Anonymous wrote:Washington & Lee has an obnoxious secret society with stupid tattoos.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They aren't good people at UVa, but they will give money to the school and will make $$$.
I hope this is sarcasm. Please go read “Secret Societies at UVA” in wiki
This keeps getting posted but the Wikipedia article describes a bunch of self serving clubs and some recent philanthropy.
It looks like UVA had some elitist societies at the start and much later some people started making their own societies to make it a trend.
I know am alum from uva and he’s the biggest ass. I can guess he was in a secret society. He was in a fraternity for sure. He and wife talk non stop about connections and networking literally all the time. It’s like a chess match they only spend time with people who they think can help them and their kids succeed socially and professionally. There’s nothing sincere about it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They aren't good people at UVa, but they will give money to the school and will make $$$.
I hope this is sarcasm. Please go read “Secret Societies at UVA” in wiki
This keeps getting posted but the Wikipedia article describes a bunch of self serving clubs and some recent philanthropy.
It looks like UVA had some elitist societies at the start and much later some people started making their own societies to make it a trend.
Anonymous wrote:I was in a (less well known/prestigious) secret society at Yale. Most of the societies had 15 seniors as members - we had 2-3 faculty members who belonged also. As to purpose, we met twice a week - Thurs and Sunday - at night and got to know each other very well. I knew a few of my fellow members before senior year but not well. Over that year, we came to know each other very well, and most importantly each were given one night to present a very detailed oral autobiography of ourselves. That’s one night devoted solely to one person. And it was a conversation, with questions and comments - favorable and not - from the full group. Most of the time, it was a great experience; occasionally it turned too critical. Every secret society I knew details about at Yale did something comparable. I would do it again in a minute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I attended Oxford University. The people in the secret societies there were shits like Boris Johnson who destroyed the country for their own advancement.
You overlooked David Cameron. Sorry the Bullingdon Society didn’t tap you
Anonymous wrote:I attended Oxford University. The people in the secret societies there were shits like Boris Johnson who destroyed the country for their own advancement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you kill yourself to get into “Harvard”, and they let you in because you satisfy some sort of stats they need to prove to the world that they are not really a beacon of white privilege. Then, you grind away a second time gunning to get a job where you will slog away the rest of your life at Google or McKinsey or whatever with the rest of the mere mortals, while the pre-ordained back door legacies get a tap on the shoulder, run around naked and are handed keys to the “real” power that was their family birthright anyway. The “big” connections are still closed to admission. And the goal is to meet 2 times a week to spill your guts to make sure that damage control is on the ready lest you are a dud? Sounds awesome!
PP here whose nephew was in one of the most prominent societies at Yale.
I guess from what I read in the press, maybe skull and bones is something like what you describe, but the one my nephew was in is nothing like that. It's also the one commonly described in the media as the wealthiest, and I saw no evidence of that when I went to several of their events over graduation weekend. The kids were extremely diverse in terms of ethnicity and income, including several and first gen kids. It was really pretty laid back.
How is it secret if they are throwing events for their aunts and uncles to attend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They aren't good people at UVa, but they will give money to the school and will make $$$.
That must be why the school lets them graffiti the whole campus. I find it weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An anonymous forum seems the perfect place to ask this question. What is their purpose? What is their future? How do other students not selected feel about their presence on campus?
Eating clubs at Princeton and finals clubs at Harvard are social clubs similar to Greek life. Secret societies seem more old money.
Inaccurate.
Some Princeton Eating Clubs are "Old Money" and some more inclusive.
The seven Male Harvard Final Clubs definitely "Old Money".
There are dozens of Yale Secret Societies but only the 3 most exclusive ones (Skull and Bones, Wolf's Head and Scroll and Key) would be considered to have "Old Money" roots.
It is fair to say that these "Clubs" are far different today than they were 75 years ago.
Anonymous wrote:I attended Oxford University. The people in the secret societies there were shits like Boris Johnson who destroyed the country for their own advancement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aren’t you not supposed to disclose you were in a secret society? How do people know their co-worker was, etc?
That was my understanding. I'm skeptical of some of these answers, especially from women. Most of these societies were all male.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an example of how the secret society members give philanthropic gifts to UVA. https://newspub.live/south/virginia/virginia-athletics-receives-40-million-gift-from-former-student-athlete/
This was a former student athlete who turned pro. I don’t see anything here to indicate it was a secret society member? That said they DO a lot for the school from a philanthropic standpoint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They aren't good people at UVa, but they will give money to the school and will make $$$.
I hope this is sarcasm. Please go read “Secret Societies at UVA” in wiki
This keeps getting posted but the Wikipedia article describes a bunch of self serving clubs and some recent philanthropy.
It looks like UVA had some elitist societies at the start and much later some people started making their own societies to make it a trend.
[/quot
False