Anonymous wrote:Male here, browsing for fun. You women are just too funny! Snarky, bitchy, data-obsessed (w/o a good grounding in quant) and, I'm guessing, non-salaried with all that fancy education...at the right ranking...over which you obsess.
thanks for the entertainment!
Anonymous wrote:You implied that the schools are comparable; they are not. Nobody here has attacked you personally or used foul language -- tactics you have resorted to repeatedly. Do you think you represent H-S well?
Anonymous wrote:Not insecure at all, actually quite proud of my Wellesley education -- I learned to think logically and to be accurate in stating facts, as for example, the facts stated in the following sentence that refers ti both H-S and Wellesley: Hampden-Sydney barely makes it into US News top 100, while Wellesley is in the top 10.
Anonymous wrote:Male here, browsing for fun. You women are just too funny! Snarky, bitchy, data-obsessed (w/o a good grounding in quant) and, I'm guessing, non-salaried with all that fancy education...at the right ranking...over which you obsess.
thanks for the entertainment!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It certainly is! And, BTW, it was a Hampden fan who brought up Wellesley -- not the other way around.
Someone may have mentioned Wellesley in passing, but it was one or two insecure Wellesley "fans" who hijacked the thread by posting at length about how highly ranked Wellesley is and objecting to any references to H-S and Wellesley in the same sentence, etc. In doing so, they both derailed the thread and created the impression that Wellesley grads are a bunch of status-conscious lightweights. Not bad for a day's non-work.
Anonymous wrote:It certainly is! And, BTW, it was a Hampden fan who brought up Wellesley -- not the other way around.
Anonymous wrote:There's a big difference between a men's college that seeks to preserve the illusion of systemic male privilege and a women's college that seeks to educate and empower women to challenge and move beyond that system.
Bullshit.
There's a big difference between a men's college that seeks to preserve the illusion of systemic male privilege and a women's college that seeks to educate and empower women to challenge and move beyond that system.