
by Margot Heffernan
โAs long as she thinks of a man, nobody objects to a woman thinking.โ
โ Virginia Woolf
Sweet Briar College. Itโs a unique place. Inimitable, really. Rich in womenโs history. The College was built on the will of its founder, Indiana Fletcher Williams, in memory of her deceased 16-year-old daughter. Indeed, itโs a womenโs college in the most integral sense.
Over the past decade, though, this small womenโs college located in Amherst, Virginia, has been afflicted. Plagued by the same blight that has spread through virtually every province of society.
Gender ideology. It has settled in at Sweet Briar where large segments of the student body stand in defense of admitting the โgender diverse,โ including men who think they are women. In fact, many faculty and board members have been swindled into thinking that people can change sex. That men who imagine themselves women should receive special empathy. That we should give into their delusions and call them โwomenโ because they tell us to.
Women must be gracious. Isnโt this what we have been told since antiquity? Be kind, dear! And isnโt this the same admonition we are given now, in tacit and overt fashion when a man or boy claims womanhood? Be kind, dear, be kind!
(more…)












