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Old July 31st 03, 07:32 AM
Dwight Stewart
 
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"Mike Coslo" wrote:

You're right. I think that all should be issued
Amateur radio licenses at birth. The testing
requirements should be changed to "Utilization
Encounters" that no longer have test questions,
but rather non-competitive non-graded sessions
designed to enhance the self esteem of the
Amateur Radio operator. The different grading
of the tickets would no longer be based on
knowledge, but on how good the licensee feels
about themselves.



Well, responding in an equally sarcastic manner, you're perfectly free to
think that if you wish, Mike. However, I think we should have reasonable
requirements that are neither too simplistic nor too difficult. Those
requirements should address the realistic needs and goals of Amateur Radio
without attempts to use them to unfairly exclude others. In my opinion, the
current written tests address the realistic needs and goals of Amateur
Radio, while the code test does not.


Dwight, it all depends on what you mean by
unnecessary.



Necessary and reasonable, both words used throughout my comments, are
pretty much self-explanatory. If that doesn't satisfy you, read the
paragraph I wrote above.


CB'ers are on the air on HF. Many run power, illegal
or not. And no one has taken a test to do that.

This proves that * you don't need any test at all* to
successfully run a station at HF frequencies.



But can one do so safely and in compliance with the rules and regulations?
Of course not. And that is why the actions of that CB'er is illegal. And it
is also why that example is not applicable to ham radio.


And reasonable requirements can be anything from a
difficult test to no test at all. just depends on
who is doing the reasoning.



The FCC is doing the reasoning. We're simply agreeing or disagreeing with
that reasoning.


The ARS can be what we make of it. All is arbitrary,
and we have to start with an idea of how adroit we
want the typical member to be and go from there. From
EE to CB.



In that case, why stop with just excluding "dumbed down" people. There is
just as many reasons to write rules to exclude the poor. 'Those people'
can't buy good radios and the cheap radios owned by 'those people' can cause
problems on the ham frequencies. Clearly, we should write rules to get rid
of anyone who earns less than $50k. When you start down the path of
intentionally excluding others, it has the tendency to go much further then
you ever intended.


Dwight Stewart (W5NET)

http://www.qsl.net/w5net/