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![]() "Jason Hsu" wrote in message om... Until the ARRL proposal came out, I had never heard anyone propose automatic upgrades of Technician licensees to the General class. Now that this proposal has come out, many people are defending this part of the proposal. Sure is bunkie! Ain't it just grand? I realize this might sound radical, but I believe that the current licensing system, for the most part, is OK. The only change that I strongly believe should be made is eliminating the 5 wpm Morse Code exam for all license classes, including Amateur Extra. Until the ARRL proposal came out, the Morse Code exam was the main controversy. The proposed automatic upgrades from Tech to General have now stolen much of the spotlight. That is because that is how the ARRL wants it to be!! The yankee-blueblood-old-boys-club in Newingtion has finally admitted that the stats for HF operators has been on a steady decline since the mid-80's. All the new op's have been getting on 2 Meters and 440 FM so they can talk to their friends during morning and evening drive time. They have no interest whatsoever, for the majority of them, to "upgrade" to TRADITIONAL HF mode of operation because the *mistique* and *unique* ability to have in your private home a radio that you can talk to the other side of the USA or into Europe. Not any longer! Today a teenager with a Dell computer and a DSL connection can conduct live chat and/or video with their friends across town or across the country or across the world. And they don't need any unsightly antennas, limited propagation or other things to hinder them...plus it's also much cheaper than ham radio. (besides...from a generational perspective, what kid or teenager wants to converse with a bunch of 60+ something year-olds on HF radio?) Face it boys. The REAL REASON this is being done is the ARRL ***knows*** that within 10-15 years, most of the current hams who use HF will be DEAD OF OLD AGE AND OR IT'S COMPLICATIONS THEROF. Along with that the subscription rate for QST (..and CQ Magazine also) is steadly declining each year. Ham radio is on it's death bed boys, the sooner you admit it, the better you'll feel. We have *nothing* to offer the current youthfull generation but a pile of obsolete technology which they not only have no interest whatsoever in, but look upon the same and it's current users as being both eccentric and wierd. As one 13 year old said to me at a ham radio demo last year: "What do I want with just a microphone and a speaker? I can video conference with my friends online at once and swap music from home". The next generation has spoken boys! Ham Radio is OBSOLETE. That is the root cause of the problem issue. Ham radio will be DEAD in 20 years just like the automobile replaced the horsebuggy. |
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