Boy Scouts going downhill!

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mkk41

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When did Boy Scouts take a page from the Girl Scouts and start selling snacks? :eek:

Boy Scouts were out in front of stores and banks yesterday selling pop corn!
First they'd great you politely , open and hold the door for ya on the way in , then hit ya with the sales pitch on the way out.

First they do away with rimfire training , now this!

Won't get started on their other policies! :rolleyes:
 
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Won't get started on their other policies! :rolleyes:

As a former Eagle Scout in the 60's - (display of all my 'scout stuff' along with two Henry's and a Ruger, all 100th BSA commemoratives .22's):



The lounge rules, won't allow me to rant about what has happened to The Scouting program over the past 45 years...

But to answer the question, even back in the 60's we had our fund raisers. I hated them, and early on in life realized, I would never be a salesman...
 
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I was an Eagle also and maybe it was in the scouts that I learned I WAS a salesman! We sold season tickets to the local swimming pool and also tickets for an annual chili supper. I always sold the most tickets to both.
 
I was a Cub Scout in 1960 and we sold Halloween candy to raise money for our pack back in those days. My nephew is a Cub Scout and sells popcorn now a days to raise money for his pack. I assume the Scouts switched to popcorn because it is considered healthier than candy.
No matter what they are selling I buy to help support the fine organization of Scouting.
 
My son's troop sells popcorn, mulch and cleans up the roads close to the landfill. Waste Management has a program that pays organizations to do this. My son is 12 and just made the rank of Star. While many of us were disappointed by the Scouts recent decision it still is the best game in town so to speak. Not sure about other scout districts but our marksmanship program is alive and well. I should know I'm the troop coordinator for it. Matter of fact I just picked up a CZ 452 from a member here Friday to use for the scouts. As I type this Ed is on a bike ride with the troop. Beautiful day for it.


Here he is March 2012 just after bridging to Boy Scouts from Webelos.



This am getting his bike out.

Beats laying on a couch playing video games or out getting into trouble. Plus they are learning things most boys their age don't have a clue about.
 
I was a Cub Scout--dont recall any fund raising attempts by my pack. I Skipped the Weebelows (SP?) and ended up as a Life Scout-was too old to get Eagle Scout. Anyway, our Troop (Troop 147) did car washes and other stuff. I sold Candy while in Scout uniform and we did stuff for disabled Vets. BTW--Mr. Ross C, Genz--was our Scoutmaster and was a WWII Navy combat pilot. He had no probs allowing us to bring guns along and told us many a story.
 
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PS, I wonder if you can still fire 22s at the ranges at large Boy Scout encampments? I used to go to Camp Karankawa and you could shoot 22s as well as Bows and Arrows--all day long if you wished? I severely lacked Robin Hoods skill so I was always at the 22 range. :D
 
Yes they still shoot 22s at Camp and have been selling popcorn for as long as I can remember. My son sold tons of that stuff.
If you read your current NRA magazine there's an article about Federal / CCI donating rimfire ammo to the Boy Scouts so they weren't effected by the panic driven shortage.
 
As an eagle scout and explorer I learned more from my years as a scout I think so far as practical hands on life training skills than I ever got in school or anywhere else for that matter. I can't comment on how I really feel of course on this forum because I have to stay politically correct or get zonked. All I will say is I am saddened that the Boy Scouts are no longer what they were in the 50s' Nuff said.
 
Thom whatt that's what we sold. Nothing but junk. And the sample boxes got broken down to fill the orders so people got broken junk. I hated it. I thought it went against everything we were supposed to be about.
 
Yes they still shoot 22s at Camp and have been selling popcorn for as long as I can remember. My son sold tons of that stuff.
If you read your current NRA magazine there's an article about Federal / CCI donating rimfire ammo to the Boy Scouts so they weren't effected by the panic driven shortage.

That really surprises me considering what's going on in current times. However, glad to hear it. Going to the rifle range to fire 22s all day long was my favorite part of camp.
 
As an eagle scout and explorer I learned more from my years as a scout I think so far as practical hands on life training skills than I ever got in school or anywhere else for that matter. I can't comment on how I really feel of course on this forum because I have to stay politically correct or get zonked. All I will say is I am saddened that the Boy Scouts are no longer what they were in the 50s' Nuff said.

Two things that never left me are:

"Be Prepared"
And the saying: A Scout is Trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and reverent.
 
Second Class Scout (we moved from Germany) and I never got back in to scouting.

But those life lessons live with you forever.

Who remembers baking lunch (hamburger meat, onions, tomatos, salt,pepper) in a foil-wrapped package buried in the camp fire? :)

But seriously, the goals of scouting -- Citizenship, character development and personal fitness -- could not be more relevant to today's youth.
 
As a member over 50years ago I fired a s&w model 17 on my first outing, the beginning of a long love affair with guns. If they knocked on my door in uniform I would gladly give them a cash donation, don't need popcorn, got plenty.
 
We would cut and sell Christmas Trees for $5 a tree. The trees were free because they were growing in a field that held an endangered plant species, a rare Prairie Flower. So we cut the trees as a conservation project and sold them for $5.00 so poor people could have an affordable Christmas tree and we used the money to go to summer camp.
 
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