Gay porn gay hazing
First is the notion of making someone submissive to prove your own masculinity. Make no mistake about it – hazing is largely about sexuality, from two different angles. In fact, an Alfred University study said that 80 percent of college athletes had been hazed.
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And while the few dozen incidents they and other media outlets have reported are an improvement over the dearth of reports just three years ago, the number of hazing incidents that has come to public light pales in comparison to the actual number that is happening at high schools, colleges and on professional teams around the country. The Web site has played a huge role in forcing the public and sports teams and leagues to start having frank discussions about hazing. Hazing is against the policy of most colleges, and anti-hazing statutes exist in 38 states. Hazing can range from seemingly innocuous acts like wearing a dunce cap or eating a raw egg to dangerous or life-threatening things like drinking excessive amounts of alcohol, branding, or crazy stunts that involve water, fire or oncoming traffic. Hazing is, for practical purposes, coercing or forcing younger athletes or students to do embarrassing things for the right to be a part of the group. What isn't being talked about much is the elephant in the room, the issue that most people are thinking about when they hear about stories of what sports teams are doing to one another usually at night behind those closed doors: Both latent homosexuality and homophobia are playing a huge role in the hazing abuse our kids are experiencing, and our societal standards that dictate what a "real man" is are to blame. The antics that have for so long gone on behind closed doors, and that have been dismissed by most as "boys will be boys," are finally starting to get the serious attention from sports administrators and the public that it deserves and that its victims need. For the last couple of years we have all watched hazing in sports finally come into focus.