Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
USC Squanders an Opportunity to Form Fraternities
USC Squanders an Opportunity to Form Fraternities
Nov 29, 2025 6:36 PM

In responding to reports of sexual misconduct on campus, the University of Southern California had a choice to make in regard to the moral formation of its young men. They blew it.

Read More…

Eight fraternities recently disaffiliated from the University of Southern California following the university’s response to allegations of horrible sexual assaults on campus in 2021. During the fall semester of 2021, there were several reports of girls being drugged and sexually assaulted at fraternity events. USC delayed taking action and informing the student body of the reports. (According to the LAPD via ABC News: “as of August no suspects have been identified and there are no arrests.”) When the allegations were finally revealed, however, USC students understandably protested. This past summer, the university issued a new set of strict party guidelines and gave fraternities until August 22 to make their decisions pliance.

According to the Seattle Times, the new rules included

A working group of fraternity and sorority leaders, faculty, administrators and staff subsequently drew up an action plan to strengthen safety measures. They include posting security guards at parties, including stairwells and hallways leading to bedrooms; using scanners to screen for fake IDs; distributing wristbands to those older than 21; banning kegs; and requiring risk review meetings before and after events.

Tau Kappa Epsilon, Beta Theta Pi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Alpha, Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Chi, Zeta Beta Tau, and Sigma Alpha Mu all decided to disaffiliate from the university instead plying with the new regulations. Disaffiliation means that these fraternities are no longer recognized as student organizations by the university, are not allowed to participate in any on-campus student-life activities, will lose access to campus facilities for any of their activities, and must remove the university logo from all their marketing. Finally, the university will have no oversight or jurisdiction over these now-unaffiliated organizations, so if there are any problems in the future, the university has no standing to issue directives of any kind to these fraternities.

In my view, the fraternity disaffiliations make sense and represent the rational consequences of the university’s misstep. The imposition of overly harsh rules squandered an opportunity to appeal to moral virtue to inspire and habituate a new culture on campus. These fraternities will now likely be viewed munities of young men who resisted following rules for the sake of others’ safety, especially women’s safety. But that’s neither true nor the point. The problem with the rules is that they imply that these men are incapable of moral virtue without coercion and threat of punishment.

Introducing more punitive measures to prevent misbehavior will neither build nor sustain the moral virtue the university seeks for its students in fraternities. If you want men in college to do the right thing, the threat of punishment usually provokes more rule breaking, not less. By contrast, what makes moral excellence an aspiration is the direct invitation and encouragement to these students to be men of outstanding virtue. It seems that the university merely wants these men to be less bad. municates, in part, that the university does not believe the men in fraternities are redeemable and that their character is such that nothing but formal restraint and punishment can prove effective in moderating their behavior. Assuming these young men will make better life choices simply to avoid punishment is not the same thing as forming virtue.

The Acton Institute believes that humans “are by nature acting persons,” that is, “through human action, the person can actualize his potentiality by freely choosing the moral goods that fulfill his nature.” This takes the capacity for moral actions seriously and respects the inherent dignity of every human being. The irony is that USC would have achieved much better results in encouraging virtue in its munity had it invited fraternity members to choose moral goods and make the sacrifices necessary to be men who live above reproach. Is it because USC has no moral foundation for inspiring human action toward the good that it is in no position to invite fraternity men to devote themselves to a life of prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance? If USC had believed in the moral potential of fraternity men, appealing to moral goods could have created the conditions for pro-social aspirations. Instead, they chose a punitive approach and overregulation, and so rejected the opportunity to develop their students. What could have been a moment for the university itself to take a step back and look at what resources it had to form character in its male students became instead an opportunity to overreact based on blowback from the student body.

A moral-goods approach could have focused on helping fraternities conduct their events in such a way that facilitates human flourishing. Fun and flourishing would have been a great way to invite these students to think differently about their events—and their lives. Instead of a punitive approach, the focus should have been on formation. If producing moral goods is the university’s priority for fraternities, its officers should want only what is truly good for those who live in fraternities and for those who attend fraternity events. The question is, does the university believe these young men are capable of rising to the occasion? The pursuit of prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance changes the way alcohol is consumed and the way women are treated, as well as the intersection of the two. In the end, it is growing in virtue that sustains a culture of moral excellence on college campuses, not the threat of punishment and overregulation.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Superheroes and subsidiarity
On the heels of a record-smashing opening weekend for Avengers: Endgame, it seems appropriate to broach the subject of superheroes and subsidiarity, and specifically an intriguing lesson about subsidiarity in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. (Sorry, this post will not be about the would-be superhero ‘Subsidiarity Man.’) In deference to those who weren’t among the people who contributed to the $1.2 billion opening, I’ll wait to post a bit more about Avengers: Endgame and specifically how it relates to the development...
Grand Rapids doesn’t need publicly funded hotels
Grand Rapids, home to the Acton Institute headquarters, is frequently ranked as one of the best cities to live in America. In 2018, Headlight Data ranked the city the seventh fastest growing economy in the U.S., based on Gross Regional Product (GRP) over the previous five years. With all that going for it, ask Acton’s foundation relations coordinator Tyler Groenendal, why do the hotels need to be publicly funded? In the face of such enormous economic impact, why is there...
What does Spain’s 2019 general election mean for Christians?
Spain held a general election on Sunday, which saw Pedro Sanchez’s Socialist Party rout the center-right opposition. “For liberty-minded Christians, this was the worst possible e,” writes Ángel Manuel García Carmona in a detailed analysis of the process, and e, of the election posted today at Religion & Liberty Transatlantic. Socialists from PSOE [Sanchez’s Socialist Party] munists from Podemos will increase taxes and the bureaucratic burden of government regulation, while debt levels increase anyway. Their coalition will accelerate these trends...
Russia bans fake news: a lesson in unintended consequences
For months, French President Emmanuel Macron has asked European leaders to crack down on fake news. At last, someone has taken his advice. Last month, Vladimir Putin signed a law banning Russian websites from posting “fake news” stories. The government, of course, will be the arbiter of truth and falsehood. Coincidentally, the same day he signed a bill punishing websites that post stories insulting Vladimir Putin. The Moscow Times reported: The legislation will establish punishments for spreading information that “exhibits...
No, George Will. Joe Biden’s program is not ‘normalcy’
Reading George Will’s latest article in National Review online Praising the normalcy of the former Vice President Joe Biden, I couldn’t help whispering to myself: What is properly normal about Uncle Joe? I am totally aware of his record as a moderate liberal in the Senate. He was against busing children to distant schools and supported a law-and-order policy to fight crime. However, I am also aware of his claim that a Mitt Romney victory in 2012 would have meant...
The Federal Reserve as lender of last resort
Note: This is post #121 in a weekly video series on basic economics. If you heard a rumor that your bank was insolvent, asks economist Alex Tabarrok, what would you do? As Tabarrok says, a typical reaction is to panic. And if you can’t get your money out, your next step would likely be to try and get all of your cash in hand. The rumor could even be false, but if enough people responded as if it were true,...
Presidential candidate Kamala Harris: We need to ban right-to-work laws
Speaking at a recent a Service Employees International Union (SEIU) event, Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris said there there is a need for “banning right-to-work laws.” It’s unclear how Harris plans to do this from the federal level, as Right to Work laws are state laws that guarantee a person cannot pelled to join or pay dues to a labor union as a condition of employment. “Kamala Harris wants to make absolutely sure that we know she’s an authoritarian,” says...
Noodles in Nigeria: When private business breeds economic development
In the West’s various efforts to alleviate global poverty, we continue to see the promotion of top-down solutions at the expense of bottom-up enterprises and institutions. Yet despite the setbacks and slowdowns caused by various governments and foreign aid, the entrepreneurs and workers on the ground aren’t sitting idly by. Across the developing world, people aren’t waiting for policies to change, conditions to improve, handouts to be given, or risks to evaporate. They are actively transforming their environments and creating...
Rev. Ben Johnson: The socialist bizarro world of David Bentley Hart
When e across a think piece so catastrophically wrong as David Bentley Hart’s April 27 New York Times column, “Can We Please Relax About ‘Socialism’?” you marvel at the effort, intentional or not. Hart, an Eastern Orthodox theologian and, as the Times puts it a “cultural critic,” says he knows that, “in this country we employ terms like ‘socialism’ with wanton indifference to historical details and conceptual distinctions.” He’s right, but not in the way he thinks he’s right. After...
Acton Line podcast: The moral hazard of student debt; Unraveling Islam
On this episode of Acton Line, Caroline Roberts speaks with Andrew Kloster, deputy director of the Center for the Study of the Administrative State at George Mason University, about the student debt crisis. Kloster claims that the student debt crisis is the greatest moral hazard of our Nation and explains how he sees the crisis panning out in the future. On the second segment, Acton’s director of research, Samuel Gregg, sits down with Mustafa Akyol, senior research fellow at the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved