But they have to send you the magazine! They make a substantial amount from advertising the quadcopters and other crap, but can only do so if they can show large "readership" (even if we don't - read, that is). The advertisers pay for large numbers in distribution, not whether their add gets read or not. It's weird, but works for them. They'd probably distribute the magazine to non-members for free if they could (but their non-profit status would prevent that) since they could garner additional add revenue by doing so. So, if they stop sending you Model Aviation, they don't save any money since they lose add revenue. They simply need to send something out to somebody (in fact, anybody, even if they hate quadcopters) that includes the advertisements so they can get an income stream from the quadcopter manufacturers.
So, there you have it: an organization that is supposed to be educational and is supposed to support model aviation, but does neither. It produces a magazine that competes with commercial magazines and puts them under (e.g., Flying Models) by sucking up all the add revenue. It ignores the many different and traditional aspects of the hobby and pointedly does not support them. And it promotes the "gee! look at the latest fad. Let's get one of these!" approach to the hobby that destroys tradition, depresses interest, and awards short attention span and those simply seeking entertainment.
What cracks me up is that they finally did a couple of articles on building and then wrote in their columns like they had an epiphany - like wow! you mean there are people out there with an interest in building! who woulda thunk?
