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AZMike

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Posts posted by AZMike

  1. It will be interesting to watch.  Gates and Co. are pretty naïve if they think the social justice warriors will leave the BSA alone after the 27th.  In the text from Zach Wahl's response on Scouts for Equality (below) you'll notice the explicit invocation of the local option as still imperfect:

     

    “Today’s announcement hopefully marks the beginning of the end of the Boy Scouts of America’s decades-old ban on gay leaders and parents like my two moms. In two weeks, the BSA’s national executive board will vote to ratify a resolution that has already been unanimously adopted by their executive committee.

    “For decades, the Boy Scouts of America’s ban on gay adults has stood as a towering example of explicit, institutional homophobia in one of America’s most important and recognizable civic organizations. While this policy change is not perfect—BSA’s religious chartering partners will be allowed to continue to discriminate against gay adults—it is difficult to overstate the importance of today’s announcement

     

    Here's another quote from Wahl's in WaPo:

     

    “This is a step in the right direction, but we’re still really concerned that there are still going to be groups that are going to be hostile to adult leaders,†Wahls said.

     

    The headline on slate.com "Boy Scouts Moves to Lift Ban on Gay Leaders, Will Continue to Allow Troops to Discriminate."  The article also contains this quote:

     

    "Half measures are unacceptable and discriminatory exemptions have no place in the Boy Scouts," Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign, the national LGBT-rights group, said in a statement. "It's long overdue that BSA leaders demonstrate true leadership and embrace a full national policy of inclusion."

     

    The headline on CBS (cbsnews.com), "Boy Scouts move closer to ending ban on gay adult leaders."  (Italics are mine)

     

    This resolution may resolve the hiring issue and it will make liberal groups feel good, but it won't ease any pressure on money flow or anything else.

     

     

    .

     

    Although we have been assured by many that it won't happen, and that the LGBT pressure groups will be happy with the scalp they got, it seems likely that the lawsuits against COs (whether religious or religiously affiliated (like the Knights of Columbus and church PTAs) will begin soon against COs, without the legal protections of the Dale decision or Headquarters to back them up. Unless they have the legal resources and the will to back them up, they will fold, either by acquiescing or closing up shop. The LDS will probably be safe as their troops are an official youth program of their religion, other groups will probably find they are not. Even religious groups who are the subject of a discrimination suit will still need the funding to defend themselves legally against LGBT legal funds and, probably, the government, which many will not have.

     

    Victory has to be total for the LGBT groups, it would appear. 

     

    I'm ending my involvement with scouting. The old Scouting program is gone, and I honestly wish good luck to those of you who will continue with the new organization. Perhaps you will see more money and corporate sponsors come in for headquarters and youth enrollment will shoot up, but I doubt it.

     

    Take care, everyone.

    • Upvote 2
  2. Several people have posted that this is purely a Youth Safety Issue. There's nothing to see here, folks, move along smartly.

     

    It seems to be be a policy issue as well. If I'm not mistaken, were we not told that a) this sort of thing would not happen, as gay kids would have the sense and maturity to keep their hands to themselves, and b) COs could bounce a kid who is gay if he overtly acts on his sexual interests - i.e., one could self-identify as gay, but to act on those impulses should result in termination from the BSA.

     

    That seems to be the issue here: Can and should the gay scout be dropped from Scouting? He violated the rules, and in a way that will have a negative effect on the victim. For the victim in this case of unwanted sexual harassment, he will likely always associate this unpleasant experience with a) going to summer camp and b) perhaps, Scouting in general. He may brush it off, but it is just as likely that he will not want to participate in Scouting anymore, where that kind of thing happened to him.

     

    Politically, is the BSA still in a position where it would be able to remove a gay scout for acting out on his desires with other boys, or has that time passed?

  3. If you have an Eagle Court planned for your son or someone in your troop in the next year, stop by your local dollar store this week - you can pick up patriotic-themed decorations very inexpensively in the week before Independence Day.

     

    I spent $20 and got lots of flag-themed bunting, hangings, and table decorations. 

     

    We put all our decorations, unused plates, napkins, blank invitations and programs, etc. in a big rubbermaid after a CoH and pass them on to the next family planning a CoH.

    • Upvote 1
  4. You are correct, I wasn't being very clear. True, there are multiple ways the BSA could go, and a liberal Wiccan only group wouldn't be pluralistic either. But the current state of affairs is pretty much one where, at least in the membership rules, its a conservative Christians group that allows others to join as long as they follow the conservative Christan rules. Otherwise why would an Episcopal church that charters a boy scout troop be told that the man they have chosen as their minister is unfit to be a registered leader for their troop because he is openly gay? Because their religious belief that being gay is morally neutral is trumped by a bunch of conservative Christian COs that believe otherwise. Not very nonsectarian is it? That is the point I was (badly) trying to make.

     

    For the same reason that a Episcopalian sponsored CO would not be able to demand that the BSA divest from any investments in the state of Israel (assuming it had any). The Episcopalian church recently changed its doctrine to allow for the ordination of homosexual men, just as it is likely to accommodate the interests of anti-Semites and call for the boycott and sanction Israel at its conference this summer (as the Presbyterian church already has).  The BSA had a policy that was based on long-standing beliefs that were shared (until recently) by all the major religions. Those views sprang from moral teachings from those religions, but were not dependent on them. If the Episcopal church has decided to exhibit a certain moral flexibility on gays and Jews to appeal to a new world-view, the BSA should not be obligated to accommodate them in every change they make.

  5. Yup, you can even bring your canon. ;) We have several Civil War and Western re-enactors in our units. One owns a cannon. ;)

     

    Our guys are seriously considering thumbing our nose at BSA once this [change] officially goes through. If national is going to allow groups to pick and choose if they want to adhere to a current policy then we will take that as lead to do the same. There's no good reason to bar scouts from using pistols or black powder (and yet allow rifles and shotguns) if there is proper training and supervision. Given the Constitution (for now) gives us the right to keep and bear arms, why would BSA want to infringe on our rights? 

     

    Perhaps you should declare yourself a troop that refuses to discriminate against black-powder firearms enthusiasts, or against handgun proponents. 

     

    Surely discrimination of any kind is a bad thing (as we are now informed by the zeitgeist), so HQ should be willing to knuckle under and cease their support of discrimination. 

     

    Likewise, the discrimination against alcohol imbibers, chainsaw users, convicted felons, and so forth. End all discrimination now.

  6. Not sure I would mind, but to repeat my earlier question, how exactly is this change going to come about?   Is there going to be another vote (seems like there should be).  Or is national going to mandate this change on everybody?  Or does nobody know at this point?

    Per NPR, a decision is going to be made by National by October. I think that's what I heard.

  7. Stosh will go bankrupt. Moosetracker will take pity and lend him some $$$ with low interest. AZMike will scoff at the newly-formed relationship. Eamonn will express confusion...and the forums will continue to provide the source of pleasure and enjoyment that we all have come to expect and appreciate.

     

    I have the strangest sensation that, like a dust bunny, those who disagree with what seems to be the new position of BSA headquarters are beginning to be swept under the rug...

  8. Thank you.  What I was trying to say was that only one side of this particular 'battle' is willing to compromise.  The problem is that what's being compromised is values.  We clearly have disagreements about those values, but one side in this issue is trying to save a national institution based on values.  The other has a 'take no prisoners' approach, and it's working. 

     

    Yep. If memory serves, the BSA did make a compromise two years ago.

     

    Wait, you mean that wasn't enough for the LGBT community?

  9. As an example of what someone will face who has the effrontery of trying to preserve their CO's ability to decide whether to allow homosexual leadership, consider what happened to Esau Jardon up in Toronto. 

     

    Leaving aside the differing degrees of religious freedom between the U.S. and Canada, it's an illustrative example of what social pressures can be brought to bear now on someone who did not even refuse to provide services to a gay wedding, but simply expressed the wrong opinions within his business. He did provide rings to a lesbian couple, who were happy with the rings he created for them.  Another couple later went in to his store and saw a religious poster that said "The sanctity of marriage is under attack. Let’s keep marriage between a man and a woman." They told the lesbian couple, who then demanded their money back for their custom-made rings and went to the media to begin, yet again, another shredding of a man's reputation for expressing his religious beliefs.

     

    Initially, Jardon refused to refund their money - they were custom made rings, they had expressed satisfaction with the work done, and were only demanding money back out of spite for his beliefs. (http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/jewelry-store-sign-prompts-same-sex-couple-to-ask-for-refund-1.3077192)

     

    Jardon expressed what most people would think are reasonable, and fairly tolerant views:

     

    “I have been posting different aspects of my religious beliefs the last 11 years, and I’ve never had one single problem with any of my customers,†he said…

    “One of the reasons my family chose to come to Canada was the freedom of rights,†he said, noting the freedom of religion and freedom of speech…

    “I feel really bad that [White] feels that we would in any way try to hurt or discriminate against her, but we will not retract from what we believe. I cannot say, ‘Well because you feel bad, I will stop believing what I believe,'†he said.

    “When I walk on Church Street in Toronto, where I am right now, and I see [LGBT rainbow flags], and I see a lot of signs and a lot of things on public property, I don’t have a problem with them. I accept it. I chose to come to Canada… and we accept the whole package… I don’t discriminate against that, nor do I come and tell them to take them down. For the same reason, I ask to have the same respect in return, especially when it’s in my own business.â€

    That wasn't enough for the LGBT pressure groups. Using the media to attack the man as a bigot, and anonymous individuals who felt emboldened by the anonymity of social media, Jardon received so many death threats on his business's Facebook page that he had to close it down. Hackers posted false articles on his company's website. He finally offered to return their money in an attempt to make the whole thing go away...but where does he go to get his reputation back? (http://www.thetelegram.com/News/Local/2015-05-18/article-4150483/Jeweller-says-he-has-been-bullied,-threatened/1)

     

    The nature of society today is that one does not need to be threatened with the legal machinery of the state and the LGBT political pressure groups' lawsuits - the mob mentality of the progressive movement, where a belief that one is "hateful" is sufficient to advocate the destruction of an individual (because he's, you know, homophobic) will now do the job without the need of a lawsuit.

     

    Do you think the CO's position will be any different?

  10. You identify an interesting point that many COs are really an adjunct organization and not the organization itself.  Examples:  KofC & PTOs.   And as you also pointed out, it is an argument left best for lawyers.  I'd find it hard to believe that my KofC chapter is not covered by a separation of church and state, freedom of religion and mainly a ministerial exception.  Rosaries said before the meeting.  Prayers before, during and after meetings.  Virtually all funds given either to the church or to Catholic charities for the poor, homeless or dying.  Our membership is broad and open, but also limited to Catholic men in good standing.  Even if a legal weakness was found, then just charter under the organization and not the adjunct.  Then have a member of the adjunct be the charter org rep.   

     

    There will be lawyers in this for years, but even if BSA membership is opened wide up ... you can't force a charter org to accept a member.  Charter orgs have always had the right to filter both youth and adult membership.  That has never been a point of discussion in these channels.  If BSA does accept homosexual leaders, it is automatically the local option.  It's the ministerial exception that allows religious schools to fire teachers for immorality violations.  

     

    BSA controls program and structure and "BSA membership", but charter orgs control the units and effectively "unit membership."

     

    Gates is right. The current policies are unsustainable and the policies are wrong.  BSA is asking churches to charter units even when the churches don't have the same morally straight definition.  

     

    BSA needs to resolve their own self-contradicting policies first.  And that is to stop filtering membership by sexual orientation.  I am glad that BSA won Dale v. BSA as it reinforces the bill of rights.  But BSA was wrong to pick this fight and wrong to try to speak for "all" the charter organizations.  

     

    I doubt that the KoC, which is registered with the government as a fraternal organization (for its tax exempt 501 ( c) (3) status) would be considered a religious organization that would be protected by the First Amendment. I agree with you that it should be, but the Obama Administration's defense of the contraception mandate (which attempted to very narrowly define what could be considered a "religious institution indicates that they would not feel it should be, and would be likely to use the force of the Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division to side on behalf of any civil rights lawsuits that would be directed against it. Although the Church has made the argument that its institutions such as hospitals, adoption agencies, and schools are elements of it religious duties towards charity, the current administration has argued against such an interpretation.

     

    It might be possible to ask your deacon or priest to take the role of a CO rep, if it is not possible to use the KoC or the parochial school's PTA. I'm sure that they have ample free time to take on that additional role as well as all their pastoral duties, and we have lots of priests nowadays to take on those duties.

     

    There is also the practical concern that must be considered by anyone who is the target of a lawsuit, especially an individual who may lack the legal resources of the ACLU, ACT-UP, and GLAAD, along with the United States Department of Justice - you may feel that the Constitution, and morality, are on your side. You may feel, arguing in the abstract on the issue on a message board, that surely the religious exception must apply in your case. But would you, as the CO rep, have the financial resources to mount a defense against the suits that will be brought by those organizations? Do you have access to the same number of progressive college law students who are eager and hungry to do legal research? Do you have the same number of attorneys who will happily work pro-bono in a progressive cause to achieve fame within their profession for winning a landmark liberal decision for their cause? Do you feel the BSA will provide you with legal backing in your defense, at this point in history, and with Mr. Gates having expressed the opinion he did? Are you prepared to deal with the mental, physical, and emotional stress, as well as the public castigation, media attention, doxxing of your personal information, and the public revelation of any potentially embarrassing incidents from your past that will be dug up by the media and LGBT pressure groups to bring you to heel? Are you and your family and your business associates prepared to deal with all that for months, and probably years, while the suit works its way through the courts?

     

    There are quite a few people who have felt, probably correctly, that the law was on their side, but were unable to sustain their fight in the face of well-funded and powerful adversaries. It's sad but true that it isn't always who's right, but who's left, that counts in a legal battle.

  11. Traditional values being bigoted homophobic values. I'm sure that people arguing for maintaining segregation where just holding up traditional values

     

    Both I and my family fought against racial segregation, so your comparison is both ignorant, bigoted, and false. 

     

    Rather than arguing the terminology, or trying to marginalize the views held by most Americans until recently by an invalid comparison, why don't you try to address the actual issue raised in the post. Do you disagree that forces outside Scouting will not be content with the so-called "Local Option"? If you do, on what basis do you make that claim?

  12. Where is the spirit of compromise in the part of those who oppose these changes? What ideas have they offered as compromise modifications?

    On the contrary, the opposing view to these changes has failed to do much more than gripe about the changes and make apocalyptic predictions as they wring their hands. THAT is not leadership either.

     

    One can only compromise with the other party if one is in a position to set terms for all the parties involved. 

     

    There are scouters within the BSA community who would like to see the acceptance of homosexuals as adult leaders, and see the so-called Local Option as a compromise to allow troops that wish to maintain traditional values to continue to do so, and troops that wish to allow homosexual leaders to do so. That's fine, and I don't doubt that you and others in the latter category are sincere in your beliefs.

     

    But you are not in a position to speak for the very large and very well-funded forces outside of scouting that demand that NO troop be allowed to maintain traditional values, whether under a local option or the current situation. You can not speak for them or arrange for a compromise for them. ACT-UP and GLAAD do not know who you are, Packsaddle, and do not consider themselves bound by any compromise you or anyone else makes.  Their agenda is quite clear and the evidence is open and readily available. The current legal situation is too fluid to allow anyone in the BSA to state authoritatively that the local option will permit troops that hold to traditional views of morality to continue as they are.

     

    Do you consider that assessment reasonable?

    • Upvote 1
  13. I have to respectfully disagree.  BSA is in a unique position to let the local option work as the unit leaders are not selected by the BSA.  The leaders are selected by the charter organizations and as the charter organization uses the BSA program as a youth program within their larger program, they essentially have shield.  For example, it would be hard to argue that a troop chartered by a Catholic church, meeting at a Catholic church and where the leaders are chosen and assigned by the Catholic church does not already have a local option.  BSA membership should be open to all, but charter organizations should be able to exercise their local choice as they always have.  

     

    If this was Girl Scouts, 4H or another organization, I'd have to agree with you.  But with Boy Scouts, BSA owns the program and the structure and the charter organizations oversees unit member signup.  

     

    That is both the strength and the weakness of the CO system.

     

    Many COs that appear to be churches are actually adjuncts of the church in question - such as the Knights of Columbus or the parochial school PTA. They do not have the legal protection afforded a religion. The legal status of church auxiliaries, and whether they can qualify under the 1st Amendment protections afforded churches are legally up in the air right now, due to the machinations of the current administration.

     

    The individuals who function as the CO's rep are often not full time employees of the church, and may have businesses or other interests that are vulnerable to legal and extra-legal coercion by LGBT pressure groups looking to damage COs that don't agree with their views. Look at the things that have happened to the bakers, photographers, etc. who have not simply refused to cater a gay wedding, but have simply expressed disagreement with them. Faced with sufficient pressure against the livelihoods and their position in the community, most COs will decide it's not worth the problems.

     

    You expressed the belief that "it would be hard to argue that...etc"  Unfortunately, that is not true. Lawyers are paid to argue, and to find rationales to demonstrate exactly why x institution should not be considered a bona fide religious institution. Their chances of finding a sympathetic judge who will look with approval on a novel legal reason to punish the BSA...is actually pretty good right now. In California, you can no longer be a member of the judiciary and also be an adult volunteer with the BSA. Funny how that worked, huh?  The legal climate has changed dramatically since the Dale decision.

     

    The LDS troops may be able to make a final stand, as the BSA is their official youth program. Any one else, no. 

  14. So then by all means LEAD. If your ideas and reasoning are sufficient to persuade others then make your case and carry the day. If all you can do is wring your hands and lament the fact that there are people who don't agree, then you have failed in your argument and don't deserve to carry the day.

    For decades now, all sides of this argument have had the opportunity to craft their arguments and they have had access to the same resources. Whatever the outcome, it will be because one side or the other has done the better job of understanding their opponents' argument as well as their own, and have utlilzed those resources to better advantage. It is a competition of ideas and the better competitor deserves success.

    So do what the other side did when they were in the minority position. Learn from them. Craft a better argument...or live with the consequences of the lack thereof.

     

    Or find some activist judges that have the same views as you.

  15. When a fella on Bryan's blog says outright and with no shame that he had same-sex relations with his former SM (among others) once he was legal, it doesn't instill confidence among folks who aren't very permissive.

     

    Yikes. Just yikes.

     

    I check out Bryan's blog but didn't see that on the thread about Gates' comment. Possibly deleted because it didn't fit the narrative.

  16.  Longtime since I posted here, but this is a very hot topic and I would like to give my 2 cents. I graduated into Boy Scouts in 1970, before the big change of 72 (which also saw some members leave). A few years later a new scoutmaster was assigned to my troop by our CO (Baptist Church) a couple months afterwards this man tried to make some moves on me. For what it's worth nothing happened, by him or by me. If I had a little more idea on how to handle it things may have been very different. One thing I new was if I reported what had happened my father would have been in prison when a graduated high school. I think one of the main reasons that I never reported it was because this guy was a Deacon in our CO. One thing for sure was what he did did not take away from my love of scouting and what it stood for, so I brushed it off earned my Eagle started my family and came back to BSA with my son. I stayed alot longer then my son and soon became scoutmaster of a troop and held it for 11 years. Finally though I had to really get out because of the politics both personal and scouting. Let's face it those of us who did the program or came in as adults cannot find anything else out there that offers so much as scouting. My problem though is for a country that claims to be free, we sure have a good deal of problems sharing good things with different types of people that live in the same country as us. Why shouldn't any young boy (or girl) be able to share and enjoy this? The idea that having a gay leader is going to teach me to look more at the football players instead of the cheerleaders is crazy. Like it or not unless you want to go and live off the grid sooner or later we all will meet or already have met OTHERS.

        We all can find good and bad deeds done by any group. I think though with the things that have been added to protect our scouts today are far better then what was in place when I was a scout. Some of these have also taken away from what scouting really was at one time. One thing for sure change is not easy and either way will hurt the program, but more importantly the scouts. I think the local option is a fair compromise.

    I'm sorry that happened to you, eagle77. When historical revisionists argue that the ban on homosexual leaders is a new thing, and that there was some sort of Golden Age of tolerance when there was a de facto local option, and homosexual leaders were accepted, I think they are living in Cloud Cuckoo-Land. The sort of experience you had was not uncommon - the files that were released by the BSA on adult leaders who committed homosexual acts on scouts would make anyone's stomach turn, and the renewed emphasis in the BSA in the 1970s was largely in response to increasing awareness of the rate of molestation of youths - it had become an epidemic, and scout leaders could no longer turn their backs and assume that an organization composed of teen-age boys would not attract men who were sexually interested in them. We're forgetting those lessons now. 

     

    I have to disagree with you on the local option, which in my opinion will not remain an option for long. As gay activists have made clear (see the quotes above), they will not accept a BSA where some - or any - COs will still be allowed to exclude gays. They are well-funded, have a formidable legal machinery that supports them, and will attack any remaining COs that do not want to allow homosexual men to have access to teenagers in what are often isolated situations. 

     

    The local option will remain local for about 6 months to a year, tops. Due to the risk of lawsuits for discrimination against any remaining resisting COs, a uniform policy requiring that homosexual men can become leaders will then become the status quo throughout the BSA. Traditionally-minded troops will close down, if they cannot accept the moral compromise the new policy and the court decisions will require.

     

    As I said, I cannot ethically be a part of that, or a situation where a vulnerable boy will again be placed in the kind of situation you were. I wish those who wish to continue in the "New Model" BSA good luck, and I hope things work out for you under the new leadership.

  17. They were all pedophiles.. I guess if you look for a needle in a haystack you are able to find 2 or 3 examples, but those are needle in haystack examples.. 99% of the pedophiles happen to be heterosexuals.. So we should ban all heterosexuals from being adult scout leaders.. You never can be too careful..

     

    Oh, so not everyone who identifies themselves as "gay" to the community is actually trustworthy. Some self-identified homosexuals are actually interested in sex with teenage boys. 

     

    Can I ask you to go back and read what I actually wrote. We are talking about the risks from pederasts here, as we are dealing with an almost exclusively male population of potential victims. Why are you talking about pedophiles, and where did you get the statistic that 99% of those are heterosexual?

     

    Given that 2% of the population is estimated to be homosexuals, why then do homosexuals account for far more than 2% of the sexual assaults on minors?

  18. Scouter99 the book is on abuse of scouts in BSA by PEDOPHILES, not gays... Most have a persona of the family man husband, wife children, church goer, civic minded..  Pedophiles will never be your openly homosexual person because of people like you who equate the two words of homosexual and pedophile as the same.. A pedophile takes on a persona that will allow parents and children to trust him and think nothing about letting their children be alone with them..  An openly homosexual scoutmaster will not have that type of trust, at least I don't see it in any near future..

     

    Ah.

     

    Like Chris J. Wilson, the openly gay, politically connected Phoenix Police Officer, who was their official community liaison to the LGBT community, who was arrested for having sex with two teenage boys he groomed? http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/news/lgbt-advocates-cast-a-pall-on-the-phoenix-pd-and-the-valleys-gay-community-6462115/ http://archive.azcentral.com/community/phoenix/articles/20140213trial-phoenix-police-lgbt-liaison-accused-threats-brk.html. He happened to meet the two teenage boys he molested through his job. Good thing he wasn't a "pedophile," though.

     

    Or like Obama's chief bundler, the prominent LGBT activist Terry Bean, who raised more than half a million dollars for Obama's 2012 campaign through members of the gay community, who was arrested for sex with a 15-year old boy. Good thing he wasn't a "pedophile," though. http://newsbusters.org/blogs/kristine-marsh/2014/11/24/network-silence-obama-ally-gay-activist-arrested-child-sex-abuse

     

    Or like gay activist Frank Lombard, the associate director of Duke University's Center for Health Policy, who was arrested by the FBI in 2009, who adopted two boys with his (adult) husband and was arrested after trying to sell their adopted son for sexual purposes to an undercover FBI agent? Good thing he was a prominent gay activist and not a "pedophile." http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/06/30/duke.molestation.internet/

     

    Or like David Carpenter and Joshua Brown, two openly gay men who lived together as a couple, who seduced, raped, and later murdered a 13 year old boy? Good thing they were openly gay men and not "pedophiles."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Jesse_Dirkhising

     

    Or like veteran gay rights advocate and former San Francisco Human Right Commission staffer Larry Brinkin, arrested for possession of child porn involving young boys? Good thing he was only a gay activist and not a "pedophile." http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Rights-advocate-pleads-guilty-in-child-porn-case-5162743.php

     

    Or like Larry Kramer, the founder of the LGBT pressure group ACT-UP, who wrote in his book, "Report from the Holocaust: The Making of an AIDS Activist": "In those instances where children do have sex with their homosexual elders, be they teachers or anyone else, I submit that often, very often, the child desires the activity, and perhaps even solicits it." So yeah, this prominent gay activist has educated us that when a child has sex with a "gay elder," he was actually asking for it, so the "gay elder" isn't really at fault.

     

    How many more of these do you need me to post, Moosetracker?  Don't confuse the wider definition of "pedophilia" (one who desires sex with children) with "pederasty" (the sexual desire of a man for a male minor). It's the latter that is applicable here.

     

    Not all homosexuals are pederasts, but all pederasts are homosexual.

  19. The local option is, quite simply, allowing the camel to get its nose under the tent. Once the camel can get its nose in there, you soon have the entire camel in the tent with you. Things will be different from then on. I have no idea what the numbers will be afterwards, but there'll be at least one volunteer less. 

     

    As Allahpundt wrote on the Hotair blog:

     

    Gates’s solution: Let each troop sponsor set its own standards. If religious sponsors like churches want to maintain the ban on gay Scout leaders, they can. If non-religious sponsors want to allow gay leaders, they can. It’s a federalist-type solution at a moment when the Supreme Court is poised to blow up federalism on gay marriage.

     

    That being so, why Gates thinks his policy is more sustainable than the current BSA policy is a mystery to me. The DOJ flatly admitted during oral argument before the Supreme Court a few weeks ago that religious nonprofits will inevitably find their tax-exempt status being challenged in court for opposing gay marriage. Even if the BSA maintains its right to exclude gay members, its 501©(3) status is bound to end up on the menu if affiliated troops continue to bar gay Scout leaders. I don’t get why he thinks giving gay-rights activists half a loaf here will protect the other half. Then again, the Scouts knew that he’d helped lift the ban on gays in the military as SecDef when they named him president; they also know that the national leadership is under tremendous pressure from corporate sponsorspolitical institutions, and even Gates’s old boss to change its position on this matter. They had to know this was coming, no matter how reluctant Gates has been to force the issue. And like he says, what choice does he have, really? The courts have forced it on him.

     

    No religious or other traditional CO will be able to maintain current standards for youth leadership, if the Local Option becomes a reality. "Local Option" will soon become "The National Mandate," as the stated opinions of LGBT activists, in the quoted comments in dcsimmon's post, demonstrate. Nothing less than total victory is acceptable to the forces of the Social Justice Warriors. Fail to follow the new party line, and expect to have your reputation trashed, if you Google your name you will find foul insults the LGBT lobby has written about you and find they will have doxxed your home address and place of business for any Social Justice Warrior who wants to count coup and safely establish his progressive bona fides by harassing you, until you fall in line. It's inevitable. All the traditions of Scouting and Woodbadge songs and good memories of times past won't change that. 

     

    I don't need that, and won't be a part of it. If the so-called "Local Option" passes, yes, I will leave Scouting for good. I may not be missed by the new leadership, but I suspect I won't be alone. Maybe you'll have an influx of new volunteers. Good luck to all who remain. 

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