The stats for the ARRL DX Contest are all positive, too, I believe. 
I think contest participation is pretty high now thanks to our Baby Boom 
generation (born 1946 to 1964), especially those of us born in the first 10 
years of that period -- we first licensed from about 1960 to 1970. Scan your CW 
SS logs for the CK numbers if you don't believe it. 
It was almost cool to be a teen-aged ham in the 1960s because it was almost 
cool to be a math or science or even chess nerd, headed for engineering school 
to design space rockets (or weapons systems). We were a generation raised to be 
competitive, even if some of us chose not to. 
Technology has helped increase activity as well. Although I am (now) relegated 
to an apartment, I'll probably be on till I drop. By earlier standards, I have 
little invested in ham gear (a transceiver and an antenna tuner). Thanks to 
telecommunication techology, I don't have to worry about interfering with a 
neighbor's over-the-air TV reception, or landline telephone, or component 
stereo system. In fact, the opposite is true -- I hope none of my close 
neighbors has a plasma TV set. 
We are very, very fortunate to find outselves in this time and place. 
Jim Cain, K1TN   (b 1948)
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