I am Brazilian, so they are really common, and wild, people drink piss, shave peoples hair, ruin people’s clothes, get drunk, and once a person even died, how are they, if they exist in you country?

  • Vanth
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    1919 days ago

    As others mentioned, some of the things you described are considered hazing. The tolerance for hazing in the US has gone down a lot in my lifetime. It likely still happens a lot, but when it is reported it is much more likely to be taken seriously.

    For example, in my hometown there was a fraternity that threw a party and got an underage student so drunk that he died. Some of the fraternity members were charged with crimes related to the students death, and the fraternity was not allowed to operate on campus for two years. If that sort of thing had happened when my dad was in university, I doubt it would have even made the news.

    • @ChilledPeppersOP
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      619 days ago

      a party that “veterans” (people in their last year of college) throw to people in their first year. I don’t know a better name for it)

  • Lvxferre
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    819 days ago

    [Contextualisation, for the others]
    OP is talking about what’s called “trote” or “praxe” in Portuguese. It goes from a genuine welcome party to hazing; it depends a lot on the uni and the grad. From personal observations, hazing is way more common in Medicine and the engineering grads; and hazing is banned in plenty unis, under threat of expulsion.

    My experiences in both grads (Chemistry and Letras*) were rather good. In both the common element was the toll, where freshmen and veterans organise themselves to beg money on the streets for booze, with painted faces. Then everyone drinks together, and the ones who don’t drink alcohol can drink soda instead, nothing is forced.

    In Chemistry the veterans were prone to a few practical pranks, but nothing abusive, like:

    • to dress as a teacher, and apply a fake exam/test on the freshmen, with content from the third year, just to see their desperation;
    • to sell boxes containing “80% pure nitreto de azoto”**, claiming that they were necessary for the graduation. (They were dirty cheap, and nobody believed the bullshit - the ones buying it did so to fund the academic centre).

    Then as a Chemistry veteran I helped with the toll. It was mostly making sure that the freshmen were safe, happy, and hydrated, or redirecting them to better crossroads (higher traffic, lower speed). Then getting drunk and babbling about the Celtic culture with one of the freshmen.

    As a Letras freshman, I actually helped more from the veterans’ side of the things than begging myself money, given that I already had some experience with this. Then spent quite a bit of time taking care of another freshman, who had too much booze and was crying “nooo I drunk too much, and my mum is coming to take me back home, what if she sees me drunk?” (she simply laughed it off).

    *Letras (“letters”) is a typical Latin American grad including linguistics, translation, and literary criticism.

    **“azoto” is a valid name for nitrogen in Portuguese, but it’s almost never used where I live. The veteran exploited that to make atmospheric dinitrogen sound fancy. 80% dinitrogen = air.

    • Lvxferre
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      519 days ago

      I forgot to mention the mud bath. Back then people would check if they were admitted to the uni by either the TV or going to the campus; and the veterans readied a big pool of mud for the freshmen. I was already aware of that so I was wearing old clothes, and even joined the vets who were drinking wine (“a true chemist likes alcohol!” or something like this). Note that nobody threw me in mud, they only said “jump, jump, jump!”

      They did throw me in the mud as a veteran though. But that was the folks from my own year.

  • @[email protected]
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    519 days ago

    sounds like hazing. that’s more of a fraternity/sorority thing - or, at least, it was when I was in school