Innocence Lost in Small Town Georgia

  1. Rachel says:

    Well said,

  2. Rachel says:

    Well said,

  3. Melissa says:

    When did we become a country of people who care more about their own social standing than about doing the right thing? I really just have no words.

  4. Melissa says:

    When did we become a country of people who care more about their own social standing than about doing the right thing? I really just have no words.

  5. Chris Lambert says:

    I lived in Gainesville, Georgia, and was a member of Troop 26 from 1983 to 1984 or so. Fleming Weaver never molested me. That said, Troop 26 had a tradition at the time of checking all the Scouts and Tenderfoot boys for hernias before any Boy Scout camping trips. I can only speak to what they did the year I was there. They had all us the boys stand in five or six lines before folding tables. Five or six Scout leaders sat at the folding tables and waited as each of us stepped up to whichever leader we got. Then each boy was asked to unzip his pants and allow the man to check him for a hernia. It was viewed as a sort of right of passage. The really strange part is that the table was set up on the front lawn of a church and the church was right there in front of a busy highway, so that we all dropped trow with the sounds of traffic directly behind us. As I said, Fleming Weaver never molested me. What he did though was give me such a look of hate that day from his seat at the table. I don’t remember who checked me for a hernia, but I do remember the look Weaver gave me. The look was full of hate and anger and the recognition of my fear. I can’t articulate it any better than that.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.