Author: Jason Free
Ole Miss Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity members arrested on CYBERSTALKING CHARGES
Remember these pictures of
Over 1,500 idiots signed a Change.org petition to lessen the severity of the punishment that these scumbags received a month ago for brutalizing pledges!
Their petition reads:
“The chapter provides a second family for our boys and they infuse a great deal of philanthropy in the local community.”¬†
HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA! HA!
The national chapter must be proud.
“We shape young men. They go on to shape the world.”
That’s were the joke stops, because their slogan isn’t untrue.
‘I DECIDED’: New York teen Baseball star refused to accept act of racism at private prep school, he chose to leave in response to derogatory comment about his speed
Read the full article by Nicole Duncan-Smith HERE.
Given how schools profit, literally and figuratively, off athletes, this young man and his mother played this situation perfectly.
Parents of high-caliber athletes should network with one another as much as possible in order to share information about the educational environments where their children will be growing and maturing.
Pi Kappa Alpha FRATERNITY SUSPENDED from Ole Miss for hazing incidents: What we know
Read the full article by Brooks Holton HERE.
PLEASE click on the link to the source article.
1,400 morons signed a petition in 24 hours asking a university to lighten up on their penalties for proven serial assault.
What’s worse, the number of idiots signing this petition or the number of people not creating and signing a petition to have the fucking frat banned forever?
Also, why isn’t the Pi Kappa Alpha national office shutting down this chapter?
Guess, they are cool with it all.
Fuck them too.
Op-Ed: As a USC professor, I can‚Äôt stay quiet about THE ADMINSTRATION’S TOXIC CULTURE
By Ariela J. Gross
Last week, scandal broke at USC — again. This time, it was allegations of drugging and sexual assault at the Sigma Nu fraternity house that the administration knew about for almost a month before warning other potential victims. During that long silence, another student reported another assault there.
If this sounds familiar, it should. In 2018, under the presidency of C.L. Max Nikias, the Los Angeles Times broke the story that George Tyndall, a gynecologist at the Student Health Center, was accused of assaulting female students for three decades, despite numerous complaints from students and nurses, and despite an investigation by USC’s Title IX office that found “there was no ‘there’ there.” USC let the doctor continue to treat students. Accusations continued to grow.
The university eventually gave him a severance package and allowed him to leave quietly. Officials failed for years to alert medical authorities, police or prosecutors, nor did they inform USC students or former patients. The USC administration actually appeared not to want to know the truth.
Read the full article here:
This type of Op-Ed is far too rare.
Instructors should demand language in their contracts that allows them to make such opinions public without fear of any form of retaliation from their employer.
Newspapers ought to actively seek opportunities to publish these sorts of insights into the inner workings of local universities.
Then lawmakers need to pull their heads out of their assess and create legislation that puts people under prisons for sexual assaults on campus.
If politicians won’t create such laws, they should be voted out of office.
That’s a hell of a lot of should’s, ought’s, and need to’s.