I wouldn't pay either, not because of some principle but sheer bone
laziness. If I had to go to the bank to get a US money order I would
put it on my to do list and never get it done before the deadline passed.
"What about payola or some such," you say. I consider the internet to
be hopelessly insecure, in spite of all the attempts to convince us
otherwise, so I don't do money things on the net. Please, no attempts
to convince me otherwise; I've read too many accounts of people losing
money to pay any attention.
I could write a cheque if I had a US bank account, but then I'd have to
mail it.
I guess that, as I get older, I get really impatient with what I call
"friction" i.e. things which get in the way. This doesn't mean I'm not
willing to put back into ham radio. I volunteer over a hundred hours a
year of my time to the club I belong to.
73 de Jim Smith VE7FO
Mike DeChristopher wrote:
>Ev, by putting a cost to contesting or other radiosports, it takes away the
>point. Remember, in theory, contesting is practice for our stations and our
>operating skills. If it cost money, yes, I'm sure some people would still
>compete. The ones who would stop participating or never start in the first
>place wouldn't have a chance to practice their operating skills in a
>"high-activity" environment. You bring up a good point, in the future
>someone might get the idea to do this, but I just don't feel it would be the
>least bit successful.
>
>So, personally, no matter what the benefits are, I would not compete if I
>had to pay.
>
>-Mike, KB1FWN
>
>_______________________________________________
>CQ-Contest mailing list
>CQ-Contest@contesting.com
>http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
>
>
>
_______________________________________________
CQ-Contest mailing list
CQ-Contest@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/cq-contest
|