John Rowell can fondly recall memories from his days as a Boy Scout in the early 1960s, the adventures of wilderness camping and canoeing with his buddies in Troop 211 in Fargo. He can also vividly recall lessons in "citizenship in the nation, citizenship in the community and citizenship in the home" that were drilled into him, culminating in Rowell becoming an Eagle Scout in 1966.
Rowell has proudly kept his Eagle Scout badge in his home office in Moorhead, at least until last week, when he drove to the Fargo Boy Scout office and gave it back.
It was during President Donald Trump's outrageous, self-serving and mean-spirited (my words, not Rowell's) speech to the Boy Scout Jamboree that the scouting laws of "courteous," "kind" and "reverent" came back to Rowell. Egged on by Trump, many of the Scouts cheered or booed on cue, and to Rowell's dismay, scouting leaders did little if anything to stop it.
Rowell, a retired mail carrier who served in the Army reserves, didn't want to discuss the nature of Trump's speech because nobody had any control over it, likely not even Trump's speechwriters. But Scout leaders throughout the crowd could have controlled their Scouts simply by standing up, facing them and giving them the Boy Scout sign, which Rowell said is the recognized signal for quiet.
"It didn't matter what the speaker said, I identified it as an enormous failure of leadership by the adults who were there," Rowell said.
The behavior of many of the Scouts was a direct dismissal of the opinions and cultural values of other students around them, Rowell believes. "A Scout is supposed to be a friend to all and a brother to every other Scout.
"To cheer in a disrespectful way, and to boo a previous president or the losing candidate is against the very values of being a Boy Scout. You are to show respect to people at all times."
In his speech, Trump said Hillary Clinton "didn't work hard" in her campaign. Kids booed when her name was spoken. Trump bragged about his electoral success and criticized President Barack Obama for sending a video (a gracious tribute to scouting, in comparison) to the Scouts last year instead of speaking in person. He thanked the crowd — made up largely of children — for voting for him. Then, he again attacked the media with lies.