Lafayette College just handed a national free speech organization enough material to ask some serious questions, and honestly, I don't think Greek life is ready for the conversation that follows. The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression raised concerns about Lafayette's decision to suspend Greek life activities across the board - and from where I've sat on a Panhellenic council, I can tell you that broad suspensions like this one don't just raise free speech flags. They expose every flaw in how universities think they can govern Greek organizations.
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Every semester, some university puts out a press release about Greek students getting recognized for excellence, service, and leadership, and every semester, most people scroll right past it. VSU just did it again - Valdosta State University handed out recognition to Greek students for exactly those three things. And I get why it's easy to dismiss. Award ceremonies feel performative. Press releases feel like PR. But I've been thinking about why that reaction is wrong, and I want to push back on the cynicism a little.
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Somewhere around week four of my first semester in a fraternity, I realized I had said yes to basically everything. Brotherhood event on Tuesday. Philanthropy planning meeting Wednesday. Some mixer that got added to the calendar forty-eight hours before it happened. And somehow I was supposed to have read three chapters of organizational behavior and turned in a rough draft that Friday. I hadn't done either. I want to be clear - I did this to myself. But the structure of Greek life makes it really easy to overcommit before you even realize what's happening.
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I went to a large state school. Think 40,000 undergrads, a football stadium that holds more people than most small cities, and a Greek row that stretches so long it has its own traffic problems on bid day. My cousin went to a small private liberal arts school with maybe 2,800 students total. She was in Pi Beta Phi. I was in Sigma Alpha Epsilon. We compared notes once over Thanksgiving and realized we were basically describing two completely different institutions that happened to share Greek letters.
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Alix Earle built her whole brand on being relatable, and that's exactly why her "sorority nightmare" content hits the way it does. When someone with millions of followers talks about Greek life going wrong, people listen. They share it. They screenshot it. And somewhere in that cycle, the actual conversation about what Greek life is - and what it should be - gets completely buried under the performance of it all.
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You accepted the bid. You cried, hugged strangers, maybe posted a Reel of yourself running home. And then the next morning you woke up and had absolutely no idea what was actually supposed to happen next. Nobody told you at the info sessions. Nobody mentioned it during preference night. You were handed a folder or a tote bag or a branded tumbler and sent on your way with a move-in date for new member orientation and basically nothing else.
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There's a People magazine article making the rounds right now, and I can't stop thinking about it. It's about parents - actual parents who lost their teenage sons to fraternity hazing - and how they've turned that grief into advocacy. I'm not going to pretend I read it and moved on. I didn't. Because I'm in a fraternity now, and before I joined I would have read something like that and said, see, this is exactly why I want nothing to do with Greek life.
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Daniella Uvaldo is leading a sorority at Columbia while being a first-generation college student in the engineering school. That sentence alone probably would have sounded like a weird combination to a lot of people ten years ago. It doesn't sound weird to me at all - and I think that says something real about where Greek life is actually headed.
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