WHITE MALE BACKLASH AGAINST
"DIVERSITY" ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES
by: S.R. Shearer
On Monday, August 29, 1994, the Associated Press ran a story which read
in part: "The students meet surreptitiously - at a restaurant off
campus, or for a drive in the countryside. The arrangements, says one
participant, never are made on a campus phone. They are outlaws. If
they are found out, they face suspension." [1] A radical terrorist
organization? A neo-Nazi group? The KKK? No! - theyre none of
these - theyre college fraternity brothers. The campus? - Middlebury
College in Vermont. The fraternity? - Delta Kappa Epsilon (the "Dekes").
Increasingly single sex organizations - specifically, male organizations
(female organizations no where encounter the same kind of official resistance);
and most especially, organizations which are predominantly white (black
and Hispanic organizations are often granted special dispensations)
- are being prohibited from college campuses throughout the country.
In New England alone, five of the areas most elite private universities
have banned fraternities outright; in the case of the Dekes at Middlebury,
they are not even allowed to have or use an off-campus house - a policy
which in "ordinary times" would no doubt be considered illegal
- an unconstitutional restriction on a citizens First Amendment
rights to freely assemble and associate. [2]
It all began in 1989, when a study of student life at Middlebury -
a study dominated by minorities, gay and lesbian activists, and feminists
- concluded that the all-male fraternities were incompatible with college
life; at the urging of the study committee, college trustees voted to
ban the fraternity system - a system which for generations had dominated
campus life at Middlebury.
What all this has accomplished, however - both at Middlebury and throughout
the country - is to animate an "underground fraternity system,"
a system which many white, male students find both exciting and titillating.
And its more than this: in seeking to ban all-white, all-male
fraternities (and, in some cases, white sororities) what multiculturalists
and feminists have unwittingly done is arose in white males (and even
white females) a new awareness of their own "Christian-based, European
heritage" - the very "monster" feminists and other multiculturalists
were attempting to suppress in the first place by their restrictions.
Feminists,
gay activists, and minorities are finding out what conservatives found
out ten, twenty, and thirty years ago in attempting to suppress liberal
activity (i.e., flag burning, anti-war activity, etc.) - that is, that
more often than not, all such restrictions accomplish is to make the
"offensive" activity that much more "stimulating."
There are now five "underground" white fraternities operating
surreptitiously on the Middlebury campus - as well as one white sorority.
One student explains, "In a school where you know you can be expelled,
you have to be very dedicated." Moreover, recruiting new members
is easy: instead of a much publicized "rush" to attract new
members, underground fraternities covertly "investigate" new
prospects and then "tap" them secretly - a process many times
more exciting and attractive to impressionable young people than the
old fraternity rush. At Middlebury, the Dekes say they are learning
"clandestine survival" - a phrase echoed throughout the fraternity
system.
Liberals - in thinking that they can legislate a new "politically
correct" multiculturalism may be greatly overestimating their own
strength, and in the process, underestimating the perseverance and "staying
power" of the older, white, European-based, Christian culture.
At a football game last fall, a plane flew over Middleburys stadium
towing a banner, "The Dekes Live." The crowd stood and cheered!
The "Old Culture" lives too, and there are many more people
than liberals know about that are cheering for it as well.
- "At Vermont College, Fraternity Is Banned But Unbowed,"
in the San Francisco Chronicle, August 29, 1994, pg. A-8.
- So Draconian is the ban on fraternity activity at Middlebury that
male students are prohibited from participating in any fraternity
activity whatsoever, even off campus activity on their own time. Don
Wyatt, Middleburys vice president for undergraduate activities
has remarked that anyone caught violating the ban would be suspended:
"It would be swift and severe," Wyatt says.
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