Thursday, January 29, 2009

This doesn't surprise me

Several local Boy Scout councils have been caught clear-cutting trees in forested areas under their control, in many cases illegally and most definitely in clear violation of their own stated philosophies and policies towards nature, as the article points out:

"But for a high-profile organization such as the Boy Scouts, which touts itself as pro-environment, conducting high-impact, commercial timber harvests that at times violate regulation, or simply push the limits of ecological best practices, smacks of hypocrisy, they say." (Emphasis mine)

Now where have I heard the Boy Scouts been called hypocrites elsewhere, albeit about other aspects of their organizational behavior? Oh, that's right, right here on this blog, about their willful ignorance of their own stated sexual abuse avoidance policies, as well as their shameful lack of help for victims of such abuse.

Back to the subject at hand. We're not talking about managed harvesting, which is quite good for forests when wisely and carefully done. This is the equivalent of strip-mining the land, even after they made explicit promises never to do so in specific areas:

"The old woman who donated that property to the Scouts had entered into an agreement with the state to protect it from logging," said Keene, senior forester for the Institute for Wildlife Protection."

Why are the councils engaging in such activities? Money seems to be the answer, as usual, with making up for the lack of donations due to their bans on gays and atheists given as the chief reason in the article, along with the rich salaries earned by the Scouting leadership for their excellent stewardship of their natural resources and outstanding protection of the boys under their supervision (cough, cough):

"Local and regional executives can earn annual compensation of $100,000 to $300,000 per year. At the national level, Scouting executives make even more."

But they're too poor to help out local councils with dedicated funds for counseling and legal fees for the victims of predatory Scout leaders. Nope, they're on their own on that one.

I would be remiss if I didn't also bring up the likely additional factor of multi-million dollar judgments and settlements of sexual abuse cases also bringing financial pressure, although I'm positive the Scouts would never admit to such a reason.

We know better, of course. This article originated out of Seattle, and I have knowledge of eight currently pending sexual abuse cases in that area alone. That's gotta hurt the ol' pocketbook just in legal fees, to say nothing of the eventual damages sure to be awarded.

It seems that just like with the Catholic Church, financial woes partly resulting from the payment of money to settle sex-abuse cases is starting to eat the Scouts up from the inside out. Unfortunately, if the leadership doesn't soon wake up and realize their mistakes, they're not going to have an organization left, not to mention those cushy salaries.

If they don't care enough about the boys' safety to prioritize a national protocol for helping victims of abuse, and they don't seem to care a fig about the environment, what's left to make the Scouts worth joining?

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