Doing that gets rid of ~250 years of tradition that has been relatively successful at bonding men together. Many of my friends I only know because I met some individually from different frat groups, and was accepted for knowing that person across the different frats, even though I never met most of them until after college. They have a very strong sense of loyalty not only to their friends, but to their fraternity and friends of their current or former members.
I know they exist, but I do not know a single sorority member from school who is still active with either her former sorority group or frequently attends meetings for newer members after graduating.
Identity politics is literally trying to destroy every social platform that has been created within the last several centuries, or even millennia. The default gut reaction should be "If frats have to admit women, then sororities have to admit men as well", but no...that's a terrible idea. Men and women bond with each other in completely different ways. Putting women into fraternities or men into sororities would destroy those organizations entirely.
Doing that gets rid of ~250 years of tradition that has been relatively successful at bonding men together. Many of my friends I only know because I met some individually from different frat groups, and was accepted for knowing that person across the different frats, even though I never met most of them until after college. They have a very strong sense of loyalty not only to their friends, but to their fraternity and friends of their current or former members.
I know they exist, but I do not know a single sorority member from school who is still active with either her former sorority group or frequently attends meetings for newer members after graduating.
Identity politics is literally trying to destroy every social platform that has been created within the last several centuries, or even millennia. The default gut reaction should be "If frats have to admit women, then sororities have to admit men as well", but no...that's a terrible idea. Men and women bond with each other in completely different ways. Putting women into fraternities or men into sororities would destroy those organizations entirely.
Doing that gets rid of ~250 years of tradition that has been relatively successful at bonding men together. Many of my friends I only know because I met some individually from different frat groups, and was accepted for knowing that person across the different frats, even though I never met most of them until after college. They have a very strong sense of loyalty not only to their friends, but to their fraternity and friends of their current or former members.
I know they exist, but I do not know a single sorority member from school who is still active with either her former sorority group or frequently attends meetings for newer members after graduating.
Identity politics is literally trying to destroy every social platform that has been created within the last several centuries, or even millennia. The default gut reaction should be "If frats have to admit women, then sororities have to admit men as well", but no...that's a terrible idea. Men and women bond with each other in completely different ways. Putting women into fraternities or men into sororities would destroy those organizations entirely.