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In article , "Dee D. Flint"
writes: "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article et, "Bill Sohl" writes: "N2EY" wrote in message ... In article , Robert Casey writes: Carl R. Stevenson wrote: I don't see the 5 wpm for Extra thing as a problem - because I don't think it has a snowball's chance in [expletive deleted] of getting approved by the FCC. One has to ask the question of what the FCC gets out of requiring code for extras. That's the key question these days for any license requirement these days. You make an excellent point. Good...so far. The problem is that it also applies in other areas, such as "what does FCC get out of protecting hams from BPL interference?" Then will we expect you to make that argument to the FCC when you comment? HECK NO, BILL! The answer to that question could very well be "Gee, we *don't* get anything out of protecting hams from BPL - so we won't!". As the treaty requirement is now gone, and no other service uses it, why bother. Because hams *do* use it. Yet hams do NOT need to pass a CW test to be allowed to use morse. If a "no-code" tech decides to operate morse on VHF, they are free to do so without ever being tested. If the ARRL proposal gets the nod, the same would be true for Novice and Generals on HF also. There are all sorts of things hams are allowed to do without being tested, or without being tested in depth. For example, a ham who passed the tests before, say, PSK-31 was invented is still allowed to use that mode without being tested. But that does not mean no test is needed, or that the current tests should not have PSK-31 in them because the old tests didn't. Some other services use it too, but not to any great extent. And certainly not to any extent that one would expect any ham to need to know code to read or operate with nay of those other services. By the way...what other services are you thinking of? There is still some maritime Morse code use, and it is used for ID in some applications. The FCC isn't in the business of giving out gold stars for the [expletive deleted] Jim, even I am not offended by "hell" It was a joke, Bill ;-) of it. Not about "gold stars". About qualifications. Of course there's differences of opinion on what qualified means. The retention of a 5 wpm test for Extra in light of no code for all others makes even less sense. I disagree. Morse code is the second most popular mode in amateur radio. For even the most privileged license to require no skill in its use makes no sense. Code isn't a lid filter, *No* test is a perfect "lid filter". No test is in any way a lid filter...as you note below. You misunderstand what I wrote. No test is a *perfect* lid filter. Particularly not a test given one time. There are bad doctors, lawyers, engineers, etc., who have been through much more extensive and rigorous testing and education, yet were not filtered out by those testing and education systems. I repeat...NO test is a lid filter. If that's true, why have tests at all? No test is a *perfect* lid filter. as witness 14.313 back in the days of 13wpm to be allowed to operate there. You mean before 1990? (medical waivers) Are you assuming all the 14.313 loonies had code medical waivers? Nope - but neither is it safe to assume that none of them did. Remember this: All those folks on 14.313, 3950, W6NUT, etc., passed *written* exams that included the rules and regulations. Most of them passed multiple written exams, yet they broke the rules anyway. So obviously those written tests aren't a perfect lid filter either. Note that I wrote "perfect lid filter". Shall we dump the rules and regs from those written exams because they didn't do the job? oh wait, that's what NCVEC is proposing for the entry level! A point we agree on. Exactly. 73 de Jim, N2EY NONE of the tests were EVER intended to be "lid filters". They were a means to require a certain basic knowledge to allow people into radio. Further testing was intended to motivate people to expand their knowledge by awarding privileges to those who did undertake the self-learning and development. Radio licenses are just a regulatory tool used by the Commission. Radio operator licenses were never, are still not any form of academic certificates of achievement. The Commission is not chartered by law to be an educational or academic agency. Possession of a radio operator license, any kind, is proof only of having passed a license test according to Commission regulations. This is why it is not necessary to have a direct tie between material tested and privileges awarded. Instead you tie the most desireable priviliges not to the type of material but to information and skills that they should have but don't want to learn. This is the way society, in general, works. In our [USA] society, laws and regulations have been decided largely by political and legislative actions. Learning ability and qualifications in the same are tested and graded by academic organizations. The FCC is not an academic organization. There is no evidenciary Divine Law which dictates certain avocational radio activity "must" be done in a certain way or that certain skills and knowledge "must" be possessed, nor is there any Divine Judgement which ascertains the sagacity of such "musts." There are only self-righteous, sanctimonious self-styled "radio gods" who demand obediance to certain "rules" because they think all should think like they do. Through political pressure, many of those "rules" make it into codified law...ergo, it is "right." :-) ------- Now back to more interesting amateur radio policy discussions concerning immunization, medicine, and urban myths concerning those, along with national policy on health care. LHA / WMD |
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