![]() |
On Sun, 27 Jul 2003 07:03:01 -0400, Spamhater wrote:
Don't open your mouth without facts which you have yet to provide any of in support of your lawlessness aim to sidestep a part you're apparently too damned lazy to do. He's an EXTRA class licensee...... The Twilight Zone..... -- 73 de K2ASP - Phil Kane |
D. Stussy wrote: I disagree that what is left means that any Technician or Novice has any HF privilege at all. The FCC rule still says that these licensees must show compliance with a non-existent regulation. Since they CANNOT COMPLY with a non-existent [international] regulation, they LACK the privilege. The compliance was met when it was required by international regulation (and it is still required by FCC regulations). According to your logic then no license class has any HF privileges since we met the compliance of an international regulation that no longer exists. So all license classes that took a code test are now non-compliant, so looks like we are all off HF until the FCC changes the rules. GEEEEESSSSHHHH!! |
D. Stussy wrote: On Mon, 28 Jul 2003, Jim Hampton wrote: Please re-read Phil's reply again. You missed the point as to each administration is free to do as they please. So far, the FCC has not seen to eliminate the Morse requirement. Period. If any entity has a choice, then how can it be called a requirement? The international requirement meant that all entities had to require a code test for HF privileges. Now the international requirement has been dropped, now each entity can decided for itself if it wants to require a code test for HF privileges, and until the FCC changes the rules, it is still required for U.S. hams. What is so hard to understand about that? |
On Mon, 28 Jul 2003 17:53:45 GMT, "Phil Kane"
wrote: You must really enjoy playing wannabe lawyer --- and missing the target. The issue of code and the ADA was hashed out by the FCC several years ago. Nothing changed. Phil from now on I will refer to you as Prince Jr. Listen Prince Jr., I can discuss anything regarding US law and express my opinions. Just because you are ARRL lawyer trying to force morse code down the throats of the disabled and helped destroy Amateur radio by keeping it a elite club doesn't mean I shouldn't voice my opinion. I have never said I was a lawyer or even a wannabe lawyer, good god I bet you are proud of your pals that are going after ten year old children trading muppet songs on the Internet. The reason disability recognition didn't change was because there was a international agreement that stopped the disabled who could not receive code from being exempt. Now that the international regulation has been changed to delete mandatory morse code proficiency the disabled should be provided a exemption promptly. (That is my opinion, is that OK Prince Jr?) Is it ok if I express my opinion Prince Jr? Or are you like the morons sending me carbon copies of complaints they are sending to Hollingsworth AKA "Prince" for daring to tell the FCC and the ARRL they are bone heads that have destroyed Amateur radio for selfish reasons. I mean I'm not the only person that thinks this about the ARRL, FCC and the morse code lunatics that have kept the ranks of ham radio so small it is ripe for the pickings by the commercial entities. The utilities will destroy HF with BPL and the rest of 50 Mhz and up bands that are worth billions of dollars will be sliced up in short order. All this time I was praying the ARRL and FCC would come around and I was a sucker to be a ARRL member for all those years. Then when it is time to dump the code the crazed bunch of "morse code or death" bunch sneak one in the back door. Now the cocksuckers want to drag out the death of morse code requirements for years. Who the hell was the ARRL board and staff saving the bands for? It certainly isn't for the average American citizen to become a ham radio operator. If you listen to ten meters it appears the truck drivers are now taking it over, so thank the ARRL and FCC for that. Thanks for sharing Prince Jr. I hope it was OK for this ham radio operator of twenty years to express his opinion. Should I include a legal disclaimer on all my post from now on? I hope you will not report me to the Oregon Bar Association. -- The Radio Page Ham, Police Scanner, Shortwave and more. http://www.kilowatt-radio.org/ |
On 28 Jul 2003 16:39:37 GMT, "Dick Carroll;" wrote:
He's just another refugee from the never-never land above 27 mhz who just can't wait a few more months to get his "due". Are lying or are you just displaying your ignorance? -- The Radio Page Ham, Police Scanner, Shortwave and more. http://www.kilowatt-radio.org/ |
On Mon, 28 Jul 2003 13:41:24 -0400, "Spamhater" wrote:
Get off your lazy ass and learn 5 WPM CW. Pal I can receive CW at 18 WPM and I even have a fancy certificate from the US government to prove it. -- The Radio Page Ham, Police Scanner, Shortwave and more. http://www.kilowatt-radio.org/ |
Keith ) writes:
I mean I'm not the only person that thinks this about the ARRL, FCC and the morse code lunatics that have kept the ranks of ham radio so small it is ripe for the pickings by the commercial entities. The utilities will destroy HF with BPL and the rest of 50 Mhz and up bands that are worth billions of dollars will be sliced up in short order. When was the last time you heard about amateur radio in your local newspaper or on your local tv stations? When your local ham clubs have an event, be it club meetings, Field Day, hamfest or something else that the public might like to know about, do they bother to get listed in the local events columns, and try to get mention on TV and radio, and even post to your local newsgroups? Or to put it another way, how did you find out about amateur radio? When I was a kid, I learned about it when there was an article in a publication intended for children. When I discovered hobby electronic magazines, amateur radio was still a part of those magazines, though it was right on the cusp of their disappearing. But when I could try for a license, I had to dig around to find a local ham club, going to the ARRL because I didn't know of any local clubs, and had no way of finding them. One of the failures of amateur radio is that it doesn't do a particularly good job of outreach. Notice there is a big difference between trying to sell something to fill seats, and trying to share something because it's important to you and you want others to know about it. Over the 31 years since I've been licensed, my impression is that amateur radio has increasingly disappeared from public view. Yes, there is the argument that ham radio has less and less relevance, but that just means people need to work harder at conveying thei importance of the hobby to themselves. Meanwhile, the licensing requirements have become less and less. About fifty years ago, you might say the halfway point of amateur radio, your FCC introduced the then-novel novice license, to make the entry requirements simpler. A simple test, a 5wpm code test, limited operating priviliges, and only valid for a year. Over the years, that was modified for less restrictive rules, and more priviliges. The US Technician license came out at the same time, and originally was only good for 220MHz and above. That too was modified tremendously over the years. Then the code was dropped for the technician class. Here in Canada, we had a no-code license a quarter century ago. But virtually nobody used it. Then in 1990, we got restructuring, and there was an entry level license that did not require a code test. So over fifty years, half of the time that amateur radio has been around, it has become increasingly simpler for people to join the hobby in North America. Yet, instead of doing a better job of outreach, the focus is always on making the license requirements simpler. Keep it up, and there will be absolutely no entry requirement. You think we need numbers to justify the bands, so you want to lessen entry requirements. But that may be a false path. Maybe we justify the ham bands because it is something more than a place to yak it up. Maybe the kids that use to come to ham radio aren't even hearing about the hobby in the first place. Maybe if they knew, it could be as appealing as it was to me when I was ten. Maybe like me, the code and theory tests are not impediments to joining the hobby, but a sense of accomplishment when they are passed. I was twelve, and went from 0 to 12wpm in four months, and I know I was always disappointed that I took the test (well, I had to go back a second month to pass the code test) in the last week of grade 6, because I was unable to boast to the kids at school. Maybe the need or lack of a code test isn't an issue to many people, because they haven't heard of amateur radio in the first place. Methinks you don't have a clue about the history of amateur radio. It didn't start when some regulatory body decided there should be a place for people to talk to their heart's delite. There were radio hobbyists almost as soon as Marconi spanned the Atlantic in 1901, when there were no rules and there wasn't even any use for radio. Those hobbyists played with this new thing, and in part helped to propel the field along. I'm not sure you could separate amateur from professional in those days. It was only once there started to be uses for radio that any rules were put in place. And amateur radio became a service in those early days by virtue of staking out a claim right from the start. Dilute the entry requirements too much, and what do you have to justify the bands, other than large numbers? But shift it back to where the test is not just an obstacle to overcome, and you may again make the hobby something that society in general benefits from. Michael VE2BVW |
Will somebody wake me up when this idiotic rant is over?
I just put the putz in my killfile. You may want to do so also. |
"Dick Carroll;" wrote in message ...
He's just another refugee from the never-never land above 27 mhz who just can't wait a few more months to get his "due". DICK, how is it possible that you could know that? |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:12 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com