By Teodorico. Teodorico can by found on Xitter at @gothicpoasting
Summer 2011. Midway through the week our troop had made it to the championship canoe race between our camp (west) and east camp. We’d beaten out everyone else on our side of the lake to face an unknown opponent for the title of “Canoe Race Champion”. We got our asses kicked. A week of rowing amounted to a furious effort against a team of high schoolers (I was a rising 7th grader and one of the oldest guys in our troop on this campout).
Fast-forward to Summer 2017. I have just finished hiking to the top of Mount Baldy at Philmont, New Mexico. I was on top of the world both literally and metaphorically. I had done so with my actual brother and several men who I also felt a fraternal bond to. It would end up becoming the subject of my college application essay. I reflected on my youth, remembering that I had certainly lost at a lot of things, but I was a winner on that day and many other days.
On May 7th, the Boy Scouts of America officially changed their name from Scouting BSA to Scouting America. This comes seven years after the Scouts announced they were going to allow girls and troons to join, nine years since they decided to allow homosexuals to take leadership roles, and eleven years after the National Council voted to allow homosexual youths (lol) to join. The comment sections were unsurprisingly replete with former Eagle Scouts duking it out with Norwood 5A’s jannies. I wasn’t surprised: the name change was akin to seeing your ghoulish troon cousin 4 months into HRT at a family gathering after having initially heard the news. But it did cement that there just are no more spaces in American society, or the west writ large, for young men.
Many of you are probably aware of the idea of a mannerbund or Koryos, a roaming warrior band of Indo-European youths. Historians suspect they were responsible (or had a major role) for the conquest of Europe by Indo-European tribes. The concept survived throughout history: both in the military context as societies saw the benefit in their young men and warrior-class forming tight-knit, fraternal bonds as well as in our social and educational context. The fraternity is a great example and was a staple of American elite culture. College used to not be a credentialing mill, believe it or not: it was finishing school for our patricians who would hone their skills in rhetoric, culture, art, science, but most importantly would form a mannerbund with their colleagues at great institutions. Looking at the history of many fraternities you see memberships filled with some of the best and brightest we have had to offer. Astronauts, statesmen, scientists, great military leaders, they may have been gifted with great heritage and the fortune of being born in a far better time but they became men as they served in their various fraternal orgs.
Scouting was a unique development that sprung from the genius of Lord Robert Baden-Powell. He was inspired not only by his experiences policing British South Africa and Matabeleland, but also upon hearing stories of the great American frontiersmen and Natives. Men who forged a nation from a wild, untamed land along with a people who had an almost supernatural connection to the land. The American legend personified. In an age of rapid industrialization where people, especially young men, were becoming divorced from the land this presented as an opportunity to Lord Baden-Powell. Upon his return he hosted a campout at Brownsea Island-a name still legendary in American scouting-and drew volunteers from the Boys’ Brigade (a similar organization at the time). Lord Baden-Powell knew that warfare was becoming less a game of the aristocracy and more of a meritocratic endeavor, however the pools from which society was drawing their officers were becoming less tied to the land. How many men would go without ever holding a rifle until they received a draft notice? How many would never learn the basics of tracking wild game? In creating the idea of scouting he sought to not only teach young men civic virtue but important martial doctrine like patrolling, tracking, and strategy. Beyond that, he sought to create men of chivalry and valor in what was becoming an increasingly debased society. The first edition of Scouting for Boys looks at the need for scouting and the need for a body of able young men from which Britannia could draw upon. It became popular in the States for a similar reason as cities exploded and families looked to find a means for their young men to connect with the land, and overtook British scouting because it was inherently closer to the frontier and many great wild spaces. Scouting itself became a great fixture but especially for our military: I have heard from mixed sources that holding the rank of Eagle scout essentially guaranteed a quick promotion after enlisting, and older editions of the Scouting handbook was essentially a guide on patrolling.
Scouting is dead now. It’s been dead for sometime but it seems that they’ve finished skinning and tanning its hide for some grotesque imitation to wear. Where else are our young men to go? Fraternity life has become hollow and essentially an MLM. It will still teach you, or any other similarly situated young men, about some important life lessons. I am sure there are some good chapters out there but my experience was nationals focusing purely on increasing membership as much as possible without a regard for quality of character (although I had a heck of a great time with the guys who I can call brother). I’d quote Bowling Alone but I think you get the idea.
The irony is that the Catholic Church and Scouting suffered similar issues in that they had to deal with sexual abuse scandals at similar times. Atomization and our steep decline can be blamed for membership declines in both organizations. Both took steep hits to membership and involvement. However, the church in America has evolved and has begun to return to its more traditional roots. This has seen a huge boost in attendance and the decline of der boomer liberalism as a guiding doctrine for the church. New priests are almost exclusively ultra-orthodox and socially conservative. I had the opportunity to attend SEEK in 2019 and I saw that the Catholic youth of the day were focused partially on retvrning, but also on the idea of this church being in this world but not of it. There’s a recent article that discusses this on AP called A Step Back in Time. A good read when it comes to the values shift and re-alignment taking place.
Scouting, on the other hand, is going to learn that there are consequences for drifting too far from one’s core identity. The organization lost roughly half of its membership due to “Covid”. People, especially young men, crave authenticity and scouting seems to be trying to have its cake and eat it too. The numbers since 2019 are also down despite broadening membership. I perused the list of merit badges and it seems that they’ve only added two nu-badges (sustainability and American Cultures), but they have watered down some of the other badges. Rifle shooting can be completed with a pellet gun now. The current chief scout executive is some beltway ghoul who, in an interview about this decision, seemed to cynically understand that this was being done purely to lower barriers to entry. But he also understands that membership is evaporating away into nothing.
BAP talks a lot in Bronze Age Mindset about how there just simply is not a space for young men to grow and develop their skills and capabilities. You can read this portion specifically in part two on the parable of the iron prison. Men need space in which they can develop their skills and build confidence. They need to be able to do this alongside men of a similar stripe. I was thinking about how fortunate I was to get this opportunity as a youth, as did my brother and cousins, but I am reminded of how tragic a loss this genuinely is. After “Scouting America” goes belly up, who will acquire Philmont? I had the opportunity to traverse it and I will legitimately become homicidal if I hear it's been acquired by some goober. Florida Sea Base? All of the great camps and locales that can be found dotted throughout the US. I am the man I am today because I had the opportunity to be brave and challenge myself but what will the men of tomorrow be like? Can we ever fill this niche? People are becoming more insulated from life in general: you could go through all of high school and never experience any great personal victories or defeats and live an existence totally separate from any risks. I hope we can because I would want my posterity to ultimately have the same experience. I hope we do take the opportunity to fill the niche given a lot of young men seem to be aching for an opportunity to do something.
Good article. Scouting was a large part of my youth as well. I’m saddened at what it’s become and will not be signing up my sons.
I got my Eagle in 2007, since then BSA has become astronomically gay and cringe. I would have loved to have stayed involved and given back, but I’m not dedicating my time and resources to such a spineless organization. Perhaps we will see a new & improved version of scouting, but i imagine (((the system))) will use lawfare to prohibit anything that works in a positive fashion for young White men.