Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bert Craig wrote:
"Carl R. Stevenson" wrote in message ... "Bert Craig" wrote in message .com... Carl, I'm going to do something that some might not expect me to do, agree. I think that in the frenzy to defend CW testing, some have tried many different angles. Not that these angles aren't correct wrt CW itself, just not the retention of CW testing. This is where the use of the FCC to defend the dropping of CW testing becomes almost silly...because to be quite honest, the FCC really doesn't care all that much about the ARS anyway and ANYTHING that'll ease the administration over the same is more than welcome. So saying "we don't have to do our homework because daddy says so" doesn't mean that the homework is unimportant, it means that daddy doesn't care. I don't agree with the analogy ... the FCC *does* care about the Amateur Radio Service ... they just don't belive that requiring Morse tests serves any legitimate regulatory purpose Please stop right there. What's the hang-up with this "regulatory purpose" stuff. I don't believe it's ALL about regulatory, it's has something to do with a rich tradition wrt a mode that is still widely used today. Tradition really does count for something and requiring folks to learn the very basic level in order to pass a 5-wpm hardly constitutes a "barrier." This is very likely how many will get their only taste of Morse. You would think so, but its too hard! Neither CW or it's proponents will sell it on it's own merits. Sad to say, but many of today's generation just don't understand why they "have to" learn all that stuff they'll never use. Dude! It's like such a waste of time, yaknow? I'll never be interested, and like "Americon Idol" is on tonight! The recent Regents fiasco is a grim reminder. Only 12 students passed the test that was really no harder than many folks had taken in years past. The first reaction..."the test's too hard," from both the parents and the kids. Of course! how is little Buffy and Adrian going to get into a good college if they don't have the grades? S make those tests easier. Rather than take the heat, the DOE is going to give them an easier test. Behold the result of second generation underachievement. I strongly disagree, Carl. I think it's a "spot-on" analogy. It'd almost be amusing if it weren't so sad. Carl thinks we make dum analogies. any more (other than complying with requirements in the ITU Radio Regs that require(d) Morse tests for folks whose licenses granted privs in the bands below 30 MHz ... a requirement that has ceased to exist as of July 05, 2003 ...) (Read the quotes from their R&O again ... it's quite clear.) No need, the words of those who are seeking less administrative work are hardly meaningful. Hmmm, avoiding work...some commonality. Sadly, many have lost sight of what this was really all about. Element 1 (Domestically, that is.) Rather than investing some time and effort to satisfy a very basic requirement that is an extremely important part of AR tradition, "Some time and effort" can vary widely across the spectrum of individuals ... for some it can be easy, for others it's nearly impossible. Just as some folks can't "carry a tune in a bucket" with respect to singing ability, Morse involves a "mode-specific aptitude" that folks possess (or don't) in widely varying degrees. If by "mode-specific aptitude," you mean sitting ones you-know-what down for 20 mins./day for a mo. and trying some good old-fashioned study/practice, you'd have a point. Takes longer in some cases. Took me six months of hard work. but so what? I'll go out on a limb, and say that a person that does not have the time to learn the material does not have the time for the hobby. Written or Morse. That is really what my whole argument is. I don't give a hoot if a person uses or doesn't use Morse. I really don't. I suck at it. I've got some physical attributes that make morse code unenjoyable for me. But I don't like lazy people one little bit. Sorry, but I don't. And behind all the rhetoric and bluff and bluster, in almost all cases it boils down to laziness. I really wish that folks would stop trying to lean on "tradition" ... maintaining "tradition" is NOT a legitimate regulatory goal that should drive the requirements for licensing, plain and simple. I wish folks would stop leaning on "regulatory" as if it's ok just because big brother says so. Especially at the 5-wpm level, puh-lease. Wouldn't it be great if all the PCTA people would just go away? - Mike KB3EIA - |