MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
Depends which Church.Ironic, given that the Church is probably one of the few organisations with a bigger abuse problem than the scouts.
Depends which Church.Ironic, given that the Church is probably one of the few organisations with a bigger abuse problem than the scouts.
Had to look these guys up since I have never heard of them. I gotta lot of reading to do.!!Patrick McManus and Grogan's war surplus lives
Had to look these guys up since I have never heard of them. I gotta lot of reading to do.!!
I think every small town back then had one Army/Navy surplus store with a most memorable character running it.
Did BSA actively ‘recruit girls away’ or were they pressured to let girls in who wanted to join a boys club? I’m asking because I don’t know and would have to think it wasn’t the former
Different programs. As a bsa leader I can say I know girls who anxiously waited for the day they could work on becoming an Eagle Scout (2017) and worked their butts off to earn it.
Sin is a cancer.....and it is no respecter of persons or organizations.Ironic, given that the Church is probably one of the few organisations with a bigger abuse problem than the scouts.
He was adamant that the programs are different and that GSA was the right thing for some girls.
My son is currently in Boy Scouts. Male and female troops and activities are separate.My understanding is that girls will be in separate troops from the boys. There may be some overlap at organized events, but I think the idea was to separate them (for obvious reasons, teenagers on camping trips?) for most of the activities. I'm not completely sure of the details though, my son is only a Cub Scout, and the girls are in separate dens from the boys so we only see them at Pack level events. Mostly they are siblings of boy cub scouts.
Everybody knew everybody is pretty much dead, at least around here. Both parents work so neighborhood interaction is limited to the annual Memorial Day picnic, every house is basically a silo, most kids live on the internet while parents work or watch television, etc.Many churches (including mine) withdrew from Scouting support when the sexual abuse issues hit the press. Churches didn't want to be associated with that mess.
Plus, the general public didn't see the abuse problem and the admission of girls as two seperate things. Instead, I think many people looked at BSA and thought, "So there's a huge sex abuse problem with the Scouts, and now they're going coed. Yeah, that'll fix it...."
It is a shame. I enjoyed my time in Scouts, especially Order of the Arrow, back in the 1970s. Back then, most of the other boys lived nearby and our leaders were fathers from our neighborhood. Everybody knew everybody, and if there had ever been an abuse issue, legal problems would have been the least of the offender's worries, as our fathers probably wouldn't have left behind enough pieces of the baztard to sue anyway.
Sorry. I didn’t mean to imply that. Just that they are different programs with different focusI wasn’t questioning the work ethic of the boys or girls.
Everybody knew everybody is pretty much dead, at least around here. Both parents work so neighborhood interaction is limited to the annual Memorial Day picnic, every house is basically a silo, most kids live on the internet while parents work or watch television, etc.
OMG don’t get me started! Lots of tent hopping in the Explorers. Good times.but I think the idea was to separate them (for obvious reasons, teenagers on camping trips?) for
We have lost a lot. Men used to care and inculcate values. I feel like a refugee from Atlantis trying to explain how it used to be. It was good.I was in the program in the late 80s and early 90s, it was awful… the leaders were awful, one leader missed many meetings leaving us sitting there. When they did show up they would get us in some boring project and then go chain smoke.
We camped once and made a burger n potato in foil in the fire meal, the guy told me where to put it, I went to pull it out twice, he said leave it- when I got it out at his command it was charcoal. He laughed n said there wasn’t any more eat it.
These folks were anything but woke and in my area was a crap program I exited pretty quickly. Tried CAP- pretty much same experience, a bunch of military wannabes who just wanted to march kids in a parking lot, no interest in aviation.
I think it’s beyond yawn worthy they are changing their name. The only thing that stays the same is everything changes.
I’ve always admired anyone who had the drive and tenacity to earn Eagle Scout. I don’t think I ever made it past First Class…. Maybe Star, I really don’t remember. But I think somewhere I still have an OA pin.How many of you are going to change your opinion of an Eagle due to this?
Good point. I was sort of thinking the same thing in the back of my mind, and you articulated it for me.I thought allowing girls was a mistake. But now that I've seen it, I changed my mind. The kind of girls that want to do it tend to fit in just fine.
But I think somewhere I still have an OA pin.
The more important question is: What does ITSLEF mean?
the more important question is: What does INSITUTION mean?
Wait until you meet Rancid Crabtree and The Troll.
An implied question in the thread is why did the Boy Scouts add females? I suspect it was because of societal pressure and also to recapture numbers. As others in the thread have posted, the number of people interested in camping, hiking, fishing, shooting guns, preparedness, etc. is declining as the country becomes more urban. Also, the availability of places to do some of those things and the willingness for people and organizations to take risks (camping - what about lions/tigers/bears/snakes/outdoor potties!!!)...(Shotguns... You're gonna let kids shoot guns? Insanity!!!) in addition to sports and a hundred other things has hurt Scouts from a numbers perspective. So the Scouts did something to enlarge their set of potential members.
As to the 'why', it may just be that the leadership realized that excluding potential members solely based on gender did nothing to further the mission of the organization.
Spend some time around teenage girls and you'll find many of them have the same issues as the boys. My kids' junior high had quite a few fights break out. The boys were not the ones fighting.Every society in history has had some kind of behavioral code to help men control and direct their more challenging attributes into socially positive actions. One could argue many of the problems with young men today come from being unmoored from guidance or expectations on being a good man.
To an overwhelming extent, such codes were limited to those in the higher social orders. A British gentleman in 1850 might be taught a code to live by, but what about his thousands of contemporaries in the slums of Glasgow? The gentleman might be taught to give his opponent a hand up if he's knocked down in a fight, but the Glaswegians will be taught that's it's then the perfect time to "put the boot in."Every society in history has had some kind of behavioral code to help men control and direct their more challenging attributes into socially positive actions. One could argue many of the problems with young men today come from being unmoored from guidance or expectations on being a good man.
....but the Glaswegians will be taught that's it's then the perfect time to "put the boot in."
What many who are not involved in scouting may not realize is that "Duty to God" is still a very integral part of scouting. My son's Cub Scout pack is in a very left of center upper middle class urban area and every year I watch the other scout leaders tap dance around the issue. Every year at "intro to scouting night" a random blue haired mom (the modern version of blue hair) always seems to proudly get up during Q&A and ask about this. we are sponsors by an elementary school PTA so we have be a little careful and how we deal with these issues, but ultimately the scouting belief is that there is a higher power the scout must ultimately answer to, whether that be God, Allah, Yahweh, Buddha, etc. That answer doesn't particularly please the atheists, but ultimately I didn't become a scout leader to debate theology either.
Indeed, and much blood has been spilled arguing over whose code is right.That's a different, and less savory, code, but it's still a code. Codes are derived from a society's idea of ethics, and not all ethics are the same.
In my long-ago Civil Air Patrol cadet days, our promotions were set on passing tests on ~six books. You'd get a ribbon and a stripe for each book, and eventually take the overall test that would make you a cadet officer.What many who are not involved in scouting may not realize is that "Duty to God" is still a very integral part of scouting.
Short of saying "I'm atheist, and I believe in absolutely nothing beyond my own selfish existence", there isn't a "wrong" answer to a question about Duty to God.