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fred8033

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Posts posted by fred8033

  1. Not that rare.  It happens.

    District boundaries are not a law or contract.  It's just to simplify grouping of units and to balance numbers.  If your unit fits better for one of many reasons in another district, work to advocate being in that district.  Get the unit assigned to that district.  

    Flexibility - Even if you can't get your unit reassigned to that district, you can still attend roundtable and often even events in the other district.  It's all about what works best.   For example, all your friends might attend in the other district.  Or the other district's roundtable or events conflict with standing troop date commitments.  Then, attending the other district might work better long term. 

    Challenges - If not formally assigned to the desired district, your paperwork goes to the other district.  Example, advancement and awards would go to the other district.   

  2. On 3/23/2024 at 7:47 PM, AwakeEnergyScouter said:

    ... hit women because they're women ... gender-based violence ...  men and women are not equal in value and dignity ...  

    I really don't understand where these extremist comments are coming from?  It's out there.  ... Society has been debating major topics for decades and will continue to do so.  The "who can hit who and for what" is mid-evil.  I pray that's not the frame of mind brought to this forum.  ...

    The topics now are balanced funding for both Women's Studies and Men's Studies departments.  Inclusion of women on men's sports teams and inclusion of men on women's sports teams.  Mandatory paternal parental leave.  Bring your son to work day.  Why are more women graduating college than men?  ... There is gender discrimination, but it goes both ways.  It's a real topic.  I just don't think it's a healthy discussion for inside a troop.   ... 

    We should be treating each other well.  ....  Beyond that, I'd rather see scouts spending their time sharpening a stick to cook a hot dog over a fire.

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  3. 22 minutes ago, RememberSchiff said:

    Just to clarify my thoughts on BSA membership policy. I disagree with it (among other things) and I will speak out - in a scoutlike way to bring about IMHO positive change for kids. In moving forward, I believe we can reach workable compromises if we can agree it is for the kids.

    That said, we have seen repeatedly where membership policy has changed before there was the necessary prerequisite education, facilities, and resources in place. Be prepared.

    ~RS

    I agree with BSA's membership policies and I support them.  If anything, I wish BSA's membership policies would go further. 

    But I agree with your other points and I respect your opinion.  Thank you.  It's the right way to approach this.

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  4. 2 hours ago, RememberSchiff said:

    I mostly agree.  My fear is BSA does the best when it focuses on adventure and skills.  Everything else is about natural learning.  BSA sucks when it tries to force what should be naturally learned. 

    Society is debating these bigger topics.  I disagree with "start having the conversations", "promote education ... on gender equality" and "empower men and boys ... on gender equality".  I fully believe in "creating a safe space" and "build the culture".  I believe we can do that very effectively.   The trouble with the first is that society is having huge debates still on these topics.  If you have conversations, you better be ready to listen to others that don't believe as you believe.  If you shut down people that have differing opinions, then you are not having a "conversation".  If you promote, you better get ready to receive push back.

    We do the best by modeling the right behavior.  Create the safe spaces.  Build the right culture.  Be kind to all.  Teach everyone.  Introduce everyone to adventure.  I believe we can do that making BSA a natural part of social change.  That's how BSA will be most effective.  ...

    Leave the ugly debates to the rest of society.  Let's focus on teaching (all) scouts how to keep the inside of their tent dry and how to paddle a canoe.

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  5. On 3/16/2024 at 12:02 PM, Eagle1993 said:

    ... I recommended allowing coed Troops but keeping girls patrols.  ...

    In my view, this is just not controversial anymore.  The world changed a long time ago.  BSA also changed; just some pretend it hasn't.  We've had female scoutmasters, female summer camp staff and female professional scouters for decades.  Now, we pretend to have separate boys and girls troops, but most interact regularly.  They definitely interact at district / council functions.  ... We are way past BSA is a boys only club.  

    If boys-only troop wants to exist, more power to them.  Go for it.

    If boys only patrols want to exist, fine.  ... I fear a hard single-gender patrols a rule will just be circumvented just like the current separate boy troop and girl troops that are really interacting together.  

     

    Scouting is about adventure, skills, fun with benefits for leadership, independence, responsibility, etc, etc. ...    I do not see gender as a deal breaker.  

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  6. @InquisitiveScouter ...   Trademark is only if we are confusing consumers to our sales advantage.   We are not selling.  It's like buying a Volkswagen for your own use  and putting a Jaguar emblem on it.  It's my car and my choice.  Probably tacky to put a Jaguar emblem on VW bug, but not a trademark infringement.  Definitely not aN ethical issue.  ... BUT ... If we work as a middle man and then sell the shirts to others, then it is a trademark issue. 

    Also, it does not have to be an exact match.  Different font?  Slightly different wording?  Does it even really need the BSA emblem there?  IMHO, if it's clean and neat, I'm happy.  

    BSA has captive customers.  The pricing reflects that.  Prices are too high because overhead cost for the shops is high and the volume is too low. 

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  7. A Scout is thrifty.  $19 versus $49.  I would be hugely tempted. 

    Looks slightly different, but just minor.  The biggest issue is it does not have the red stitched BSA on the shirt.  Is that bad?  IMHO, I bet I could find a mom with a sewing machine that can automatically add the emblem after the fact for cheap; or free within the unit.

     

  8. 21 hours ago, Bzzy said:

    ... this entire circus is nothing but another attack, choking us with our sashes and kerchiefs to keep us quiet while they have their way with all of us, and once again these attackers are far bigger and stronger than any of us.

    Yeah.  There is nothing healing in this process.  Whether you believe BSA was at fault or you believe BSA was trying to do more than other organizations at the time, the fact is this process is damaging to many.  I really doubt lawsuits litigating incidents from 20+ years ago.  30+ years?  40+ years?  Society and laws and expectations have changed so so much.  

    The only lives changed are in the law firms and the insurance companies.  

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  9. 1 hour ago, yknot said:

    I often think the reactions of some of the scouters on this site to certain things might be due to the fact that they perhaps no longer have younger kids involved in a public school district themselves. Or, if they do, their involvement may be limited to a more insular community like a scouts/church continuum. Some simply may not be exposed to things that seem very commonplace or mainstream to others. 

    Demeaning and bullying is inferring that the many who have not heard of the term are somehow less or old or uneducated or an isolated religious sect.  You can discuss the term without being mean.   ... That's me being an upstander.  ;)

    The term was rarely used in society before the last few years.   I've taken years of classes thru business, college and post-graduate work.  My kids just graduated a major school system a few years ago.  I am very well educated.  ...  The fact is the term was rarely used until recently.  It's why I strongly assert it's strongly connected with a political agenda.  

     

    image.thumb.png.9d538fdcf2d7c81056cc91cff6f93236.png

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  10. 1 hour ago, Navybone said:

    My response was to ask “What do you disagree with in the Cit in Society MB?  Not talking about the political BS, "woke" or rest of it.  What part of the requirements of the MB do you disagree with?  My experience in our troop is that the scouts don't have issue with it (so far as it is not an active MB - camping, etc...). “   There was no response.  I specifically asked about Cit in Society MB because this is a forum about scouting and I was trying to keep the issue on scouting.  Cit in Society MB is how the BSA is addressing developing a mindset of diversify, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in our youth.  If there was acceptance of the principals of DEI as articulated in the MB, then the need for the affinity groups.

    You asked ... What do you disagree with in Citz in Society MB? 

    Requirement #1 ... Defining terms

    • Terms are loaded for specific political views and objectives.  Equity versus Equality is a difference that not everyone agrees with.  Upstander is a made up woke term.  Let's pull in conservative terms to balance the debate.  
    • Focusing on "Identities" leads naturally to "Identity Politics" which is something both the far left and the right reject.  Marxist and Socialist groups criticize as it's divisional.  Conservative criticize because it's prejudicial. 

    Requirement #2 & #3 & #4 ... Leadership and ethical decision making and  ... Isn't this all of scouting?  How to be a leader?  How to be kind?  How to be considerate?  Why is this reduced to a specific badge.  It should be everywhere in scouting.

    Requirement #6 ... Wow.  In my past, that would have been reaching out to a Lutheran or a Democrat.  Is that enough?  Perhaps we should require those from non-military families to interview those in the military to understand why they choose to serve?  ... Or do we just want shallow skin deep definitions? ... At some point, we are all different than each other in some way.  

    Requirement #7 onward ... just too much to pick apart.  Effectively ... these are setup to burn a specific political view into the youth.

    Perhaps I'd be okay with Citz in Society if we balance the politics in others badges.  Perhaps Citizen in the Nation ...  New requirement ...  Find the current price of a gallon of gas and break that cost apart into various piece parts.  Direct state and federal gas taxes.  Sales tax for the car receiving the gas.  Annual license plate cost for that car.  ... Taxes for the piece of land the gas station sits on.  Employment taxes for the people working at the gas station.  Deed transfer taxes for when the gas station bought the land.  Inspection fees for building the building.   ....  Permit fees to build the building ...   Identify all the taxes involved for the local gas station to sell a gallon of gas.  

    Citz in the Society has some good parts that should be included in other badges.  Beyond that, Citizen in the Society is teaching a specific political view that just pushes me and mine away.

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  11. 50 minutes ago, InquisitiveScouter said:

    The youth is not "signing off" the requirement.  The youth (or, we should call them the Instructor) is simply using a column already printed in the Scout Handbook to indicate instruction is complete, and the Scout is ready to be tested.  (The check mark column on left side of requirements lists.)

    However... if the Troop is "requiring" that this column be used, and is holding up a Scout from being tested or advanced because of it, then that would be adding requirements.

    100% agree.  BSA requirement is for the scout to have the skill to advance.  There is no requirement for the scout to be instructed.  Heck, an ideal scout owns their own skill development by reading or learning thru any method they can.  

    Is your process egregious?  No.  Will it be a huge red flag?  No.  ...

    It escalates as an issue when scout / troop conflict exists.   I saw this every year.   Scouts would escalate advancement issues to the Council Advancement Committee requesting approval to pursue Eagle beyond age 18 because the troop delayed the scout with extra hoops that added weeks / months of delay.  ...  I don't know if it would happen to your troop, but it does happen to other troops.  ...  A good CAC would can find in favor of the scout giving the scout a few months to six months because the troop did not do right by the scout.  

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  12. 20 hours ago, Eagle1970 said:

    ...  I had built a big wall around my abuse and I allowed it to be shattered for the sake of the justice I was absolutely assured would occur.  I wish I had never put myself through this.  Not much of a surprise that in the end, the only ones having a good day are the attorneys on salary and, of course, the insurance companies.  

    Your statement is so true in so many ways.  The legal process adds damage for everyone.  It's hard to watch.  Worse, many attorneys and their firms have already been paid tens of millions in this case.  Now, it could start over.  Bankruptcy cost so far well over $100 million ???

    Wishing you the best thru all this. 

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  13. 1 hour ago, MYCVAStory said:

    86% of the almost 60,000 voting Survivors approved the BSA plan and the TWO attorneys who filed for the Stay represent .2% (that's one/fifth of ONE percent) of all Survivors.  

    So, 8,400 voted no and are being forced into a settlement that releases all 3rd party liability.  ... It's always a few that protect the rights of many.  So, it may be only two lawyers, but it's not that clear cut.  ...   There is always the question of whether the 60,000 voters are real or part of the massive infomercial victim expansion.

    It's best for BSA if this moves forward and the bankruptcy is done.

    On the flip side, 3rd party releases is questionable.  I'd personally rather not see it exist.  It allows for these massive cases that pervert the courts.  

  14. 16 hours ago, Ojoman said:

    1 billion of the 2.4 billion million going to 'legal expenses' already. 

    Does that include the previous invoiced and paid expenses thru the bankruptcy court proceedings over the last several years that is probably outside the 2.4 billion settlement?  Other administrative costs of the settlement administrators? 

    1 billion of 2.4 billion is about 42%.  I'm betting if everything is factored in, it is really significantly higher.  

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  15. On 2/7/2024 at 7:15 PM, Eagledad said:

    The Scoutmaster will be the quality controller because they look at the Scout's book during the SM Conference.

    Just a note ... The SM would be the quality controller for the overall process used by the unit, but the specific facts for an individual scout. 

    For an individual scout, the SM would only see the completed advancement records during the SMC.  SMC is not pass / fail.  Just acknowledgement the SMC happened.  So, all requirements are signed.  It would be inappropriate for a SM to block a specific scout or for the SM to say a signature is invalid.  Perhaps, the BOR could inject and say a requirement was not really completed; i.e. a PLC signature is invalid.  But, it's not the place of a SM during SMC to quality control an individual scout.  

  16. 13 minutes ago, George said:

    Most of you are describing precisely the sort of emphasis on the PLs and PLC that I also support. Authorizing PLs to sign off on S-T-2-1 skill requirements is straightforward enough, but I would like to go further. I realize that, under current policies, I can't permit the PLs to sign off on requirements that expressly reference the Scoutmaster or "other adult leader" or let the PLC take the place of the Scoutmaster conference or the board of review. But it seemed to me that the PLC could handle the "Scout spirit" requirements (and maybe also the "[b]e active in your troop" and "serve actively in your troop" Star, Life, and Eagle requirements, subject to the Guide to Advancement's requirements to have reasonable expectations in place on those issues).

    Anyway, I appreciate all of the comments so far! Please keep them coming!

    I could support the scout's signing off on scout spirit, active in your troop and serve actively.  Also, you can minimize BORs.  Just because it says three adult committee members doesn't mean it needs to be 30+ minutes.  It could be five minutes of three committee members.  ... The one I would strongly suggest never to dilute is the scoutmaster conference.  The scoutmaster needs to know the scouts and hear what they say.  Period.  

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  17. Policy?  No.  It's just very, very different than how almost all other troops work.  It will raise dozens of questions that can escalate. 

    #1  Make sure you don't call it a Court of Honor or a Board of Review (BOR).  ...   Scouts still need to sit in front of a BOR comprised of three to six adults that confirms requirements are met.  ... Your troop is just creating a PLC meeting agenda item where they review scout spirit.  ...

    #2  All scouts don't sit in the PLCs; just the SPL, PLs and a few others.  So the scouts needing advancement won't be there for the PLCs.  So, how do you handle that?  Is it just a list of scouts that need scout spirit signed off?  An agenda item to be voted on?

    #3  Troops should not put time-delay-like-hoops in front of the scout.  It should be as easy as the scout asking the SM to sign off on scout spirit.  Now if SM is not there, I can understand days or a week delay until the scout and SM are in the same place.  ...  Anything that causes a month plus delay (such as a non-PLC scout attending a PLC) is strongly against the spirit of advancement and the explicit rules  ... but you could have impromptu PLCs at each and ever troop meeting / activity / event.  ... Scout could walk up to SPL and ask SPL to sign.  SPL grabs a few PLs and has the discussion then and there.  Ideally, immediately signing off on scout spirit.

    #4  Scout spirit exists as a catch all for the SM to address issues and as a discussion framework for the SM conference.  If the PLC signs off, then the SM can't block / delay / use that requirement as a focus point for discussion and improvement.   No testing completed requirements.  Essentially, the SM will lose their catch-all flexibility to address concerns.  ...   Example, scout has a requirement to have a SM conference; not to "pass" the conference.  Any discussion can be used.  And the discussion having happened is completing the requirement to have a SMC. 

    #5  The 1954 reference is way, way out of date; 70 years out of date.  
           * Court of Honor is a award ceremony; not a test.  The correct term now is a Board of Review.  
           * Boards of review is different now.
                    * an administrative review that the requirements are completed (not re-evaluating completed requirements)
                    * a discussion about the scout's experience.  Goal is to get feedback for troop and encourage the scout; NOT judge the scout.
                    * a celebration also.  Wow.  Look how far you got.  Nice work. Congratulations. 
                    * not a pass/fail.  Though BORs can refuse (should be extremely rarely) to advance a scout, don't expect BSA support. 
                    * In my 15 plus years, it only happened once or twice with hundreds of scouts.
                    * PLC does NOT sit in BORs. 
     

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  18. 10 hours ago, T2Eagle said:

    My theory on the why of the tied requirements is that it’s designed to do what it demands —- encourage a troop or patrol to seek a variety of adventures, not just go out and plop at the same park or scout reservation every month.  And since it’s the scouts not the adults who should be planning their activities, they all have some incentive, beyond the obvious quest for adventure, to build consensus and get out and do enough of a variety that everyone can satisfy both the requirements and their own particular wanderlust.

    Agreed and extended. 

    #1  It's also to encourage scouting and discourage claiming family vacations to complete requirements.  This is a continual battle in scouting ... often with the parents chasing requirements.  ... Also, proper supervision?  Proper execution? (scouts leading, not adults, etc).  

    So for your example, yes it's okay to have two or three dads with their sons doing a special campout to complete the requirements as long as the scouts talk to their merit badge counselor and/or scoutmaster to make it a designated scouting activity; with a strong preference to get the approval before the event.  IMHO, the merit badge counselor would be primary as the MBC signs off on the requirement / expectations.  If I was the MBC, it would be the that the scouts make the plans and are the driving force in the event; that the activity was more scout-like and less vacation / resort like.  ... On the flip side, the scoutmaster can approve it as a "scouting activity".  It just gets muddied then as the scout confirmed with the scoutmaster, but the MBC might not accept the event as completing the requirement for some other reason.

    #2  One final note ... BSA requirements are legalistic because everyone is always gaming the system, but our working with scouts is NOT to be legalistic.  We help the scouts.  We encourage, guide and inspire the scouts.  We do have lots of flexibility so that we can encourage, guide and inspire.  ...  In this case, the scoutmaster / MBC can wave their magic wand and say it's a designated scout activity.  ... In this case, it's a kind heart that would be talking with the scout to see if a different path exists to complete the requirements.  

  19. 16 hours ago, Ojoman said:

    Trust me, even after hell freezes over the BSA and GSA will not merge. There are just too many differences from program structure to philosophical and frankly some 'resentment' built up over the years. It would make sense for a merger but just won't ever happen. 

    Correct.  Resentment might be workable (even though it's very, very real and alive). 

    The real issue is BSA and GSA are only similar in name; not much else.  Might as well say BSA should merge with 4H or Civil Air Patrol or Boys and Girl Clubs or etc, etc, etc.  

    • Like 1
  20. 1 hour ago, Jameson76 said:

    ...  During planning many years ago they asked if we had to attend the district camporee, we advised their choice, so we have not done that lately.  Mostly they found it (and I quote) lame.

    Yep.  Almost always lame.  Good maybe for 1st year troop scouts.  Otherwise only good is getting together and seeing other scouts / adults.  The actual event itself is almost always has zero or often less than zero value.

    1 hour ago, Jameson76 said:

    Try to focus on activities and adventure.  Last year, 2023, we did Trip to beach and national seashore island, backpacking in mountain, wide game, putt putt tourney, lock-in, summer camp, trip to State Park and gorge and waterfalls, boating and tubing, kayaking, fishing weekend at mt lake, hiking and exploring mountains with AOL visit.  All requested and run by Scouts

    Love that answer.  IMHO, adventure makes scouting fun and valuable.

     

      

  21. Our critiques were done at the annual planning event.  Key to that was to keep the other adults out of it ... ideally well away.  ... Scouts will shut down giving way to adults.  ... IMHO ... it's not just an issue during critiques.  It's for how the whole troop runs.  The scouts need confidence that they own and run the troop; with friendly safe guidance by their SM.  Scouts that don't speak up is often a reflection of other issues.  

    Best thing to do is only have the scoutmaster involved during the planning and reviews.  The challenge is getting the other adults to trust the SM and stay out of it.

     

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  22. Don't see this as bad.  See if there is an option to provide a great experience for the few remaining scouts for the time they have left.  See if there are any options like being a patrol under another troop.  

    A key is don't take this as a big negative statement for you and yours.  There is a magical mix in scouts.  People.  Recruiting.  Experiences.  When things shift, it can kill troops.  The key is you and your troop provide great experiences for the scouts you have.  Then, when they are gone, they are gone.  It's okay to close down.  You have not failed.

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