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From: Frank Gilliland on Dec 30, 9:49 am
I've noticed that different hams tend to congregate in different parts of the spectrum, maybe because different parts of the spectrum have different characteristics requiring different skills. So why not just have one license with three "endorsements" based on spectrum use: -- MF & HF; -- VHF; -- UHF & up. ......or something along those lines????? It's a logical thought concept...at first. Thinking more about it will just "redistrict" the present ham population along slightly different lines from what exists now. There's been a half-century (almost) of such subdivision and compartmenting U.S. radio amateurs up until the Restructuring of 2000. It had gotten to be too complex for what it was worth, both to the Commission and to most of the "amateur community" (as well as pushing off newcomers). Essentially ONE "class" of license is quite sufficient. Those that "specialize" in working specific bands with specific modes can go right on doing what they did before. Those just won't get any especial perquisites in rank- status-title for doing so. [TS for them] Let the ham publications glorify them (in excelsior). There's no point in having the license class subdivide, stratify, and make them "different." Those that have a yen to experiment, innovate, try out new things in a one-class system would be free to do so, no real restrictions other than their own abilities. Yes, there is a "danger" to having the private spectral playground of some occupied by what those specialists call "interlopers." However, NOBODY "owns" spectral property other than what the FCC stakes out in regulations. The specialists only THINK they "own" certain spectrum...it was never really "theirs" and their is no "ownership" by some kind of eminent domain of private turf. |
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