Leo  wrote in message .  ..
 On 12 Jan 2004 09:15:19 -0800,  (N2EY) wrote:
 Leo  wrote in message .  ..
  Jim,
 
  Personally, I feel that it is indeed unfortunate that you do not see,
  or will not admit to, your disrespectful treatment of Kim,
 
 [callsign deleted]
 
 Your opinion noted, Leo. However, after much consideration, I do not
 consider my omission of Kim's callsign to be disrespectful. YMMV.
 As stated before, it wasn't your omission of Kim's callsign that was
 disrespectful, it was the context that it was done in - omitting hers,
 but leaving everyone else's intact.  Repeatedly.
 As you are aware.
I am aware that you preceive it that way. Are you aware that no disrespect
was intended?
  Your statements in defense of your conduct are based entirely upon
  circular logic, rationalization, contradiction and denial - indicating
  that you are not prepared to accept responsibility for your actions
  towards a fellow ham here on the group.
 
 Basically what you are saying is that I should accept Kim's callsign
 as appropriate for the ARS, and use it here, because:
 
 1) FCC issued it
 2) She asked me to
 3) *You* don't 'have a problem' with the callsign, and therefore *I*
    shouldn't, either.
 No - I said that Kim's callsign IS a valid one, accepted by the FCC
 for use in the ARS.
It's a *legal* one. No one disputes that.
 You can dislike it, revile it, be insulted by it
 - whatever you choose to do.  But, you must respect the fact that it
 is a valid amateur callsign - because it is! Just like yours, issued
 officially by the FCC.
I did not ask for this specific callsign. Kim asked for hers.
 Jim, you aren't the guy who gets to determine what is or is not
 appropriate for the ARS.
Not true!
We *all* have a say in what is and is not appropriate for the ARS. And that
includes me.
 That role belongs to the regulatory authorities.
And to all of us hams.
 Whatever your problem is with this particular call, it
 is between you and the FCC - not us!  If they declare that it is
 inappropriate, then it will be withdrawn.  If not, it stays. Whatever
 it is - it's their decision - not yours and mine!
That's only true as far as the issuance of a callsign. Not its use.
 As you are aware.
 As I have stated before, no disrespect was intended. But I am not
 going to use Kim's callsign in my posts, because I think it is
 inappropriate for the IRS.
 In your opinion, Jim - not necessarily the opinion of the FCC, or many
 members of the ARS.
I'm not telling them not to use Kim's callsign.
You are telling me I *must* use it.
Not gonna happen.
 However, no one is trying to say that you must
 use Kim's callsign in your posts - the issue is with your intentional
 exclusion of only her callsign from your list!
Which is the same as saying I *must* use it!
 As you are aware.
 
 You can use it in your posts all you want. So can Kim. I won't try to
 impose my standards on others, even though they try to impose their
 standards on me.
 No one is attempting to impose standards upon you, Jim.
Yes, they are.
 The message
 was (quite clearly) that it is inappropriate and disrespectful to omit
 just this one callsign from the pool, while leaving all others intact.
 As you well know. And as clearly stated in previous posts.
 As you are aware.
"inappropriate and disrespectful" by whose standards?
Answer: YOURS!
 [Kim a licensed radio amateur]
 
  told you straight up that she felt disrespected by your actions.
 
 I have felt disrespected by her action in choosing that callsign.
 I told her that straight up a long time ago.
 Not sure I understand why you would feel personally disrespected by
 Kim's choice of callsign, Jim - I don't imagine that she did it to
 offend you personally.
She didn't. But that was my perception. And to paraphrase Kim: 'that's the
perception that counts'
 You are of course free to express your opinion regarding this issue,
 however - but to do so in public isn't always a wise choice.  Would
 you walk up to someone in a crowded mall and tell her exactly what you
 thought about their skitr being too short?
Depends on who it was.
 Of course not - that would
 be impolite.  And not too smart,  perhaps - she might smack you!  
What if it was my teenage daughter? (Not saying I do or do not have one).
 Some opinions are best kept to one's self  
And some are best expressed rather than repressed.
  A simple apology to her would have been appropriate.
 
 I apologize if my posts have upset anyone. That was not the intent.
 But I will not compromise my standards on this to avoid hurting
 someone's feelings.
 
  The right thing to do.
 
 In your opinion. Mine's different.
 Compromising standards isn't the issue, Jim.  As you are aware.
No, it's *exactly* the issue. To use Kim's call here would compromise my
standards.
 If you had changed your poll to list everyone by their first name,
 would that have compromised your standards?  Of course not.  It would
 have created a Level Playing Field, and caused little fuss at all.
It would have caused confusion because there are several people with
the same first name here.
 It would have removed the opportunity for you to try and punish Kim
 for her poor choice of callsign, though - say, you weren't trying to
 do that, were you?
Nope.
 Of course not - your standards are too high for
 that......aren't they?
Yep.
  Jim, you have been a frequent victim of attack and insult here
  yourself - frankly, you should know better.
 
 Where is the insult in not using a word or phrase I think is
 inappropriate?
 As stated above, and in previous posts - it is a situational thing.
 For example, yelling "Hey, Dick!" to a friend sitting over at a bar is
 quite appropriate.  Yelling "Hey, Dick!" to some biker sitting at the
 bar is not.
What if that's the biker's name?
 Same phrase - totally different intent.  Context is
 everything!
 As you are aware.
Yet yelling both phrases is *legal* - although not always
advisable or appropriate.
And in the context of amateur radio callsigns, I think Kim's choice
of callsign is inadvisable and inappropriate.
Your own logic proves it.
  Insulting a fellow amateur publically, then denying and justifying the
  act with a litany of self-serving rhetoric.
 
 I don't see it that way at all.
 
  Do you believe that these
  actions, your actions, are in the best interest of the Amateur
  service?
 
 Yes. You may disagree, but I will not describe that disagreement
 as "prejudice", "censorship" or "self-serving rhetoric".
 What part of this statement are you having trouble with, Jim?
The words ""prejudice", "censorship" and "self-serving rhetoric", for a start.
They are inaccurate
 Definitions (and specific usage within the thread):
 Prejudice: "an opinion formed beforehand" (your opinion that the
 callsign
[inappropriate callsign deleted]
 is inappropriate to the ARS)
It wasn't formed beforehand. It was formed only after I encountered the
callsign and its owner here, and considered all the issues.
Therefore, it's not prejudice.
 Censorship:  "the supression of something considered objectionable"
 (like the intentional omission of just one callsign in a list,
 perhaps?)
I use the word "inappropriate", not "objectionable". And I did not
"suppress" it - I just won't put it in a post of mine.
Therefore, it's not censorship.
 Rhetoric: skill with language - (ahem)
The phrase was "self-serving rhetoric", not just the word "rhetoric".
AHEM.
  I suspect that few here join you in that belief.
 
 Doesn't matter.
 It certainly should!
So you're saying the majority opinion should rule? What if
the majority says it's inappropriate?
 Your quote below is quite appropriate. At times, Dr. King
 held standards and beliefs that were not popular. His adherence to those
 standards and beliefs was considered "insulting" by some. Should he have
 listened to them, or followed his conscience?
 Dr. King was a champion of equality and equal rights - a mission which
 cost him his life.  He was dedicated to ensuring that people were
 treated equally, regardless of the "personal standards" of those who
 felt that they were not entitled to equal treatment.
Equal rights under law. Equal opportunities. Not equal results. Not
an abandonment of standards.
 Do you treat everyone equally, Jim?
I treat them appropriately. What is appropriate for an adult is not
appropriate for a child. To treat them equally could be very unsafe.
 Even when you have a strong bias
 against some characteristic of theirs that you find objectionable?  No
 matter what?
The only bias I have is in my Southgate Type 7.
 I'd refrain from drawing parallels to Dr. King until you can state
 that unequivocally. Without prejudice.
I state without prejudice that I don't have the bias you accuse me of.
I have standards that I adhere to.
 
  "The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of
  comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and
  controversy."
 
 Rev. Dr.
 
  Martin Luther King, Jr.
 
 And at this 'time of challenge and controversy', I say that Kim's
 callsign is inappropriate to the ARS, and I will not repeat it
 in my posts. No insult is meant by this action. But it will not
 change.
 Once again, no one is forcing you to use the dreaded callsign in your
 posts.  Again, Jim, the issue is singling out one individual because
 there is something that you don't like personally!  As you well know.
 One's principles and beliefs, however righteous and sacrosanct, do not
 convey the right to treat others disrespectfully.
Some people said that when people organized marches and protests against
things that violated *their standards*, they were acting disrespectfully.
 To return to the quotation from Dr. King - in this time of challenge
 and controversy, someone might choose to admit that they was wrong in
 singling out one individual due to personal opinion, and revise his
 list to indicate equal respect for the status of all participants.
 Someone else might choose to twist the words and concepts around ad
 infinitum to justify their actions. Still another would take the moral
 high ground, and justify their actions based on rigorous personal
 standards and ideals.
 Which of these represents the Right Thing To Do?  I know.
And by saying you know, you are doing exactly what you describe.
 So do you, Jim.
 I don't use the term "friend" to describe Kim, because she reserves
 that word for a very select group, and I respect that choice of hers.
 
 But I will say that one of the characteristics of a true friend is
 telling the truth as the true friend sees it, even if it is not
 what someone wants to hear, and even if a person may get their
 feelings hurt or feel insulted by that truth.
 An excellent homily, Jim - but with a fatal flaw.  True friends would
 conduct this level of personal information interchange only in
 private, and with compassion, sensitivity and dignity.  A true friend
 would not choose to do that in a public forum, would they, Jim?
Some would. I did. So did Kim, and so have you. And while I respect
Kim's use of the word "friend", I would say that the honesty and openness
here  - even in disagreement - are the actions of "true friends".
73 de Jim, N2EY