** A Victory for Sororities: Education Department Rules Sororities Are for Women Only
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Dear friends,
It turns out, sororities are for women after all.
As I recently wrote for The Daily Signal ([link removed]) , the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights just affirmed what every sorority woman in America knew the first time she walked into her chapter—a sorority is for women.
In a statement that would’ve been self‑evident five minutes ago—just as it was over a century ago when sororities were first formed—the department announced: “A sorority that admits male students is no longer a sorority by definition and thus loses the Title IX statutory exemption for a sorority’s single‑sex membership practices.”
Translation: If you let men in, you’re not a women’s organization anymore. You’re just another coed club—one that fails to understand basic biology and forces radical leftist group‑think on its female members.
In the same announcement, the Department of Education also declared June as Title IX Month, “in honor of the fifty‑third anniversary of Title IX of the Educational Amendments (1972) being signed into law. June will now be dedicated to commemorating women and celebrating their struggle for, and achievement of, equal educational opportunity.”
What better way to kick it off than by reaffirming that Title IX was written to protect women—not radical gender ideologies. While not a new law, this Education Department clarification carries enormous weight—it reaffirms the long‑standing legal basis for single‑sex sororities under Title IX.
Unfortunately, the National Panhellenic Conference, the umbrella organization over sororities nationwide—and the national sorority leadership of every one of the 26 national sororities—have fallen prey to the same woke “mind virus” that has inundated our entire culture. They all allow men who identify as women to join our female‑only sororities, forcing radical and dangerous policies onto chapters and loyal alumnae who disagree.
A Case in Point
In 2022, Kappa Kappa Gamma’s national leadership forced its University of Wyoming chapter to accept Artemis Langford, a 6‑foot‑2, 260‑pound man, despite the protests of women in the house. When some brave sorority members took legal action, they were dismissed as bigots.
According to court documents, multiple female collegiate sorority members testified that Langford would linger in common areas in the KKG house, stare at them, and become visibly aroused.
To add insult to injury, the activist judge told the young women they had no right to define what “woman” even means in their own sorority. National KKG’s own attorney claimed “[the word] ‘women’ is unquestionably not defined … and unquestionably has multiple meanings.”
The Education Department Office for Civil Rights is now rightly investigating the University of Wyoming for “allegedly allowing males to join and live in female‑only intimate and communal spaces.”
For years now, a small but quickly‑growing army of sorority women across the country—mothers, professionals, sisters, and friends—have watched in disbelief as the National Panhellenic Conference and national sorority leadership cast aside women who dared to say what biology, common sense, and the law have always affirmed: Men do not belong in women’s spaces.
Here’s What We’ve Seen
* Kappa Kappa Gamma expelled two loyal alumnae—Patsy Levang and Cheryl Tuck‑Smith—for objecting to admitting trans‑identifying men.
* Phi Mu expelled alumnae Michele Bunker, Carolyn Cook Maiden, Carolyn Carroll Neese, and Stephanie Mire Theriot for defending single‑sex status and expressing Christian faith.
* Payton McNabb—injured by a trans‑identifying male volleyball player—was kicked out of Delta Zeta after confronting a man in a dress in the women’s restroom at Western Carolina University, and the man filed a Title IX complaint against her.
* Emily Hines was expelled from Alpha Phi after posting a TikTok questioning gender identity and criticizing Rachael Levine’s “transgender” identity.
* Chi Omega expelled a man not for being a man—but for identifying as nonbinary, not as a woman.
The National Panhellenic Conference and national sorority leaders offered no response—except enforced silence, group‑think, and DEI compliance.
A Turning Point
Today, we mark a turning point, because the truth doesn’t bend. Biology is real. Women will no longer be silenced.
Title IX has had a carve‑out for single‑sex organizations almost from its inception. That means sororities and fraternities have a legal right to exist as women‑only and men‑only spaces. But if you start letting men who “identify as women” into the sisterhood, you forfeit that protection. Colleges and universities that support you are now on notice: support a sorority that admits men and you lose the legal exception.
It’s a seismic pronouncement to the National Panhellenic Conference and national sorority leadership—and a lifeline to women who simply want a women’s‑only space.
Many thought our sororities were lost—too politicized, traditions compromised. But this announcement is another crack in the leftist takeover of women’s safe spaces. It’s proof that truth still matters. That women still matter.
So to all alumnae who walked away in frustration and disbelief: come back. Get involved. Reengage.
This is the moment to fight for who we are—and for what we stand for: sisterhood.
It’s Time to Stand With Women
To the National Panhellenic Conference and national sorority leadership: stand with women. Remove politics from our sororities and return organizations to founding principles—creating supportive, lifelong bonds of sisterhood among women.
Sororities were meant to empower women—not silence them, not replace them, and certainly not betray them.
National Panhellenic Conference, you have betrayed us all.
To the rest of the country: This isn’t just a sorority issue. It’s a women’s‑rights issue. A truth issue. A Title IX issue. It’s about whether women have any spaces left that are truly their own. And this fight isn’t over. We need action from Congress, courage in state legislatures, and boldness from all of us—speaking up loudly.
What happened in Wyoming and Jefferson County—where girls were told they didn’t matter—should never happen again. What happened to McNabb, to the KKG and Phi Mu alumnae, and to countless others silenced and slandered should never happen again.
Finally, we say thank you. Thank you to the Education Department Office for Civil Rights for exposing the Biden administration’s legacy of undermining Title IX and the civil rights of women and girls across this country.
This has been a long‑fought win. We’ll take it. And we’re only getting started.
Please check out previous stories here ([link removed]) .
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