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"Dee Flint" wrote in
: "robert casey" wrote in message ink.net... It does not mean that things are messed up. It is simply a fact that a very effective way to motivate people to do something that they don't want to do is to tie it to a privilege that they very much want. Parents do it all the time. It's one thing for parents to do that sort of thing, but the FCC isn't our parents. What does the FCC get out of requiring element 1 nowadays? The treaty requirement is gone, and no other service uses Morse code anymore. Radio equipment is more reliable today than 50 years ago. Stuff that took 20 vacuum tubes to do are now on a few ICs, and usually it's the batteries that crap out before anything else goes out. The old argument that code equipment is simple and thus more reliable doesn't really mean much today as it did 50 years ago. If we want to attract younger people to ham radio, it would be counter productive to require stuff no longer relevant to get the license. There's many other activities that don't require licenses that one could do, and they could do exactly the interesting parts and ignore the parts not interesting. Actually it appears as if it IS the code that attracts young people simply because it is different. It's the middle aged people who seem to object most strenuously. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE Children find the code a novelty, but that doesn't mean that they are prepared to learn it |
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