[GreenKeys] QSO's with glass tubes
Mark Richards
mark.richards at massmicro.com
Wed Feb 5 13:31:09 EST 2014
For what it may be worth, I wholly agree with your observations.
It may be that ARRL membership, and the ratio of ARRL renewals for new
licensees, is a good indicator of the sustainable growth of Amateur
Radio. I don't think anyone has done a study. The data is there...
maybe this will be my calling.
Now I may be straying a bit...
America still has 3 social and economic classes, and these are tightly
linked:
The upper class: pays none of the taxes, has all of the money, does
none of the work
The middle class: does all of the work, pays all of the taxes
The lower class: exist to scare the poop out of the middle class
All the while the upper class continues robbing what's left of the banks.
In order to maintain this structure a drug is needed. The old drug was
TV. The new distraction is the flat screen (quoting myself, "flat
screen, flat world") and the further social distancing produced by the
internet-ization of every social interaction. As long as we have
devices that plug into the wall, make a humming sound, and when we press
a button start the car and make toast, many of us will be too gizmod' to
complain about our basic economic and social plight.
Ideas my own. Ideation/adaptation courtesy of the late and prophetic
George Carlin.
There is a parallel between the fascination with Amateur Radio in my
youth and today's youthful fascination with flat screens. I was
obsessed with something that gave me great pleasure, opened up direct
communication with others, advanced skills with wide-ranging impacts,
and provided a balanced kinesthetic, visual and auditory experience.
Today, the flat screens are made in China (whereas I built my own gear
and fixed hand-me-down stuff), are programmed in Redmond (whereas I
constructed my own methods and adapted those in use), and are used for a
few months and then replaced by a newer gizmo that has even more
unnecessary features than its predecessor (whereas in my time gear was
expensive and precious; was rugged and well purposed, and had therefore
a value beyond the cost of the unit itself - I came to love it and
therefore respect the cost and effort involved).
A prime difference to consider is the speed of everything. It took
thousands of years to transition from the agrarian economy to the
industrial economy. It took just a few decades to transition from the
industrial economy to the internet/flat screen economy. The next
transition will be even faster, and I suspect it will come about when
the electricity simply flows no more. Then we will return to rooting
for potatoes... a good thing.
I feel deep sadness and concern for today's children who have been
denied the opportunity to feel the grip of a pencil between their
fingers; the neuron-pathway-development that comes from forming letters
on paper with that pencil; the transfer and further expansion of these
kinesthetics to the whole life. Our clueless school "district" spent
hundreds of thousands on "I" pads for first year students and in so
doing they follow the mainstream over a cliff. How ridiculous and
outrageous. But it cannot be stopped.
Drugs are like that.
/k1mgy
On 02/05/2014 11:09, tony.podrasky wrote:
> GM OMs;
>
> I disagree.
>
> I'm wondering if the ARRL has a chart that shows the direction
> of membership: is it going up or down?
More information about the GreenKeys
mailing list