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#1
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According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an...
ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ |
#2
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![]() K4YZ wrote: According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an... ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ Steve, what's it to you? You have no understanding of MARS. |
#3
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![]() bb wrote: K4YZ wrote: According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an... ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ Steve, what's it to you? You have no understanding of MARS. Why do you want to utter yet ANOTHER mistruth, Brian, when you have so many others out here that you still have yet to answer to? As noted previously, Brian, I've been a member of each MARS at one time or another for different reasons, and have been in charge of an island-wide system on Okinawa for six months. My undersanding of the program, it's history, purpose and goals far exceeds anything you or Lennie the Lame can cut-and-past from internet URL's. Steve, K4YZ |
#4
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From: "bb" on Thurs,Apr 21 2005 4:50 pm
K4YZ wrote: According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an... ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ Steve, what's it to you? You have no understanding of MARS. The planet, the candy bar, or MILITARY Affiliate Radio System? :-) "Sorry, Hans, MARS IS amateur radio." Poor Stevie still thinks that hams started it and run it, too. The United States ARMY started what would become MARS before WW2. That was in an effort to "get civilian radio amateurs interested in MILITARY radio operations. The acronym was formed after WW2 when USAF joined the Army in the system. The last branch to join MARS was the USN (and USMC by extension). MARS has performed well in the 60s to 70s as a morale booster for the military personnel away from home, courtesy of many civilian MARS operators (who have amateur calls) placing telephone calls for them. However, MARS is definitely still a MILITARY op and the Department of Defense DIRECTS MARS. Stevie has been shown the link to the DoD page but he won't concede to going there and reading it. [he may think it is a "trick" by others to lead him to a different website] The DoD may be reached by direct, independent search available on all ISPs. Each military branch maintains their own MARS Hq. For example, the Army MARS headquarters is at Fort Huachuca, AZ. MARS is a regular participant in "Grecian Firebolt" radio networking exercises carried out by GOVERNMENT and MILITARY organizations having intrinsic radio networking ability. Exercises like those can and HAVE been done successfully WITHOUT any civilian volunteer participation. MARS is NOT part of the regular military communications scheme, only a sort of standby which exists primarily for inter-service morale boosting. Stevie keeps enobling himself by implications of relationship of his amateur status to that of MARS. This is akin to his implications of "participation" in the famous "seven hostile actions." :-) |
#5
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wrote:
From: "bb" on Thurs,Apr 21 2005 4:50 pm K4YZ wrote: According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an... ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ Steve, what's it to you? You have no understanding of MARS. The planet, the candy bar, or MILITARY Affiliate Radio System? "Sorry, Hans, MARS IS amateur radio." Poor Stevie still thinks that hams started it and run it, too. And here's yet ANOTHER lie that Leonard H. Anderson ahs to account for... I never said they (Amateurs) started it. You are welcome to try and locate the post wherein you insist I did. I didn't say they "ran" it. You are welcome to try and locate the post wherein you insist I did. I DID say that without the Amateur Radio service, MARS would not exist. This still remains true to this day. Stevie keeps enobling himself by implications of relationship of his amateur status to that of MARS. This is akin to his implications of "participation" in the famous "seven hostile actions." I'm not "enobling" myself for having shown that I was a previous MARS member, Lennie. Those are facts. It validates My knowledge and experience in MARS that substantiates my assertion that without Amateur Radio, MARS would cease to exist. You are welcome to list YOUR MARS callsigns, Lennie, and tell us all about YOUR experiences in the programs.... You have the callsigns and dates I was a member. You may verify my experiences at your leisure. Steve, K4YZ |
#6
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![]() K4YZ wrote: bb wrote: K4YZ wrote: According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an... ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ Steve, what's it to you? You have no understanding of MARS. Why do you want to utter yet ANOTHER mistruth, Brian, when you have so many others out here that you still have yet to answer to? No mistruth, Steve. You are the one who claimed, "Sorry Hans, MARS IS Amateur Radio!" Hi, hi! As noted previously, Brian, I've been a member of each MARS at one time or another for different reasons, Wow, I didn't realize that there were different reasons for being a member. I guess the different services have markedly different purposes and goals. and have been in charge of an island-wide system on Okinawa for six months. That would have been funny to see. Can you give us some details of your "In-Charge" time so that we can verify it? We'll Start with a copy of your USN MARS license, and a letter from the installation Commander assigning you such duties. Then we'll need corroborating information from your customers and subordinates. This will be fun! My undersanding of the program, it's history, purpose and goals far exceeds anything you or Lennie the Lame can cut-and-past from internet URL's. Steve, K4YZ We'll let you prove that with the above requested information. And none of this "Seven Hostile Actions" stuff. Best of Luck! |
#7
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![]() K4YZ wrote: wrote: The planet, the candy bar, or MILITARY Affiliate Radio System? You have the callsigns and dates I was a member. You may verify my experiences at your leisure. Heh, heh, heh. Care to share all that "in-confidence" information with the rest of us? |
#8
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![]() bb wrote: K4YZ wrote: wrote: The planet, the candy bar, or MILITARY Affiliate Radio System? You have the callsigns and dates I was a member. You may verify my experiences at your leisure. Heh, heh, heh. Care to share all that "in-confidence" information with the rest of us? Why? Was the post I made in this forum only a day or two ago not adequate for you too? Don't tell me you WEREN'T PAYING ATTENTION again, were you, Brain...?!?! Steve, K4YZ |
#9
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![]() bb wrote: K4YZ wrote: bb wrote: K4YZ wrote: According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an... ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ Steve, what's it to you? You have no understanding of MARS. Why do you want to utter yet ANOTHER mistruth, Brian, when you have so many others out here that you still have yet to answer to? No mistruth, Steve. COMPLETE mistruth, Brain. You are the one who claimed, "Sorry Hans, MARS IS Amateur Radio!" As noted previously, Brian, I've been a member of each MARS at one time or another for different reasons, Wow, I didn't realize that there were different reasons for being a member. I guess the different services have markedly different purposes and goals. They do, to some degree. That's why you have USMC and USN units with NMC MARS calls and not AFMARS calls, and vice-versa. and have been in charge of an island-wide system on Okinawa for six months. That would have been funny to see. Can you give us some details of your "In-Charge" time so that we can verify it? We'll Start with a copy of your USN MARS license, and a letter from the installation Commander assigning you such duties. Then we'll need corroborating information from your customers and subordinates. This will be fun! You need to wake up, Brain. Callsigns, dates and locations were given in another thread just within the last two days. Feel free to research my duty assignments during those times. My undersanding of the program, it's history, purpose and goals far exceeds anything you or Lennie the Lame can cut-and-past from internet URL's. Steve, K4YZ We'll let you prove that with the above requested information. The "above requested information" was posted in RRAP this week. And none of this "Seven Hostile Actions" stuff. That happened too. It's just not pertinent to this forum. Best of Luck! No...best of luck to YOU...explaining how you didn't see those callsigns, dates, locations I already gave... You're such a putz, Brain..... Steve, K4YZ |
#10
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From: "K4YZ" on Fri,Apr 22 2005 2:34 pm
wrote: From: "bb" on Thurs,Apr 21 2005 4:50 pm K4YZ wrote: According to his eHam profile, Toddie is an... ARMY MARS MEMBER! QUOTE I am a member of the following ham radio clubs... Army M.A.R.S. Christian County Amateur Radio Club (CCARC) UNQUOTE Good thing "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" doesn't apply to MARS, eh, Toddie...?!?! Steve, K4YZ Steve, what's it to you? You have no understanding of MARS. The planet, the candy bar, or MILITARY Affiliate Radio System? "Sorry, Hans, MARS IS amateur radio." Poor Stevie still thinks that hams started it and run it, too. And here's yet ANOTHER lie that Leonard H. Anderson ahs to account for... Tsk, tsk, tsk. The UNITED STATES ARMY said that THEY started MARS. I just repeated it. No lie at all. :-) Don't get too angry with those typos like "ahs." Or is that some kind of TN accent? I never said they (Amateurs) started it. You are welcome to try and locate the post wherein you insist I did. You ARE going to say that at the end of your "reply." I didn't say they "ran" it. You are welcome to try and locate the post wherein you insist I did. Tsk, tsk, tsk...YOU said "MARS IS amateur radio." Put that way, the only interpretation can be that MARS is "all" about amateurs. It isn't. I DID say that without the Amateur Radio service, MARS would not exist. This still remains true to this day. Untrue. MARS did NOT "begin" with amateurs but rather the U.S. military. The ARMY to be exact. MARS exists because the DoD says that MARS exists. Each major branch of the U.S. military maintains their own MARS headquarters. MARS continues to function with or without any civilian volunteers. That is referencible by documents outside of the ARRL. [the ARRL does not run MARS] I'm not "enobling" myself for having shown that I was a previous MARS member, Lennie. Those are facts. It validates My knowledge and experience in MARS that substantiates my assertion that without Amateur Radio, MARS would cease to exist. MARS was formed by a few members of the U.S. Army prior to World War II. The purpose of this small Army function was to get civilian radio amateurs interested in military communications and "possibly" contribute to the state of the art of military communications. That was a rather grandiose view of the few in that first MARS organization (under another name then). In the main, the remainder of the military (wisely) considered themselves and their mission to be of importance, especially in the growing hostilities around the world in the 1930s. There is enough referencible material on the history of military radio to show that there was LITTLE influence on military communications by the few amateurs who had volunteered to be a part of this Army experiment. The major part of the experiment was focussed on Public Relations, NOT on the civilian volunteers actually being any part of military radio (the military had enough paid civilian employees for that purpose). After World War Two, and just after the split-off of the Army Air Corps to form the United States Air Force, the new USAF combined with the USA and changed its name to the present MARS or MILITARY Affiliate Radio System. Eventually the USN joined in that. The role of MARS focussed now on the morale issues of the widespread military spread beyond our shores. The "phone patches" became a regular part of civilian volunteer efforts as well as the "radiograms" forwarded when voice telephone contact could not be made. That was an excellent service to our military at the time. By the 1980s the needs for any "phone patches" were dwindling rapidly. One reason was improved means of communications for military personnel off-shore. By the mid-1990s the DSN had spread to U.S. bases off- shore and was growing at an amazing rate. The DSN or Digital Switched Network has been described as "the government's own Internet" and functions the same. A major difference is that the DSN can connect directly to the Internet and it is possible for individual service members in many locations to communicate directly with their family and friends back home. Computers have become a part of military operations. The mission of MARS had shifted to become a sort of liason between the military and other government agencies. That served its original post-WW2 role as a sort of back-up system, an actual affiliate. An affiliate is NOT part of the day-to-day military communications system but can "work with it." That MARS can function on its own, without civilian volunteers, has been proven in the previous Operation Grecian Firebolt annual military-government exercises. You are welcome to list YOUR MARS callsigns, Lennie, and tell us all about YOUR experiences in the programs.... "Experience" is NOT a requirement. There is much history of MARS available to anyone who will bother to look beyond the PR of the ARRL. The Fort Huachuca, AZ, military website is a good place to investigate for information. Huachuca is mainly the Army's Military Intelligence School as well as a hub of military communications. Huachuca also trains UAV teams for unmanned aerial reconnaisance (what UAVs are designed and operated for) and other M.I. skills, including the center for the last morse code cognition (receiving only) schooling for the entire U.S. government. MARS (Army) Hq is a small part of the sum total of Fort Huachuca activities. As to actually "working with MARS," station ADA had one 1 KW FSK RTTY transmitter on tertiary priority for the MARS facility at Far East Command Headquarters in Tokyo in the early 1950s. First priority was to the FEC Commander's aircraft should he be aloft. Secondary was to back-up of either Anchorage or Seattle radio circuits, depending on traffic needs. I don't recall any time that the MARS facility at Pershing Heights was actually granted use of that one transmitter between 1953 and 1954; they had asked often enough but Control had the final say. By late 1955 the MARS facility was moved to Hardy Barracks and they got their own tri- bander and (perhaps) a better transmitter; Pershing Heights was given back to the Japanese (it was their old War Ministry) and the ADA transmitter site increased to 43 transmitters from 36 and relocated to Camp Tomlinson (a converted airfield) NE of Tokyo. MARS messaging had to use regular TTY routings, again in low priority, even being behind the Red Cross messages carried over RUAP (the TTY node name used then). You have the callsigns and dates I was a member. You may verify my experiences at your leisure. Irrelevant. MARS existed before Stevie existed. The DoD DIRECTS MARS. The major service branches all have their MARS Hqs and all supply information on their activities. The Army Communicator (from Fort Gordon, GA) and SIGNAL (from AFCEA, the military-civilian Armed Forces Communications-Electronics Association) both have published information in those periodicals. [archives are available for viewing at their respective websites] MARS is a *small* part of military communications, not in the mainstream. The AFRTS is much bigger and DOES have an extraordinary number of civilian volunteers (primarily from the entertainment industry). MARS works with SHARES, the SHAred RESources of the government insofar as government radio stations exist (2500 give or take, not part of AFRTS and not part of regular military communications nor part of regular civilian-government DSN, AUTOVON, AUTODIN. et al networking). As to "Mars," the planet, I've been privileged to view real-time (in solar system time terms) data and video arrive from the first successful Mars lander at JPL. A super-tense time (years before the little rovers) since that was a definite FIRST then. |
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