The point just keeps flying over your head. What if someone kept
saying to you, if
you want a driver's license, you have to learn Egyptian Hieroglyphics
first?
Actually Jeff, you don't get the point.
Crap, why the hell can't any of you just concentrate and deal with that point
before you avoid it and jump to something else???
When you get the license for HF amateur operation, you get privileges that
include code.
No, you have the privileges to use code on VHF and UHF if you want to and don't
ever have to pass a code test. In case you are not aware, parts of those
bands are set aside for code as well.
Code proficiency is part of the requirement.
It was part of the requirement to get a technician's class license too, wasn't
it? But that was dropped, right? It would have been dropped all across
the board for every class of license, but the international agreement between
countries was the ONLY reason it had to stay with the HF licenses. Now that
the world finally got to vote on this, they did away with the requirement.
The requirement is NO LONGER. Other countries were quick to remove the
requirement from their local laws, the US is just very slow at changing
laws. It will happen, it just takes a government like ours months of boring
useless discussion to come to an obvious conclusion. Have you ever watched
C-span? Then you would know how ****ed up our government is.
Code does happen
to represent a significant part of HF operation.
So does voice.
It has to do with demonstrating you know what you are doing in areas that
are pertinent to the license.
"Knowing what you are doing" is a technical reasoning since you are dealing
with equipment that can cause interference and even death if not used
properly. Not knowing how to send morse code properly is not going to
interfere with any other licensed services or cause anyone to die.
Now, try to answer this without avoiding it....
What if to get a driver's license, you had to learn Egyptian Hieroglyphics
first?
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