Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#38
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message ... "Dee D. Flint" wrote in message y.com... "Ryan, KC8PMX" wrote in message ... 14. The ARRL leadership should take the following role in the code test issue: E. Stay the hell out of it until they truly represent all of the amateur radio community. Right now they are the only organization who represents us at all. If you want to control their policies, become a member and climb the political structure. No... they only represent their membership. (as that has been dictated to me time and time again.) There in lies the real root of the problem, it is a "political" organization, i.e. bureaucracy. Those who are not members of the ARRL have chosen to remain unrepresented since they have done nothing to form a lobyy to take the place of the ARRL. I can self-represent for the time being. It's better that what the has been done to amateur radio since my involvement since 1988. I write letters on a regular basis to not only the FCC, as well as the elected officials from my area that serve in congress and the senate. Not only do issues come up that they might have an opportunity to vote on, they "have friends" in other parts of the goverment as well I am sure. Instead of lazily waiting for the arrl to act on matters, I can just imagine the response if at least 20-30 wrote letters on a regular basis to there congress and senator persons. Our districts for each up north here contain *at least* 1,000 hams a piece. That was another question I also had.....WHO are the arrl lobbyists? WHAT exactly are they doing? WHO exactly are they talking to? WHAT is their budgets?? I have asked this before but with no response. If it is not for the magazine subscription (QST is actually a fairly decent magazine even though content is forever dwindling over the years due stuff being pushed to the website) then the other argument by some is for some type of protectionist/mafioso scheme as to why to join the arrl. I do not consider the arrl the equivalent of christianity, nor will I be brainwashed to think that arrl can do no wrong or preach/recite some mantra's. I do not consider the ARRL end all and be all either. But a strong, organized group is more successful than random individuals writing to elected and appointed officials. That is a political fact of life. Those who do not care to admit that to themselves will have very limited success in achieving their objectives. Now as far as who the ARRL represents. Yes it is their members. These members are a cross section of the ham community. The policy is based on what the members want. If you wish the ARRL to change direction, then join it and get a sufficient number of people with your views behind you and get more people to join that have your views so that you have the support to become an official and a policy maker. Those hams who say that they won't join the ARRL because they have a different viewpoint than the current membership of the ARRL are choosing to be less effective in getting their viewpoints across to the ham community and the FCC. The ARRL isn't some magic entity that exists out there that hams join. It is the result of hams banding together. The views represented by the ARRL will be those of the people who have decided to become active and push those views. While I do agree that individuals should write their elected officials and so on, that does not negate the need for having an organized body to push for changes. The most effective way to change the system is to work from within not from without. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
If you value SW or HAM radio.... | Antenna | |||
FUD ALERT !!!!! (was With CW gone, can the CW allocations be far behind?) | General | |||
With CW gone, can the CW allocations be far behind? | General | |||
With CW gone, can the CW allocations be far behind? | Policy |