Anonymous wrote:A female can be an animal. When talking about people, use men and women.
Anonymous wrote:You people are nuts. Texas A&M graduate here and the student body is middle of the road if you exclude the corp, which is less than 5% of the school. Some of the top political layer of the administration currently are a little nuts politically but that isn’t felt at the student level. It’s a nice school and severely underrated on the east coast especially for engineering, business, and STEM areas. Hard for me to imagine preferring VT over A&M.
Anonymous wrote:A female can be an animal. When talking about people, use men and women.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I once heard a female who had visited the campus for the first time describe it as "a place where men still act like men."
So why do they get to be men, and she has to be a "female," not a woman? Is this a place where men refer to women as females?
I don't understand either one of your questions. Women are females and females are women. If you're asking if TAMU is a place that by and large believes in two genders, the answer is yes.