15 May 2009

Meet the Boy Scouts of the 21st century


The Explorers, a coeducational affiliate of the Boy Scouts, have long prepared teenage members to become police officers and firefighters. Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, many Explorer posts, working with local and federal law enforcement agencies, have added programs to train members in confronting terrorism, illegal immigration and border violence. Here, Explorers in a drill with the Imperial County, Calif., sheriff's office prepared to enter a building taken over by terrorists who had begun shooting hostages.

In El Centro, Calif., Explorers portraying Border Patrol agents rushed into a room filled with fake poison gas and aimed their weapons at a man before realizing he was a wounded hostage.

Dave Holletz, of the Brawley, Calif., police department, entered after the Explorers had killed the last hostage-taker. "Forget the injured, forget the dead," Mr. Holletz advised the Explorers. "Accomplish your mission: terminate the shooter."
I was a Cub Scout and Boy Scout in the 1950s. Things seem to have changed a bit, especially in this affiliate program...
The Explorers program, a coeducational affiliate of the Boy Scouts of America that began 60 years ago, is training thousands of young people in skills used to confront terrorism, illegal immigration and escalating border violence — an intense ratcheting up of one of the group’s longtime missions to prepare youths for more traditional jobs as police officers and firefighters…

“This is about being a true-blooded American guy and girl,” said A. J. Lowenthal, a sheriff’s deputy…

Cathy Noriego, also 16, said she was attracted by the guns. The group uses compressed-air guns — known as airsoft guns, which fire tiny plastic pellets — in the training exercises, and sometimes they shoot real guns on a closed range.

“I like shooting them,” Cathy said. “I like the sound they make. It gets me excited.”

…one role-player wore traditional Arab dress. “If we’re looking at 9/11 and what a Middle Eastern terrorist would be like,” he said, “then maybe your role-player would look like that. I don’t know, would you call that politically incorrect?”

All photos: Todd Krainin for The New York Times

3 comments:

  1. Given their location, I suspect that the only "terrorists" in question are poor people crossing the border to look for work. The hatred of Latino immigrants is rampant among some right-wingers. Historically, poor people migrate from a poor country to a rich one. And we employ them in many capacities.

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  2. Uh, I'm considerably younger than you (30) and was involved with Explorer Scouts during high school (mid-nineties) on a group and council basis. This is *dramatically* different from anything I experienced. We partnered with a pharmaceutical company and generally leanred about chgemistry, and froze hot dogs with liquid nitrogen (with strict adult supervision). I'm a little shocked by this...

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  3. Sue - Agreed, but just to clarify, these are not "Explorer Scouts" (which I presume still exist), but an "explorer program" affiliated with the Scouts.

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