The sanctity of womanhood emerged the victor this past week, but it wasn’t here in the “home of the brave.” It was a collective of Scottish women who stood up against the madness of transgenderism before the U.K. Supreme Court — and won.
The judges found, rightly, that biological sex determines womanhood. Our fellow women across the pond took on responsibilities and leadership positions they likely never imagined taking up. Now we must call on American women to do the same.
A battle is unfolding on college campuses, one that reaches beyond the fight to keep biological males out of women’s sports. It is a struggle for the survival of another intrinsic domain to American culture: women’s sororities.
In the eyes of the general public, a sorority is an exclusive social club for female college or university students who sometimes live together. Really, it is more than that. It is a lifelong bond between women that requires all the intimacies and loyalties of sisterhood, with a legacy and culture that are thoroughly American. The first fraternity emerged in 1776, that impressive year of our nation’s founding.