Sorority women scared of big man.
Sorority Sisters Stand Up for Women’s Spaces Amid Safety Concerns
A group of sorority sisters in Wyoming are taking a stand for women’s spaces and safety after a 6-foot-2, 260-pound man who identifies as a woman was allowed to join their sorority. Seven past and present members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter at the University of Wyoming have filed a lawsuit against the sorority for betraying its central purpose and mission by conflating the experience of being a woman with the experience of men engaging in behavior generally associated with women.
- The women allege that Artemis Langford, the transgender member, has engaged in creepy behavior around them and has made them feel unsafe in their own home.
- Langford has not slept in the sorority house but has turned up for meals and other events, according to the Cowboy State Daily. He is reportedly expected to move into the house next year.
- The lawsuit also claims that the sorority violated its own rules by allowing Langford to join with a grade point average below the required minimum and by forcing members to vote on his admittance online using their email addresses instead of through the anonymous voting system.
These women are not just fighting for their sorority, but for all women’s spaces. One of the seven women involved in the suit told Megyn Kelly on her podcast that Langford’s presence in the Kappa Kappa Gamma house makes her feel uncomfortable and unsafe. “We need women’s spaces for that reason,” she said.
The sorority sisters are also concerned about the precedent this sets for other women’s organizations. Should males be allowed to join sororities? The answer seems clear to these women who are fighting for their right to a safe and exclusive space for women.
Kappa Kappa Gamma has denied the allegations, but the lawsuit continues as these women stand up for their rights and the rights of all women to have safe and exclusive spaces.
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