Student fraternities ๐Ÿ‘จโ€๐ŸŽ“๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€๐ŸŽ“

in #fraternity โ€ข 7 years ago

Student fraternities

Hi friends, I hope you're fine?
I am going to talk to you today about student fraternities such as those seen in American films taking place at universities such as Amรฉrican Pie or Skulls, for example.

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They are called fraternities and sororities (frater and soror Latin words meaning "brother" and "sister"). These are social fraternal organizations for undergraduate students.

The names of brotherhoods in North America usually consist of two or three Greek letters that are often the initials of a Greek or Latin currency.

The members of these fraternities or sororities are called Greeks. A fraternity or sorority is often called a Greek house or simply a house. These terms are sometimes misleading because these brotherhoods do not necessarily have a real home to meet.

However, several groups do not use Greek letters in their name, such as the Skull and Bones in Yale cited in my article on the Illuminati (https://steemit.com/secret/@lndesta120282/the-illuminati).

The use of Greek letters began at William and Mary's College with Phi Beta Kappa.
These organizations grew from the 1870s, mainly in American universities. They constitute an important circle of socialization for the bourgeoisie who attended these establishments, indeed, they allowed them to create a network and a spirit of camaraderie based on the practice of sport.

This assistance continues after graduation because often relatively well-off students finance these fraternities.

In addition to providing a social status, these fraternities are then useful in the business world, since they generate ramifications everywhere. One example is the Beta Theta Phi fraternity that was established in sixteen cities in 1889 and then in one hundred and ten in 1912. In 1889, Delta Kappa Epsilon had six senators, forty parliamentarians, as well as personalities such as Henry Cabot Lodge and Theodore. Roosevelt and in 1912 were added eighteen New York bankers, nine notable Boston or three directors of

Former members of these communities are called frat brothers.

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Organization

The brotherhoods are not mixed, that's why there are fraternities for boys and sororities for girls. Members are considered to be active only during the undergraduate years, although sometimes there are exceptions, for example, in Afro-American, Latino or Asian fraternities in which active membership continues after obtaining their membership. undergraduate degree.

These organizations can sometimes be considered as mutual aid societies in that they provide extracurricular and social activities for their members.

Academic and professional success, foreign language learning, mutual aid and fraternity are the main values of these communities.

The fraternities organize many charity events throughout the year and raise funds for various causes. With their own social network, members of a fraternity remain connected and warned of any event on their campus.

The student association regulates, between codes and traditions, all the social life of its members. They mix very little with the members of another fraternity.

Unfortunately, they are often criticized because they lead to deviant behavior: denigration of the body of new, alcohol consumption, sexual abuse during hazing.

Indeed, if one wishes to enter one of these organizations, one must carry out a hazing which consists of a week of recruitment during which are connected the festivals and the rites of initiation.

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The most famous fraternities

Some fraternities host the future great of this world, George Bush for example who was at Yale.

Below is one of the most famous student societies that happens to place their members at the highest level of power and society.

Skull and Bones

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Also known as Chapter 322 or Brotherhood of the Death, it is located at the end of the campus of the prestigious American university Yale, in a mysterious stone building bearing the name The Tomb. It was founded in 1832 by a William Huntington Russell.

None of its members has the right to admit, even under torture, to have made or to be part of this fraternity. If someone has the misfortune to mention his name in the presence of a member, it will immediately leave the room without being noticed. "It's so secret that we can not talk about it," said George W. Bush, former president of the United States and a supposed member.

Each year, in the spring, about fifteen third-year students, with a family history worthy of the name, are designated by a simple pat on the shoulder. They are then invited, at dusk, in The Tomb. They must go in without being seen. They will then have to prove the talents of speakers and leaders by revealing their most interesting family and sexual secrets.

Future "knights" are baptized to celebrate their birth in the "real world", the one that counts, and will receive a new name. Legend has it that George W. Bush, lacking imagination, was baptized Temporary.

Some conspirators are denouncing the club's ability to establish chains of influence for all newcomers to society, from the CIA to the Pentagon to the Defense or State Secretariat and the most influential media.

This would allow it to ensure continuity in its plan of world political domination.

Members called Bonemens are neither Republicans nor Democrats, they use every stream of thought at the right time to advance their causes.

The fraternity returned to the forefront of the 2004 US presidential race between John F. Kerry and George W. Bush. Indeed, they were both members of Skull and Bones and therefore would be bound for life by a secret pact of mutual aid.

Notorious members

Among them are the big families and big American fortunes, influential in politics, commerce or the media: the Bush, the Withney, the Rockefeller, the Harriman, the Goodyear family, Kellogg, Vanderbilt, ... According to some, the Masters of the World are not at the White House but in New Haven, on the Yale campus ...

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What a post about Student fraternities. Thanks for sharing.

Awesome, this will clear up some misconceptions and help new college students!

thank 's for info...
upvoted

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a very useful sharing about student fraternities @lndesta120282

Good post. Thanks for your sharing.

Nice post ...

interesting subject thank you.
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