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![]() "Leo" wrote in message ... On Tue, 10 Feb 2004 23:32:40 GMT, "Dee D. Flint" wrote: "Leo" wrote in message .. . On 10 Feb 2004 09:52:50 -0800, (N2EY) wrote: snip Without the ARRL, do you think we'd still have amateur radio? I don't. Um, the rest of the planet does not have the ARRL, and amateur radio is still going strong there..... snip 73 de Jim, N2EY 73, Leo Without the ARRL, US amateur radio would have remained permanently closed after World War I. The other countries did not have enough amateurs to justify keeping the frequencies and it is highly probably that they would have all gone to commercial interests. Everyone wanted the shortwave frequencies at that time and without the US, the foreign amateurs would not have had enough leverage to have held on to the spectrum. Dee, Perhaps, but I'm not comfortable that it is fact. In 1917 (or 1916, depending on the source), there were some 6,000 amateurs operating in the US - not sure how many there were when amateur radio was turned back on in 1919, but it was probably less than that, due to losses in the war. Even at 6,000, though, would that constitute a sufficient number of amateurs to influence policy on a global scale? Keeping in mind that the US, as a member of the ITU, has voting privileges but not an overwhelming influence. Foreign stations still boom over here today on part of our 40 meter band - because the ITU agreements say they can. The Americas can request, and debate, and vote upon, but not control ITU policy. I doubt very much that they could back then, either. Although records in the early 1900s are sketchy, if you pick periods in time that are documented, the number of US amateurs was roughly equal to the rest of the world combined. This is still true today if one excludes Japan, which has over 1 million licensed users but with an abysmally low activity rate (Japanese licenses are for life, many children are licensed in school programs and never use the licenses, and no renewal is required). While the US would not have been an "overwhelming" influence, it still would have been a major player. How long could amateurs in other countries have been effective against government and commercial interests in the ITU if the US had remained in an "amateur radio black hole?" It is difficult to say of course but there would have been much less strength available to resist the encroachment. Yes one cannot say with absolute certainty which way it would have gone but I do believe that amateur radio would be a lot less common now if the US had not been involved. Also keep in mind that due to our form of government, our civilian population (in this case hams) do have more influence in shaping our governments approach to items like amateur radio than is and was prevalent in a lot of countries. According to The Wayback Machine, it wasn't commercial interests that wanted control of these bands post-WWI (all radio bands, actually!) in the US - it was the US Military. The ARRL did a fine job of lobbying the US government to have the frequencies reopened to US amateurs - but I don't think that the rest of the world would have walked away from amateur radio forever if the ARRL had been unsuccessful. And, in the absence of the ARRL, other alliances may have been formed to lobby for this right - just like they did in the rest of the world. I did indeed mean to include military. Sorry about that. In the context of lobbying the US government for keeping amateur frequencies and re-opening them after WWI, I do believe that in the absence of the ARRL another body could have formed (and probably would have) and done the same as the ARRL. But you know what, we would then be having this same discussion of "ZZZZ" organization and the people who today slam the ARRL would be slamming the "ZZZZ." The rest of us would then be defending "ZZZZ". Same game, different names. In fact, your happy ham neighbours to the North were legally transmitting again as of May 1, 1919 - a full 5 months before the US amateurs were allowed back on the air on October 1st of that year. As I recall from history class, the US military hasn't attemped to enforce US policy up here since 1814 - and never successfully prior to that But would they have had enough clout in subsequent ITU conferences to stave off the commercial and military seekers of the bands. In any disagreement, you don't want the strongest player sitting on the sidelines or playing on the other side. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
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