... Okay, I have no idea what you're having a problem with me about. Since you said scouting is gathering information about an area and I qualified your position (if you are 'everyone else') as it being useful to have information I think I'm within the general area?
I've had personal experience with a 'scout' character going on to become 'solo the encounters' character. It was a failing, of mine, as DM.
As for the getting struck by lightning it's because the particular encounter consisted of hags and some sort of stone they had, not so much because my DM hates scouting. Still, birds are not immune to encounters.
Because your summary was a gross twisting of the arguments involved. I mean, I'm the first person to say that mundane scouting is pretty much always a trap, and that in the vast majority of cases scrying is the way to go - unless you have a druid in bird form who can take a quick peek
(heck, knowing the lightning strike range is fairly useful by itself
) That said, in practice I agree that splitting the party is usually not a good idea - but my complaints against it are time based, not imaginary rules based.
But in any case, one of the points I was trying to make (and yes, this is my bad for not linking the thought in the original scouting post) is that it's important to keep in mind that the "how" you do something is far less important than "what" you want to do. So, mundane scouting is a trap, but you have a player that wants to be the guy that checks ahead - divination spec Wizard, or Unseen Seer, or if you have a crazy edge case like I was talking about earlier, then you can get even more specialized.
There's too much of people getting hung up on what they think is in a concept as opposed to what actually is (also a lot of people not knowing the rules, but that's another discussion) just as being a sneaky assassin type =/= rogue, or unarmed fighting =/= monk. It's fine to point out the actual traps, but it's just as much of a mistake to throw away good concepts as it is to allow bad ones.
So yeah, "scouting is a trap" - no way, totally wrong. "Some methods of scouting, including X, Y, and Z are traps" - sure, I can in theory get behind that.