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Laziness is no reason to destroy quality radio.
If you hate CW or are too dumb or lazy to learn it, your retard ass needs
to stick with scanners, shortwave, cell phones, and CB. We don't need you in ham radio. SC |
Laziness is no reason to destroy quality radio.
"DougSlug" wrote in
: Troll, troll, troll your boat.... Stick with listening to police, fireman, baby monitors, and fast food joints on a scanner, you're too lazy to be a good ham. "Slow Code" wrote in message ink.net... If you hate CW or are too dumb or lazy to learn it, your retard ass needs to stick with scanners, shortwave, cell phones, and CB. We don't need you in ham radio. SC |
crapthon goes on
To All,
I found that the " blocked sender " feature in Outlook Express is of tremendous help in all of the above groups. b.j. -- Reality is an hallucination brought about by the lack of GOOD BEER ! |
crapthon goes on
The trouble with a code is that it is designed to keep people out. Once
you've learned the 'secret' code, it makes you feel that you have something that you, and a select group of others can participate in. Once you're up there, see how quickly you pull the ladder up. Does a proficiency in CW make for a better operator? Yes, in a way. It shows a studious interest in the hobby and is a worth achievement but does it make a more courtious or interesting operator? Certainly not, and this group is witness to that. "People who don't use code are lazy", What? Is that the only discipline available to allow someone to experiment with radio? Absolutely not! How about learning electronics and building your own equipment? Is that a lesser or a greater achievement? How about taking the hobby forward by progressing and leading cutting edge technologies? It was after all the amateur fraternity who brought this new fangled SSB phone mode. Were are at the dawn of a new digital age on all you people can do is look backwards and remain firmly rooted in the seventeenth century. Come on, wake up and smell the 21st century. |
crapthon goes on
Juan Skinner wrote: The trouble with a code is that it is designed to keep people out. Once you've learned the 'secret' code, it makes you feel that you have something that you, and a select group of others can participate in. Once you're up there, see how quickly you pull the ladder up. Does a proficiency in CW make for a better operator? Yes, in a way. It shows a studious interest in the hobby and is a worth achievement but does it make a more courtious or interesting operator? Certainly not, and this group is witness to that. "People who don't use code are lazy", What? Is that the only discipline available to allow someone to experiment with radio? Absolutely not! How about learning electronics and building your own equipment? Is that a lesser or a greater achievement? How about taking the hobby forward by progressing and leading cutting edge technologies? It was after all the amateur fraternity who brought this new fangled SSB phone mode. Were are at the dawn of a new digital age on all you people can do is look backwards and remain firmly rooted in the seventeenth century. SSB is a period stain on the panties of radio communication. I hate SSB. I prefer narrowband FM, or AM even, for quality and lack of annying squawk. Baudot RTTY is fun too. Make people build something to get the General license and make them show competence to where a two way or broadcast facility would hire them for the Extra. "The True Ham Builds!" |
Laziness is no reason to destroy quality radio.
"Slow Code" wrote in message ink.net... If you hate CW or are too dumb or lazy to learn it, your retard ass needs to stick with scanners, shortwave, cell phones, and CB. We don't need you in ham radio. SC You need to leave, it's not for you. |
Laziness is no reason to destroy quality radio.
"tools" wrote in :
"Slow Code" wrote in message ink.net... If you hate CW or are too dumb or lazy to learn it, your retard ass needs to stick with scanners, shortwave, cell phones, and CB. We don't need you in ham radio. SC You need to leave, it's not for you. I'll leave when there is no hope left. How are things in Lid-ville? SC |
kookathon
Slow Code wrote:
Paul W. Schleck wrote in : In .com writes: 73, Paul W. Schleck, K3FU Good luck with it Paul. I look forward to seeing Markie, Lloydie, Woger, Todd, Steve, Brian, Lenny, U-Know-Who, John, Robert, Jimmie, Scott and all CW test haters and lazy asses put in the dumpster. likely by then the test will be history but why would imagine it it willstop and the rest from posting IF pauls ssytem shuts down one side then the NG will die It will make usenet a much better place. why? And a real hams can save ham radio from the dumb it downers. real Hams have trying to save radio from the dumbed down code welfare type like yourself Thanks, 73 de Slow Code |
Laziness is no reason to destroy quality radio.
Slow Code wrote:
Paul W. Schleck wrote in : In .com writes: Where is Paul Schleck these days? Here it is 1 December and his "threatening" troika of "moderators" haven't yet appeared. I wonder if he has been appointed to a new cabinet post? You know, the "Department of Hamland Security"... :-) Holiday regards, LA The member of our team that is finishing the final draft of the Request for Discussion (RFD) agreed to a firm deadline of January 1, 2007. The team has reviewed, and agreed to, prior working drafts of the RFD, as well as submission guidelines for the proposed new newsgroup, so this is just cleanup and tweaking at this point. The submission guidelines were recently posted to misc.test.moderated. We will have an RFD to pass along to the news.announce.newsgroups moderator to crosspost to this newsgroup shortly after January 1st. Moving the discussion period to after Christmas is also desirable in order to have a bigger audience for the RFD, and give everyone ample opportunity to provide feedback free of holiday distractions and time demands. In the meantime, we've been testing the robomoderation software, Secure Team-Based Usenet Moderation Program (STUMP). Several rec.radio.amateur.policy participants have graciously agreed to send us test submissions, many of which we have approved and posted to misc.test.moderated. At this point, anyone reading this newsgroup is welcome to send us test postings. Send such submissions to: We'll process them as if they were actual submissions to the proposed moderated newsgroup. Anything we approve will be posted to misc.test.moderated, so please don't send anything to that address that you don't want posted to Usenet, or at least add the text "not for publication" or "do not approve." We would be particularly interested in test postings that are PGP signed. Watch this space for further information after the first of the year. -- 73, Paul W. Schleck, K3FU Good luck with it Paul. I look forward to seeing Markie, Lloydie, Woger, ....and all CW test haters and lazy asses put in the dumpster. Hey, dumb****, Roger passed 13 wpm CW for his General. Why don't you know what the **** youare talking about before you run your uninformed fat yap? |
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