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![]() "Larry Roll K3LT" wrote in message ... In article , "Bill Sohl" writes: Carl: Well, you've spent years making THAT perfectly clear! Fortunately there are those of us who do care about whether or not a useful communications skill continues to be practiced in the ARS. Do YOU care enough to be a positive spokesperson/recruiter for CW to new hams? Bill: I've been doing that all along. Coulda fooled me by many of your comments in this newsgroup. ... I see that as a totally unimportant issue in he grand scheme of things ... it is up to Morse enthusiasts to recruit new Morse ops ... and talking down to those who are not interested will not help that cause. Especially since those who are not interested have finally gotten their way! Sounds like a personal problem. Well, it will be for the New Age hams who will not have benefited from having been exposed to the more comprehensive and challenging licensing process of the Pre-Restructuring/WRC-03 Era, including Morse code testing. Yawn. We used to have that incentive in the Pre-Restructuring Era. Now that it is gone, to rely simply on enticing people to Morse/CW with the promise of better operating capability will probably not resonate very well with the majority of newcomers who, basically, are going to be refugees from the Citizen's Band, who just want a louder, more frequency-agile box to plug their microphone into. Defeatist attitude as I see it. Anything like the "defeatist attitude" of those who, for years, have avoided being involved in Amateur Radio because of code testing? Suck it up and deal with it. Again, future hams will not have had your experience. That is the difference. Not having "been there, done that" disqualifies them from making any judgment on the "code" issue whatsoever. I don't buy that argument Which doesn't make it any less true. Nor does it change the fact that your statement is only an opinion. My statement about future hams having no experience with Morse/CW is plain FACT, not opinion, Bill. It is also a fact that because of their lack of experience, they are self-disqualified from having an "opinion" about the subject. That's utter bull. For no other reason than this is the USA and anyone is free to have an opinion on morse and voice it as they see fit. Your opinion, is exactly that...your opinion. ... folks can be intelligent enough that, with a modest exposure to Morse through personal contact with other hams, seeing others using the mode, etc., they can make a choice as to whether they are interested in purusing the mode or not. That's not the same thing, Carl. I was referring to their "opinions," or subjective impressions, of the Morse code. The decision-making process they apply to decide whether or not to attempt to learn it is a much more objective process. So work te process, be a recruiter for morse. As has always been the case, the ability of any advocate of Morse code testing to "recruit" new hams to the mode is limited to relating their own experience. The new hams will be receptive to his in varying degrees, yet they will, in fact, not have the same incentive to actually give it a try that existed under the previous licensing process. Guess you'll just have to accept that. In the end, whether or not they learn it is strictly up to them, as it has always been. Agreed. The problem is, in the future, they will still have full HF privileges, so they no longer have nothing to lose by simply forgoing the whole Morse/CW mode. That's a problem for you. Others might consider it just a challange to overcome in the recruiting process. They will, however, most likely petition the ARRL and the FCC for more HF phone allocations -- and where do you think they'll come from? Petition the ARRL? The ARRL doesn't set the rules last time I checked :-) Cheers, Bill K2UNK |
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