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Old November 30th 05, 05:58 PM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy
an Old friend
 
Posts: n/a
Default What Law is Broken?


Bill Sohl wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
wrote:
On 29 Nov 2005 14:53:19 -0800,
wrote:
Bill Sohl wrote:
"an old friend" wrote in message
oups.com...
wrote:
wrote:

(SNIP)

By the way, Docket 98-143 had 303 ADDITIONAL filings after
the twice-revised final end date of 15 Jan 05, the latest
being
made on 5 August 2005! :-)

Why does that matter?

becuase it isn't suposed to happen at least if it does they are all
suposed to have been mailed before the deadline
why does it seem you don't care about the
rule of of law when it suits you

There's no violation of law if someone sends in a late comment.

sure is


There's a violation of law if someone sends in a late comment??
What law is violated if someone sends in a comment after the
deadline?


Jim is right. Anyone can send the FCC comments, messages,
etc at anytime. The sending or submission of a comment outside
the comment period is NOT a violation of the law.


strawman

never said the sending of a late coment is crime

I said for the FCC to consider to violate the concept of the rule of
law

it flouts the intent of the craetion fot he legal framwork that is
supposed to guide these proceedings

It is part of the road to chaos

The only
violation of law that could be in play then is IF and only IF the
FCC accepted and integrated the comment into the FCC
proceedings...BUT, even then I suspect if anyone complained
that the courts would take a less than hard-line stand regarding
post deadline comments.

Missing the deadline simply means FCC isn't required to consider
the comment.

it means the FCC SHOULD not and I think is legaly barred form
considering it


That's not the same as breaking a law.


Of course the FCC could read a post deadline comment and
consider it in their braod internal review process and never
make reference to it in a follow-up R&O. Who outside
the FCC would even know?

(SNIP)


the result was ripping the guts out of the ARS by killing the HS
clubs and making it rough to start one merely shows how
out of touch the ARRl was even then


How did incentive licensing affect highschool radio clubs?


I'm curious about that conclusion/result too.


obvious realy

something killed them about the same time

also the restriction of HF that result make them obviously unattractive
even today the presense of the morse code test has made the efforts of
a gruop of teachers to gte a new club off the ground (with uqipement
left the schoool by a late ham ) the kids simply aren't interested
Morse Code as entry requirement


Cheers,
Bill K2UNK