I thought Damon ordered this topic executed a few hours ago...

DO NOT make him get the AO-51 Goat out to take care of this problem...

Now then, what ever happened to SO-67...they were on to fixing it I thought

73 K7TRK

-----Original Message-----
From: amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org [mailto:amsat-bb-boun...@amsat.org] On
Behalf Of Gregg Wonderly
Sent: Tuesday, October 25, 2011 7:54 AM
To: amsat-bb@amsat.org
Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: This Is a HOBBY people

On 10/23/2011 11:55 PM, Art McBride wrote:
> Greg,
> It is the Amateur Radio Service. It does have 5 purposes as quoted in Part
> 97.1
>
> If you buy supplies and work on something you enjoy doing it is called a
> hobby.
>
> If you do it to establish a business we call it work.
>
> We are Amateurs because we receive no compensation for our efforts, not
> because we are unprofessional.
>
> So where is the conflict?
>
> Politicians are famous for finding the facts to support their conclusions.
>
> I prefer to have all of the cards on the table.
Art, there is no conflict in you using Amateur Radio as a hobby.  The
conflict 
is in the exact "meaning" of each of the words in the subject line.   The 
capitalization of "Is a HOBBY", puts the emphasis on "is" and "hobby", which
for 
me says that there is no "other part."  I enjoy many hobby parts of Amateur 
Radio.  But, I also believe that the service part is very important to my 
community.  I live in Oklahoma where 4 out of 12 months of the year we have 
tornadoes as a huge threat, and 2 other months out of the year we have a
chance 
for huge ice storms.  So, 1/2 of my year is subject to weather events that
may 
require some form of support for the Amateur Radio community.  It's a big
deal 
for the local Tulsa NWS office, that we have built a large UHF linked
repeater 
system that covers pretty much all of their responsibility area.  They can
get 
direct reports from the local EOC offices from their local spotters on their
VHF 
nets to confirm things they see on radar to be able to get a "Tornado
Warning" 
out ASAP.  Every single extra second saves lives.

Thus, in my state, our club and its members can help by keeping equipment
and 
agreements in place so that this system can function.  When it's not needed
for 
storm spotting, it works great for wide area bike ride support.  We have
about 
10 different significant bicycle events with 100 mile rides in this area
each 
year.  Those people are staying in good health and enjoying the out doors.
I 
like the outdoors too, so going out to help is not a problem for me.  I've
just 
had family events with my daughters in Marching Band contests for the past 6

years, and that has kept me from being able to support the 3 big events of
the 
fall (MS-150, Tulsa Tough, Dam Jam) or the others in between.  People are
safer 
because we drive the routes and provide transport of food, drink and broken 
bikes and riders.

Sure, someone else could do it for pay, but why not exchange some services,
for 
a T-Shirt that you can wear around the house, and a good time using Amateur 
Radio to talk to your friends, to boot.

Gregg Wonderly
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