Hey N2AVH,
re The remaining "tropical" stations ( Peru, Bolivia ,China, Brazil,Canada, etc) : In THEORY there are still remote areas of the world without much in the way of local radio station coverage or internet. So the few regional SW stations that ARE left may still have "some" audience (maybe) . . Many (or most) of the tropical SW stations in Central/S America also were on the AM broadcast band as well .I believe 80 or 90 % of the listener ship was always on AM . SW was just kind of a 'fill in". Even back in the day I also think that the same advertising on SW made a lot less money as well.
FWIW, way back when ,some of the German high end cars- for sale IN Germany- had 49 M for "regional" coverage of a few favorite stations.
Perhaps the shrinking audience and cost vs return of SW simulcasts ( along with transmitter parts maybe becoming harder to come by) struck a death blow for 99.9 % of all tropicals .
There are a few "hobby" stations still on ( R. Tarma Peru 4775, + 1 AM and multiple FM , WAZN 1470 Boston, WJIB 720 Boston, etc).
It seems that China may still have an audience for "tropicals "in rural areas . But they may be govt subsidized anyway .The PRC may simply want to flood ALL media outlets, even low audience tropicals.
Not sure if the US govt really cares about SW pirates now . But admittedly (since my "friend" shut down- for HIS own reasons) , I haven't researched how many (if any ) busts there have been on US SW (or X band AM) pirates lately . FWIW, most of the Xband AM outlets around here shut down for their own reasons , not because of a bust.Probably the same deal on SW. But DON'T do it ANYWHERE on the FM band. You really put a bull's eye on yourself there.
Re SW ever coming back , even during an "apocalypse". I really doubt it.Big SW stations would need lots of money and electricity. I also doubt that in a serious crisis than folks in the US would be trying to get info on SW. Any SW activity in that scenario would be "lone cries in the wilderness" type stations with the operators just " throwing it out there" out of desperation. VERY few (or no) folks would probably hear them.
Low power local FM (or MAYBE AM) would be the "better" band of choice. But how many people would have FM (or AM ) broadcast transmitters in their possession and ready to go during very bad times ? Precious few.Their are a LOT more rogue hams that would be able to gear up on SW . But again, I doubt a population on crisis is going to park for hours on 6955 hoping to hear something "useful ".
SW never had a huge audience anyways (compared to AM /FM), even during the 1970's heydays.SW broadcasting (like it or not) is now simply an obsolete technology.
de NQC