David Bean wrote:That's the second time on this thread that you've claimed a large number of people agreed with your opinion. Would you care to cite a source? I'm serious; people object to all-male organisations because they think women oughtn't to be excluded, but the degree to which they could give a toss is generally determined by whether it would be worth a woman's while to join, and I can assure you it certainly wouldn't have been as far as the Kensington Club was concerned. There were actually two ladies we used to invite along anyway simply because their company was too delightful to be missed, but even if we'd been stricter about it it wouldn't have been for anyone else to tell us whom we could or couldn't have lunch with. By way of a satire of exclusivity one of the two and I recently formed our own dining club, which we decided would be the most exclusive in the world in that it would only ever admit the two of us. Should the joke affect how anyone looks at us?
I honestly cannot believe I am having to defend a position of sexual equality. The KK club discriminates on the basis of sex and therefore is at odds with the modern world. Come on.
Again, private clubs are free to do as they wish - the problem comes when they receive endorsements or the use of University land. That is what Louise Richardson has revoked here.
My point was that nobody should have the right to tell anyone else what sort of relationships or other groups they should or shouldn't enter into, or on what basis. You seem to view the issue simply as one of non-discrimination, where as I see it as one of freedom. I'm not sure I see the virtue of preventing discrimination if it is not to further the cause of freedom, and so on a point of principle I'd say freedom is more important. Why should my right not to be excluded from some group or other supersede the right of the group to select its own membership?
My response to this is pretty much as before. In this day and age women shouldn't be excluded on the basis of the fact they are, you know, a woman. And most definitely the University should not be endorsing any club that holds that view.
Your arrogance here is breathtaking. "Unfortunately you can't impose your will universally"? Who the hell do you think you are, even to form judgements on the activities of these people, let alone to wish to prevent them if only society was foolish enough to give you the authority? Are you really so comfortable, so certain, that your opinion is objectively the correct one that you would actually seek to force it on others - that you would impose your will, with violence, as any attempt to cause people to do other than their free will dictates must involve, and paying no heed to the freedom about which you display such callous indifference?
I fear you may have missed the rather obvious tongue in cheek tone of "Unfortunately I can't impose my will universally". To be fair, I thought it was pretty clear I wasn't serious and wasn't plotting some sort of dictatorial takeover of the world.
On this occasion you confuse a question with an argument (the clue was in the question marks). My view was a statement of fact: the KK does things, ergo if the KK is not to do them, either somebody else does, or the things don't get done. Not controversial; my question was, what should the answer be (and to more immediate import, what are the university's answers).
My point is that there is very little the KK does that has to be done by the KK. There is no fundamental reason the SA, University of another society cannot run an opening and may ball.
Whoa, whoa, whoa! Where did you get this information from? It's not in the statement, anyway, but given that several users have already raised questions about what will actually happen to the Procession as a result, if you know something, might you feel like sharing?
I do not know what will happen to the Procession in the future, but I suggested the most likely outcome in the short term is that it continues just without any involvement from the University. I believe Louise said something to that effect that in her statement...?
Not a bit of it! I couldn't care less whether the KK admits all men, all women, all babies or all frogs - as far as I'm concerned if the KK has no official position in St Andrews life then its membership is entirely a matter for them. However, the university indicated that it wanted to cut ties with the KK, so if the university would care to explain what reforms the KK would have to make before it would be prepared to reverse this decision, that would be another extremely useful contribution to the discussion, and we'd have to form our opinions based on what it came up with.
Very helpfully, Louise Richardson did..."I look forward to the day when membership of the Kate Kennedy Club is open to every student of St Andrews at which point the university will be delighted to treat the Kate Kennedy Club in the same way as all other clubs and societies."
So, once the KK open their membership up to women then the University will consider reversing it's decision.





). The issue that Dr Richardson should've ended with should've been solely on elitism - not racism, not gender - elitism. The stigma that is attached to the KK is one that the university cannot afford to continue to see linked to the university's already quite frankly awful reputation for neglecting those from less privileged backgrounds (I would not say that I am from a poor background, nor anything quite like that, but I would still put myself in the lower half of students here, which is amazing to me). I remember getting the e-mail from the KK in my first year stating that their membership interviews were going to take place - and I was absolutely shocked that such a thing could exist where you had to have interviews to be a member in this sense. I took a stance never to attend a KK event as a result back then as I didn't feel that I wanted to have an involvement with a group like that, even passively. Whilst my stance towards the KK has softened a little over the years, I have still never been to an opening ball, may ball, procession, fashion show etc - but I respect and maybe even admire the hard work and effort they put into promoting the town, maintaining town-gown relations and providing events for the general student body (providing you can afford them).
