What "doom?" There is no "doom." There is only this subject
header that's been going since May Day of 2003. :-) The only "doom" is in the old Dragnet show theme...you know, the one that goes "doom-de-doom-doom..." :-) All USA radio amateurs in their grace period are in limbo and don't count for anything. All the no-code-technicians have expired since they never renewed and therefore don't exist. Excuse me...I was trying to think like the PCTA. Too hard. Gotta get more acetaminophen. |
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John Smith wrote: When the data attempts to force the fact that doom is comming--re-arrange the data and argue like hell!!! And make counter-accusations. Of course, that is how the doom occurred in the first place! John If only they could ration the rationalization. |
John,
Are you an advisor to President Bush? Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA ps - the sky is falling, the sky is falling! "John Smith" wrote in message ... When the data attempts to force the fact that doom is comming--re-arrange the data and argue like hell!!! Of course, that is how the doom occurred in the first place! John wrote in message oups.com... From: on Jun 1, 9:15 pm These are the numbers of current, unexpired amateur licenses held by individuals on the stated dates: As of May 14, 2000: deleted, four-year-old data, grace periods are only 2 years As of May 31, 2005: Novice - 28,370 (decrease of 20,959) Technician - 268,575 (increase of 63,181) Technician Plus - 49,098 (decrease of 79,762) General - 136,581 (increase of 23,904) Advanced - 76,119 (decrease of 23,663) Extra - 106,707 (increase of 27,957) Total Tech/TechPlus - 317,673 (decrease of 16,581) Total all classes - 665,450 (decrease of 9,342) Note that these totals do not include licenses that have expired but are in the grace period. They also do not include club, military, RACES or other station-only licenses That's simply untrue, . Military "calls" are assigned by the MILITARY. FCC has NO legal jurisdiction over USA military OR government radio. Note also that effective April 15, 2000, new Novice, Technician Plus or Advanced licenses are no longer issued, and that all existing Technician Plus licenses are being renewed as Technician. An absolutely IMPORTANT clarification to obscure the fact that no-code-test Technicians are condescendingly sponged into the MORSE-TESTED totals. Here's the totals of ALL AMATEUR licenses as given by www.hamdata.com as of 5 June 2005, with "delta" relative to those same classes two years ago...and the percentage of total 2005-date licenses less 9,550 "Club" calls: Class Licenses Delta Percentage Technician (no-code-test) 293,613 +19,932 40.64 Technician Plus 56,161 -19,480 7.77 Novice 34,116 -8,331 4.72 General 144,802 +1,855 20.30 Advanced 82,902 -3,322 11.43 Extra 109,325 +3,678 15.13 Total Less "Club" calls 722,452 -5,668* 99.99** * 2003 all-license totals were 736,616 or which 8,496 were "Club" calls so the Delta for comparison is 728,120. ** Percentage totals do not add up to precisely 100% due to arithmetic round-off to hundredths. Note: "Club" calls include all the non-individual license grants. As of the hamdata.com figures for this Sunday, 5 Jun 05, NO-CODE-TEST Technician Class licensees outnumber General Class licensees by an almost exact 2:1 ratio. [General class licensees WERE the largest in old days, no more] Nota Bene: The total licenses for the no-code-test Technician Class, 293,613, do NOT include the "Tech Plus" total licenses of 56,161. [let's stop this foolish "lumping-together" by rather obvious PCTAs in trying to embelish the sanctity and nobility of morsemanship] ALL license classes in the Technician (no-code-test), General, and Amateur Extra classes have the SAME grace period. If current Novice or Advanced license holders don't RETEST, they go bye-bye, get defunct, disappear from that great database. The current percentage of NO-CODE-TEST Technician class licensees now make up slightly over FORTY PERCENT of all classes. It is obviously the most populous of ALL classes and CONTINUES TO GROW. Neglecting that singular LARGE class of radio amateurs is foolish pipe-dreaming or weird personal fantasizing. We now return you to the regularly scheduled PCTA rationalization party in progress... |
"bb" wrote in message oups.com... John Smith wrote: When the data attempts to force the fact that doom is comming--re-arrange the data and argue like hell!!! And make counter-accusations. Of course, that is how the doom occurred in the first place! John If only they could ration the rationalization. There ain't no rationalization here, this is *religion*, pure and simple ;) Either yer fer us or agin us! LOL 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA |
wrote That's simply untrue, . Military "calls" are assigned by the MILITARY. FCC has NO legal jurisdiction over USA military OR government radio. You're mistaken. MilRec Amateur Radio station licenses (and calls) are assigned by the FCC. The military has NO legal jurisdiction over the assignment of those calls. No Morse or written test is required to obtain this station license. Just a couple of examples of these station licenses are W4ODR and KH6SP. These Military Auspices station licenses number less than 100, so are not a significant percentage off all station licenses and can be ignored in the sort of census that N2EY records here. Another example of Andersoneque half-vast knowledge of Amateur Radio matters. The information is available to all citizens, even non-licensed persons, in FCC rules at §97.5(b)(3). dit dit de Hans, K0HB |
Jim:
Hey!!! george (our fearless leader) said that same thing... Art Bell said, "If george said it, it must be true." ... well, maybe something like that... grin Warmest regards, John "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... "bb" wrote in message oups.com... John Smith wrote: When the data attempts to force the fact that doom is comming--re-arrange the data and argue like hell!!! And make counter-accusations. Of course, that is how the doom occurred in the first place! John If only they could ration the rationalization. There ain't no rationalization here, this is *religion*, pure and simple ;) Either yer fer us or agin us! LOL 73 from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA |
Jim:
I just kiss the ground our five-foot-one-inch-tall fearless leader walks on... (well, something like that...) grin Warmest regards, John "Jim Hampton" wrote in message ... John, Are you an advisor to President Bush? Best regards from Rochester, NY Jim AA2QA ps - the sky is falling, the sky is falling! "John Smith" wrote in message ... When the data attempts to force the fact that doom is comming--re-arrange the data and argue like hell!!! Of course, that is how the doom occurred in the first place! John wrote in message oups.com... From: on Jun 1, 9:15 pm These are the numbers of current, unexpired amateur licenses held by individuals on the stated dates: As of May 14, 2000: deleted, four-year-old data, grace periods are only 2 years As of May 31, 2005: Novice - 28,370 (decrease of 20,959) Technician - 268,575 (increase of 63,181) Technician Plus - 49,098 (decrease of 79,762) General - 136,581 (increase of 23,904) Advanced - 76,119 (decrease of 23,663) Extra - 106,707 (increase of 27,957) Total Tech/TechPlus - 317,673 (decrease of 16,581) Total all classes - 665,450 (decrease of 9,342) Note that these totals do not include licenses that have expired but are in the grace period. They also do not include club, military, RACES or other station-only licenses That's simply untrue, . Military "calls" are assigned by the MILITARY. FCC has NO legal jurisdiction over USA military OR government radio. Note also that effective April 15, 2000, new Novice, Technician Plus or Advanced licenses are no longer issued, and that all existing Technician Plus licenses are being renewed as Technician. An absolutely IMPORTANT clarification to obscure the fact that no-code-test Technicians are condescendingly sponged into the MORSE-TESTED totals. Here's the totals of ALL AMATEUR licenses as given by www.hamdata.com as of 5 June 2005, with "delta" relative to those same classes two years ago...and the percentage of total 2005-date licenses less 9,550 "Club" calls: Class Licenses Delta Percentage Technician (no-code-test) 293,613 +19,932 40.64 Technician Plus 56,161 -19,480 7.77 Novice 34,116 -8,331 4.72 General 144,802 +1,855 20.30 Advanced 82,902 -3,322 11.43 Extra 109,325 +3,678 15.13 Total Less "Club" calls 722,452 -5,668* 99.99** * 2003 all-license totals were 736,616 or which 8,496 were "Club" calls so the Delta for comparison is 728,120. ** Percentage totals do not add up to precisely 100% due to arithmetic round-off to hundredths. Note: "Club" calls include all the non-individual license grants. As of the hamdata.com figures for this Sunday, 5 Jun 05, NO-CODE-TEST Technician Class licensees outnumber General Class licensees by an almost exact 2:1 ratio. [General class licensees WERE the largest in old days, no more] Nota Bene: The total licenses for the no-code-test Technician Class, 293,613, do NOT include the "Tech Plus" total licenses of 56,161. [let's stop this foolish "lumping-together" by rather obvious PCTAs in trying to embelish the sanctity and nobility of morsemanship] ALL license classes in the Technician (no-code-test), General, and Amateur Extra classes have the SAME grace period. If current Novice or Advanced license holders don't RETEST, they go bye-bye, get defunct, disappear from that great database. The current percentage of NO-CODE-TEST Technician class licensees now make up slightly over FORTY PERCENT of all classes. It is obviously the most populous of ALL classes and CONTINUES TO GROW. Neglecting that singular LARGE class of radio amateurs is foolish pipe-dreaming or weird personal fantasizing. We now return you to the regularly scheduled PCTA rationalization party in progress... |
wrote:
From: on Jun 1, 9:15 pm These are the numbers of current, unexpired amateur licenses held by individuals on the stated dates: As of May 14, 2000: deleted, four-year-old data, grace periods are only 2 years May 14, 2000 was five years ago, Len. And the purpose of posting those numbers is to have a comparison with today's numbers. As of May 31, 2005: Novice - 28,370 (decrease of 20,959) Technician - 268,575 (increase of 63,181) Technician Plus - 49,098 (decrease of 79,762) General - 136,581 (increase of 23,904) Advanced - 76,119 (decrease of 23,663) Extra - 106,707 (increase of 27,957) Total Tech/TechPlus - 317,673 (decrease of 16,581) Total all classes - 665,450 (decrease of 9,342) Note that these totals do not include licenses that have expired but are in the grace period. They also do not include club, military, RACES or other station-only licenses That's simply untrue, . N2EY is my callsign. Military "calls" are assigned by the MILITARY. The totals above "do not include club, military, RACES or other station-only licenses". What is untrue about what I wrote? FCC has NO legal jurisdiction over USA military OR government radio. See post by K0HB on this subject. Note also that effective April 15, 2000, new Novice, Technician Plus or Advanced licenses are no longer issued, and that all existing Technician Plus licenses are being renewed as Technician. An absolutely IMPORTANT clarification to obscure the fact that no-code-test Technicians are condescendingly sponged into the MORSE-TESTED totals. It's important simply because the license class "Technician" includes both code-tested and noncodetested amateurs. Here's the totals of ALL AMATEUR licenses as given by www.hamdata.com as of 5 June 2005, with "delta" relative to those same classes two years ago These totals *include* expired-but-in-the-grace-period licenses. ...and the percentage of total 2005-date licenses less 9,550 "Club" calls: Class Licenses Delta Percentage Technician (no-code-test) 293,613 +19,932 40.64 Technician Plus 56,161 -19,480 7.77 Note that the decline in Technician Plus license numbers almost exactly matches the increase in Technician license numbers. Novice 34,116 -8,331 4.72 General 144,802 +1,855 20.30 Advanced 82,902 -3,322 11.43 Extra 109,325 +3,678 15.13 Total Less "Club" calls 722,452 -5,668* 99.99** * 2003 all-license totals were 736,616 or which 8,496 were "Club" calls so the Delta for comparison is 728,120. ** Percentage totals do not add up to precisely 100% due to arithmetic round-off to hundredths. Note: "Club" calls include all the non-individual license grants. As of the hamdata.com figures for this Sunday, 5 Jun 05, NO-CODE-TEST Technician Class licensees outnumber General Class licensees by an almost exact 2:1 ratio. [General class licensees WERE the largest in old days, no more] The license class "Technician" includes both code-tested and noncodetested amateurs. If the FCC does not change the rules, there will be no more Technician Plus licenses less than 5 years from now, because they all will have been renewed as Technicians. Nota Bene: The total licenses for the no-code-test Technician Class, 293,613, do NOT include the "Tech Plus" total licenses of 56,161. But they *do* include all former Technician Plus licenses that were renewed after April 15, 2000 but not upgraded since then. And they include all former Novice licenses upgraded to Technician after April 15, 2000 but not upgraded since then. It is incorrect to say that Technicians are all "no-code-test" because some of them are code tested. [let's stop this foolish "lumping-together" by rather obvious PCTAs in trying to embelish the sanctity and nobility of morsemanship] FCC has been renewing all Technician Pluses as Technicians since April 15, 2000. They are doing the "lumping". ALL license classes in the Technician (no-code-test), General, and Amateur Extra classes have the SAME grace period. All amateur radio licenses have the same grace period - two years. If current Novice or Advanced license holders don't RETEST, they go bye-bye, get defunct, disappear from that great database. The previous statement is incorrect. Current Novice and Advanced licensees can renew and modify their licenses indefinitely, and retain their operating privileges. There is no retesting requirement for them to retain their current operating privileges. Current Technician Plus licensees can renew and modify their licenses indefinitely, and retain their operating privileges. There is no retesting requirement for them to retain their current operating privileges. However, their licenses will be renewed as Technician. The current percentage of NO-CODE-TEST Technician class licensees now make up slightly over FORTY PERCENT of all classes. The license class "Technician" includes both code-tested and noncodetested amateurs. It is incorrect to say that Technicians are all "no-code-test" because some of them are code tested. It is obviously the most populous of ALL classes and CONTINUES TO GROW. It grows from three sources: 1) New licensees 2) Upgrades from Novices 3) Renewals of Technician Plus as Technician. Neglecting that singular LARGE class of radio amateurs is foolish pipe-dreaming or weird personal fantasizing. What "neglect", Len? They are listed along with all others. We now return you to the regularly scheduled PCTA rationalization party in progress... No rationalization on my part, Len. The numbers I post are what they say: current, unexpired licenses held by individuals. I do not include expired-but-in-the-grace-period licenses, nor club or other non-individual licenses. |
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