LAPD Ends Relationship with Boy Scouts, Cites Anti-Gay Policy
by Kilian Melloy
Monday Dec 28, 2009
A youth program associated with the Los Angeles Police Department will no longer be affiliated with the Boy Scouts of America, due to the BSA’s policy of excluding gays, atheists, and agnostics.
The Explorer’s Program, which the Boy Scouts created in 1949, has served since 1962 as a means of giving youth interested in law enforcement practical experience by allowing them to assist the LAPD with crowd monitoring, clerical work, and other tasks. But now the program is set to be re-vamped, dropping both its old name and its last ties to the BSA, which has provided insurance to participants through its Learning for Life program, reported an article posted Dec. 22 at Daybreeze.com.
But the Boy Scouts’ policy of excluding gays, atheists, and agnostics clashes with the city’s non-discrimination policies, and the Police Commission has determined that the LAPD will no longer associate with Learning for Life. The new program will commence on Jan. 1, 2010, and will rely in part on donations.
"It’s bittersweet in the sense that the Boy Scouts or Learning for Life have been part of this for a long time--in name only--but the LAPD is committed to a better program and we can do that without having discrimination," Police Commissioner Alan Skobin said.
Openly gay Police Commissioner Robert Salzman said that the new program, which he has helped
devise, would be "as good or--I’m confident--better than the program it replaces."
Continued Salzman, "The Boy Scouts are clear that they discriminate based on sexual orientation, gender identity and religion, and the result of that is I could not be active on the Boy Scouts."
The Boy Scouts have defended their exclusion policy, taking the battle to the U.S. Supreme Court, which upheld the group’s right, as a private organization, to determine who may belong. But the group has continued to generate controversy, since it is in some cases entwined with city programs.
The Boy Scouts’ chief executive, Bob Mazzuca, told the Associated Press recently that, "We do have folks who say we probably should rethink this." The Boy Scouts of America will celebrate its centennial in February, 2010; said Mazzuca, "We can agree to disagree on a particular issue and still come together for the common good."
For all the organization’s emphasis on leadership and ethical integrity, however, Mazzuca indicated that the Scouts were in no hurry to update their policies. "This issue is going on in every nook and cranny of our country," Mazzuca said. "We’re just not at the point where we’re going to be leading on this."
Said Lambda Legal’s Kevin Cathcart, referring to the 2000 Supreme Court decision, "The world has changed immensely in these past nine years and the Scouts appear not to have changed at all."
Said David Niose, who serves as the president of The American Humanist Association, "The Boy Scouts are synonymous with American values and patriotism--like motherhood and apple pie. By excluding atheists and secular Americans, they are essentially saying we cannot be good citizens."
It’s not just social attitudes that are changing; how people connect, stay in contact, and influence one another’s views also are in flux, as young people grow up with cell phones, text messaging, and the Internet. Said Mazzuca, "We’ve been slow to realize the changing landscape of how people form their opinions." The AP article said that BSA is now delving into social media such as Twitter and Facebook to plug into youth culture.
"One of the magic parts of this adventure is that none of the bedrock things that made us who we are have to change for us to be more relevant and dynamic," Mazzuca said.
http://www.edgenewengland.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=&sc2=news&sc3=&id=100459
A couple of weeks ago, I went shopping at a Publix grocery store and before you enter the store the Boy Scouts had a table set up and they were selling goodies. They asked me if I wanted to buy and I looked at the mom behind the table and said: “I will never buy anything to support a group that discriminates against gays” and kept on going. I heard her jaw as it hit the floor.
Mr. Bob Mazzuca obviously does not seem to see discrimination as a problem and that it is one of the most integral parts of teaching youngsters to be tolerant and celebrate diversity, just like baseball, apple pie, this is one of our American values.
He will think differently if it was the Boy Scouts who were being discriminated against. But as more and more people and organizations repudiate discrimination and they begin to see their support languish, they will change their tune.
A small reminder:
Bush traveled the country in the early days of his presidency, promoting his tax cut plans as hugely beneficial to small-business people and families of modest means. This was more deceit. The tax cuts would go overwhelmingly to the very rich.
The president would give the wealthy and the powerful virtually everything they wanted. He would throw sand into the regulatory apparatus and help foster the most extreme income disparities since the years leading up to the Great Depression. Once again he was lighting a fire. This time the flames would engulf the economy and, as with Iraq, bring catastrophe.
And they are now accusing President Obama of trying to institute socialism in America. Socialism is what the Republicans successfully accomplished in the years before Obama….only the rich and powerful corporations were the recipients at the expense of the poor and the middle class…REDISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH HAS ALREADY SUCCESSFULLY TAKEN PLACE IN AMERICA…FROM THE POOR AND THE MIDDLE CLASS TO THE VERY RICH…THANK YOU REPUBLICANS.






It's a shame that the Boy Scouts' short-sighted leaders would stand in the way of kids having the positive influence of being mentored by law enforcement. I didn't know they were excluding atheists and agnostics also, but I guess that makes sense according to their rules. Twisted!
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