371 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
371 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Pump up the volume (or how to make a pirate radio station)
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By: D.J. "big Joe"
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This is patently illegal, so don't distrbute it to people you do not trust!
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What is pirate radio? Pirate radio is an illegal radio station that is run
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by people who don't feel like waiting for the FCC to get around to licensing
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them. From music to talk there are pirate radio stations all over the U.S. and
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the world. In the U.S., stations are usually started in big cities. One great
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pirate station (who is still on the loose, at last check) is Radio Free New
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York, located in New York city.
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How to get started?
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First, make sure you really want to do this, if you get caught, you pay a
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hefty fine, get the equipment confiscated (Big $$$), and may spend a few years
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in prison. If you really want to start a pirate station, here you go.
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First, pick up the equipment. This is such stuff as mixing board, turntable,
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microphone, CD players, tape decks, eight track (For the '70s disco stations),
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and so on. DON'T go to expensive, if you get busted, you don't want to throw
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$30,000 down the tubes on equipment alone! Most of this stuff can probably get
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picked up at electronic and radio flea markets. (Check ham magazines such as QST
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and 73 for info and dates on these.) The stereo equip needs not to be something
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glorious. Used or from the local Salvation Army will due just fine.
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Plug a wire from the OUTPUT on the stereo equipment to the INPUT port you've
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chosen for that particular piece of equipment on the mixer. Now, the output line
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from the mixer, will go to the transmitter.
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First, plug the mixer output line into the input of an amplifier. Use your
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mike, and practice DJing for a while and you'll hear yourself
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coming over the amp speakers.
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Once you are really good at this. Build or buy a FM or AM trans-
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mitter. (UNDER 100 WATTS, so you are rather quiet and local.) Trans-
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mitters are most definitely the most important part of your investment
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and the most expensive. In the event you think you're going to get
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busted, hide the transmitter well. Tune the transmitter for the freq-
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uency you want to use and hookup an antenna.
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Your antenna should NOT be obvious. A wire in the attic might
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even be a bit to conspicious if the house was searched. For AM
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stations a good Amateur Radio antenna tuner can work well. Use the
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tuner to "tune up" the gutters, window screens, clothes lines, etc.
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I will warn you, AM antennas are very large. FM antennas are smaller
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to build.
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To make antennas you must know several electronic facts. The most
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important one is SWR (Standing Wave Ratio). I don't understand it
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exactly, but too much will screw up the finals in the transmitter.
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Tune the antenna to anything less than a 2:1 ratio on an SWR meter.
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(Available at Radio Shack). Secondly, to get a rough estimate on a low
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SWR antenna, do this simple 5th grade math. Divide the frequency by
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468. This will give you the length of the antenna in feet. Fine tune
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this for the lowest possible SWR.
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To hide your antenna, read some of the articles in ham magazines
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on hidden antennas. Plans for flagpole, clothesline, tree, and other
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disguised antennas are in almost any good radio magazine at the
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library.
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Once the antenna is hooked to the transmitter, you are on air.
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Here are some ground rules:
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1. Do not tell people you run the radio station, keep it in a low
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visibility area. (In the cellar, for example.)
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2. Be polite. Some pirate stations have become popular with local
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folks. (They objected when the FCC shut them down) Be courteous and
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don't pollute the airwaves with obscene music or language. If you are
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offensive, people may report you. If they like you, they may not tell
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the FCC about you.
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3. Always watch for suspicous people driving around and around the
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neighborhood. These may be the G men looking for you. Also, watch for
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people in your yard. Always check the yard, etc. Before going on air.
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4. Never talk to people about the station on the phone. Lines are
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easilly bugged.
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5. Do not advertise your station openly. People will hear your
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station while tuning around. Also, the FCC talks big and might adver-
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tise for you.
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6. No suspicous bumper stickers, pins, etc. Keep a low profile.
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7. If you get busted, call the local chapter of the ACLU. They
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may represent you.
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8. In the event it looks like the house might be searched,
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disconnect the board-transmitter cable and put the output to a reel
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cassette recorder, and hide the transmitter cable. This makes it look
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like you have a small recording studio. This is wise to do whenever
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you are off air. When you are going on vacation, or out of town, Stash the
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equipment, not in your house if possible. In the event you move, stay
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off the air at your new location for 6-12 months.
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9. How to handle G men and FCC informers: 1. Be polite (Rude
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people are considered "guilty".), 2. Devise a system so that you can
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be off air whenever anyone comes to the door. Do NOT rig an electronic
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doorbell system to be rung by a family member when cars arrive. They
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are too conspicous. This idea may work:
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Have a periscope, mirror system, or video system set up to
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monitor the driveway. Whenever a vehicle drives in, shut off the
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transmitter (Always, have a remote switch!), disconnect the line
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(the studio camoflougue), leave the room.
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3. Once the equipment is stashed, etc. Let the people in. If it
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is a cold day, offer them coffee, etc. Do not kiss-up though, it makes
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you look guilty.
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4. Ham operators know a lot about radio direction finding and
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electronics and they often help FCC people in looking for us. (One
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reason I don't like hams.) They are considered DANGEROUS do not let
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hams around the equipment. If I were you, DO NOT operate a station if
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an active ham lives within 1/4 mile of the house. To find out, look
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in neighbor's driveways for cars with callsign plates (such as N6ZZZ),
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big antennas on house and cars, or FEMA, CD, or ham bumper stickers.
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10. DO *NOT* under any circumstances give out your location, name,
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phone number, address, etc. Talk as little as possible, and when you
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do talk, use a scrambler or voice destorter. It is less reliable, but
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taping thick (1-2 inches) foam over the mike can work to some extent
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when you also disguise your voice.
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11. If you hear locals complain about interference on radio and
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t.v. and the interference seems to be your station, shut down right
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away! This is probably caused by poor shielding in your antenna line,
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no filters, or harmonics. If it the latter, mad hams and CBers might
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be after you for messing up their bands.
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12. Always check the antenna line with a multimeter before power-
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ing up. Make sure there is NO contact between the two leads. This is
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to prevent someone for "pinning" your coax or antenna line. (This is
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when you push a wire through the coax, and short the center to ground,
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causing the transmitter to burn up)
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13. Keep the records you play on air stashed away. The records
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you keep with your "studio" should be a few reel to reel tapes of
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songs. Definately not the ones you use on air. To keep the records
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in a distant place, try this. Keep the records at another place (When
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I refer to records, I mean CDs, Tapes, Carts, etc.) and record the
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songs to blank tapes. Use the re-recorded tapes then erase them
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(using a bulk eraser) when done. Keep using and erasing the same
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tapes, now the FCC has no proof you own the music that was played.
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They can search your place, never to find a trace of the albums.
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Notes:
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Once you get a solid format going, pirate stations can have
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"request time". This is done using the telephone company's test loops.
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Here's how you do it:
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Start dialing high number phone numbers in your area. (Such as
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123-9998). When you get a ring and a pickup with no one speaking on
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the other line, have someone else call the number above and below that
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number (Such as 123-9999 and 123-9997) If you can talk to the other
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person, volia! You've found a loop. Now have the upper (or lower)
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number dialed up at the station, and have your callers dial the other
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number. Then they can talk to you, without the Feds tracing you.
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To have "On air requests" (Which I do not really reccomend) buy
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a phone patch. These can be bought cheaply from ham stores. You don't
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need the 5 second delay, because you are a pirate station and illegal
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anyway.
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Another hint, announce your "location" about ever 1/2 hour. Make
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this location about 30 or so miles from where you really are. For
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example, a pirate station in New York may say he is from Long Island.
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Interesting ideas:
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Not all pirate stations are from someone's basement. The British
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government had ships broadcasting onto it's airways from out at sea.
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The UK navy finally caught the crew. American pirate radio stations
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have been tried off the coast too. Foreign shortwave pirate stations
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can reach the entire globe, and probably won't be stopped. These
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third world nations are broke, and usually could care less about a
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pirate station in the jungle unless it is a direct threat to the
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security of the country or in opposition to the government's beliefs.
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If you want to get out of pirate radio, do not try to sell the
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transmitter legit. It looks a little funny to have an unlicenced
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person selling a transmitter. I advise selling it to another pirate
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(they get to know each other after a while), or slowly dismantling it
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and selling it at various flea markets, junk collectors, and throwing
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away some. Take about 2 or so years disposing of the transmitter. It
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is the most "hot" piece equipment. The rest of the equipment can be
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used or sold, it is perfectly legal. Do not sell it all at once, or
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right after you've gone off-air. Never (NEVER) sell modified mikes.
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Also, never use the loop-call method again (especially the same
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phone #s), and dismantle all methods of observing the driveway.
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Lastly, sell the tapes you used, or keep them hidden well for at least
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2 years. Once a station has been off the air for about that long, the
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G men stop looking for the station. Also, dismantle anything
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associated with the station and fill in holes where wires ran, etc.
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In the event you get busted, plea bargin. Don't try to claim
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innocent if you were caught speaking into the mike, "Down with USA on
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Anarchist Radio Los Angeles." In the event they found your studio set-
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up, you may want to try to plead innocent. In all cases, consult a
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lawyer. The ACLU may be willing to represent you, also. Especially if
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you are a leftist cause. (Anarchist, communist, socialist, etc.).
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Conservatives might not be as lucky with this group. Keep your eyes
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open, if they search your house without a warrant, arrested you with-
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out a warrant, forgot to read you your rights, you might be able to
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get out on a technicality.
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If you are convicted, your FCC licences are finished, for good.
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This includes ham, cb, commercial, and so forth. So be cautious when
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getting involved with pirate radio.
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That's all folks! If you have any questions, write to the FCC,
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Gettysburg Maryland. (Yeah, right.)
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If you found this article helpful, send a $5 donation to the
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Easter Seals society in the name of Radio New York International (A
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pirate station shut down several years ago)
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have fun,
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big Joe, Radio Free Juneau
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102.1 FM...coming soon to a radio
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near you. (If you live in Alaska)k the antenna line with a multimeter before power-
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ing up. Make su |