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perdidochas

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Posts posted by perdidochas

  1.  

    Our pack uses email and we give out fliers to upcoming events at meetings, but our den meetings are all in the same place (basically a church gym).

     

    I've thought about using text as well, and may set up a text list for my den next year. Texting is a great way to do last minute messages.

     

    Somewhere on this forum, they had the below link in text form. I can't find it, but googled up this link.

     

    This link goes to a page that gives email addresses to most mobile phone companies. You can send a text by sending an email with the 10 digit phone number as the address.

     

    http://www.hurt911.org/investigation/sms-text-message-address.html

     

    For example, 0123456789@txt.att.net would send a text to (012)345-6789 on the att network. The downside is that many of these have a character limit (one company has an 80 character limit), as it's a text, not a true email.

     

  2. Trevorum,

     

    I'm disappointed that the President could not make time for the 100th anniversary of Scouting. It's not like this was something that just came up. His staff knew about it for years. I will be a bit more specific. The left fringe of the Democratic party (which is becoming the base) despises Scouting. We are "homophobic" and pro-religion.

  3. A butterfly knife (like any other knife) can be used as a toy or as a weapon, and can be dangerous. What the boys in the video are doing is unsafe, but that doesn't mean that butterfly knives are inherently unsafe. In the Phillipines, they view butterfly knives as we view lockblades--as tools (and weapons).

  4. Check state/local regulations. I don't see the big deal about them, and if my boy requested (and it was legal), I'd tell him to save up for one, and then allow him to buy a single-edged butterfly knife. I'd provide the bandaids :-) Boys like knives.

  5. A scout is Reverent.

     

    If my son (for some odd reason) had ended up in a Muslim troop (i.e. one sponsored by a mosque), I would expect that they stopped activities 5 times a day for Muslim prayer. If a Muslim scout was in my boy's troop (which is sponsored by my own church, a Catholic one), I would make accomodations so that he could pray 5 times a day. It is a requirement (i.e. part of their duty to God) for Muslims to pray 5 times a day in a specified fashion. To not allow them to do that is infringing on their duty to God.

     

    That said, I agree with Horizon's approach. Scouting is not an activity that is neutral to religion. It is pro-religion (or whatever you want to call it, as I know there are groups of evangelicals that claim they have no "religion.")

  6. We have about 100 on roll, probably 50-60 "regular" customers. We are among the biggest packs in our Council. We have a bigger pack between November and March (in between fall soccer/baseball and spring baseball/soccer).

  7. Horizon describes my boy's troop as well. As a parent, I was very impressed at Family Night at Summer camp, because our boys were in uniform (at least the centennial shirt, with subdued shorts). I think it's a good practice. I was apathetic towards the uniform in my early time as a Cub leader, but after 5 yrs of it, I see the importance of it.

  8. OGE,

     

    In terms of parental involvement, I think the opposite is true. When I was a Cub Scout in the mid 1970s, the only parent involvement was the den leader and the assistant den leader. The rest of the parents just dropped off the scouts after school to the den meeting. Most of my den meetings as a Bear Leader and WDL had at least two or three parents helping out. When I was a Boy Scout in the late 1970s, the only parental involvement (besides the SM and ASMs) was drivers. My oldest son's troop has parents (committee members and ASMs) all over the place.

     

    I do agree with the volunteering organization aspect, not in terms of actual volunteerism, but in terms of joining volunteer organizations. We are doers, not joiners. People will show up in droves for a beach cleanup, but not for a meeting to organize a beach cleanup group.

  9. The Troop my son just joined doesn't meet on two Mondays--the week of summer camp, and the week between Christmas and New Years.

     

    The Pack I'm a WDL in follows the school schedule, although we start later than school does. I wish I had had the energy to turn the pack into a summer pack--this is my last summer with them.

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