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Old August 17th 03, 03:25 AM
Dave Heil
 
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Brian wrote:

Dave Heil wrote in message ...
Brian wrote:

Dave Heil wrote in message ...
Brian wrote:

Dave Heil wrote in message ...
Brian wrote:

Dave Heil wrote in message ...


Please quote that "may share space" FCC document.

Please quote the "Farnsworth Exam at 13-15wpm is the same as the Morse
Exam at 5wpm" FCC document.

That's totally irrelevant to the discussion at hand.

Why?

...because the Farnsworth method was not under discussion. It is
irrelevant to the request made of you.

I thought the existence of FCC documents were now part of the
discussion. At least you broght it up.

Tell you what David, in the future put your comments that are not open
for discussion in brackets [xxx].

OK?


It'd be easier if you just stuck to the matter being discussed.


FCC documents that don't exist?


We were discussing one of those--the one which uses the words "may share
space".

Farnsworth exists as the de facto "code" exam, even though the
FCC documents specify Morse Code. Yet the FCC documents DO assign the
exact same priveleges to Carl that they do you, yet you insist on
arguing it.

What doest it have to do with the FCC's "may share space" document?

Part 97 addresses your and Carls priveleges.


It certainly does.


You implied that it didn't.


No, Brian. Your attempts at reading between the lines often gets you
into trouble with understanding what has actually been written.

So? We weren't discussing installing towers within
a certain distance from an airport but that's in Part 97.


Yes, it is. Do you live near an airport?


We weren't discussing that.

That would make you a fool.

I'd guess the fool to be one who is asked about a regulation about
"sharing space" and responds with some nonsense about the Farnsworth
method of learning morse.

You don't believe in sharing space which the FCC says you must share
in a document called Part 97.


I've never stated that I don't believe in sharing space.
That's something you've tried to establish.


That's something that you implied, with "he may not."


Incorrect, little electrolyte. If I write "It may rain or it may not",
the words do not imply that I don't believe in rain.

Dave K8MN