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"Alun" wrote in message
... "Bert Craig" wrote in t: "Alun" wrote in message ... "Bert Craig" wrote in : "Alun" wrote in message ... "Kim W5TIT" wrote in : "Bert Craig" wrote in message news ![]() gy.com... "Alun" wrote in message ... It just so happens that I don't like CW, in the sense of I have no desire to use it. That should be OK too, but for some reason it bothers you. Why? No it does not bother me that someone who has learned it chooses not to use it. They have made that decision from a position of knowledge and experience. This is radically different from a person judging it and saying they will never use it when they do not have that knowledge and experience to draw on. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Right on the money, Dee. Larry pointed this out earlier, but not as eloquently as you. 73 de Bert WA2SI It fascinates me that you won't accept someone's plain and simple truth that they don't like CW--even if they don't have experience with it--because you reason that they need to have "knowledge and experience" with it. Well, I know people who are quite well-versed in CW who don't like it, people who haven't ever even tried it and don't like it, and people who have taken and passed a 5wpm test and don't like it. I also know people from those same three categories that do like CW operation. It's pretty much as simple as folks who do or don't like most other things in life. Either ya like it or ya don't. Kim W5TIT I think that you have hit upon a very important point there, Kim. A good analogy might be not liking an item of food that you haven't tried, because it looks disgusting on your plate. If you eat some you might like it, or not, but there are probably all kinds of other things that contain the same nutrition. These guys are like a parent telling a child that they have to eat their brocolli. But they aren't my parents and I don't like brocolli, or CW. I take vitamins, and work phone. Slight difference, Alun. Nobody's forcing anybody to learn code. There exists a no-code Technician license for those who do not wish to have to pass the 5-wpm code exam. 73 de Bert WA2SI Not really true. Very true, Alun...very true. No HF privileges with that licence, as we all know. As with most things in life, increased *privileges* requires increased effort. The ARS is but a microsm or society as a whole. Despite the efforts of some to reduce it to "just a hobby" status, the values and principles we learn in our "avocations" will likely carry over into the other aspects of our lives. Many here were first licensed as children or young adults, that's no accident. The kids of today are referred to as the Nintendo generation, kinda hard to compete with. However, in our quest to gain quantity, we appear to be courting a slightly older prospective ham...products of the newer "I want it now" society. So what can we do, villify the "speed bump" of our licensing structure in an effort to remove any "barriers." If you admit that you view the code test as a "speed bump", then you are admitting it's not relevant, but just there to slow down the traffic. You view that as desirable, and I don't, which is one of the differences between us. I kinda liken it to kids that are graduating HS with a 5th, 6th, or 7th grade reading level. Gee, how'd they get through? Check out the recent regents debacle. Not enough kids pass, it must be to hard...so we'll throw 'em a curve. See the cycle there. Had someone had the courage to NOT throw some of these kids their earlier curves in the first place, their Regents scores would be higher. What does this have to do with amateur radio? Very little. It's like saying that allowing people to get a licence without a code test will affect their knowledge of RF. It's not about the code Alun, it's about the effort. Human nature. What we learn to do as we practice our avocation early in life, we tend to apply to other aspects later in life. Still believe this is about a 5-wpm Morse code test? Yes. No hidden agenda here. No, there's no hidden agenda. If you take away the passion and whining from BOTH sides of the equation, it becomes obvious that the code test is really not the issue. It's the effort. If the writtens were made more difficult and the published Q&A pools eliminated, the whining would then continue. The common denominator...the effort involved. Why must we reduce our beloved hobby/service to the lowest commen denominator? Oops, my bad. That should read "common." Gotta pay more attention. hihi 73 de Bert WA2SI Like I said before, Alun. It's ok to just agree to disagree. Take care. 73 de Bert WA2SI |
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