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NJCubScouter

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Everything posted by NJCubScouter

  1. I did not suggest it is the first time. Obviously, it isn't. However, I just don't comment on it most of the time. I thought it was appropriate in this case on the theory that "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." As I said above, the prohibitions on laser tag (and paintball) are not based on a risk of injury. This has been discussed in this forum several times over the years. What they are based on is a perception that pointing a weapon (paintball gun) or simulated weapon (laser tag gun) at another human being and pulling the trigger is not an appropriate Scouting
  2. That's my experience as well. The trading post needs no advertising, beyond telling the kids where it is.
  3. As long as we are just saying what we "think", with no need for evidence or anything, what I think is that the "silly guidelines" (whatever someone might define them to be, for example, I have no problem with banning laser tag and paintball, and those aren't really safety issues anyway) are driven by "risk management" considerations. Those decisions are driven by both what has happened in the past and what is predicted to happen in the future. Whoever is in charge of these decisions at National looked at the risk and predicted risk and decided that, for example, patrol day hikes with no adul
  4. What you are saying may be generally true, but in this case, look at the headline of the article: "Leave No Trace Says Stop Geotagging, for Pete’s Sake." (Bold-face italics added.) What's the "for Pete's sake" there for? To me it suggests a "tone" of exasperation, which is negative. It is really just a slightly more polite was of saying "Leave No Trace Says Stop Geotagging, You Idiots." No shifting necessary.
  5. I think the "tone" of the article goes beyond your reasonable approach.
  6. That's bad, obviously. According to this, 163 youth participants in Exploring have been abused over the past 40 years, nationwide. (Which goes back to when Exploring included what is now Venturing.) Leaving aside how they got that number, I wonder how many children have been abused in school, at home or in other settings - including Boy Scouts, for that matter - over the past 40 years. Not that this excuses anything, and I do understand the reaction of course, but if people are going to shut down Explorer posts because of this, then a lot of other things would have to be shut down as well
  7. I don't think the articles at the time were very clear on how people found out, but I remember they did say that in the first grade the child switched from "presenting" as a girl to presenting as a boy. He then joined the pack in third grade. Presumably kids in the pack also knew him from school, so everybody knew anyway. It may well be that the parent who complained was one of the few parents who did not already know about it.
  8. Under the "new" rules, for palm purposes he had 50 palms (71 minus 21) at the time of his EBOR, entitling him to 10 "palms" at his ECOH, but what that really works out to (I think) is 3 silvers and 1 bronze. (I think.) From his EBOR he must then wait until he has BOTH 3 months' additional service and 5 additional MB's to get his next palm. (That would be a gold replacing the bronze.) And then from the date of that palm, another 3 months and another 5 MB's for his next palm (a silver replacing the gold), and so on, but the palms stop when he is 18. (So for example if and when he earns a pa
  9. On the geotagging thing... I don't use Instagram and I have never geotagged anything so it is conceivable that I do not understand what is being discussed here... but the upshot seems to be that we shouldn't be telling people how to find things in the backcountry. By that logic, shouldn't we eliminate all trail maps, too? So we can just stumble around and find places on our own so they won't have too many visitors? There also seems to be a certain amount of arrogance involved here... you found a great place, maybe even a "secret" place (an interesting concept, unless the spot is on your own
  10. And I still want to know more about the free-range disembodied legs and torsos and stuff.
  11. The BSA's trend lately seems to be toward removing some of the specific rules and telling us out here in the field to "use your best judgment" or, stated another way, "if something goes wrong, it's your fault because you decided what to do, not us." And, at the same time, in a number of ways, treating us like we are morons persons of deficient intellectual capabilities. What could go wrong?
  12. That wouldn't work very well in our CO's gym in the summer. Talk about hot-weather overnighters. Though I suppose they might let us camp at the edge of their cemetary across the street. ❗
  13. No, not exactly free range, and the video shows that too, with the parents crowded around on the outside of the fence. Despite the efforts to revive "free range parenting" (which my parents just called "being a parent"), I think it is coming back in only a limited form. Witness the fact that the playground has an "executive director" (though admittedly she seems to be in charge of more than one playground) as well as the parents encircling the playground. I also would like to know more about the replicas of dismembered human body parts strewn throughout the place. Added: I
  14. On the showers thing, this has been raised before. Personally I think a parent of a transgender child is not going to put their child in that kind of situation, up to and including putting the child in a school that is going to make accommodations. (Of course, the request for accommodations itself is going to notify at least the principal of the school that the student is transgender. I also suspect that if I were the parent of a transgender youth, I might want his/her teachers to know.) Unless I have misunderstood his posts, DavidCO is a teacher at a Catholic school, and it seems likely t
  15. It is the result of what I call the "good idea syndrome." Everything that is considered a "good idea" is included in the advancement requirements, even though the combined end result of all the "good ideas" is a set of advancement requirements that is too heavily weighted toward "homework" merit badges and (in my opinion) a bloated set of requirements for the lower ranks. It is a good idea to have Family Life as an Eagle-required MB. Same for Cit in the World. Same for Communications. Same for (insert your own choice here.) They're all good ideas. But when you look at the whole thing, i
  16. It sounds like the lesson is that you have to have two lawyers and a judge on every camping trip to make sure you're complying with G2SS.
  17. robhixkg, welcome to the forum! Your math is correct, except that some might say the Eagle requirements have to be completed by the day before the 18th birthday, so subtract one day from all the deadlines. But ignoring that for sake of simplicity, the Scout should keep this in mind: If, hypothetically, he were to have his First Class Board of Review when he is exactly 16 years 8 months old, then there is one day on which he can have his Star BOR: His 17th birthday, not the day before and not the day after. Same thing for life when he is exactly 17.5. It's a big mistake to cut things
  18. I enjoy having people from the UK in our forum, where else would I go to find myself part of a group being referred to as "you lot"?
  19. What is a "visiting Unit Commissioner" doing serving on, much less chairing, a unit BOR for Life? Regardless of whether they are properly understanding the situation with this Scout or the troop or not, I don't see how it is th eir role. They are not a member of the troop committee. It sounds to me like the UC is acting like some kind of roving "boss" who gets to take over the unit when he is visiting. He's supposed to be helping and supporting and advising, not commanding. I am the Advancement Chair for our troop, and I chair the BOR's, and if I am absent, the CC does. I don't thin
  20. First of all, Jennrumrum, welcome to the forum! Second of all, it is kind of funny that the person you were answering is not likely to still have a need for the information, but its ok, someone else may be in need of the information and will see your answer.
  21. "Bye bye boys! Have fun storming the castle!" Sorry, I couldn't help myself.
  22. I guess it depends on the area. I live in the most densely populated state in the country. My specific area is less densely populated than the average for NJ. It is mostly a mixture of suburban developments and small industrial (or formerly industrial) towns, with various kinds of multi-family housing scattered here and there. I think chances are pretty high that at least one kid in a troop or pack is going to have known little Johnny back when he was little Janey. And if they didn't know him directly, they will have heard about it. Unfortunately it is something people like to gossip abo
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