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Hong Kong Boy Scouts to Protect IP 617

phresno writes "Declan McCullagh at C|net's News.com has a short article on the development that the Hong Kong Boy Scouts Association has teamed up with the MPA to create an intellectual property merit badge. Mike Ellis of the MPA hopes this program will 'provide thousands of young people -- future leaders -- with a better understanding of the value of intellectual property.' Those with tinfoil hats will surely be thinking of the youth in Orwell's 1984."
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Hong Kong Boy Scouts to Protect IP

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  • by Excen ( 686416 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:10PM (#12423505) Homepage Journal
    Is it just me, or is Hong Kong the perfect place for the MPAA to start brainwashing the youngest members of our society?
  • Children (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fembots ( 753724 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:10PM (#12423506) Homepage
    Funny how you can still make use of children if you hit the right note.
  • by rewinn ( 647614 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:10PM (#12423507) Homepage
    How about a GPL Merit Badge?
  • This is sick (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Saven Marek ( 739395 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:11PM (#12423514)
    Let me be one of the first to say this is absolutely sickening. Boy scouts are about honor and doing what is right and about self reliance and about all other good things like that. Not about serving commercial interests.

    What next they have a McDonalds Merit Badge given to the kids who can eat a quarter pounder a day all week for supporting a good old american company? Well it means the same thing.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:13PM (#12423567)

      What next they have a McDonalds Merit Badge given to the kids who can eat a quarter pounder a day all week for supporting a good old american company?

      I hope so. I could sure use the additional "quadruple-bypass-survivor" merit badge.

      • "quadruple-bypass-survivor" merit badge.

        Pish, the really cool one is the "performed-quadruple-bypass-while-in-the-middle-of -a-jungle-with-a-pocket-knife-two-centimetres-of-r ubber-tubing-and-a-duct-tape" badge!

        (But what do I know, I'm still working on my "stupid-bloody-program-compiles-and-maybe-just-may be-WORKS-dag-nab-it" badge :| ...)
    • This is ++good! (Score:2, Insightful)

      Boy scouts are about honor and doing what is right and about self reliance and about all other good things like that.

      Well, it's a para-military brigade that was originally advertised as a good way to keep young boy's hands busy (i.e. to prevent them... going blind).

      So it's a pretty good choice for an organisation who's been attempting through various means to indoctrinate the next generation into their view on copyrights.
      • Obviously spoken like someone who has either never been or never been part of the program.
        • Re:This is ++good! (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Your_Mom ( 94238 )
          Why do the submit and preview keys need to be so close?

          "Obviously spoken like someone who has either never been, or never participated in the program. Your blanket statement reminds me of when Microsoft globally condemns the work of OSS, without even know what it actually does."
    • In partnership with the Boy and Girl Scouts of Amerika, we at McDonalds have helped create a business support merit badge that is earned in just the way you have described.
      [Patent Pending on this business method].
    • Badges sometimes have sponsors though. My cooking badge is sponsored by Flora, and home safety by Prudential Insurance (Or someone, I can't be bothered fishing out my camp blanket).
    • Re:This is sick (Score:4, Insightful)

      by LWATCDR ( 28044 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:18PM (#12423650) Homepage Journal
      "Let me be one of the first to say this is absolutely sickening. Boy scouts are about honor and doing what is right and about self reliance and about all other good things like that. Not about serving commercial interests."
      Frankly I guess I am confused. Is pirating and right? I thought that the main complaint with the RIAA was with there tactics, destruction of the princeable of fair use, and just general nastyness. I mean the FSF uses the very same IP laws to go after people that break the GPL. Are they just as evil since they go after violators of their IP as does the RIAA?
      I really thought it was about keeping your rights to privacy not piracy.
    • Re:This is sick (Score:5, Informative)

      by brontus3927 ( 865730 ) <edwardra3@gma[ ]com ['il.' in gap]> on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:32PM (#12423857) Homepage Journal
      With the exception of maybe 5% (2% who earn the rank of Eagle, and maybe 3% who care but aren't able to make it that far) of Boy Scouts, scouting is about being in a social club. There are over 100 merit badges, maybe 2 dozen relate to the core of scouting. The rest are things that started out as an opportunity to educate young people on technologies (like Computers and atomic energy), become horribly out of date because there isn't enough interest in updating them, and scouts (if they can find a leader certified to sign off on that badge) getting them to have a longer list of badges. When I was a scout in the 90's, my troop (which was an Eagle generating powerhouse, averaging 2/year in a troop with a membership ~30) more than half of the merit badges didn't have anyone qualified to teach them. I went to a jamboree to get my Computers merit badge, and the book had images of an Apple IIG!

      Below are the requirements for the Computers Merit Badge which was "updated" a few years ago:

      1. Give a short history of computers. Describe the major parts of a computer system. Give four different uses of computers.
      2. Do the following:
        1. Tell what a program is and how it is developed.
        2. Give three examples of programming languages and what types of programming they are used for.
        3. Describe a source program and an object program.
      3. Show how the following may be stored in computer memory: text, numbers, pictures, and sound.
      4. Do THREE of the following:
        1. Use a database manager to create a troop roster, providing name, rank, patrol, and telephone number of each Scout. Sort the register by rank, by patrol, and alphabetically by name.
        2. Use a spreadsheet program to develop a weekend campout food budget for your patrol.
        3. Use a word processor to write a letter to parents of your troop's Scouts, inviting them to a court of honor. Use the mail merge feature to make a personalized copy of the letter for each family.
        4. Use a computer graphics program to design and draw a campsite plan for your troop.
      5. Do TWO of the following:
        1. Visit a business or industry that uses computers. Study what the computer accomplishes and be prepared to discuss what you observed.
        2. Use a computer attached to a local area network or equipped with a modem to connect to a computer network or bulletin-board service such as Prodigy, CompuServe, or America Online. Send a message to someone on the network or download a program or file from the network.
        3. Use a general-purpose programming language to write a program application of your choice, subject to approval by your counselor.
      6. Be prepared to discuss several terms used in each of the following categories:
        1. Input/output devices
        2. Storage media
        3. Memory
        4. Processors and coprocessors
        5. Modems
        6. Networks
        7. Electronic mail
        8. Robotics
      7. Be prepared to discuss various jobs in the computer field.
      8. Is it permissible to accept a free copy of a computer game or program from a friend? Why or why not?
      9. Describe several ways in which you and your family could use a personal computer other than for games and recreation.
    • Re:This is sick (Score:3, Insightful)

      by netruner ( 588721 )
      Before I get started, I need to say that I have had a college course that extensively covered IP issues and also was an Eagle Scout.

      The thing that I find problematic about this is that the adult world hasn't figured out how much creedence to give IP rights, yet the group in question appears to be indoctrinating the youth. Understanding that Scouting in other countries can work differently, the core values should remain the same. I seem to remember something in scouting about being an upstanding, law-ab
      • Re:This is sick (Score:3, Insightful)

        by ScentCone ( 795499 )
        adult world hasn't figured out how much creedence to give IP rights

        What? It's completely unambiguous, and there are very clear-cut laws on the books. You Cannot Rip People Off - what haven't we figured out about that?

        What you probably mean to say is that the part of the population that doesn't like to pay entertainers for their work haven't yet brainwashed enough eventual voters into thinking that they have an entitlement to free movies and music, and thus we haven't yet changed the laws to make it so
        • Re:This is sick (Score:5, Insightful)

          by An Onerous Coward ( 222037 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @05:38PM (#12425385) Homepage
          You seem to be going out of your way to be inflammatory. Not everyone who complains about draconian IP laws are simply out to score free stuff, and--despite your comments--you know it.

          The laws are not always clear cut, and where they are clear cut, they do not always represent the best interests of fairness, justice, or society as a whole.

          Do you think it's right that a documentary maker loses the right to use a shot because it happened to catch a few seconds of a TV playing "The Simpsons?" Do you really think our society is served by keeping "The Grapes of Wrath" under copyright until 2038? What about the literally millions of copyrighted works that no longer have value to the copyright holder, or for whom the copyright holder can't even be found? Should we make sure those works can't be copied either, until those copies which do remain have crumbled into dust? Should researchers face criminal prosecution merely for discussing the copyright protection measures of a new gadget?

          If these are the sort of fair laws that you want Boy Scouts to be taught to respect and obey, then your endeavor is doomed. Even a twelve year old can see that "IP law" is just a big, corporate-sponsored power grab, and any attempts to teach them to respect those laws will only result in their losing respect for all laws.
        • What you probably mean to say is that the part of the population that doesn't like to pay entertainers for their work haven't yet brainwashed enough eventual voters into thinking that they have an entitlement to free movies and music, and thus we haven't yet changed the laws to make it so.

          You can't "rip-off" a dead person by making a copy of their book. If anything I think most authors would prefer that their work was available forever, instead of deleted from history. In any case the author's wishes d

        • You, dear sir, are a complete idiot.

          It is indeed perfectly reasonable to pay ENTERTAINERS for their work. It is not reasonable to pay some bloody cartel which fights tooth-and-claw against any form of distribution medium which they do not control and profit from. Personally, I don't buy CDs, because I think it is wrong for the ENTERTAINERS to get a few pennies out of the twenty dollars I spend to purchase an item that costs all of about five dollars to make and distribute.

          The ENTERTAINERS, at least the
    • Morals? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by mosb1000 ( 710161 ) <mosb1000@mac.com> on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:48PM (#12424053)
      I thought the Boy Scouts were supposed to morals and leadership skills to future generations. I think respecting other peoples IP falls under the morals category. They already teach you not to plagiarize other peoples work, which is really the same thing, so I don't see why you find this so upsetting. I suppose next you were about to complain that they teach kids not to cheat on tests.
  • The Badge (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Artax ( 877602 )
    Really at the end of the day its just a badge. Sure it brainwashes kids to keep their intellectual property safe. Maybe if they keep the property then they will begin to think that the government can't interfere with their own intellectual property. This would be a huge step forward in China.
    • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:17PM (#12423616)
      > > Those with tinfoil hats will surely be thinking of the youth in Orwell's 1984."
      >
      >Maybe if they keep the property then they will begin to think that the government can't interfere with their own intellectual property. This would be a huge step forward in China.

      slashdot 54550 reporting: lastpost 877602 doubleplusungood refs unevent "great leap forward". Rewrite fullwise upmod anteposting.

      If shinyvictoryhelmet wearing, plusoldposter unknow crimethink! PWN3D :)

      --
      Long live the Greater Eastasian Co-Prosperity Sphere Junior Anti-Piracy League!

  • Because, if you think piracy is bad here in the US...

    In Asia it's all but legal. The problem is so big that mitigating it will take a lot more than a few boyscouts earning merit badges in Intellectual Property.

    That is the most absurd think i've ever heard!!! Where is the world coming to?
  • What? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Omega1045 ( 584264 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:11PM (#12423529)
    Funny, my calendar shows May 3rd, not April 1st... this is just weird and scary.
  • BSA (Score:5, Funny)

    by ReverendLoki ( 663861 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:11PM (#12423531)
    You know, it used to annoy me that these [scouting.org] two [bsa.org] shared the same initials. Turns out it was just being a bit prophetic...
  • by MooseByte ( 751829 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:12PM (#12423536)

    "Hong Kong Boy Scouts Association has teamed up with the MPA to create an intellectual property merit badge."

    I think the "l33t skillz" merit badge is going to trump that one any day of the week...

  • fucking disgusting (Score:3, Insightful)

    by SirSlud ( 67381 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:13PM (#12423551) Homepage
    When a large industry has trouble enforcing rules it effectively set (speficially copyright terms and reductions on what constitutes fair use,) and begins to use Boy Scouts to 'spread the gospel'/'indoctrinate', you have to wonder if the law really is in the interest of the people.

    Yet another case of people serving the economy, as opposed to vice versa.
  • "Intellectual property merit badge." The Hong Kong Boy Scouts Association owes me a new LCD monitor, since my old one has just been sprayed with Pepsi.

    Jokes aside, "protecting" intellectual property isn't just something you can do once, but something that will occur over your entire life. When do they get it? How do leaders know that, once they've got this badge, they won't just go back to torrenting stuff? Honestly, this is the most ridiculous idea I've ever heard. What's next, a Coke merit badge (wh

  • I have no idea what the Hong Kong boy scouts are like, but here in the US you will not find a strong criminal element (ignoring little boy pictures) that emanates from the Boy Scouts. You don't preach to college students the benefits of higher education.
    • The real problem with P2P filesharing is that many people don't actually realize that it is illegal. I fix a lot of computers and I have lost track of the amount of times that I have mentioned to someone that they were guilty of distributing copyrighted material illegally only to have them look at me like a deer caught in someone's headlights. Some people understand that what they are doing is illegal, but lots of folks have no idea. These people thought that free music was one of the perks of having an

  • Wasn't that the name of Buckaroo Banzai's band?
  • Or.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Sanity ( 1431 ) * on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:14PM (#12423576) Homepage Journal
    Those with tinfoil hats will surely be thinking of the youth in Orwell's 1984
    Or in Hitler's Germany. Co-opting the youth is a common tactic for those that wish to exercise control over society. This is easy because the youth tend to be more gullible (sorry but its true, Pokemon anyone?).

    The key question is why the education systems we all pay for are facilitating this (although perhaps not in this particular case, many schools in the US have also been willing channels for pro-intellectual property propaganda).

    • Re:Or.. (Score:3, Informative)

      Kids also make the best soldiers since they lack the life perspective of adults (my theory). I was recently reading an article about Ugandan rebels who kidnap children from orphanages to retrain them into miniature killing machines. The truly chilling part was the brutal unquestioning efficiency with which the children carried out executions of prisoners.
    • Re:Or.. (Score:3, Insightful)

      by deanj ( 519759 )
      First, Godwin's Law invoked, so you lose the argument by default.

      Second, that's Hong Kong we're talking about, not the US, at least for this story. ...I agree with everything else you said though.

      The "Polticially Correct" speech that's forced in schools these days IS what was warned about in 1984.

      Those not saying the "right words" are accused of "thought crimes", or "hate speech" just because they used words someone else didn't like. So much for free speech.
  • The Golden Arcade (Score:3, Interesting)

    by HungWeiLo ( 250320 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:14PM (#12423577)
    Visitors to Hong Kong some years ago may remember the Golden Arcade. It was infamous for bootleg software, movies, video games, and anything else that resides on digital media.

    After that got closed down due to U.S. pressure, they started opening up shops in dark alleys. I remember going to one of those places one time. There was a guy who stood in front of the dark alley way (I think I was 12 years old at the time), and I swear there was a 3-carat diamond attached to each of the numbers on his Rolex (and every one of his teeth, it seemed like). Talk about heaven. Through all the cigarette smoke, I was able to make out things like NT5 alpha CDs and PlayStation games. Those were the days. Although it seemed like you needed pretty good English skills to open up one of these outfits, since most buyers were British or Australian.
    • Places like that still exist. They're just harder to find, and not only because of the police, but because of P2P as well.

      The good thing about Hong Kong is that education until 9th grade is compulsory, and English is taught by default. So most people would be able to communicate in basic English, which is enough to work out deals.
  • by dR.fuZZo ( 187666 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:16PM (#12423607)
    And I already had problems telling the two BSAs apart...
  • Hmmm... (Score:5, Funny)

    by 0x461FAB0BD7D2 ( 812236 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:17PM (#12423619) Journal
    I know that Scouts learn by doing things, such as tying knots, building camp fires and so on.

    Does this mean they'll learn about IP by using BitTorrent, Exeem and so on? If so, about 70% of Hong Kong deserves that badge.
  • by pr0t0 ( 216378 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:17PM (#12423635)
    Apparently, you have to be able construct an FBI warning using nothing but your scarf, a pocketknife, and some damned-fine whittling.

    Please post yours below:
  • If the EFF offered its own course in Intellectual Property, would the Boy Scouts accept completion of that course as meeting the requirements for getting this merit badge?
  • In other news, (Score:2, Interesting)

    by DJCacophony ( 832334 )
    The organization has also announced new available merit badges in the following categories:

    - Fascism
    - Lawsuits
    - Falsifying evidence
    - Misinterpreting technlologies they don't understand
  • Little shits (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Lord Kano ( 13027 )
    Why in the hell would the scouts take a position on a politicized issue like this?

    This gives a whole new meaning to "Weblows" [mninter.net]

    LK
  • As an Eagle Scout, (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jockeys ( 753885 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:19PM (#12423668) Journal
    I feel compelled to say that this is utterly wrong. A scout is a lot of things. Trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent. But not "aware of copyright laws." I don't recall the Scout Oath containing anything about being a corporate shill for the recording industry; merely promising to do your duty to my God, my country, my community, and myself. This is absurd.
    • I don't think that camping is part of the Scout Law either, but the merit badge does exist. And I fail to see how stamp collecting keeps one morally straight, mentally awake or physically fit.
      • You try licking 30,000 stamps. 3 calories apiece, that'll keep you up all night and you're gonna have to be quite an exercise bug to get that weight off.

        And with those impressive tongue muscles, you might as well stay morally straight because the women are gonna LOVE you....

        Then again, maybe stamp collecting should be a girl scout badge...
  • by grumpygrodyguy ( 603716 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:20PM (#12423671)
    Those with tinfoil hats will surely be thinking of the youth in Orwell's 1984.

    Is it OK for those of us without tinfoil hats to think the same thing?
  • Personally, I can't think of anything better than training young people to rat out their friends and families, all the while standing up for the rights of IP owners like Disney. We don't want those poor Hollywood bums to go broke do we?

    Definitely Orwellian.
  • Does the Hong Kong Boys Scouts Association have a drifting and automobile customization patch?
  • 1984? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by tktk ( 540564 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:30PM (#12423830)
    Those with tinfoil hats will surely be thinking of the youth in Orwell's 1984."

    Orwell was an optimist.

  • by some1somewhere ( 642060 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:44PM (#12424010)
    As usual, the media distorts the picture.

    Actually, this "badge" is useless. The number of kids going around buying copy PS2 games, CDs, etc. is amazing in Hong Kong. I'd say over 99% of PS2 games, software, DVDs, etc. in Hong Kong are copies/counterfeit. No doubt, they'll just get the badge and continue on their merry way as usual.

    Counterfeit software and goods is a way of life and culture in Hong Kong, China, and many places in Asia. You have "Woman's Street", which is an ENTIRE long street dedicated to fake goods. You even have police patrolling the area to keep it safe from pickpockets! But they are never shut down. Go there to find your "LV" bags, "Dior" rings, and "Rolex" watches.

    In fact, now that they have made it safer to go to these places, MORE tourists are turning up. There are less seedy types and more goods now.

    So I really think this is a pointless exercise. Now that China and HK are working together more, even MORE copy stuff is going to HK. And with HK's famous low crime rate and focus on making money and business, it is the IDEAL place to get these kind of things: total safe, cheap, available everywhere.
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:48PM (#12424057) Homepage Journal
    Scout A: I'm working on the whitewater kayaking badge.

    Scount B: I'm working on the wilderness survival badge.

    Scout C: I'm working on the Intellectual Property badge.

    Scouts A & B: Whoa! Cool!
  • Just a question (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Sv-Manowar ( 772313 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:53PM (#12424117) Homepage Journal
    But who's this going to effect, the kids who go to Boy Scouts are more likely to be the ones who don't pirate films

    The kids who sit at home on Kazaa and doing stuff other than helpful 'community building' activites will be most of the people who pirate things. Nice targetting MPAA. doh!
  • similar in the USA (Score:3, Interesting)

    by delirium of disorder ( 701392 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @03:53PM (#12424118) Homepage Journal
    As an Eagle Scout who earned the "Computers" merit badge, I'm glad the Boy Scouts of America hasn't gotten this bad yet...However, the american computers merit badge isn't much better. It's quite outdated. The book pictures a 5 1/4-inch floppys and dot matrix printers as modern hardware. It also makes no refrence to GPL software including GNU/Linux. It implies software piracy is wrong but does not mention freedom and shareing as important values. Hopefully progress can be made. The free software movement is reaching out to scouting.

    http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/7813/ [linuxjournal.com]

    The BSA needs to respond.

  • by MaestroSartori ( 146297 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @04:00PM (#12424206) Homepage
    ...since surely the first step in changing unjustly-attained corporate sponsored IP law is educating people why it is such a bad thing in and of itself.

    "Copying a shitty CD will get me fined a billion dollars and raped in prison? That law sucks! Where do I sign up to change it?"

    Also, I don't know if scouts in other countries is much like scouts here in the UK, but we used to make our own music, perhaps they could encourage these kids to create stuff instead of stealing/copying-with-infringement (delete as applicable) the shit the corporate machine is spewing out.
  • by hyfe ( 641811 ) on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @04:33PM (#12424625)
    Partly offtopic, but I just have to say it:

    Boy scouts scare the shit out of me.

    Small children required to stand at attention, swearing oats they don't understand. Small children learning obidience to elders, to an organisation out of their parents control. Ever read about that anywhere? (this was a core element in italic/german fascism for the knowledge-impaired)

    Sure, the organisation is benign and all nice and stuff now, but will it stay that way?

    • The Scout Promise

      On my honour,

      I promise that I will do my best,

      To do my Duty to God and the Queen,

      To help other people at all times,

      And to carry out the spirit of the Scout Law.

      The Scout Law

      A Scout is

      Helpful and trustworthy,

      Kind and cheerful,

      Considerate and clean,

      And wise in the use of all resources.

      You're right, that's pretty scary. "Do my best"? I mean that's obviously training them to be corporate pawns. "Kind and Cheerful"? What sort of Commie trick is that?

      The people running scouts ARE
    • Small children required to stand at attention, swearing oats they don't understand. Small children learning obidience to elders, to an organisation out of their parents control.

      Scouting is entirely within their parents control, because nobody can sign up without parental permission, and the vast majority of the people running things are parents.

      You comment does apply to public school however, where parents truly lack control, and children are truly taught to love and obey the State.

      For me, scouting was
  • Scout's Honor (Score:3, Interesting)

    by mattr ( 78516 ) <mattr&telebody,com> on Tuesday May 03, 2005 @10:55PM (#12428334) Homepage Journal
    Now might be a good time to review what scouting is about according to this site [bsa13.com] showing the Eagle Scout ceremony. Sounds a lot like some stuff I've read at gnu.org about being thrifty, loyal to family and friends, helpful, well just about all of them.

    Maybe it would be a good time to make a Knoppix CD for scouts? Help them get the computing merit badge and maybe a few others? I loved scouting until I dropped out because of a shitty group and gave up my hopes for an Eagle, but you could do worse than use free software to help more geeks get merit badges and get Eagle Scout free software evangelists. Actually it would seem to be natural to use free software if you are going to limit copying to that which can be done legally.

    A Scout is TRUSTWORTHY: A Scout tells the truth. He keeps his promises. Honesty is a part of his code of conduct. People can always depend on him.

    LOYAL: A Scout is true to his family, friends, Scout leaders, school, nation, and world community.

    HELPFUL: A Scout is concerned about other people. He willingly volunteers to help others without expecting payment or reward.

    FRIENDLY: A Scout is a friend to all. He is a brother to other Scouts. He seeks to understand others. He respects those with ideas and customs that are different from his own.

    COURTEOUS: A Scout is polite to everyone regardless of age or position. He knows that good manners make it easier for people to get along.

    KIND: A Scout understands there is strength in being gentle. He treats others as he wants to be treated. He does not harm or kill anything without reason.

    OBEDIENT: A Scout follows the rules of his family, school and troop. He obeys the laws of his community and country. If he thinks these rules and laws are unfair, he tries to have them changed in an orderly manner rather than disobey them.

    CHEERFUL: A Scout looks for the bright side of life. He cheerfully does tasks that come his way. He tries to make others happy.

    THRIFTY: A Scout works to pay his way and to help others. He saves for the future. He protects and conserves natural resources. He carefully uses time and property.

    BRAVE: A Scout can face danger even if he is afraid. He has the courage to stand for what he thinks is right even if others laugh at or threaten him.

    CLEAN: A Scout keeps his body and mind fit and clean. He goes around with those who believe in living by these same ideals. He helps keep his home and community clean.

    REVERENT: A Scout is reverent toward God. He is faithful in his religious duties. He respects the beliefs of others.

Get hold of portable property. -- Charles Dickens, "Great Expectations"

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