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Originally Posted by
Jim Kyle
My own scouting experience was only as a Cub and it was pre-WW2 to boot. My parents would not let me have anything to do with the BSA during the war years when I was eligible, because in the area of Southern California where we lived at the time, they said that the organization appeared to be unduly influenced by the Russian social experiment. (Their words were considerably stronger, even McCarthyesque.)
When my own sons came to the age of becoming interested in Cub Scouting, though, we looked into the possibility of becoming involved with the OKC scouting movement. I attended an initial briefing for fathers who shared that interest -- and came away appalled at the extreme sexist views expressed by the official BSA folk conducting the meeting. (The fact that only fathers were allowed to attend should have warned me, I suppose.) They made absolutely no bones about their motive being to eliminate all tendencies to treat females as equals. While I'm no rabid supporter of the National Organization of Women and the feminist activism of the early 60s (for that's when all this happened), I did (and still do) believe that people should be treated equally without regard to race or sex. The attitude of the scouting officials at that briefing soured me, permanently, on the BSA and all of its associated organizations. My sons grew to maturity without taking part. So did my grandchildren.
I do believe that, as a private organization, the organization has every right to make any rules it wants -- even if those rules go against the twelve points they consider supreme. However, I don't have to associate with, or support, them in any way. Neither does UPS.
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