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#532
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If Lennie Anderson Had To Tell The Truth Once, Would Bill Clinton Swear Off Big Mac's and White House Interns? With "Engineers" Like Lennie, It's No Wonder Everything Says "Made In Someplace Other Than The United States"
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#533
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If Lennie Anderson Had To Tell The Truth Once, Would Bill Clinton Swear Off Big Mac's and White House Interns? With "Engineers" Like Lennie, It's No Wonder Everything Says "Made In Someplace Other Than The United States"
an old fraud wrote: I use him for punching bag hopeing he might give it up Markie, you are everybody's punching bag. did you catch the bit where he claims that he is acting as MY firend I am gald I was not drinking something , i might have choked to death We can only hope you would choke to death...... in a few day weeks or months I will quit this feild signing off here as KB9RQZ/AE That will never happen, you are too stupid to pass the theory tests. |
#534
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that persondie?
Al Klein wrote:
Ever try taking dictation at 100wpm spoken speed in a foreign language? I have. Even in one I understand, it's difficult. In one I don't understand it's impossible. Maybe you're better than I am. I can certainly write down Spanish spoken at my CW speed of 13 wpm which is the whole point. If one speaks faster, I may not be able to copy it. If one sends CW to me faster than 13 wpm, for sure I cannot copy it even in English. -- 73, Cecil, http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#535
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that person die?
Cecil Moore wrote: Al Klein wrote: Ever try taking dictation at 100wpm spoken speed in a foreign language? I have. Even in one I understand, it's difficult. In one I don't understand it's impossible. Maybe you're better than I am. I can certainly write down Spanish spoken at my CW speed of 13 wpm which is the whole point. If one speaks faster, I may not be able to copy it. If one sends CW to me faster than 13 wpm, for sure I cannot copy it even in English. interesting how Al Keeps changing the condictions franticaly trying to make a point -- 73, Cecil, http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
#536
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that person die?
On Thu, 24 Aug 2006 14:52:28 GMT, Cecil Moore
wrote: Al Klein wrote: Ever try taking dictation at 100wpm spoken speed in a foreign language? I have. Even in one I understand, it's difficult. In one I don't understand it's impossible. Maybe you're better than I am. I can certainly write down Spanish spoken at my CW speed of 13 wpm Really? You listen to people speaking at 13 wpm? What are they on? It sounds like good stuff. |
#537
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If you had to use CW... would robesin still be an idiot?
From: on Wed, Aug 23 2006 7:58 pm
wrote: From: Cecil Moore on Wed, Aug 23 2006 6:38 am Instead of using verbal communications, how about a parable about how those Boy Scouts could have chosen to use Morse Code? Your question is unconnected to your first sentence. How does one "use morse code" to save a drowning child? Why would they do that if they were in close proximity? Darn those Cell Phones! A cell phone was used to call paramedics, not a code key. Impossible according to the rabid morsemen. "ALL" infrastructure (including cell phones) "FAIL" in emergencies! :-) Please tell us why it is SO important to be "correct" on details of the Titanic disaster that happened 94 years ago? I asked another in here who-what-why-where-when of amateur radio saving any lives via morse code. That hasn't been answered yet. Nor will it be. MYTHOLOGY cannot be argued logically. It is part of the lore, the mystique promulgated by groups who think they are far more than they really are. The ARRL resells a few fictional novels by a single author (a gal) whose subject is mainly "saving the day" with amateur radio, several of which are supposed to feature the "life-saving abilities" of morsemanship. I've never read any, just read the ad copy for them on the ARRL website. In the writing trade those are known as "teen-age novels" and are for the under-adult age group. Some folks think those works of fiction are "real" and like to cite them to those of us who know better. That and all the other tales of the Olde Dayes when Kode was King and all the "best" radio men pounded brass. That was long, long ago when radio was new, something to communicate with that did not exist before it came along. Maybe you can supply the details? Cecil can't. Cecil tried to appease the morse jihadists a while back by joining in their rrap cw net. In the end, they still can't stand his views on morse testing. The RRAP morse jahidists MUST have THEIR way. They NEED the elitist identification to prove they are "somebodies" who are "better" than ordinary mortals through morsemanship. They get very tiresome rather quickly. I'm calling them the new "Al-Code-ah" since they might be organized and beginning to terrorize amateurs with their demands of code-testing-forever in the USA. I've nothing against those who LIKE to use morse code and find pleasure in that mode. I am totally against those who DEMAND that ALL MUST test for morsemanship (at any speed) just to get an amateur radio license. They are fixated on their youth and times past, trying to delude themselves that time has marched on and all of electronics technology has changed many times over since They began. It's quite remarkable viewing some of those olde-tymers trying to tout their "I am the greatest" bragging, especially so since I began in radio communications back before some of them had yet to be born or at least before they became teen- agers! These olde-tymers blabber on about the efficacy of morsemanship long, long after ALL the other radio services stopped using morse. For them time stood still...or they refused to acknowledge the inexorable passage of time. The "Al-Code-Ah" continue in their Jihad... |
#538
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that person die?
From: on Wed, Aug 23 2006 7:46 pm
wrote: From: on Tues, Aug 22 2006 7:14 pm wrote: From: on Mon, Aug 21 2006 6:30 pm wrote: From: an old friend on Mon, Aug 21 2006 3:16 pm wrote: From: on Sun, Aug 20 2006 2:57 pm Robesin is merely a product of the "incentive" licensing system where all those who hunger for being a "somebody" can get a Title - Rank - Privilege through a singular skill. If it doesn't have rank or a uniform, Robesin isn't interested. That certainly seems the case. The "uniform" is his emperor's new clothes... Lessee. He's got a Marine uniform (he says). A Tennessee State Guard uniform (whatever that is), an ill-fitting Air Force CAP flight suit uniform, and a male nurses uniform. And he has lots of military medals that he never earned (according to him). You know, whenever I saw folks in the CAP uniform at any Air Force Base, including Maxwell, they work the 4b or Class A. Never ever saw a CAP in a flight suit before robesin's well advertised home page. In all my visits to USAF bases I've never seen any CAP personnel there, let alone some in a poopy suit. I've seen several civilians on USAF bases, employed by the USAF, wearing flight suits and clearly identified as to being civilian. I didn't make that system, neither did you, neither did anyone in these four forums. The FCC took a big chunk out of it (license classes and morsemanship skill) with the Restructuring of 2000 and that ****ed off the Title-Rank- Status seekers. Devout morsemen are angry and venting steam because their self-esteem has fallen. Only in their minds. They are the very same good or bad hams that they were with all the layers of hamdom. All of those "layers" hams are examples to the general public, good or bad or indifferent. So? "Self-esteem" is a nice-nice word for EGO tied in with self- perception. Trying to represent themselves as "expert" radio persons in this new millennium is a rather stupid idea of those devout morsepersons when they want to force the FCC to keep the code test. Some do. Some don't. robesin does. He's a bad example for the morsemen. Those who LIKE morse code should, and can, go on using it. Roger. Roger that. salute That is in no sense any validity for making it an amateur radio test requirement for a license. No valid reason to maintain it as a barrier to the ARS. Oh, oh...in the PC (Political Correctness) of morsedom, the code test cannot possibly ever be a "barrier." ALL "good hams" should WORK for their AMATEUR licenses! Those that won't are worse than river-bottom slime...:-) Trying to speak logically, the FCC grants amateur licenses in the USA and even they proposed (via an NPRM) to eliminate the amateur radio morse code test for a license. FCC is on record of a couple decades ago that this singular manual skill test does not tell them if a license applicant is worthy of a federal license. Simply amazing. EIGHTEEN years alleged on active duty and he can't supply a single photo or document to support his claim? In November of this year I can truthfully say I've been in the southern California aerospace business 50 years. I have all sorts of documentation and photos on that which I may fully digitize some day (some are already digitized). Some time ago I posted my resume in here...which only made Robesin ballistic then since he has NO comparable experience in industry and cannot prove any radio experience other than amateur and alleged "chief operator" status at some small MARS station long ago. [that was before his less-than-a-half-year as a purchasing agent at a small set top box maker] Yet as "chief operator" or ANCOIC of NMC MARS on Okinawa, he remains woefully ignorant of MARS. I just don't get it. It's easy to "get." He wasn't what he says he was. He hasn't supplied a single bit of evidence to prove his claims. Now it all makes sense. It was all one great big super-brag. Robesin used the wrong word/acronym for a RESUME' presented as part of an interview for a job. Thought he had a "killer" job as a male nurse? God forbid! Robesin an academic? Not in this lifetime. It's just his inappropriate use of what to him are important sounding words and acronyms. Some of those he makes up as he goes along. Probably how his career in the Marines was invented. Well, he might have been in the reserves? The rec.radio newsgroups have showcased Robesin. He HAS earned his reputation. He's worked very hard for it. He's hardly worked in radio. Oh, I don't know. After a hard day behind the microphone, he's got that 1,000 yard stare. That's also a symptom of anoxia...lack of oxygen used up in his bragging of what he did that never was... :-) Tsk, all that work he does in trying to bluff us. All he had to do was present SOME sort of document proof or even a personal snapshot taken while in that "hostile-action-filled" 18 year "career" in the USMC. He hasn't done so after many years. If he can't present a single item of 18 years of his life, it is hard for the rest of us to believe anything he said. |
#539
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If you had to use CW... would robesin still be an idiot?
From: on Wed, Aug 23 2006 8:10 pm
wrote: wrote: From: an old friend on Mon, Aug 21 2006 3:16 pm wrote: From: on Sun, Aug 20 2006 2:57 pm It's "minority rule" when ARRL lobbies for preservation of morse code test for any amateur radio license class. The ARRL membership is slightly less than a quarter of all US amateur radio licensees. The ARRL is trying to soften their image - the latest QST shows a person using a, gulp, microphone on the FRONT cover! Good grief! The sky is falling! The sky is falling! It may be for some. I pity the Al-Code-Ah and their absurd zealousness of the old. Just inside is yet another article on building a code key - from a door hinge. Oh, goody...HIGH TECH construction article. They didn't mention wether you should use oil or conductive grease on the hinge. They should use "RF Grease" - same stuff to lower VSWR on feedlines... Would they follow that with another article on the door itself? Like, I mean, making the door a jar? :-) Wow! We almost leaped from a door hinge to a jar head. Oh, my! :-) Now comes the "outrage" from a wanna-be jar head. I was thinking more of the image of Jar-Jar Binks having come to earth in Newington and invading the editors offices of QST. [see the 4th "Star Wars" film to find out who Jar-Jar Binks is and morsemen should quit viewing "Independence Day" for the umpteenth time... :-) ] This just in from The ARRL Letter, Vol. 25, No. 33, August 18, 2006 "ARRL First Vice President Kay Craigie, N3KN, represented the League at the Global Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Conference 2006." "Craigie stressed that Amateur Radio needs to avoid "being dazzled by our own press clippings into thinking that we are the big dog in emergency telecommunications."" She refers to robesin-like attitudes within the ARS. Oh. My. God. ! ! ! Tsk, just because NBC, CBS, ABC, CNN, FOX, ESPN, and PBS haven't covered the tremendously fantastic wonderfullest huge contribution to saving lives and property via ham radio? Gosh, there are all sorts of clippings from obscure weekly and biweekly newspapers dutifully cut-and-pasted into messages here from Robesin & Co. And probably at least as credible as the rest of the news they carry. Weeklies and bi-weeklies serve their communities okay. It's when their reporters get overly ambitious and start copying copy from other sources when they get into trouble. Maybe I'll have to write the Department of Defense and say that "Major" Robesin said that radio amateurs run MARS! He did. We KNOW Major Dud said that in here over and over and over and over and over and over again, but did he really write DoD? BWAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Right and all the other radio services are switching to morse code for all emergency communications a la ham radio The American Public would sue them for slow service and wrongful deaths. Well, the reporting of those civil court cases would be NEW COPY for the papers! Wanna bet that the ARRL would try to spin that off as "good for the ARS?" :-) ...the sky has truly fallen! The other shoe would drop. The end is near... doo-dah, doo-dah... |
#540
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If you had to use CW to save someone's life, would that persondie?
Al Klein wrote:
Cecil Moore wrote: I can certainly write down Spanish spoken at my CW speed of 13 wpm Really? You listen to people speaking at 13 wpm? What are they on? It sounds like good stuff. Your objection was that I cannot write Spanish at 100 wpm. I admit that but I know how to say "despacio" until they slow down so I can write it down. Since I can copy CW at 13 wpm, that seems to be a reasonable comparison. -- 73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp |
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