Scouts No More
by Michael S. Alford
Local Boy
As the parents
of multiple home-schooled children we are always looking for ways
to get our kids some social activity. With that in mind we had considered
Cub Scouts for our two oldest. I had a very positive impression
of the organization, and expected lots of fun with campouts and
survival skills being taught. And to tell you the truth, it started
out great. We formed up a little Pack made up of other homeschoolers,
and in true homeschooler fashion, us dads sat down with the BSA
Manual and began to rewrite the curriculum. We decided what to keep,
what to toss, and the dad we elected as the Den Leader did a phenomenal
job. We even rewrote some of the standard Cub Scout cheers which
we thought were a bit ribald for these 1st graders in our care.
When time came for fundraising, we rejected the overpriced trinket
sales model that was recommended and we devised our own program
which was a smashing success. The whole family was involved in our
Cub Scout pack, even the Den leaders daughters who volunteered
to be the hapless victims in every first-aid scenario we played
out. The poor girls choked on a chicken bone, broke their legs,
had boulders fall on them. It was great fun.
Then the phone
calls happened. One of the higher-ups in the organization was hearing
rumors that we werent sticking to the manual. Soon observers
from the Council level started showing up at our meeting. It became
harder and harder for our family to attend the meetings since we
lived on the other end of the county and some obscure rule dictated
where we could and could not meet. The Den Leader announced that
he and his family would be relocating. It was the combination of
these and other factors that caused us to move to a more established
Pack closer to our home.
But more established
came with a cost. We were the only homeschoolers in this group,
and it showed, as the meetings were built off of the insanely arbitrary
public school holiday calendar. It was fairly early on that we learned
that the siblings were not welcome at the meetings. This caused
some tears at our house, but my reasoning was that the 2nd oldest
would be old enough to have his own Pack at the end of the year,
so lets just endure and get out of this what we can. The time
for fundraising came and the overprized trinket model was foisted
upon us. This required us to literally spend hours outside of chain
stores hawking our wares to random passers-by, with most of the
proceeds going to upper levels of professional Boy Scouts. We approached
the organization with the idea that had done us so well before and
it was flatly rejected. We were told to sell the overpriced trinkets
or do without any funding. A bit of investigation proved that the
organization was top-heavy with salaried employees and that a substantial
portion of these sales went to pay their salaries. Every meeting
seemed to focus more and more on the fundraising, with a curtailing
of activities for those who did not meet the quotas. At one of the
banquet dinners, the higher up who had called me before to investigate
the non-compliance rumors presented a program wherein our Scouts
would be going door to door asking for donations. This would be
done in addition to the expensive uniforms, the dues that went up
every year, the campouts that cost more and offered less, and the
ridiculously expensive buttons, beads, patches, etc that adorned
the uniforms. The statement was made Your friends are neighbors
are already benefiting from having Scouts in the area, now its
time for them to pay for it.
I began to
have real issues with the organization's definition of patriotism.
Police were brought in to give speeches on how to be a good citizen,
with good citizen defined as somebody who helps the police
do their job. Cops were heroes, firemen were heroes, the military
were heroes, virtually anyone who wore a state uniform was lauded
for their heroism. The Pledge of Allegiance was a staple in the
meetings and there was a constant push towards collectivism and
conformity. One of the permission forms I was expected
to fill out to be able to accompany my own child somewhere requested
the social security numbers and medical history of my entire family.
I refused and challenged the need for this information, and was
told that nobody else has any problem with it. When
I voiced my objections, we were marked as those people.
I declined to become a Den leader because it would have required
me to sign on to all sorts of things that ran contrary to the culture
of our family. Soon after that, planning meetings were being held
without my knowledge, and an agenda trotted out that sent up a fresh
litany of red flags for me almost every week. I began to have a
sick feeling in my stomach most meetings. My children of course,
were blind to all this, as they simply saw this as an opportunity
to be around other kids.
Its
also worth mentioning the campouts. Twice a year we would go to
a BSA-approved facility where a list of pre-scheduled activities
was offered to us, with no deviations allowed. These campouts were
expensive and charged per person which made it hard to take the
entire family. The Scouts would be taught mindless cheers (borrowed
from old gospel hymns) that lifted up the Boy Scouts as a great
organization with lots of fun to be had by all. Then they would
be marched from activity to activity under the ever-watchful eye
of salaried Scout employees who would do everything in their power
to reduce the liability of the Scout organization should anyone
become injured. Any suggestions outside of the approved schedule
would be quietly dismissed, and this collectivism extended even
down to the food choices for the campout. A list was given to us
of foods we would be buy which would then be held in common and
dispersed by the leadership. I said No thanks, well
bring our own food to icy stares.
There were
people in the group that seemed pretty dedicated to having a good
time, some of them at low levels of leadership and they rode the
rules right up to the edge. But every meeting there seemed to be
more rules, more things to be signed, more money doled out for patches
that celebrated the most mundane of achievements (they have a video
game merit badge, for crying out loud) and more calls for fundraising
with less actual activities. The drift was towards safe lawsuit-proof
activities which happen to be excruciatingly boring for a young
boy. Ill give you an example. It came time for my oldest to
qualify to be able to carry a pocketknife on campouts. The proficiency
is supposed to be demonstrated with a block of wood and a knife.
Somebody somewhere in lunatic-ville decided that having the boys
demonstrate actual proficiency with actual pocketknives would be
too dangerous, and so they were issued plastic cutlery and a bar
of soap. I wish I was making this up.
In the middle
of all this we discovered a wonderful book written over 100 years
ago by the co-founder of scouting. . Its very pages ooze with rugged
individualism and self reliance. This man taught his early Scouts
to go into the woods and cut down trees to make their shelters (tents?
Bah!), to hunt and kill their supper. There is a whole section on
how to perform in-field taxidermy! By contrast, the modern Scouts
are taught a philosophy of Leave No Trace which sounds
harmless enough, but the implementation of it was that not only
would you not leave any trash behind but you wouldnt even
pick up sticks from off the ground lest you disturb nature.
Instead, it was required that we bring all our firewood with us
from outside the campsite, and take all the ashes with us once we
were done. I, apparently the ever-present troublemaker, questioned
the very sanity of some of their policies, and once again was not
invited to the meetings. I took this book to one of the higher ups,
and was told in no uncertain terms that the world in which Scouts
could do activities like the ones described in that book were long
gone.
By now I had
2 children in 2 different Packs that met in 2 different locations,
and Monday nights were becoming my least favorite night of the week.
Another thing I noticed was a lack of fathers involved in Scouts.
Since we live in a culture of male-abdication, I usually was the
only dad at these events. And because I was unwilling to be in position
of leadership (along with its requirement to endorse all sorts of
lunacy) the leadership vacuum was filled by women. Now women are
great, Im a huge huge fan of them, but women, as Im
sure you will agree, are not men. And the teaching of boys is best
left to men whenever possible. These well-meaning ladies, coupled
with our litigious society, created an environment where risk-taking
was a frightful prospect, and instead it was enough to simply read
from the Scout manual about how to do dangerous things and then
check the box so that you can get your ridiculously expense little
patch.
I made a command
decision, that the organization was teaching dangerous things, and
at a high cost, and at the end of the year we would be withdrawing
from the program. I cannot recommend the organization to anyone,
especially anyone with a penchant for questioning what they are
being told. I had endured gut-wrenching meetings for 3 years, and
my children had no skills to show for it. However we still have
the book, and our family this spring will be returning to the spirit
of Scouting and seeing if we can learn some real skills along the
way.
Reprinted
from Local Boy.
March
5, 2013
Michael
S. Alford [send him mail]
is the author of Swindled:
How the GOP Cheated Ron Paul and Lost Themselves the Election.
Visit his website.
Copyright ©
2013 Michael S. Alford
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