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Campus Alert: Hug at your own risk
Every hour, students at Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania commit sexual misconduct. How? No, the student body isn鈥檛 made up of sexual predators. It鈥檚 because Gettysburg鈥檚 sexual-misconduct policy makes even the most innocent student interactions a violation.
Gettysburg requires its students to gain consent before sexual interaction. No surprises there: That鈥檚 not only the law, it鈥檚 common sense. But what isn鈥檛 common sense is how Gettysburg defines 鈥渟exual interaction鈥 and 鈥渃onsent.鈥
The school鈥檚 policy considers 鈥渂rushing, touching, grabbing, pinching, patting, hugging and kissing鈥 to be sexual interactions. Making matters worse is the fact that Gettysburg requires 鈥渧erbal,鈥 鈥渃ontinuing鈥 and 鈥渁ctive鈥 consent to engage in these 鈥渋nteractions.鈥 Under the policy, hugging your friend without permission is as serious an offense as rape.
In practice, complying with Gettysburg鈥檚 policy seems to mean that each and every physical contact between students is doomed to be embarrassingly awkward. (鈥淐an I hold your hand?鈥 鈥淵es.鈥 鈥淐an I continue to hold your hand?鈥 鈥淵es.鈥) But of course Gettysburg students don鈥檛 comply with these ridiculous prohibitions; they鈥檙e students, not robots.
Every Gettysburg student has likely violated the policy at some point. So why does it exist? Since it clearly has no relation to reality, the policy should be scrapped.
Gettysburg鈥檚 administration insists that while the policy is enforced, it has never been used to crackdown on hugging or hand-holding, but the fact that the policy still exists means that administrators have explicitly reserved the right to punish students for this behavior when they deem it necessary. Trusting administrators with the power to punish on the promise that they won鈥檛 abuse that power is a losing proposition.
The university promised to change its policy at the start of the school year鈥攂ut an academic year later, the old rules are still in effect. FIREshould be extremely suspicious鈥攁nd they should demand change.
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