Anonymous wrote:I lived w Dartmouth folks for a while and they were all tattooed w their societies from Dartmouth
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I still don’t get the purpose? To get to know each other well? Why does the club need to be secret to do that?
These are like mini Masonic lodges. Many of the people in them might be liberal or progressive Democratic, but they’re based on aristocratic principles and simply aren’t democratic at all.
These groups are supposed to be made of people who can trust each other’s with their lives, raise money for the college or charity, run the government, and fight bad guys.
When good guys belong, maybe they sometimes do important, wonderful things.
When bad people belong to them, they no doubt do and cover up all sorts of terrible things.
See the movie The Good Shepherd with Matt Damon. Yale, Skull and Bones, William Donovan, the creation of the CIA. George HW Bush is an example of this background.
But S&B is not secret. It does not hide its members' identities. The purpose of the group is networking and socializing, not anonymous philanthropy like the ones at UVA.
Okay, but my point was to agree with the poster I quoted who noted that they’re based on aristocratic principles, run the government, fight bad guys. It’s beyond networking as it’s like selection and preparation for a life of elite power. It’s well known that S and B was the pipeline to the CIA in its early days.
Anonymous wrote:Very minor presence, unless you are in one, for Yale's secret societies and Harvard's finals clubs. Princeton eating clubs are a little different--about half the people are in them.
As like with everything else "super-prestigious," it's all about family connections. Either you have them or you don't!
Never gave any of it a second thought while at HYP, honestly.
Anonymous wrote: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
How nice that you know ONE alum from UVA. YOu readily admit that have no idea if they are in an anonymous philanthropic society at UVA. Nevertheless, you extrapolate your perceived judgments about this person here, mistakenly thinking that one person's behavior can apply to all alums. Why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I still don’t get the purpose? To get to know each other well? Why does the club need to be secret to do that?
These are like mini Masonic lodges. Many of the people in them might be liberal or progressive Democratic, but they’re based on aristocratic principles and simply aren’t democratic at all.
These groups are supposed to be made of people who can trust each other’s with their lives, raise money for the college or charity, run the government, and fight bad guys.
When good guys belong, maybe they sometimes do important, wonderful things.
When bad people belong to them, they no doubt do and cover up all sorts of terrible things.
See the movie The Good Shepherd with Matt Damon. Yale, Skull and Bones, William Donovan, the creation of the CIA. George HW Bush is an example of this background.
But S&B is not secret. It does not hide its members' identities. The purpose of the group is networking and socializing, not anonymous philanthropy like the ones at UVA.
Anonymous wrote:I went to MIT we didn't have that other than informal groups that pulled off hacks.
Friends that studied at Cambridge on study abroad encountered these. My friend was in the Legless Birds club, but they all seemed to be more drinking clubs that anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I still don’t get the purpose? To get to know each other well? Why does the club need to be secret to do that?
These are like mini Masonic lodges. Many of the people in them might be liberal or progressive Democratic, but they’re based on aristocratic principles and simply aren’t democratic at all.
These groups are supposed to be made of people who can trust each other’s with their lives, raise money for the college or charity, run the government, and fight bad guys.
When good guys belong, maybe they sometimes do important, wonderful things.
When bad people belong to them, they no doubt do and cover up all sorts of terrible things.
See the movie The Good Shepherd with Matt Damon. Yale, Skull and Bones, William Donovan, the creation of the CIA. George HW Bush is an example of this background.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I still don’t get the purpose? To get to know each other well? Why does the club need to be secret to do that?
These are like mini Masonic lodges. Many of the people in them might be liberal or progressive Democratic, but they’re based on aristocratic principles and simply aren’t democratic at all.
These groups are supposed to be made of people who can trust each other’s with their lives, raise money for the college or charity, run the government, and fight bad guys.
When good guys belong, maybe they sometimes do important, wonderful things.
When bad people belong to them, they no doubt do and cover up all sorts of terrible things.
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.
[/quot
False
+1
The Seven Society recently gave 777,777.77 to the university for faculty teaching. Yes, 777,000 dollars. Another member recently gave 40 million. Can you do that? No, you just want to tear down.
Read here to learn what just the anonymous philanthropic group, The Seven Society, has given to UVA. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Society