I can go either way with this. There should be a third voting option IMHO.
My problem with the local option is the possibility of problems between Troops where one exercises the option one way and another exercises it the other and what has not been an item of contention in the past now becomes a reason why one group is "forced" to practice tolerance while another acts as it will(and that can occur with either choice acting as the bully). Now I realize that there are adults out there doing this now, but IMHO I haven't yet seen it have any effect on boys i've known yet.
This decision could bring that discriminator into the discussion among the youths and force them to make decisions they shouldn't have to yet.
As to AZMikes qurestion about in what ways? Folks are inventive, they'll find a way to make it interesting.
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#1602-07-2013, 03:27 PM
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#1702-07-2013, 03:51 PMThe boys already confront those issues any time they 'choose sides'. They've been doing it since they first started forming competing groups.
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#1802-08-2013, 09:08 PMSpoke with our Exec and assistant today, and they both are really concerned about the effect of the final decision. The CE said his calls are running at about 41% against it, and a lot of threats to leave if it happens. He said they are already looking at ways to redo the budget, as they fear they will lose considerable income. We are in a bit more conservative area of California, so his percentage does not really seem too off to me, though my own discussions have indicated most people would prefer the local option as long as it WAS a local unit choice. Our church has has already told us they will run with our decisions on leadership and so on. And the National Methodist have indicated support for local as well.
We discussed the nightmares of people dropping out of jamboree at that late date, as well as loss of executive board members. Apparently there has been some that indicated they would resign should the change occur.
As noted earlier, I really just do not get why this is such a problem with so many, other than we now live in a very egotistical cultural climate. Will just focus on the troop and hope for the best.
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#1902-09-2013, 05:51 AMMisplaced comment. Sorry.
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#2003-07-2013, 03:18 PMIf the Local option is passed, the scenario I fear is one where an openly gay person wishes to join a unit, and it just so happens that this particular unit chooses to follow the original membership requirements. (i.e. heterosexual individuals only).
If the person is refused membership to this unit, based on said sexual orientation, and this individual decides to sue, I am guessing that the CO will be the entity that is sued.
Will the BSA support the CO, or wash their hands of the incident, and leave the CO hung out to dry?
One incident like this could put a significant financial burden on a CO.
Your thoughts?
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Merlyn_LeRoy commented#20.303-07-2013, 10:32 PMEditing a commentCurrently, ALL BSA charter organizations must legally be able to exclude gays and atheists; that's why public schools had to stop chartering units.
Any unit that could, hypothetically, be sued due to the local option could be sued TODAY on the same grounds.
PS: OGE, do you know when people will be able to create new topics again? -
Merlyn_LeRoy commented#20.403-07-2013, 10:35 PMEditing a commentCurrently, ALL BSA charter organizations must legally be able to exclude gays and atheists; that's why public schools had to stop chartering units.
Any unit that could, hypothetically, be sued due to the local option could be sued TODAY on the same grounds.
PS: OGE, do you know when people will be able to create new topics again? -
packsaddle commented#20.503-08-2013, 07:11 AMEditing a commentMerlyn, I was told that Terry's still working on 'bugs' which, as seems painfully obvious, are numerous in the new site. I'm not sure how long it will take.Last edited by packsaddle; 03-08-2013, 07:13 AM.
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#2103-08-2013, 08:41 AMtest test test test
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#2203-08-2013, 02:41 PMSo, Has Smith College in Northampton, Ma ever been sued for sex discrimination?
“They didn’t go to Smith” “Go to Smith, she couldn’t even spell it”…
Or the Catholic Church, as they don’t ordain women as Priests, have they been sued for sex discrimination?
After all the pleas for the Local Option, why has no one ever mentioned the CO being sued until now?
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dcsimmons commented#22.603-13-2013, 08:59 AMEditing a commentAnd a couple more...
Straight woman sues the church over a headstone she was told was not acceptable to the church leadership for their private cemetery. http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nascar...5--nascar.html.
Transgendered "woman" sues private relgious college after her expulsion for "lying" on "her" application. http://www.christianpost.com/news/ca...student-90934/.
Point here isn't whether these cases are direct corrolations to the BSA decision (although the later case is interesting). Point is, organizations can be sued regardless of their position. The BSA national is the current target because they dictate policy to the chartering organizations. In short, the best return on investment for the ACLU and other organizations is to attack the shield. Remove the shield and the COs are now forced to have a policy, thus, they become the obvious target for the continued campaign. The larger the chartering organization, the better return on investment. I simply don't believe the gay movement will be satisfied with the local option and some chartering organizations will simply move on rather than fight. -
Merlyn_LeRoy commented#22.703-13-2013, 09:31 AMEditing a commentBut every current chartering organization must already have the legal right to discriminate against gays and atheists, or they would be being sued NOW. The ACLU threatened to sue any public school that chartered a BSA unit that required discrimination against atheists, which is why public schools no longer charter units.
You'll notice the ACLU hasn't been suing the BSA for excluding gays or atheists since the Dale decision 13 years ago. If a public school chartered a BSA unit that excluded atheists (or gays, probably), they would get sued regardless of whether the BSA has a local option or not, because schools can't do that in either case. -
Basementdweller commented#22.803-13-2013, 04:54 PMEditing a commentOld simmon isn't all that enlightened and fears what he doesn't understand or even cares see the other side. Not that long ago folks would not marry or rent to mixed race couples.....This isn't all that much different. Regardless of what you believe, gay and lesbian folks are decent folks too....There are the idiot dirt bags just like hetero...types......
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#2303-08-2013, 10:28 PMThis was emailed out from our council ofice today as a reiteration of current policy, before the coming "survey":
"Current BSA Membership Policy
While the BSA does not proactively inquire about the sexual orientation of employees, volunteers, or members, we do not grant membership to individuals who are open or avowed homosexuals or who engage in behavior that would become a distraction to the mission of the BSA. Scouting believes same-sex attraction should be introduced and discussed outside of its program with parents, caregivers, or spiritual advisers, at the appropriate time and in the right setting. The vast majority of parents we serve value this right and do not sign their children up for Scouting for it to introduce or discuss, in any way, these topics. The BSA is a voluntary, private organization that sets policies that are best for the organization. The BSA welcomes all who share its beliefs but does not criticize or condemn those who wish to follow a different path."":
"
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ghjim commented#23.103-13-2013, 03:36 PMEditing a commentBut do the "vast majority" of parents the BSA "serves" approve of a membership policy that requires every troop and pack to exclude gays and athiests? Sure doesn't look like it does it? I have said before I think it has always been this way. The majority of BSA adult volunteers and parents don't like this policy. And this after years of these people leaving the BSA, some forced out, because of this membership policy.
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#2403-08-2013, 10:29 PMWhoa, that was strange - - - -
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packsaddle commented#24.103-09-2013, 04:34 AMEditing a commentThe 'ghost in the machine'? I'm going to be a bit worried when the site puts random characters together to form an image of Merlyn's avatar, lol.
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#2503-09-2013, 04:42 AMWe had someone at our District committee meeting who has been elected to go to National for the vote.. I didn't realize those voting had to physically go to Texas to do so.. Sounds like he is not voting for the council either, but had to come up with his decision on how to vote on his own, because he has been researching to figure out how he should vote..
My initial thought (I admit I was stereotyping), was that his vote would be to keep the policy as it is, because he is very old I'm guessing in his 80's (and I may be being charitable at that), and very religious.. While he didn't openly say which way he will vote, the passage he read out of the boy scout handbook lead me to believe it will be for the local option.. More on the reasoning that "Don't ask, Don't tell" goes against the BSA vision of what it means to be morally straight. It was a very different viewpoint then any I have heard debated on this forum..
From the breakdown of the meaning of the Scout Oath. (Chapter3, page 46 of the BS handbook may be off a page or two for different versions.)
... and morally straight.
To be a person of strong character, your relationships with others should be honest and open. You should respect and defend the rights of all people. Be clean in your speech and actions, and rmain faithful in your religious beliefs. The values you practice as a scout will help you shape a life of virtue and self-reliance.
Then he went back and reread a few times the phrase, "You should be honest and OPEN with your relationships with others..", and really highlighted this phrase.. I forget how, but at least for me, he drew a correlation that "Don't ask, Don't tell", is a policy that requires people to be anything but honest and open.. It says if you are a homosexual, we will accept you in as long as you are not honest with us.. It promotes something that goes against what we state the meaning of morally straight is..
Now, if our policy was that which stated that homosexuals should be open and honest about their sexual preferences and stay 200 yards back from any ongoing BSA event, how he would vote.. But, my conclusion is that based on the fact that the current policy is that of “Don’t ask, Don’t tell”.. In good conscious he must vote against the BSA continuing with this policy..
Considering so many have used the “Morally Straight” phrase as the reason why the current policy should be maintained.. Who have basically defined “Morally Straight” to mean, you are heterosexual, not homosexual.. This viewpoint was a unique perspective for me..
Well I really shouldn’t have been all that surprised at this gentlemen’s perspective, this guy is very young at heart, just trapped in a body that is aging. He still looks at the world as a place where he can learn new things and has always been open to different viewpoints.. That he evolved on this topic along with the rest of the world, I really should not have been that surprised. But, I admit, I was.
By the way, anyone else handpicked by their council to go to National to personally cast their vote?.. Anyone know if it is one per council, or one per district or what? Is everyone who is going allowed to vote their own mind on the matter, or are some to vote as the representative of the council, and vote their viewpoint.. (I would imagine, they would basically choose someone they know is like-minded with whatever their viewpoint is, that being the case.)
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#2603-09-2013, 04:51 AMhmm.. editing went a little buggy.. I tried to edit last post so that "voting" in the first line was changed to "voters".. But it wouldn't let me save my edit unless I entered a title? (not the comment of why I was changing it, but a title..) Yet, although I had an entry field to add a title, it wouldn't let me put anything into that entry field..
Well at least the bugs that wouldn't let me log in last week are gone.. Yet still pretty buggy.. I should get myself a jar with a lid with holes punched in it.. I might catch me some rare specimens in the weeks to come.
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#2703-09-2013, 07:06 AMSome local councils are doing membership policy surveys, a few others are now hosting education sessions about Boy Scout membership standards. Some sessions are open, some by invitation only.
http://www.herald-mail.com/news/loca...,1774614.story
http://www.northplattebulletin.com/i...24998&pageID=3
http://www.michiganscouting.org/Sout...rshipStandards
Will volunteer feedback affect their respective council vote in May?
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#2803-09-2013, 12:26 PMEvery council has certain voting members that can vote at the National meeting; usually the Key Three and, depending on the size of the council, member(s) at large. Our small council has 4 total. They just put out a three question survey regarding the issue, sort of. The queries did not mention "local option", only acceptance or non-acceptance of Gays; so do not think it is going to get meaningful results. On the other hand, just got a National survey as well; and it was very specific, and asked for detail as to why and so on. It seemed to be aimed at an honest attempt to get "real" answers. I had to deal with one local member of the congregation at our Methodist sponsor on Scout Sunday. We had a short discussion out in the patio away from the others. Not sure if my answers mollified her, but at least she did not pursue it further. She had gone to the minister, who came to me and asked me to speak with the woman. The church as a whole, is very supportive still.
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ghjim commented#28.103-09-2013, 04:04 PMEditing a commentI think the national survey is the most exciting thing I have watched the BSA do for years now. For the first time, maybe in decades, National is trying to find out what the BSA members really want. No more secret groups doing investigations and making policy.
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#2903-09-2013, 12:27 PMEvery council has certain voting members that can vote at the National meeting; usually the Key Three and, depending on the size of the council, member(s) at large. Our small council has 4 total. They just put out a three question survey regarding the issue, sort of. The queries did not mention "local option", only acceptance or non-acceptance of Gays; so do not think it is going to get meaningful results. On the other hand, just got a National survey as well; and it was very specific, and asked for detail as to why and so on. It seemed to be aimed at an honest attempt to get "real" answers. I had to deal with one local member of the congregation at our Methodist sponsor on Scout Sunday. We had a short discussion out in the patio away from the others. Not sure if my answers mollified her, but at least she did not pursue it further. She had gone to the minister, who came to me and asked me to speak with the woman. The church as a whole, is very supportive still.
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#3003-10-2013, 04:28 PMBSA just sent me a survey on the proposed policy. Anyone else get one?
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NJCubScouter commented#30.103-10-2013, 05:24 PMEditing a commentNike: Not yet, but the following did appear on my council's web site on Friday:
A new Voice of the Scout survey has been developed in support of the Listening Phase of the Membership Standards Study. The survey will officially launch March 8, 2013 and will run through April 4, 2013. This survey will be sent to parents of Scouts, Volunteer Leaders at the Unit, District, and Council levels as well as Chartered Organization Representatives and Heads of Institutions. We encourage you to check your e-mail and junk/spam mail to fill out the survey. If you are not sure if your e-mail address is in the system for the survey, please contact (name and contact information) for assistance. -
SSScout commented#30.203-11-2013, 08:13 PMEditing a commentNot I. Did not receive the VotS survey, but Council emailed to ask I look for it. I went to the National Site and gave a page full to the survey linked on the Home page there.
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