When the Boy Scouts were allowed to be Boys!

One of the saddest, and possibly biggest threats to our survival is the current man-hating environment we find ourselves in where boys are told it’s wrong to be men.

From Brands like Johnny Walker and Gillette producing man-hating advertisements instead of products to the Boy Scouts of America destroying the scouts by allowing in girls and telling boys not to be boys, we are living in what we believe is one of the most dangerous times in human history. There is a war being waged on men and young boys, a war to make them bow down and become a bunch of sissies for the greater good.

We believe this is an attempt to kill Western civilization by demasculinizing the people who helped keep us free for so long!

When Boy scouts were trained to be Men

Sadly, we live in a time where the biggest adventure most kids will experience is sitting in front of a T.V., watching someone else experience the outdoors. It really is a shame that more parents don’t encourage their kids to experience the adventures that were once a part of daily life.

It’s also a shame that we no longer teach them to value God and Country!

The Boy Scout Oath:

On my honor, I will do my best
To do my duty to God and my country
and to obey the Scout Law;
To help other people at all times;
To keep myself physically strong,
mentally awake, and morally straight.

How far we’ve Fallen!

If you want to see how far we’ve fallen into the abyss, check out some of these great, old Boy Scout cigarette cards from the early ’20s. They are a shinning example of how we used to teach our young men to be strong, to have values, and to learn the skills they need to advance society and protect Western civilization.

Boy Scout Cigarette Cards 

Boy Scout Knot Techniques:

Boy Scout Knot Cards
Churchman's cigarettes boy scout card

How to Splice Rope Together:

Imperial Tobacco Boy Scout Cards

An Emergency Water Filter

Imperial Tobacco Water Filter Boy Scout Cards

Boy Scout Techniques and Skills

Boy Scout Cigarette Cards
Boy Scout Cigarette Cards Electric Shock
Boy Scout Cigarette Cards Stopping a Dog
Boy Scout Cigarette Cards Survival Skills
Shirts of Liberty

OFFGRID Survival book

Newsletter

21 Comments

  1. Thank you for this post!

    I’d never seen “Cigarette Cards” before, and isn’t it just a sign of the way times change that these seem to have been intended for Boy Scouts!

    I’m a scout leader and I appreciate and agree with your view of kids/parents today….

    I grew up running the hills, and while my boy doesn’t do much of that with us living in the suburbs, he certainly gets his opportunity to camp just about every month!

    It makes my proud to know that he can handle himself so well in the woods, taking care of most of his needs and working to do more! (He’s just twelve, but he’s a heck of a cook!)

    Thanks again!

    Tim
    Troop 44
    Collinsville, OK

  2. Have to agree with Tim. Both my children learned to camp hike in the woods, fish and the fundamentals of shooting. Son now an Eagle Scout. Daughter spent her spring lashing together a raised sleeping platform in the woods, felling her own wood.

    They could handle themselves in most situations, unlike a lot of their contemporaries

  3. I have two Eagle Scouts and my husband several years later is still Scoutmaster of the Troop. The skills this program teaches boys are so valuable in todays world. If you have sons I highly recommend Boy Scouts and if you don’t buy a Scout handbook and Fieldbook for your survival library. Great wealth of information in both books.

  4. I wonder if the Boy Scouts emergency water filter up above could still be used in this day and age with all the polutants that are found in the water?

  5. When I was younger I was heavily involved in Boy Scouts in all it’s aspects (Week long camps, National, Council and OA) Now that I am older I long for the times when I can do that stuff again. If Boy Scouts taught me anything it was 2 things.

    1. Love the outdoors and treat it with respect
    2. Be prepared

    Both things I think your website reflects.

    Thanks!

  6. @mike

    Yes the water filter will still work as long as you use non-standing water like a fast moving stream. If it’s still non-moving water you run the risk of having large animal fecal matter decomposing in it.

    Personally I’d boil it as it’s easier to do but if I couldn’t start a fire that’s an option.

  7. As a Scout Leader, I’d have to agree. The biggest challenge many of us face is xbox, wii, etc. Getting the boys off the couch and into the woods can be a challenge.

    Those that do make the leap, love it. There’s something innately appealing about camping, hiking, fire building, etc.

    My son and I recently completed a 50 mile bike ride in just over 7 hours for one of his merit badges. The things he learned about himself during that ride can never be replaced or forgotten. He was pushed to his limit a couple of times, yet kept going. Character was built; confidence was gained. You don’t get that on the couch.

    Joe

  8. My 2 brothers were Eagle Scouts as was I. I remember going out into the woods camping and learning how to live off the land as a preteen and teenager. As I look back – Philmont Scout ranch, Order of the Arrow and Summer Scout camp were priceless experiences that have helped me with life. I served 23 years and 8 months in the USAF and worked with Force Recon Marines and US Army Special Forces and I can honestly say that my scouting skills learned when I was a kid gave me a huge advantage in trainng because believe it or not the military teaches those same skills. I learned them when I was 12 – 14 years old. Yea Boy Scouts was the bomb!

    • Well, back then, you didn’t have everyone trying to make you not do something for your own good. Scouts didn’t smoke and the info was a service. C-rations used to have cigarettes in them. They removed them, but guess what? Didn’t stop the troops from smoking. Signs of the times I guess.

  9. If only young boys today were as good at knot-tying, camping, cooking, and hiking as they are adept at posting on Facebook and playing Halo!

  10. As an Eagle Scout and now Cub scout leader it saddens me to see so many parents raising Sheeple instead of fostering individualism and strength in our youth. Electronic babysitters (xbox, PC, Gameboy, iPod, etc) are no sustitute for dirt, blood and outdoor adventures. Having travelled around the world to some very bad places, I can’t tell you how many times my BSA skills have come into play both in the survival aspect as well as medical.
    My 8yo son and 13yo daughter continue to learn about the outdoors and about being tough blooded Americans cause that’s the proper way to raise kids…

  11. My brother was in the cubs for a while,which is what the little boys were in before they were old enough to go into scouts, but never went into the scouts, while and my sisters were in the Brownies, which I guess is the equivalent, of Americas girl scouts. It was a time they lost its appeal in England, but I guess it all depended on where you were. As youngsters you enjoyed everything but they werent as active in England as they tended to be in this country. My fathers cigarettes had cards in each packet, they used to vary in lots of subjects. He used to give them to me to collect and I had a bunch growing up, from Naval ships, movie stars, athletes, cowboys to boy scouts and everything in between. I cant remember when they stopped putting cards in the packets, but the packets were very small. My father smoked Park Drive.

  12. These are an interesting bit of Americana, but I wouldn’t blame parents so much for not encouraging scouting. I’d say that BSA failed our youth when it sold out to evangelicals and Mormons and made scouting less about fun, adventure, and skills, and made it more about church indoctrination.

    When this happened, it lost its appeal to our youth, and parents stopped encouraging it if the local troop was run by the “wrong” denomination.

    I remember scouting when I was young (the ’70s), and there was none of this. It was just good clean fun and adventure without people trying to convert and indoctrinate. When I took my boy in the ’90s, it was like a fundamentalist church camp – and we, apparently, were from the “wrong” church.

    I was an assistant scout master for a time, but was told that my religious views (which I never shared with the kids) might be “confusing” and send “mixed messages”.

    BSA needs to get back to its roots if it wants to be relevant to our youth or it will continue its slip into obscurity. Of course, it doesn’t help that, increasingly, Scout leaders just don’t know how to do those things we would like our kids to be learning, and even when they do, fear of lawsuits makes most Scout activities too diluted to be fun or valuable.

  13. My grandson (now 14), my son and myself were all involved in scouting. For all of us it was the best teacher and best experience we ever could have had. In my grandson’s troop there was never any type of religious indoctrination at all, except for “A Scout is reverent.” and I don’t consider one of the Scout laws as indoctrination. Tom, I think that you hit a bad troop. They are not all like that.

  14. My experience in the early 90s was similar to what Tom described. I left the scouts early. The youth needs to learn love of the outdoors and to be prepared, but without the mind-control.

  15. It is the best right of passage our nation has. If it weren’t for its doctrine of religious principles (which I believe in), it might be more prevalent in society. It is totally relevant and there are still tons of young men (and young ladies now in Venturing) that are learning these skills. Be a leader and tell every child you can to get involved. But spare me the “Never do for a boy what he can do for himself” line if you are unwilling to teach someone and learn for yourself and just sit back and criticize. The biggest problem in the program is volunteers who sit back and say go do this or that without modeling or teaching (that and being flat out rude and nasty to a child). The arcane “this is how we’ve always done it” jargon and nastiness drives away youth. You can be assertive and expect results without being ridiculous as some leaders are. All in all, everyone should give it a shot.

  16. I was in Scouting throughout my youth, some of the best years of my life. Growing up in the city, I always looked forward to getting away. Now that Im grown, I realize that my love of the outdoors was a direct result of my scouting experience.

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