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Old December 29th 06, 02:04 AM posted to rec.radio.amateur.policy,rec.radio.amateur.antenna
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Default Code Free "It's part of the dumbing down of America," according to CDC


wrote:
Stefan Wolfe wrote:

QRZ Search Results: There are 0 records matching +Stefan* +Wolfe*


I guess no one cares that Stefan come on here bitchin and moaning and
crying about the "dumbing down" of USA amateur radio, and he has no
apparent license.

How easily everyone gets fooled by these trolls.

SAN FRANCISCO: It may be the ultimate SOS.

Morse Code is in distress.
......
......
While the decision had been expected, some ham radio operators fear that
their exclusive club has been opened to the unwashed masses
- and that the very survival of Morse Code is in question.
......
The demise of the Morse requirement, however,


There has never been any "Morse Requirement." No particular mode is
mandated.


That's right. And there's no requirement to get on the air once you do
have a license.

could be a boon for ham radio
itself. After the FCC decision, demand for information
about radio licenses surged from about 200 in a typical weekend to about
500, according to the American Radio Relay League, an
organization representing ham radio operators.
......
"It's part of the dumbing down of America," said Nancy Kott, editor of World
Radio magazine


I suspect that Nancy is actually that grouchy Sterba, Kurt N.


I dunno. Kurt might be anybody.

and a field representative for the
Centers for Disease of Control and Prevention in Metamora, Michigan.


I thought the CDC was in Atlanta and World Radio was in 6-land?


You're right.

"We live in a society today that wants something for nothing."


The written exams are "nothing?"


That's exactly right. That's why it was so important to keep the Morse
Code exam, because the written exams are nothing.

A female in a mostly male radio world, Kott is one of about 660,000 licensed
ham operators in the United States


Another "first."


Well, I dunno.

and is the U.S.
leader of Fists CW Club, an organization that calls itself the International
Morse Preservation Society.


That would make it "IMPS." I thought it called itself "FISTS."


I guess no one wants to be called an "Imps."

... So true, Ms. Kott...


I'm not so easily convinced, Stefan.


Maybe Stefan has some other words of wisdom?

 
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