Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should serve only cake, ice cream and Capri Sun at college parties....
Tell you what. You go right ahead and throw that cake and ice cream party. See how many students come to it.
I am hoping the increased use of ever more legal pot will make your cake party sound like a good idea before my DC gets to college. It’s rare that a rapist is high, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should serve only cake, ice cream and Capri Sun at college parties....
Tell you what. You go right ahead and throw that cake and ice cream party. See how many students come to it.
Herein lies the problem in American culture. A few weeks ago around homecoming time, My 17 year old was recently explaining that kids only want to go to parties at the houses of kids with parents who allow drinking because without alcohol...they're bored. Has the Information Age screwed our youth so badly that nothing other than substance abuse is considered fun?
Anonymous wrote:They should serve only cake, ice cream and Capri Sun at college parties....
Tell you what. You go right ahead and throw that cake and ice cream party. See how many students come to it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fraternity men make up 85 percent of U.S. Supreme Court justices since 1910, 63 percent of all U.S. presidential cabinet members since 1900, and, historically, 76 percent of U.S. Senators, 85 percent of Fortune 500 executives,and 71 percent of the men in “Who’s Who in America.” And that’s not counting the 18 ex-frat U.S. presidents since 1877 (that’s 69 percent) and the 120 Forbes 500 CEOs (24 percent) from the 2003 list, including 10—or one-third—of the top 30. In the 113th Congress alone, 38 of the hundred Senate members come from fraternity (and, now, sorority) backgrounds, as does a full quarter of the House. Is there something inherent in the fraternity culture that sends its members to the country’s top echelons?
That would be The Good Ol' Boy Network, of which fraternities are but one particularly gross manifestation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fraternity men make up 85 percent of U.S. Supreme Court justices since 1910, 63 percent of all U.S. presidential cabinet members since 1900, and, historically, 76 percent of U.S. Senators, 85 percent of Fortune 500 executives,and 71 percent of the men in “Who’s Who in America.” And that’s not counting the 18 ex-frat U.S. presidents since 1877 (that’s 69 percent) and the 120 Forbes 500 CEOs (24 percent) from the 2003 list, including 10—or one-third—of the top 30. In the 113th Congress alone, 38 of the hundred Senate members come from fraternity (and, now, sorority) backgrounds, as does a full quarter of the House. Is there something inherent in the fraternity culture that sends its members to the country’s top echelons?
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degenerate meathead frat boy at a state U that lets in anyone with a pulse != nerd frat at an Ivy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should serve only cake, ice cream and Capri Sun at college parties....
Tell you what. You go right ahead and throw that cake and ice cream party. See how many students come to it.
Herein lies the problem in American culture. A few weeks ago around homecoming time, My 17 year old was recently explaining that kids only want to go to parties at the houses of kids with parents who allow drinking because without alcohol...they're bored. Has the Information Age screwed our youth so badly that nothing other than substance abuse is considered fun?
Anonymous wrote:The news out of Penn State today is so disturbing. There is zero positive benefit to having fraternities and sororities. Everyone who went to college and reads the news knows this. It has got to end. Obama should have had his department of education do something because surely Trump and Betsey DeVos will not touch it because they pretty much epitomize a frat bro and a sorority sister.
Anonymous wrote:I think the non fraternity parties are much, much worse. They just aren't associated with a big name that the college can blame.
Anonymous wrote:They should serve only cake, ice cream and Capri Sun at college parties....
Tell you what. You go right ahead and throw that cake and ice cream party. See how many students come to it.
Anonymous wrote:Greeks are here to stay. Many parents and kids place the importance of a top house bid over grades.
Anonymous wrote:Fraternity men make up 85 percent of U.S. Supreme Court justices since 1910, 63 percent of all U.S. presidential cabinet members since 1900, and, historically, 76 percent of U.S. Senators, 85 percent of Fortune 500 executives,and 71 percent of the men in “Who’s Who in America.” And that’s not counting the 18 ex-frat U.S. presidents since 1877 (that’s 69 percent) and the 120 Forbes 500 CEOs (24 percent) from the 2003 list, including 10—or one-third—of the top 30. In the 113th Congress alone, 38 of the hundred Senate members come from fraternity (and, now, sorority) backgrounds, as does a full quarter of the House. Is there something inherent in the fraternity culture that sends its members to the country’s top echelons?