Roll Tide! Alabama Sororities Deny Male Pledge
15 Aug 2022
BUCK: Clay, apparently a guy tried to join a sorority. What happened here? You know, they didn’t have sororities at Amherst, which was a huge, big L there, big loss for the Buckster in college.
CLAY: University of Alabama, the bid week or whatever you want to call it.
BUCK: Where I should have gone to school, yes.
CLAY: Rush is a monster deal. The sorority rush. So, for the first time ever they had a biological man that was attempting to become an Alabama sorority girl. God bless Alabama, Roll Tide. The sororities all rejected him and refused to allow him, as a man identifying as a woman, to become a member of any of their sororities.
Biological males are now participating in rush week to join a sorority at University of Alabama pic.twitter.com/S5WqYuZTuG
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) August 15, 2022
So, I gotta say, Roll Tide. Good for the University of Alabama, good for these girls standing up for themselves and not allowing a guy in because there are a lot of dudes that would try to do this otherwise. By the way, if you’re a straight guy, you got into the right sorority, I mean, there’s a lot of guys out there, like, heck, I’d like to live in a sorority house
It’s like the guys who end up in prison that go and flip and decide to live in a — you saw that New Jersey where the guy got two different women pregnant?
BUCK: Show’s over.
CLAY: Wild times.
Recent Stories
Patriotic Michael Berry to Buck: For True USA: Get it from a Road Trip -- Not the TV News
Buck and Houston-based syndicated radio host, Michael Berry, praised the U.S.A., agreeing with all the country's current tourists.
Supreme Court Just Turned U.S. Citizenship Into a Criminal Scam
There's no sugarcoating it. It's a dark day for America.
Criminal (In)Justice: Rafael Mangual on Why Soft-On-Crime Policies Fail
Join the conversation about socialist election wins in New York and the battle to fight crime in America's cities.
Jim Jordan Jumps On Breaking SCOTUS Ruling on Birthright Citizenship, Battling Sanctuary Laws
The Chairman on the House Judiciary Committee focuses on what Congress can do now.


