Rebutting The Columnist Who Called Out USC Fraternities For “Perpetuating Rape Culture”

Rebutting The Columnist Who Calls Out USC Fraternities For Perpetuating  Rape Culture

We hear it every day…

“Fraternities are bad!”
“Frat guys rape more often than non-frat guys!”
“Let’s ban fraternities!”

This shit is tiring for members of the Greek community, because, much to the general public’s dismay, we shun acts of sexual deviancy, rape, and assault just like any upstanding member of society with a half-functioning moral compass would. Alas, the narrative rolls on.

Recently, one columnist at the University of Southern California wrote an extensive report on sexual assault at the school. In his report, titled “The Cost Of Sexual Assault,” he aims to shed light on the epidemic of sexual assaults on USC’s campus, explain that the school system poorly handles cases that arise, and, more importantly, he calls out Greek life for perpetuating the so-called “rape culture” on campus via “high costs” and “creepiness.”

In the column, the author uses a graph that shows the correlation of “creepiness” to a fraternity’s status. “Creepiness” is apparently a calculable statistic, based on “sexually aggressive experiences.” You can view that graph here. In the plot graphs, the X-axis of the left graph is the status of a fraternity (the lower the status, the more they pay for parties, and likely the higher tier they are), while the Y-axis is the “creepiness” frequency. The X-axis for the graph on the right is the total number of fraternity hookups versus the same Y-axis as before.

Assuming that fraternity status is influenced at least partly by the amount of financial resources funneled into parties, the chart on the left shows that higher status fraternities, and thus, those who spent more on parties, had a higher reported-creepiness frequency. Add in the chart on the right, and the logical result is that despite having a higher creepiness frequency, the top (and more creepy) frats with the most expensive parties also had more collective hookups.

A sociology professor at the University of Michigan also went on to say this:

“Fraternities have a domination of the party resources, which basically contributes to sexual assault.”

Pretty drastic leap there. I don’t even know how this professor came to this conclusion that having more party resources contributes to sexual assault. I missed the scientific study that proved that the more “party resources” you have, the more you’re going to be assaulting girls sexually. Seems like this professor just jumped from point A to point Q with no proof given on how they got there.

The most important stat I’d like to point out is the fact that he said a 2014 University of Oregon study showed sorority girls are two times more likely to face sexual assault than girls who are not in sororities. He was using this stat to back up a 2008 study done at USC showing that Greeks were more likely to partake in sexual assault. The numbers in that study were also percentage-based. You’ll see this strategy used by anti-Greek people a lot, but when you get down to the raw numbers, you’ll find that they are a bit skewed — some might even call them biased. They use these percentage-based numbers because they’re trying to scare people. However, 100 percent of one is still just one, and one-percent of 10,000 is still 100.

For example:

The 2014 study at the University of Oregon found that 38 percent of sorority girls are likely to experience rape or some sort of sexual assault. That seems high, right? I mean, if I was a sorority girl, that would be extremely alarming to me. On the flip side, the study found that only 15.3 percent of girls who weren’t in a sorority would experience rape or some kind of sexual assault.

Now, let’s break down these numbers. Since I don’t have the 2014 enrollment numbers from the University of Oregon, we’ll assume that the same percentage of sexual assault experiences are happening at Oregon for 2015, and we’ll use the 2015 enrollment numbers.

The total enrollment for the University of Oregon in 2015 is 24,181. Of those enrolled, 20,569 are undergraduates. To be conservative, I will throw out the graduate students and assume that they are not in Greek life. There are a total of 12,638 female students on campus, both graduate and undergraduate. Graduate students account for roughly 15 percent of the total attendance, while females account for 52.3 percent of total attendance. So it’s relatively safe to assume that there are roughly 10,758 female undergraduates (20,569 x 52.3%).

The total number of students who are in Greek life at Oregon is 3,334. According to Niche.com, 14 percent of undergrad females are in sororities at Oregon. That would mean that there are about 1,506 undergrad females in sororities (10,758 x 14%). My math brings me to 9,252 undergraduate girls who are not in a sorority (10,758-1,506).

Now, let’s take the 38 percent of sorority girls who are likely to experience rape, and you’ll find that the total number is 572 girls. On the opposite end of the spectrum, you have 1,416 girls who are not in Greek life who will experience sexual assault. THE NUMBER OF GIRLS WHO AREN’T IN GREEK LIFE WHO WILL EXPERIENCE SEXUAL ASSAULT IS ALMOST EQUAL TO THE TOTAL NUMBER OF GIRLS IN GREEK LIFE.

I’m not ignorant. Obviously sexual assaults do take place at fraternity houses, just as they take place in any number of non-organizational houses, but when you’re throwing out skewed stats like “sorority girls are two times more likely to be raped than non-sorority girls” without including all of the factors that contribute to the allegedly higher percentage of sexual assaults, you’re going to scare a lot of people away from joining sororities and fraternities that would’ve otherwise done so, in my opinion, unnecessarily. In reality, the raw numbers show that more girls are sexually assaulted outside of Greek life than the total number of girls in Greek life (at least at Oregon). Again, those are just the raw numbers based on the math above.

So how would the guy that wrote this accusatory column go about changing the whole “home turf advantage for fraternities” narrative? He suggests lobbying for sororities to get an alcohol insurance policy so that the girls can start throwing parties at their own houses. Good luck getting Panhellenic on board with that, chief.

The second idea that he presents is for all fraternities to hold parties at public venues rather than their private houses. This happens all over the country already, and let me tell you, it is damn expensive to have to rent out a bar or venue. If you have a wet house, you have an advantage in recruiting because you have a place where you can get drunk knowing that you can pass out on the couch if need be. So in a sense, his plan already happen. So now what?

Well, his third idea would be to just keep telling the parents more and more info on all the bad things that fraternities do so they’ll stop paying for dues and effectively crumple the Greek system. Listen, when my future kid gets to college, he will be an adult. At that point in his life, he will be free and able to make his own decisions without needing parental approval when it comes to these types of things, because that’s how I’ll have raised him.

We all get the point that the author is trying to make. Sure, there are bad apples in the Greek system just like there are bad apples in society as a whole. That doesn’t mean you shut the whole fucking thing down. You get rid of the bad apples, better the system, and move on. The overall goal of columns like this to disrupt the growth or continuation of Greek life by damning the entire system is skipping way too many steps. Surely there are more productive ways to better fraternities and sororities than damaging their reputations by throwing out skewed stats in an effort to lesson their membership. Let’s find some other solutions that are actually realistic, like better educating sororities, and fraternities, on the dangers of sexual assault, rather than the idealistic but hardly realistic solutions presented by the columnist in question.

[via “The Cost Of Sexual Assault”]

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  1. Ballocaustvictim

    I know this is going to get downvoted to hell, but I’ll say it anyway. First of all, big shoutout to Harrison Lee for blatantly lying about the title of the article to make it seem like the author is bashing fraternities nationwide. It’s “The Cost of Sexual Assault at USC” and not “The Cost of Sexual Assault.” If you’re going to bash an article, don’t change the title to suit your own agenda. Take a fucking journalism class. You are deliberately deceiving your readers in this rebuttal, and that’s the smoking gun. If you had done this right, your rebuttal could have been reprinted in more mainstream websites. Perhaps Medium.com would have picked it up too as a counterpoint to this article. As for the data from non-USC sources, the author’s goal is to use information and input from other universities to supplement his critique of USC’s situation, where fraternities are predominant in the social scene. Whether or not that’s appropriate is debatable, but at the end of the day he’s criticizing USC’s situation. He makes that clear: “This article is dedicated to, and written for, the survivors. USC has failed you.”

    Second: I don’t go to USC, but I do know the author Nathaniel Haas. He’s a well-intentioned guy who cares about USC’s sexual assault problems, and he’s generally a solid writer (you can find his articles concerning many subjects on various websites). He notes in his own article that he joined a fraternity as a freshman, and then it was kicked off when his own house was implicated in sexual assaults. His opinion is not wholly against fraternities, just the bad ones.

    As a fraternity member, I don’t totally agree with the method of generating “creepiness” measures generated by Hernandez and cited by the author Haas (shoutout again to Harrison Lee for wrongly inferring that this research should be attributed to the author, not the Economics grad student who conducted it). At least Hernandez tried to find a way to judge which fraternities are problematic and which ones are not; it’s a valiant effort that could have helped to solve the challenge of identifying bad fraternities. He’s essentially using a two-stage least squares regression (common in Economics) with cash spent on parties as an instrumental variable for how popular a fraternity is, and therefore how many girls it attracts. This is flawed on a number of levels, and as TFM notes, does not prove causation. If there’s a successful way to do that, it would make weeding out bad chapters that much easier, which would allow us to better police ourselves instead of letting the rotten ones attract national condemnation. I would welcome an effective measurement to prove causation. Unfortunately, Hernandez’s system fails to accomplish its goal, but if someone could improve upon his methods, it might actually be valuable to the Greek System.

    Given the overall evidence, it’s obvious USC has a sexual assault problem. Fraternities are, to some extent, to blame; according to USC’s own statistics, most sexual assaults occurred on “noncampus” locations, which include fraternity houses. Haas’ point was to condemn the failures of USC’s administration’s poor attempts to manage sexual assault problems and he did that very well.

    10 years ago at 1:29 pm
  2. Professor

    Read his entire article. Really seems like he is taking big words and controversial topics to throw his name out into the spotlight. Every accusation towards the fraternity mentioned was cleared by their president and proved innocent or was approached with the right actions. He legit had all his proof shut down by the president but still found a way to rebuttal it saying “he must be wrong or must be lying”. Fraternities participate in a lot of risky behavior, but so does every one else in the world. There are good and bad things that arise from every set group of people but just because we are “greek” we are targeted.

    10 years ago at 1:50 pm
  3. BigDogBecks

    A sexual assault survey was done at my school recently and they found 23% of assaults happen at fraternities, 24% in dorms and 51% off campus with a few other random cases… We’re safer than the rest of the school

    10 years ago at 2:03 pm
  4. math_is_hard

    Your understanding of number analysis is laughably bad, or you are purposely misleading people to back your point. Why do you think studies, crime statistics (and every single other profession) use rates not raw numbers? Because raw numbers don’t tell you shit. Example murder rate. If those stats at Oregon are true, than the sample size is more than sufficient to draw the conclusion that something is seriously fucked up there. I’m sure you would make a great police chief though. “Guys I know our murder rate was twice that of Chicago’s but we only had 1/3 the number of murders as them!” Yea, but your city is 6 times smaller and you should give up trying to justify a shit performance.

    10 years ago at 2:53 pm
  5. TheseColorsDontBleed

    Way to show your work. Your high school pre-calc teacher would be proud.

    10 years ago at 4:02 pm
  6. Fratticus.Finch

    The thing that always pisses me off the most is that every reported sexual assault at my school happens in the dorms. Fraternities are statistically safer for people, yet we get shit on because we are easy targets for the left.

    10 years ago at 5:55 pm
  7. CartmanBrah

    Both your logic and that of the original article is flawed. The sorority rape numbers are irrelevant in determining fraternities role in rape. The percentage of Greek to non Greek male rapists is the only statistic that could do that. Many factors play into why sorority women are raped at a higher rate and there is no imperical evidence as to the role fraternities play.

    10 years ago at 7:50 pm