Guest Post by Morbo
As the Carpetbagger mentioned on Thursday, the city of Philadelphia has denied the Boy Scouts access to a building where the Scouts have for years enjoyed a sweetheart rental deal.
The Scouts have been meeting in the municipal Beaux Arts Building since 1928. They lease it from the city for the token sum of one dollar a year. They won’t be meeting there any more. The city has decided it does not want to subsidize a group that discriminates.
Most of the talk about the Boy Scouts and their discriminatory policies centers on homosexuality. If you’re gay, you can’t be a Scout leader. They’ll even kick out a young man who has been involved for years if he emerges from the closet while in a leadership position.
That’s abhorrent. But I want to take a moment today to focus on the other people the Boy Scouts discriminate against: atheists, agnostics, humanists and other religious skeptics. Although often overlooked, this form of discrimination by the Scouts is equally obnoxious. Yet I sometimes get the impression that if the Scouts would drop their anti-gay policies, most people would assume everything was cool.
Our Constitution guarantees religious freedom. By necessity, this must also include the right not to believe. It should be obvious that you can be a good citizen, a moral person and a patriotic American and not believe in God — although some of the public opinion polls I’ve seen show that a distressing amount of people have trouble grasping this concept (including, apparently, Mitt Romney).
Thankfully, our rights are not determined by polls (yet).
There was a time when most people encouraged, or at least tolerated, other forms of religious discrimination. Jews could not stay in certain hotels, join certain social clubs or get their children into some posh private academies.
Those prejudices fell some time ago. Indeed, they are even illegal now. They were fundamentally wrong, and we are a better nation for having discarded them. When are we going to ditch the last prejudice and admit that it’s OK to be an atheist?
There’s one last thing I’d like to say to the Boy Scout leadership about this: You could learn a lesson from the Girl Scouts. They used to require a religious oath. A few years back, they made it voluntary. A girl can still say the religious oath if she wants to, or she can use another that more accurately reflects her beliefs. It’s her call. The Religious Right threw a fit about this, but it does not seem to have had much affect on the organization.
If the Boy Scouts truly want to stand up for what’s best about America, they should give up their embrace of the last prejudice.