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‘Self-segregation’ myth affects all societies

Words on Fire
Published Friday, April 11, 2008

Wednesday night was Pre-tap, but I’m a little hesitant to write about the group I recently joined. I know, we’re not supposed to talk about this stuff with our masks off, so I won’t name which one it is. Let’s just say I accepted the offer because I wanted to really get to know some great people I would have never otherwise met. It’s not that elitist, even though none of my other friends got in. And it will be a fantastic opportunity to network, meet alumni and maybe even get a good job after college. That alone makes it worth it, even if it’s going to take up my Thursday and Sunday...

#1 By (Anonymous) 5:25a.m. on April 11, 2008

Touche, Niko. Way to put scare societies in their proper place, embarrassed.

#2 By Buster Brown 8:36a.m. on April 11, 2008

In my time as a member of Yale's union, I was told I was "making others look bad" (I was working too fast) and eventually paid to sit in an office, read the paper (USA Today, ugh!), and deliver the news to my supervisor at the first break.

A friend of mine, working as a casual, was fired (I forget the actual term) because her computer-work "could be done by a union employee." Of course...it couldn't, and the position went unfilled (and the work, undone).

Then there is GESO: their aggressive tactics were right out of some Communist guide (including the buddy system and harangues of attrition). Confrontations when I was just trying to get a cup of coffee. Lectures about how Yale was cheating me (what? By paying me $10K and waiving tuition? Cheat me some more, please!).

And when the unions struck and "scabs" were brought in for custodial duty? The hospital was the cleanest it had ever, ever been! All the doctors (secretly, so that unionista wouldn't hear) whispered among themselves how they wished the strike would go on and on indefinitely... The replacement staff were hard-working, conscientious, polite--the OPPOSITE of what we were used to.

Yes: working for and with the unions sure taught ME a lesson, one I keep with me still: BUST 'EM!

#3 By ex-officio 9:51a.m. on April 11, 2008

Written lightly and fluidly. I'm almost a fan of this article. Thankfully, not ANOTHER whiny one.

#4 By Yonah 10:28a.m. on April 11, 2008

Hear, hear!

#5 By Great! 11:09a.m. on April 11, 2008

Thanks for the article, it's great and I agree 100%.

#6 By fabulous 12:46p.m. on April 11, 2008

so true. great article. i thought yalies hated the exclusivity of princeton's eating clubs, but hey, we're no better. well written.

#7 By Yale Mama 8:59p.m. on April 11, 2008

Niko I love, love, love your writing. You are truly a talented young man. I am happy thta someone close to me considers you a friend.

#8 By (Anonymous) 12:56a.m. on April 13, 2008

Great article Niko! But now that the pre-tap list has leaked to Ivygate and JuicyCampus we're all wondering if you'll accept..? Is it possible to do both?

#9 By MIT C. 10:22a.m. on April 14, 2008

Has Yale really changed so much in 35 years that people really give a damn about whether they or someone else is in a senior society? Reverse snobbery usually is a reaction to real snobbery. Is there a snobbery about senior societies now? Is membership seen as prestigious? It wasn't 35 years ago, but now I wonder.

Oh, btw, Niko, tell us how abolishing secret ballots in worker elections on unionization is such a democratic and wonderful thing. Unite Here is pushing this, which they call "card check neutrality". Give us a report on that when next you write, won't you?

"But the best thing about the union, and all of the other groups I’ve joined, is that none of them share a conception of community in which friendships are defined by their sheer exclusivity. When I meet new people in these groups, I can hang out with them and my old friends as well."

This paragraph is a real laugher. Just make sure your old friends are pro-union and make sure your Unite friends don't know you hang out with any non-union new friends (assuming you don't define your friends by any exclusivity criterion, like only union folk).

#10 By (Anonymous) 1:52p.m. on April 14, 2008

http://www.yaledailynews.com/articles/view/22062

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