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So Long, Sex Week at Yale?

Students Fight Back



Who says you can’t beat the sexualized campus culture? Some brave students at Yale have just done so!

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Chuck  Colson

According to the forthcoming book, Girls Uncovered: New Research on What America’s Sexual Culture Does to Young Women, by the time our daughters graduate from college, the vast majority will have had sex without the benefit of marriage. Many will be engaging in high-risk sexual behaviors, including having multiple partners and sex under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

This may be shocking, but sadly it’s no surprise, given the sexual culture on many campuses. Take, for example, Yale University.

For the past several years, this elite Ivy League institution — where the great theologian Jonathan Edwards once served as president — has supported a student-initiated event called Sex Week at Yale, which is described as “a campus-wide interdisciplinary sex education program.”

Folks, this is not Sex Ed 101. The Yale Dean of Student Affairs has e-mailed students about the wonders of “glorious consensual sex.” The university itself says that Sex Week at Yale, next scheduled for February, “has prominently featured titillating displays, ‘adult’ film stars, and commercial sponsors of such material.”

So if that’s how the grown-ups at Yale approach human sexuality, can you imagine how the students feel? Well, not altogether. A group of brave young people at Yale is bucking the sexual trend. Calling themselves Undergraduates for a Better Yale College, they’re cleaning up the campus like the New York police are cleaning up Zuccotti Park.

Yale’s sexual culture has been dysfunctional, to say the least. Rape, harassment, the objectification of women, and simple disrespect have caused even The Yale Daily News to admit that “the project of reforming Yale’s sexual culture is a formidable one.”

But Undergraduates for a Better Yale College is challenging the kind of thinking and worldview that allowed Yale’s sexual culture to go so badly off the rails.

“We believe,” they say, “that the heart of the problem is … a paradoxical attitude that both trivializes sex and is obsessed with it.” They add, “It is obsessive — and pathetic — to be as consumed with sexual curiosity as our campus so frequently is.”

Strong words, but they are also backing them up. Opposing Sex Week at Yale, these students set up a website, betteryale.org, placed advertisements in the alumni magazine and in the student newspaper, and challenged campus officials. And that’s not all. They are organizing fun, wholesome, and healthy alternatives — such as True Love Week, Great Date Night, and Better Yale dances.

And you know what? They’re winning! Under pressure from Undergraduates for a Better Yale College and other groups, the Yale administration has backed down, removing its support for the “sex week” and kicking it off campus. That’s amazing!

While nobody will be surprised if the university allows it back in some restructured form, this cultural skirmish shows what can happen if advocates for moral standards break the spiral of silence and realize that they can accomplish great things. It’s just what I’ve been talking about over these weeks. We have to break the spiral of silence created often by a tiny minority.

Well, OK, this is only a small victory. But small victories add up. Remember, Yale University is one of the most influential institutions in America. If it can happen at Yale, it can happen anywhere.

Correction: Jonathan Edwards studied at Yale. He served as president of Princeton

Further Reading and Information

Yale Bans ‘Sex Week’
Nathan Harden | National Review | November 15,2011

Who We Are
Undergraduates for a Better Yale | BetterYale.org

 

Doing the Right Thing
| DoingtheRightThing.com

 




Comments:

Students fight back
This seems to be not only a victory of morality over rampant immorality, but also of courage over cowardice.
Sex Week
I had the privilege in Oct. 2009 of debating one of the most prominent "sex ed authors" in our country from Hartford Univ. at the Univ. of Kentucky's 'Sex Week'. The week, and planned events, were every bit of what you described and more as the major sponsor was a 'sex toy' company out of Ohio and the session right after our debate was a presentation of these 'toys'. The most encouraging thing of the evening was the number of students who came up after the debate to thank me and recognize the clear 'victory' the Truth had in the debate as well as the 'objective' moderator (who was a tenured Political Psychology professor of 38 yrs.) who simply asked afterwards, "How in the world did we fall so far as her 'arguments' were absolutely ridiculous?" Also, Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich (renowned educational publishers) had flown in one of their key folks to 'celebrate' the event with their author (the Hartford prof) and did not look thrilled at all after the event as the arguments given were exposed for the selfish, destructive agenda and ideology that they truly are and it was evident to all! Finally, when UK was considering hosting "Sex Week" the next year, we contacted several of the campus orgs. and ministries to work on hosting a coincidental event and once word got out, UK dropped their Sex Week and it has yet to return, although as you stated, we will keep looking for it to reappear with more subtlety and yet with just as much ammo and destruction in their sights! As I've shared many times, and to all who'll listen, this is one of, if not, the key battle used in claiming the hearts, souls and minds of our youths, their futures and the future of our homes, families, churches and communities! Thanks for all you do and God bless in Christ!
encouraging news
After a rather defeating week from a personal standpoint, this is good stuff to hear - very encouraging. Thank you, Chuck, for your sharing of this good news. I have prayed for the protection and continued endurance of these young students.