Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it weird that I love those peanut butter sandwich ones? Nobody else in my family will touch them. And they are jam packed in their little cookie sleeves in the box, so they are a good value, too.
Do-Si-Dos! I do, PP! Hurray, there are at least two of us. No one else in my family likes them either and I don't know why. The crunchiness and the peanut butter, yum.
Anonymous wrote:Boy scout troops get 70% of every bag of popcorn they sell
Girl scout troops get .40c for every box they sell
Do the math and see who is getting scammed
Anonymous wrote:How can Aldi sell girl scout cookies? Are they legit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Aldi Tagalogs and thin mints are sooo good
Do they only have them seasonally?
Anonymous wrote:The Aldi Tagalogs and thin mints are sooo good
Anonymous wrote:Becsus this bodes all cost the same (except for the gluten free and the s’mores), the ones that are more expensive to bake have fewer cookies per box.
And to respond to PP about the 50 cents, that’s incorrect. Cookies and packaging cost $1. Of the remaining $3, $.70 goes to the individual troop. The other $2.30 is split between the Council (which, in this area, covers the great DC area) and the Service Unit (which usually covers a couple schools). The Service Unit uses the money to subsidize things like camping trips and the Council uses it for scholarships, to maintain the many GS camps, and for stuff like the program kits (eg, telescopes that can be checked out by troops for stargazing programs, etc.)
It’s not like MLM because it’s not a pyramid scheme. As far as fundraisers go, I find it less bothersome than the overpriced Boy Scout popcorn, the wrapping paper stuff, and the fancy balls that charities throw were they spend as much as they take in so that people can go someplace in formal wear “for a good cause.” But that’s just me.
Anonymous wrote:Is it weird that I love those peanut butter sandwich ones? Nobody else in my family will touch them. And they are jam packed in their little cookie sleeves in the box, so they are a good value, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course they are, and not just for that reason.
The cookies taste bad, because they're not made with great ingredients (pure butter, please).
And girls are pressured by certain troupes and parents to sell those awful things.
Parents then annoy everyone in their circle by trying to make sales.
It's really sexist to expect girls to sell COOKIES when boy scouts aren't tied to that tradition.
Um...
The boys sell popcorn.
You are looking for outrage where there is none.
The outrage ia in the hobbit sized cookies, not manufactured sexism.
No, for several reasons:
Boy Scouts are not inextricably linked to sales of one particular type of food as Girl Scouts are. You don't think: "Yeah! It's the season to buy BS Popcorn!" and post it all over your social media...
Popcorn doesn't have the feminine connotation that cookies do in people's minds.
Guys can make popcorn. Cookies: people think "mother in the kitchen". Understand that this perhaps doesn't happen that way in YOUR house. But it is the popular conception.
It's amazing that people here do not see what's right in front of their nose - that GS still has some trappings of misogyny. The cookies need to go, and be replaced by another, or a variety of different items.
Anonymous wrote: So it's a scam all the way around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Of course they are, and not just for that reason.
The cookies taste bad, because they're not made with great ingredients (pure butter, please).
And girls are pressured by certain troupes and parents to sell those awful things.
Parents then annoy everyone in their circle by trying to make sales.
It's really sexist to expect girls to sell COOKIES when boy scouts aren't tied to that tradition.
Um...
The boys sell popcorn.
You are looking for outrage where there is none.
The outrage ia in the hobbit sized cookies, not manufactured sexism.