k0ro
08-23-2005, 04:17 PM
Having been licensed since 1977 (I'm 41), I believe one of the sea changes in amateur radio has been the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War. #I believe this change alone accounts for some, even a significant degree, of the loss of our unique status and the interest/support of the public at large for our hobby/service. #I believe there are at least two key reasons for this. #
The first is that during the Cold War our service value was immediately recognized due to the specter of a nuclear exchange. #Probably the most accurate depiction of amateur radio that I have seen in a Hollywood movie was in the anti-nuke film, "Testament" from 1982 or 1983. #In it a northern Californian town is isolated after a nuclear war, and contact with other parts of the nation is maintained by a sixty-something amateur, and after his death, the young teenage boy whom he taught to operate his gear. #We no longer have such a mass-global or mass-continental threat, where clearly our unique communications assets would be required and held in high esteem. #I don’t think that there is widespread concern that a terrorist attack could cripple our communications infrastructure at this time, and thus our service value is diminished.
The second event is that we have lost some of the mystery of our fraternity due to the end of the Cold War. #Friends, teachers, co-workers and strangers were all amazed that I was regularly speaking with others in the USSR, East Germany, Yugoslavia and the like. #They would ask me what we discussed and were surprised that long-standing friendships developed, and that amateurs were allowed to operate behind the Iron Curtain. #I had something they didn’t have, a human bridge in a seemingly inhuman political landscape. #We no longer have national enemies (that is, nations as enemies) with whose citizens we can communicate and build friendships; there is now nothing noteworthy about using internet messaging to speak with someone in Kazakhstan.
I believe it is also true that the combination of military paranoia and forced civil service within the Iron Curtain nations promoted the adoption (perhaps the indoctrination) of amateur radio among those populations. #Look at the fantastic collective...I mean club...stations that have come out of the former Yugoslavia. #These were also the days when short-wave broadcasting may have had its greatest moment, as Voice of America and Radio Moscow vied for the hearts and minds of people across the globe. #
CW seemed to be the preferred medium of exchange with the Soviet Bloc amateurs due to difficulties with English and the moderate stations they often had, so this change might also be reflected in some decline in CW activity. #I remember the awe I had for so many of the Soviet hams who had built their own stations...some quite complex...and how embarrassed I would feel when a Polish ham apologized for his English on 15 or 20 SSB, when I could not speak a word of Polish.
Many of you might disagree with these thoughts, but they might resonate with some of you. #It seems that at least my amateur radio experience was far different when I could use it to build friendships where the general public least expected they could flourish, and that provided some of the “magic” of our hobby that is now lost.
73,
Art, KC2G
The first is that during the Cold War our service value was immediately recognized due to the specter of a nuclear exchange. #Probably the most accurate depiction of amateur radio that I have seen in a Hollywood movie was in the anti-nuke film, "Testament" from 1982 or 1983. #In it a northern Californian town is isolated after a nuclear war, and contact with other parts of the nation is maintained by a sixty-something amateur, and after his death, the young teenage boy whom he taught to operate his gear. #We no longer have such a mass-global or mass-continental threat, where clearly our unique communications assets would be required and held in high esteem. #I don’t think that there is widespread concern that a terrorist attack could cripple our communications infrastructure at this time, and thus our service value is diminished.
The second event is that we have lost some of the mystery of our fraternity due to the end of the Cold War. #Friends, teachers, co-workers and strangers were all amazed that I was regularly speaking with others in the USSR, East Germany, Yugoslavia and the like. #They would ask me what we discussed and were surprised that long-standing friendships developed, and that amateurs were allowed to operate behind the Iron Curtain. #I had something they didn’t have, a human bridge in a seemingly inhuman political landscape. #We no longer have national enemies (that is, nations as enemies) with whose citizens we can communicate and build friendships; there is now nothing noteworthy about using internet messaging to speak with someone in Kazakhstan.
I believe it is also true that the combination of military paranoia and forced civil service within the Iron Curtain nations promoted the adoption (perhaps the indoctrination) of amateur radio among those populations. #Look at the fantastic collective...I mean club...stations that have come out of the former Yugoslavia. #These were also the days when short-wave broadcasting may have had its greatest moment, as Voice of America and Radio Moscow vied for the hearts and minds of people across the globe. #
CW seemed to be the preferred medium of exchange with the Soviet Bloc amateurs due to difficulties with English and the moderate stations they often had, so this change might also be reflected in some decline in CW activity. #I remember the awe I had for so many of the Soviet hams who had built their own stations...some quite complex...and how embarrassed I would feel when a Polish ham apologized for his English on 15 or 20 SSB, when I could not speak a word of Polish.
Many of you might disagree with these thoughts, but they might resonate with some of you. #It seems that at least my amateur radio experience was far different when I could use it to build friendships where the general public least expected they could flourish, and that provided some of the “magic” of our hobby that is now lost.
73,
Art, KC2G