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John Smith wrote:
N2EY: One point you got right, ham radio HAS TO compete with a superior form of communication--the internet! For some uses the internet is better than ham radio. For other uses ham radio is better. The competition is for time only. And, the only way it can is drop the code... Do you mean hams should stop using Morse Code, or that there should not be a Morse Code *test*? In either case, how will that help ham radio compete for time? wrote in message ups.com... Charles Brabham wrote: "Dee Flint" wrote in message ... "John Smith" wrote in message ... N2EY: I have asked the young men why they have no interest in getting a ham license, it is because of the limitations placed on the no code license--and the fact they are not interested in learning code to chat with someone DX--a task which can be accomplished much easier and reliably over the net with instant messaging, IRC chat, etc... that is REAL. THAT is dropping the numbers of hams and putting bands in danger of being lost... that is holding our numbers at such low levels the FCC begins to find us more a bother than anything else... This does NOT make sense when our numbers are near their all time high. Yes - both in total numbers of US hams, and the ratio of hams to the total US population. In recent years the totals have begun to go down, and the percentage of the population as well. Reducing the license test requirements in 2000 has not brought growth, yet some folks insist that more and more reductions in test requirements are the only solution. It's just another one of those guys who thinks that Ham Radio is only relevant in as much as it resembles the Internet. - In other words, the guy has no clue about the hobby but wants to run it down because it is not the Internet. BINGO! Yet it is exactly the fact that amateur radio *is not* the internet that is the draw! I use this attitude as a handy intelligence test for amateurs... If they cannot differentiate between Amateur Radio and the Internet, or if they cannot see why there should and would be differences between the two - then I know that they are brain-damaged ( or even worse ) - associated with TAPR or the ARRL's HSMM group. In any case the attitude indicates a clueless state in relation to the amateur radio hobby. Makes sense to me! 73 de Jim, N2EY Charles Brabham, N5PVL Director: USPacket http://www.uspacket.org Admin: HamBlog.Com http://www.hamblog.com Webmaster: HamPoll.Com http://www.hampoll.com Weblog: http://www.hamblog.com/blog_n5pvl.php |
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