Scouts has changed over the years. Part of it is because the sponsor-ship has changed from schools (thank you ACLU) to private groups, churches or what not.
I was in Cubs for about three months, Scouts for about four years, did OA, stopped at life as they changed the program to be less outdoors/camping oriented. Learned lots of stuff that helped me form who I am today. Honesty, respect, lot of great things that I think are more from my leaders (Fred Farmer, Bruce Rohr, et.al.) than from the program.
Shot my first firearm at the range during summer camp. Shocked the 5hit out of the kids there as other than the first shot they rest were all within the second circle. 760 pump and my father taught me the basics and polished by many hours in the basement with a sand trap he built.
My wife and I were Den leaders for our oldest as no other parents would do it (started with 22 kids, crossed over 18) and was an assistant scout master as we bounced from troop to troop. Between bullying and stupid control issues in the first two troop we were in, not to mention at counsel, I got sick of the my tent is bigger than your tent mindset. Third troop ROCK, great leaders and kids but we moved to Iowa after one year there. Both kids lost interest after the first year here as the troop they selected did almost no camping.
Fund raising if I never see popcorn again in my next three lives it will be too soon. For high adventure stuff lots of troops do all sorts of things, sell candy at the train station, sell christmas trees, you name it. My oldest is a kick butt salesman because of selling pop corn door to door. Sadly he hates sales as much as my wife does (she was #1 in the world for her division at Xerox many moons ago).
While we were always in competition with Troop 176 from Mother of Sorrows (we were 175 from Paddy Hill) we always helped out other troops loaning stuff, never saw any of that as an adult. Maybe it was due to being in the North Shore of Chicago, money talks, niceness gets walked upon.
Very sad to hear that the parents were against basic firearm training. A few years back most summer camp programs had it available there, though that was before the ammo shortage really hit.