure echoes the majority of Greeks and Greek alumni.

It’s not only the action, it’s everything that comes with it in 2015. The people who lazily write “think pieces” about fraternities and their racism issues while they casually ignore that there are people of every race involved with Greek life. There are armchair activists racing to the top of Judgment Mountain to write a “racism is bad” post on Facebook. Of course there should be outrage, but it all feels a little easy. Today, it isn’t just the people who commit the crimes who get in trouble; it’s every group these people represent. So when a southern fraternity is explicitly racist and spews hate speech, it affects every box that this group checks off: Greeks, southerners, Oklahomans, men, and white people. All of these groups are all a little more racist to everyone they come in contact with, and that really sucks.

But that’s the thing — we all don’t suck. I would say most people associated with Greek life are currently throwing their hands up and trying to form some sort of opinion that rationalizes why a group of people would be gleefully singing such crap. I tried the other night. I rambled on about how these songs have words that I can’t believe these kids connect to any real sort of hatred. In a very extreme example, I tried saying that if every time they sang this song, a black person died, they’d have known the severity and wouldn’t sing it. I’m sure I’m not the only one who bumbled along in such extremes because at the end of the day, I’m really trying to protect myself. I’m trying to tell anyone who sees me as a former “frat guy” that I wasn’t on my own bus with my own friends doing the same thing. In a time where the criticism lands on a group over the individual acting in extremes, you’re a guy who could have been on that bus. These guys aren’t you or your brothers, but they represent some piece of who you are or where you came from. Just ask any SAE across the country how many times he’s said the phrase, “they’re different at every school” this week and you’ll realize how far this spreads.

Every week, the internet serves us these strongly-worded reactions to extremes, whether it’s blaming all Muslims for the actions of ISIS or al-Qaeda or convicting an entire race when a criminal happens to be black. The vast majority of the free-thinking world exists outside of these extreme examples. The world is nuanced and can’t always be packaged into tidy generalizations. This story shouldn’t be a surprise — racism exists — but it also shouldn’t be the launching pad for a tirade against anyone who has worn some Greek letters. The more we lazily swim with the current of “these people are this way” and “those people are that way,” the more we create these very particular niches. We act less like a country full of people just trying to live our lives and more like a group of bros, hipsters, nerds, blacks, and whites who live near one another and just have to put up with it. The finger-pointers are giving out jerseys so you have to hope your team isn’t the “bad guy.”

A lot of pledge programs have this rule: If one person messes up, so does the whole group. The same goes for life. Oklahomans, southerners, Greeks, SAEs, and white people are all wearing the burden of this stupidity because one of “theirs” did something bad. That rule works for a pledge class because it makes them accountable for one another and brings them together as friends. In real life, that attitude is just an easy way to distinguish between “us” and “them,” “good” and “bad,” “black” and “white.” And it seems like a giant step backward that’s too easy to take.

  1. TitsMcGee420

    As usual Jared, you hit the nail on the head. This represents all my feelings towards this “scandal” but honestly I wish people would just move on with their lives and find some new story to obsess over.

    11 years ago at 12:21 pm
  2. Maverick91

    “I’m trying to tell anyone who sees me as a former “frat guy” that I wasn’t on my own bus with my own friends doing the same thing.”

    Too real, Jtrain.
    Nice piece.

    11 years ago at 12:22 pm
  3. YupNope

    Dorn, maybe you should pop the SAE titty out of your mouth, and really reflect on what Jtrain just wrote.

    11 years ago at 12:25 pm
      1. jonstan

        I’ll fellate jtrain whenever I damn well please.
        Also, great article. Couldn’t have said it any better

        11 years ago at 12:36 pm
  4. USArmy

    Jared,

    This is a fine example of your work. This is one of the best articles I’ve read on the subject of SAE at OU. I don’t always agree with your articles, but this is one of the finest arcticles you’ve ever written. You on you, bud.

    11 years ago at 12:40 pm
  5. BornProudRaisedProud1890

    If we’re honest, the most prevalent racism in Greek life doesn’t come from IFC fraternities. It in all of the supposedly “multicultural” fraternities that are 100% composed of a single demographic and would never even consider any other demographic.

    For example, the kid in my house who was originally trying to rush an Asian fraternity until they found out he was only half and balled him for it.

    11 years ago at 12:48 pm
    1. Denzel FRATington

      They aren’t “multicultural” fraternities. They’re social fraternities that were created when minorities were excluded from mainstream social fraternities.

      11 years ago at 12:02 am
  6. SemperPhiA

    “Of course there should be outrage, but it all feels a little easy. Today, it isn’t just the people who commit the crimes who get in trouble; it’s every group these people represent.”
    “Just ask any SAE across the country how many times he’s said the phrase, “they’re different at every school” this week and you’ll realize how far this spreads.”

    Glad someone on the site is finally saying it. As of recent it feels that the only ones wearing the “bad guy” jersey is all of SAE. No Greeks here feel the burden while we’ve had several brothers threatened yet we live 700 miles away from the source. Hope more people connect to this.

    11 years ago at 1:03 pm
  7. stonewalllee

    This is exactly what needed to be said. Tell your buddies to follow your lead, and start publishing real work instead of click bait.

    11 years ago at 1:59 pm