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From: "K4YZ" on May 11, 10:15 am
wrote [in response to W3RV]: On "8.5 years is not a dramatic anything," that's a rather gross fluff-off, "sweetums." A child who begins public school at age 5 will be almost out of Middle school in 8 1/2 years. Rather dramatic, I'd say...but, since you are cheerleading the ARRL, you will aerily dismiss it when it comes to the League. And that same child is more likely to be an HF-licensed Radio Amateur in that time frame than you are, Lennie. Embarrassing, ain't it... Tsk, tsk, tsk. NO "embarrasment" at all...to me. I've been a working PROFESSIONAL in radio-electronics since 1952, passed a First 'Phone test in 1956, been co-owner of a business radio in what is now called Private Land Mobile Radio Service, and have legally OPERATED on many MORE parts of the EM spectrum than is permitted to just amateur radio licensees. However, Robeson's post is just more of the puerile junior-high school babbling by the Avenging Angle of Dearth, Stebie Robeson, off on another tangent of hatred, trying to mouth-off more abuse. Tsk. It does indicate that the mindset of some amateur extras hasn't gone much beyond age 13 1/2. At question is NUMBER DATA on/from ARRL and the DATE of such numbers. Kelly contends that an 8 1/2 year period is inconsequential to the discussion. Coslo disagrees with that. I disagree with Kelly's contention. Robeson can only jeer and heckle the participants in that discussion, not being able to think while in the midst of his unstable emotional volatility. Kelly thinks that the ARRL is "going along swimingly," no problems there, everything just fine. Not the case in reality. Brakob realizes that and so does Coslo. Note the statements on the www.hamdata.com webpage in regards to statistics: TECHNICIAN class license totals have been increasing at a rate of 26 per day! [that's about four times faster than the combined General and Extra class increases of 6 per day] On the license class totals, it is interesting to compare (via Hamdata) those of 11 May 05 versus those of two years prior: 2005 2003 Both Tech Classes - 350,566 348,749 All four others - 373,171 378,994 Total, all classes - 723,737 727,743 Percentage of Techs - 48.44 47.92 Comparison of Growth, 2005 v. 2003 Gain or Loss, Techs - +1,817 Gain or Loss, other four - -5,823 Gain or Loss, all licensees -4,006 It should be noted that the peak of U.S. amateur radio license numbers was on 2 Jul 03 with a total of 737,938 then (number of club calls not known). The Hamdata statistics are derived automatically by downloading the publicly-available FCC database (massive in size) and sorting for classes. The increase in both Technician classes is not "dramatic" but it IS an increase and has NOT stopped as some amateur extras claimed "would happen" after the 12-year elapse from the 1991 creation of the (no-code-test) Technician class. At 48.44 percent of ALL current licensees, that IS a very large percentage and is constantly approaching a MAJORITY (it hasn't stopped increasing in 14 years). It should be obvious (but is not to some closed mindsets) that the "other four" classes (Novice, General, Advanced, Extra) have had their totals DROP in numbers. The "other four" all require morse code testing. The no-longer-issued-new Novice and Advanced classes dropped by 11,649 but the General and Extra classes gained only 5,826. The net change in the "other four" is -5,823. The two-year growth in both Technician classes is NOT enough to stem the 4,006 loss in licenses overall in two years. The (no-code-test) Technician class licensee is FORBIDDEN to operate below 30 MHz. A Technician Plus licensee is permitted below 30 MHz only if they have taken a morse code test. Old paradigms of "the majority of hams work in the HF bands" is rapidly approaching oblivion. The "World Above 50 MHz" may soon be the majority-use spectrum in amateur radio. The ARRL may not be tuned in to that band... |
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