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In article , "Dee D. Flint"
writes: I and other parents that I know have always required our children to eat foods that are good for them whether they liked them or not. My children have always been required to eat what was served whether they liked it or not. Children were not allowed to dictate the menu. ...and so you act like you are the "parent" in here telling us what we are supposed to like? LHA |
Dick Carroll; wrote:
Dee D. Flint wrote: "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... snippage Oh how cruel! Dee, you are a meanie. You are stunting your kids emotional growth and forcing them to do something they don't want to. NO one should be forced to do something they don't want to be it Morse Code or eating foods that are good for them. - end of being facetious. How about NBI - NO Broccoli International? - Mike KB3EIA - I LIKE broccoli. Let's make it NO Peas International. No, let's go with Brussels Sprouts. No-BS-I??? Yeah, that's it!! Hehe, Good one, Dick! - Mike KB3EIA - |
N2EY wrote:
In article , Mike Coslo writes: I LIKE broccoli. Me too actually. Make that three. Let's make it NO Peas International. Pretty Peas? Peas are great! Green beans, on the other hand..... -- And if ya really want to get people fired up: Calves' liver, anyone? Like 'em all so far. Okra maybe? Snot wrapped inside a vegatable, that one. - Mike KB3EIA - |
The same applies to students of all ages. When an adult goes to college, and wasn't it pointed out in an earlier post in this, or another, thread that electrical engineering students aren't required to learn morse code? hmmmmmm..... Clint KB5ZHT |
Sonny, I've probably done MORE in radio already than you've done in your entire "career" as a hambone...er Ham. oh, i'm just DIEING to see if he dares say something like "you can't know everything I know and how far i've come and where i've been"... oh, that's going to be just TOO juicy... bet he does though! Clint KB5ZHT |
"Clint" rattlehead at computron dot net wrote in message ... The same applies to students of all ages. When an adult goes to college, and wasn't it pointed out in an earlier post in this, or another, thread that electrical engineering students aren't required to learn morse code? hmmmmmm..... Clint KB5ZHT Your incorrect usage of snippage really hurts your comments. My point was to show that adults are often required to meet standards set by people who are experienced in their field of choice. This means taking courses in college for example, that the student may never use. This is similar to requiring hams to take and pass code tests. Electrical engineering is not ham radio. Although they don't study code, all of them have to take subjects in which they have no interest and will never use otherwise they don't get the degree. Adults are required to do things they don't want to on a regular basis. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
"Larry Roll K3LT" wrote:
Perhaps, but the accuracy of those judgments are definitely affected by having had those experiences, or not. Someone who has never experienced a house fire, a terrorist attack, life under a tyrannical dictator, or a business failure is certainly capable of making the entirely incorrect judgment about any of the above. (snip) Gladly, we don't live in a trial and error world today. I would hope the bridge designer would have enough knowledge to build a safe bridge without having to watch one (perhaps this one) fall down first. People can learn about the specifics of a subject without personally experiencing every aspect of it. We generally trust that system for a great many things in this world today (for example, the bridges we routinely drive over). I do not disagree. However, experience has shown that people who aren't required to be code tested usually don't bother to learn and use the Morse code, so the issue does relate to code use, only to the extent that the lack of a requirement would tend to cause a decline in the use of the Morse/CW mode in the fullness of time. If that were true, I think a test requirement is the worst way to accomplish what you're seeking. Instead, a better solution is to find ways to attract new people to that aspect of ham radio. You're obviously not going to have much success with that effort today because "no coders" have made their choice about code while focusing solely on the license requirement (the license requirement dominates the issue in their minds). Later, when that license requirement is gone, the mode itself becomes the focus. At that point, I think many more will be interested in taking a second look at code. Obviously, there is no way for me to prove that now, but I just have a feeling about this (perhaps the same way you have a feeling about the above). Dwight Stewart (W5NET) http://www.qsl.net/w5net/ |
"Larry Roll K3LT" wrote:
Dwight, unless and until you can show us just exactly WHERE the ARS's code testing requirement ***IS*** relevant OUTSIDE of the ARS, all you're doing is blowing smoke. And not very dense smoke at that. It isn't relevant to anything outside the Amateur Radio today, Larry. That's exactly why there are efforts being made to eliminate the Morse Code test requirement. Those efforts extend throughout the world, including the recent ITU vote to allow more flexibility on this issue. Dwight Stewart (W5NET) http://www.qsl.net/w5net/ |
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