Gender-neutral housing, which allows male and female students to room together on campus, is the latest liberal trend in higher-ed. Yale has been a pioneer in this progressive cause, along with other Ivy League schools, first allowing gender-neutral housing for seniors in 2010 and then juniors in 2012.
This week a student at Yale wrote an op-ed in the Yale Daily News in favor of the expansion of gender-neutral housing to sophomores. Currently, only seniors and juniors have the ability to share dorm rooms with members of the opposite sex, but since the Yale administration evidently has no problem with the idea of gender-neutral housing in principle, there is little doubt that this privilege will be extended to the sophomore class in a matter of time.
The argument usually runs that to separate students in housing based on gender is arbitrary and particularly unfair to those of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) community.
Little needs to be said of Yale’s widely-publicized amoral sexual culture (one need only read the titles of Sex Week events or look up Yale’s record of sexual misconduct), however I have yet to see a single proponent of gender-neutral housing properly address the negative implications of the opposite sex living together and have seen even fewer conservatives voicing serious objections.
Though the usual focus is on the effect housing policy has on LGBT students, for the sake of argument let’s look past the clamor of the LGBT community for new privileges because such a decision would undoubtedly affect many heterosexuals as well.
By allowing members of the opposite sex to live together we allow both homosexuals and heterosexuals of the opposite sex to share the same living space. Is there no worry over possible sexual harassment or rape when a young college male, brimming with hormones, and often drunk, also shares the same intimate living quarters with a girl who bathes, changes, and sleeps in the same small area?
We recognize that men are most often the perpetrators in cases of rape because there are physical differences between men and women, like a male’s size, strength and aggression. On the other hand, these gender-based physical differences don’t exist amongst homosexuals, which is a primary reason why cases of male-male or female-female rape are much, much less common.
In gender-neutral housing there is nothing at all to hinder—neither inconvenience nor space—unwanted sexual advances among those living together.
Read more at College Fix.
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