Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"N2EY" wrote:
Those movies came out *after* wholesale disregard for the rules was already very common on 27. (Although I've never been a cb user, I have listened there since the mid-'60s and known many cb users). In the 60's and early 70's, CB was only a minor nuisance, mainly a concern only for the FCC. Most Americans had never even heard of it. By the end of the 70's, the number of CB'ers had increased dramatically and problems (and complaints) were widespread. The only significant thing that happened during that time, to cause such growth, was the Hollywood movies (and television shows) featuring CB. And you could clearly see that influence. By the late 70's, the very first channel most people turned to when they got their new CB home was channel 19 (the truckers' channel). That fact drove truckers crazy. And the only way most people even knew of that channel was those Hollywood movies. But ham radio did not have that "outlaw" mentality. Really? I thought that was pretty obvious. We were talking about "what if," not "what is." And, back then, such activities would have brought down tremendous peer opposition by the rest of the ham community. (snip) You put way too much faith in peer pressure, Jim. Peer pressure would not control thirty to fifty million people (the estimates of CB'ers by the late 70's) if they had decided to ignore the rules. Yet in my experience there has been a longstanding problem with the cb "outlaw" culture trying to migrate to amateur radio. In this area, at least, we have had serious problems on VHF/ UHF repeaters from newcomers who saw 2 meters as a noise-free version of cb. I've traveled to almost a dozen states in the last five years and such behavior is extremely rare on all of the repeaters I've monitored or used. Instead, I've mostly heard polite, friendly, people who seemed to be very serious about their ham radio involvement. Where problems did exist, it was usually blown out of porportion by guys angry about others using "their" repeater for things they didn't like. In one situation, I even heard several guys antagonizing two guys so they could record the results, which they said was going to be sent to the FCC (minus their part in it, I'm sure). The two guys were not doing anything wrong before those guys showed up on that frequency. Because of my experiences, I always wonder about the cause whenever I hear people talking about a "problem" on a local repeater. Dwight Stewart (W5NET) http://www.qsl.net/w5net/ |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Funny Morse Code Picture | Dx | |||
Funny Morse Code Picture | General | |||
Funny Morse Code Picture | Dx | |||
eScrew zen story | Antenna | |||
It's Mother-Mary on Cheese Toast! (ot but funny!) | General |