Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Physical hazing or property damage? Both are bad but for me there’s a huge difference.
If it’s anything physical or humiliating, I wouldn't sugarcoat. Tell him there’s a trend in kids secretly recording these rites and to imagine the world watching a tape of him forcing this on others next year. Having his future ruined and family embarrassed may motivate him if the moral qualms aren’t enough.
You might also tell him that half of his future dating pool won’t touch a frat guy who hazed others with a ten foot pole.
Hazing goes way beyond just "humiliating." It can be violent and deadly. Watch that PBS documentary or the "Breath Nolan Breath" linked earlier in this thread.
Taking the worst incidents and projecting it onto hazing as a whole isn't a way to get a realistic picture of what's going on. We have no idea what OP's son is going through and, in terms of actual risk, how it compares to - say - getting in a car.
Could be that there's very real danger here or it could be that there's very limited risk of significant harm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you have options.
You can call the National HQ for your son’s fraternity.
You can call campus police if they’re doing this on campus (like if you know they “meet” at midnight at the XYZ house.
You can call the actual police if they’re “meeting” at a private residence.
Hazing is real, it has long-lasting effects on ALL involved, and it is illegal. If nothing else call Nationals. Best wishes to your son.
Ridiculous overreaction.
If her kid doesn’t want to do something gross, he should drop out. Look for a different fraternity. Smart move.
But no one is in danger here.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have options.
You can call the National HQ for your son’s fraternity.
You can call campus police if they’re doing this on campus (like if you know they “meet” at midnight at the XYZ house.
You can call the actual police if they’re “meeting” at a private residence.
Hazing is real, it has long-lasting effects on ALL involved, and it is illegal. If nothing else call Nationals. Best wishes to your son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As proud as x-President of Phi Betta Kappa you guys need to grow a pair.
NP. The real adults on this thread are laughing at you. Glory days, amirite?
And shaking our heads that a grown man walks around saying, “grow a pair.”
Too bad they can’t at least prevent such people from parenting (since they spread dated, toxic concepts that we should move past). Okay
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As proud as x-President of Phi Betta Kappa you guys need to grow a pair.
NP. The real adults on this thread are laughing at you. Glory days, amirite?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. Go ahead and name the school and the frat here. It's anonymous after all.. It's not like they are going to sue you. It will end up helping a lot of other kids/parents.
FWIW, my DS (at Michigan) considered a Frat last year but realized most of them are predominantly White and filled with a bunch of racist a-holes. His decision to not keep going was validated when he saw other kids that persevered being abused, crying in the dorms, etc. He's moved on and now has plenty of friends and activities he's part of. The familiar argument about "brothers" after college and 'network' is all BS. Do you really want your son to have racist, a-hole brothers and benefit from their network?
Then he clearly didn’t look hard enough. I agree it’s predominantly white, but DS is in one with a POC president, and his best buddy is also not white. But, your DS probably didn’t want to be in a bottom-ranked fraternity, so he had to denigrate the entire lot. Hazing was limited to cleaning house and having to pick up takeout.
Anonymous wrote:OP. Go ahead and name the school and the frat here. It's anonymous after all.. It's not like they are going to sue you. It will end up helping a lot of other kids/parents.
FWIW, my DS (at Michigan) considered a Frat last year but realized most of them are predominantly White and filled with a bunch of racist a-holes. His decision to not keep going was validated when he saw other kids that persevered being abused, crying in the dorms, etc. He's moved on and now has plenty of friends and activities he's part of. The familiar argument about "brothers" after college and 'network' is all BS. Do you really want your son to have racist, a-hole brothers and benefit from their network?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As proud as x-President of Phi Betta Kappa you guys need to grow a pair.
NP. The real adults on this thread are laughing at you. Glory days, amirite?
Anonymous wrote:As proud as x-President of Phi Betta Kappa you guys need to grow a pair.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have options.
You can call the National HQ for your son’s fraternity.
You can call campus police if they’re doing this on campus (like if you know they “meet” at midnight at the XYZ house.
You can call the actual police if they’re “meeting” at a private residence.
Hazing is real, it has long-lasting effects on ALL involved, and it is illegal. If nothing else call Nationals. Best wishes to your son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn’t understand the appeal of the Greek system when I went to school and I can’t believe it’s still a thing.
Sorry you didn't get a bid, geed.
Never even tried bc again I never saw the appeal. You calling me a geek like that’s some sort of insult does nothing to lessen the a-hole stereotype though.