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The Battle for the Boy Scouts
by Hans Zeiger
06 December 2004
The ACLU's latest maneuvers makes clear that it intends to force the end of all federal support for the Boy Scouts of America.
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Nearly a century
has passed since Lord Robert Baden-Powell founded the Boy Scouts in Great
Britain. It has been a century filled with radical ideologies that recruited
young men into Hitler Youth and the Communist Party, that populated the American
youth cult with hippies and druggies, and that replaced fathers with fanaticisms
and mores with MTV. Young men might have annihilated this world had it not
been for the Boy Scouts.
The Boy Scouts have always been a great threat to the utopian dreams of the
ideologues. In the 1920s, the national secretary of the Young Communist League
warned Lord Baden-Powell that he should expect a fight to the finish. Baden-Powell
replied, "You can't fight without two. Our aim is to help to poorer boy,
independent of all political questions, to get his fair chance of happiness
and success in life."
Today, the Boy Scouts -- at least in America where the Scouts haven't succumbed
to political correctness -- remain above the trap of radicalism and ideology.
While truth has been supplanted by relativism in most American institutions,
the Boy Scouts still study and practice principles.
But the fight to the finish that was launched by the Young Communist League
is not over. The Boy Scouts is an exclusive organization; it is only for
males who adhere to the Scout Oath and Law. So wherever the gospel of perfect
equality is preached, the Boy Scouts are assaulted. As a result of that assault,
the Boy Scouts organizations in Great Britain and Canada and many other countries
have opened their memberships to females and homosexuals.
In the United States, we know the chief legacy of the communist movement
as the American Civil Liberties Union. ACLU founder Roger Baldwin wrote in
Soviet Russia Today, "I champion civil liberties as the
best non-violent means of building the power on which worker's rule must
be based. When that power of the working class is achieved, as it has been
done only in the Soviet Union, I am for maintaining it by any means whatever."
Later, in a Harvard University publication, Baldwin admitted, "Communism
is the goal."
"There is fresh evidence that the ACLU intends to end all federal support
for the Boy Scouts of America," said Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist on
November 20, announcing the Save Our Scouts Bill to reaffirm the federal
government's relationship with the Boy Scouts of America. "In their view,
where there is government there cannot be faith. But to this legislator,
the ACLU's continued attacks on the Boy Scouts are starting to become its
own form of persecution."
Frist attempted to pass the bill through the unanimous consent procedure,
but it failed. So he promises to reinitiate the bill next session.
Frist was responding to a November 15 decision by Pentagon attorneys to prohibit
military base sponsorship of Boy Scout troops as settlement of a five-year
old lawsuit filed by the ACLU. At issue was the Scouts' "duty to God" contained
in the Oath, which precludes atheists from joining the organization. The
ACLU said that BSA partnerships with the federal government violate the First
Amendment. Since that isn't the case, it seems that Eagle Scout Donald Rumsfeld's
Department of Defense broke wartime policy to settle with the terrorists
in the ACLU.
The week after the Pentagon decision, the U.S. House of Representatives passed
a resolution by a vote of 391 to 3 applauding the Boy Scouts for its contributions
to the nation. Darrell Issa (R-CA), who sponsored the resolution with Joel
Hefley (R-CO), said that the purpose was to "defend the Boy Scout's ability
to continue the fine work that they have done for nearly a century." Only
Democrat Congressmen John Dingell of Michigan, Barney Frank of Massachusetts,
and Lynn Woolsey of California opposed the Boy Scouts.
Eagle Scout Congressman J.D. Hayworth (R-AZ) wrote to Secretary Rumsfeld
seeking a reversal of the Defense-ACLU settlement. And Jo Ann Davis (R-VA)
is co-sponsoring legislation in the House to cancel the capitulation.
However the issue is resolved, it is not a battle that we can afford to lose.
There is too much at stake here to give up on the Boy Scouts. Our very capacity
for self-government is at risk when we allow the ACLU to deny a boy's opportunity
to learn to be, "trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind,
obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent."
Congress must follow through to protect the Boy Scouts, and ultimately to
protect our courts from becoming a permanent tool of the ACLU. Americans
who care about the protection of the Scout Oath and Law ought to contact
their member of Congress immediately with the message of Senator Frist's
bill: "Save Our Scouts!"
The ACLU considers this a fight to the end. Well, let's put an end to the ACLU.
Hans Zeiger is a Seattle Sentinel
columnist, president of the Scout Honor Coalition
and a student at Hillsdale College in Michigan.
Email Hans Zeiger
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