Girl Scout Cookies .

I always buy a couple of boxes from someone in our neighborhood (she's a cute tiny little thing and she actually comes up to the door and does the selling herself. I won't buy from the parents who sell them for their kids.)

And I don't mind the price. I see it as a donation to the Girl Scouts...most of the money goes directly to them.

MMMM....Thin Mints. How bad can they be? I mean, THIN is right there in the name!}(
 
Another Thin Mint enthusiast. We had a sweet little demon, er ah, Brownie who is a neighbor and I remember pushing those things (myself and for both daughters), so I bought - she knocked on the door - most of the girls make their parent's sell them nowadays.

Lorrie - howling about the single serving boxes.
 
It's peanut butter sandwiches for me. :9 :9 :9 And the chocolate-covered peanut butter patties too. And the shortbread. And the thin mints. Shoot. Who am I kidding? Gimmee all of them!!! :7
 
We don't get GS cookies here. Our Girl Guides and Brownies sell cookies, but just the chocolate and vanilla sandwich ones and the chocolate mint ones. Someone from the forums sent me a few boxes of GS cookies two years ago and I can understand how they could be someone's downfall. I wish you all the best of luck!

And hey, if you need to get 'em out of your house, you can always send them to me! ;-)
 
I think I'm one of 4 people in the entire world who don't like packaged cookies, not even Girl Scout ones. Homemade cookies I can hear calling me from another state, but store bought ones just don't appeal. I would however, endure a long walk barefoot over tiny Legos (much more painful than hot coals, I'm sure) for chocolate.:p

Jonahnah
Chocolate IS the answer, regardless of the question.
 
Me too!! Homemade cookies are MUCH harder to resist. I can't remember the last time I had an Oreo or other store bought cookie. LOL @ walking barefoot over tiny Lego's for chocolate- ouch! ;-) I still have 2 boxes of Thin Mints in my freezer from *last* year!
 
<<I still have 2 boxes of Thin Mints in my freezer from *last* year!>>

WHAT??? Now that's just crazy talk!

I ordered four boxes - two Thin Mints, two Caramel Delights. They should be here Monday...between DH and I, I don't expect them to make it to Friday. :+
 
We have 11 boxes of cookies. 9 samoas, 1 thin mint & 1 short bread. So far, I haven't eaten any. I fear if I start with just one, I'll eat the entire box.
 
Dave- I love the Samoas x3 too! :)

This year I honestly avoided all the little Girl Scouts (but I wouldn't refuse if anyone had asked me!) which was easy being a college student with no children. However, one of my professors brought Thin Mints and Tagalongs to seminar last week. I just took a couple thin mints and passed the box along. Like in Office Space, "Just pass, Melton!" It's sooo much easier when they aren't staring at me when I open the cabinet! I do, however, keep emergency stock of homemade cookie dough in the freezer. I might have to have a double chocolate chip cookie this afternoon... Mwah ha ha!!
 
What if I just give them the money for the cookies and let them keep them? :p

I ease my guilt, but can still fit into my skinny jeans--well, I don't have any "skinny" jeans (those things are horrific looking with their straight, skintight, nasty legs-but thats another thread altogether).
 
I'm going to take a few boxes over the to no sweets thread and wreak my havoc!}( }( }( }( }( :9
 
You know what? I don't think we'd have problems with Girl Scout Cookies if they were available year round. We'd work them into our diets in moderation like we do cheesecake and Oreo's (oh, am I the only one to do that?).

But since Girl Scout cookies only come out this time of year, we buy a ton, eat a ton and buy a ton more. It's a conspiracy! ;0)
 
Got 8 boxes in this house. DS polished of at least one already. DH will eat them with coffee on the weekends.

Now I'm not even sure what I ordered - Tagalongs, Samoas? I know the Thin Mints and Shortbread. Guess I'll check the cupboard where I am hoping they will stay hidden away from me.

I am also OK if I don't start . . . <<<crossing fingers and toes that I don't start>>>
 
Why Girl Scout Cookies Must Be Banned

By Tom Purcell

The Girl Scout cookie season is upon us. That means one thing. The annual cookie sale must be banned.


How can we allow anyone, in these progressive times, to inflict empty calories on an already obese public?


How can we be so inconsiderate to diabetics and others who are unable to consume sugar?


How can we allow any organization, regardless of its cause, to use children to pimp products loaded with trans fat, the partially hydrogenated oil that Americans fear more than communism?


It is true that the Girl Scouts organization was founded in 1912 to help girls develop physically, mentally and spiritually. I know the annual cookie sale has become a tasty part of American culture since it originated in 1917.


But the fact is this: The annual sale is teaching girls TERRIBLE values.


It is teaching them raw capitalism — how to exploit the weak and the helpless. My own niece, an otherwise sweet and lovely child, knows I can't help but eat shortbread cookies by the row. I eat Thin Mints as though they were Tic Tacs. I down Peanut Butter Patties the way grizzlies dine on wild salmon.


I'm addicted. But rather than protect me from my addiction, she preys on me. She calls or visits just before dinner — when I am at my most hungry and vulnerable. She tells me about her troop's good deeds and how my order will fund even more.


The clever little manipulator always walks away with a sizable order. All Girl Scouts do. They probably meet in private to laugh about the helplessness of their victims — they laugh about the strong-arm techniques they use to part friends, family and neighbors from their hard-earned dough.


In the process, they are destroying our environment. More than 200 million boxes of Girl Scout cookies are sold every year — that's $700 million in annual revenue. Precious trees must be felled to farm the grains and sugars needed to produce them — trees that are essential to dissipating carbon dioxide.


What's worse, as those cookies are manufactured, packaged and shipped, more carbon dioxide is pumped into the air. That's right, the Girl Scouts are causing the Arctic ice cap to melt. The next time you dip a shortbread cookie into a cup of milk, the least you can do is remember the starving polar bears stranded on hideously small ice floes.


That's why the annual Girl Scout cookie sale must end.


Look, if the Girl Scouts want to teach girls how to market products and manage inventory and money, can't they be more socially responsible? Instead of selling cookies, why not sell low-energy-consumption light bulbs? Why not sell something that makes the girls aware of man's thoughtless destruction of our fragile ecosystems?


Better yet, instead of teaching the girls the principles of capitalism, why not teach them how to be government bureaucrats instead? America is moving toward European-style socialism. The careers of the future will be in government, not the private sector. Why not have the government produce a pamphlet on the harmful effects of cookies, then mandate that the girls develop a program to distribute it?


Sure, I know some people will criticize me for demanding an end to the cookie sale. They'll say that it really does teach girls useful business skills. They'll say that it's as much a part of American culture as baseball and apple pie — that we should celebrate it and enjoy it. They'll say that America has real problems and that I ought to focus on those rather than something as harmless as a lousy cookie sale.


Well, nuts to that. I urge you to write your senator and congressperson. If the Girl Scouts won't willingly stop foisting their cookie pox on the rest of us, we must use the might of the federal government to mandate a ban on their annual sale.


I just hope the ban goes into effect before my niece talks me into placing another order.
 

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