"John Smith" wrote in message
...
... oh, I love that argument!!! Let me see if I have it correctly,
either:
1) Women are too stupid for the technical fields.
How you managed to twist Mike's words to come up with this interpretation is
amazing. He neither said nor implied anything of the sort.
2) We are no worse than any other technical field about baring women.
He said nothing about barring women from technical fields. Again how you
managed to come up with this inverted interpretation is one of the mysteries
of the world. Women choose not to go into technical fields for their own
reasons. That includes hobby activities like ham radio.
ROLL!!!!!
John
Dee D. Flint, N8UZE
"Michael Coslo" wrote in message
...
wrote:
Phil Kane wrote:
On Tue, 14 Jun 2005 17:21:00 -0700, John Smith wrote:
... all the women I have ever tried to interest in radio... all have
declined doing anything towards getting a license... once they even see
a key and a code practice oscillator they look at me as if I am crazy
and ask, "You are kidding, right?"
Tell that to our friend Claire who is the NCS of the Beaver State
(CW) Traffic Net - high-speed CW. And she's no dummy - retired PhD
in a specialized field of the biological sciences.
. . . then there was the legendary traffic handler Mae Burke W3CUL who
was a neighborhood housewife . .
I can't imagine any person becoming a Ham because they simply want to
"chat with someone around the world".
In the first place most of my DX contacts are pretty terse, and don't
fulfill any "chatting needs". Not that I have chatting needs!
There certainly are women in Ham radio, and although a minority, they are
probably no more of a minority than women's representation in other
technical fields. This would mean that any problem is shared with those
other technical fields, and not a Ham radio specific problem.
- Mike KB3EIA -