KimberlyAnn wrote:Yes, they're forced to be in scouts. Why would anyone be told they were "missed in scouts" if they weren't by default a part of the scouts in the first place?
I believe that a child's parents still have to fill out forms to sign them up, so they wouldn't be "forced" to be part of the organization--except perhaps by their own parents. And even belonging to the organization wouldn't "force" them to participate.
Also, why
should boys who don't want to be Scouts be offered some other, parallel program? And why
shouldn't a religious community have "temporal" expectations of its people? All religious groups have "temporal," behavioral expectations of their people; and the choice to opt out of the default program should be quite enough, without all kinds of programs being tailored to personal taste.
by the way, you may not understand the nature of Boy Scout ranks very well. They involve abundant choice in the requirements to be pursued. A scout can choose to meet most merit-badge requirements through athletic, scientific, service-oriented, and many other means; and how much or little a scout pursues this at all is largely up to individual initiative.
the Mormon church isn't historically concerned with what is truly good for people, why should they be now?
Rather than asserting this, why don't you argue it?
The Mormon church hasn't been concerned with its people's health, education, healthy family life, communal bonds, freedom from economic want, etc.? What Mormon church are you talking about? I don't believe I'm familiar with this one.
They talk a lot about free agency but don't care to allow any for their own membership, unless "it's our way or the highway" is what Mormonism really means by free agency.
I've never been a fan of the authoritarianism of the LDS church, and am still decidedly not. I think it's silly to get to the level of telling people which varieties of pop are acceptable, how many piercings they should have in an ear, and what they can do in the bedroom. But over the past few years of nonparticipation in the LDS community, participation in the broader "world," and reading in the social sciences, I've come to appreciate more than I ever did in the past the positive aspects of LDS community and social norms. I'm not aware of any other community that does more to promote its members' health, freedom from poverty, education, goal-orientation, and close family life. The norms and default expectations of the LDS community are healthy and helpful to its participants in all these areas.
The real objection to boys being "forced" or "pressured" into Boy Scouts is, so far as I can see, an objection to the having of a norm or default expectation at all: the individual choice of teenage boys should be maximized; they should be given options of which program to join. This is just another way of saying there should be no norm or expectation at all. Norms are not sets of options. They are guidelines prompting people to go in a particular direction and
not another. And the idea that individual choice needs to be maximized, particularly for young people, while part of the ubiquitous cultural religion of our time, is simple nonsense. The dizzying amount of choice already available in our world is greatly
decreasing people's satisfaction with the options they select, and making it more difficult for people, especially young people, to make choices and commitments at all. While these facts are little known, and very much against the cultural grain, they are established facts nonetheless.
That the LDS church should offer a menu of different programs for its youth to choose from, as many colleges now offer a menu of different general ed requirements, is psychologically uninformed individualist claptrap.
Don