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WW4BSA > SCOUTS   10.03.24 08:37l 75 Lines 3336 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: B.-P.'S OUTLOOK (PART 18) FINAL
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Sent: 240307/1217Z 7735@WW4BSA.NEFL.FL.USA.NOAM BPQ6.0.24



The Other Fellow's Point of View

OUR attitude in the Boy Scout Movement is that we do not wish to be in 
conflict with any political, educational, religious, or other body, but we 
are very glad to have their advice or suggestions.

Our aim is to be at peace with all and to do our best in our own particular 
line.

Probably the majority of us are in sympathy with the Socialist ideal, though 
we may not see with the same eye the practicability of its details or its 
methods.

We, in the Scouts, desire not so much to cure present social evils as to 
prevent their recurrence in the rising generation; to try to lessen the 
great waste of human life now going on in our city slums where so many 
thousands of our fellow humans are living an existence of misery through 
being "unemployable"; this is not always from their own fault, but simply 
because they have never been given a chance.

Our main effort is to attract the boys and to beckon them on to the right 
road for success in life; we endeavour to equip them -- especially the 
poorest -- with "character" and with craftsmanship so that each one of them 
may at least get a fair start.   If after this he fails it is then his fault 
and not, as at present, the fault of us who are in a position to give a 
helping hand to our less fortunate brothers.

The fact is, that justice and fair play do not always form part of our school 
curriculum. If our lads were trained as a regular habit to see the other 
fellow's point of view before passing their own judgment on a dispute, what 
a difference it would at once make in their manliness of character !

Such lads would not be carried away, as is at present too commonly the case, 
by the first orator who catches their ear on any subject, but they would also 
go and hear what the other side has to say about it, and would then think out 
the question and make up their own minds as men for themselves.

And so it is in almost every problem of life; individual power of judgment is 
essential, whether in choice of politics, religion, profession, or sport -- 
and half our failures and three-quarters of our only partial successes among 
our sons is due to the want of it.

We want our men to be men, not sheep. And, in the greater proposition of 
International Peace, it seems to me that before you can abolish armaments, 
before you can make treaty promises, before you build palaces for peace 
delegates to sit in, the first step of all is to train the rising generations 
-- in every nation -- to be guided in aall things by an absolute sense of 
justice. When men have it as an instinct in their conduct of all affairs of 
life to look at the question impartially from both sides before becoming 
partisans of one, then, if a crisis arises between two nations, they will 
naturally be more ready to recognise the justice of the case and to adopt a 
peaceful solution, which is impossible so long as their minds are accustomed 
to run to war as the only resource.

In the Scout Movement we have it in our power to do a very great thing in 
introducing a practical training in justice and "fair play," both through 
games and competitions in the field, and through arbitrations, courts of 
honour, trials, and debates in the clubroom.

June, 1912.


-----------------------------------------

73
Jeff
WW4BSA




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