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In article k.net, "Dwight
Stewart" writes: And, once again, you fail to mention who or what is benefited by it, if not the ARS. Please provide an answer, or quite wasting our time with this illogical statement. Larry, I know you are not so dumb as to not know how Morse Code/CW has fit into the history of Amateur Radio and how Amateur Radio has fit into the other radio services throughout that history. Knowing that, your request above could only be considered factitious. Therefore, I will treat it as such. Dwight: I wasn't being facetious, I was asking a question based on a logical premise which you yourself raised. So, you either answer it, or your original premise is insupportable. Which is it? (snip) And, since everything I'm discussing here is related ONLY to the Amateur Radio Service, that's the only group of Morse/CW users who are being considered by me in any of my postings. (snip) Well, that may be what you're discussing, but I'm discussing Morse Code testing - a discussion which, by it's very nature, cannot be limited to just Amateur Radio. OK, fine. Now, then, precisely which OTHER radio services currently require Morse code testing??? However, if the discussion were limited to just Amateur Radio, your arguments would have no more weight since most ham operators today don't use code/cw on any routine or regular basis. There is little reason to maintain testing for a mode that is seldom used by more than a relatively small minority. Hmmm. Funny how that "small minority" seems to come out of the woodwork in vast quantities during CW contests, Field Day, or whenever some rare DX pops up on the air! 73 de Larry, K3LT |
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