Hopefully most on the list will remember all this as (almost) total bunkum from 
previous attempts.  The anti-US spin is just the cherry on the cake.   For 
clearer realistic responses and final outcomes please refer to the previous 
times that this consolidated effort below have been raised and put to bed.  
These can be found via searching on the USMA list archives via the web front 
end rather than the distribution list.
 


Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2010 07:29:56 -0700
From: barkatf...@ymail.com
Subject: [USMA:48095] Re: attitudes
To: usma@colostate.edu




America has always thought of itself as being holier than thou.  When you have 
a superiority complex it makes you look inferior all of a sudden if you adopt 
the practices of those you have always looked down upon.  Now that America is 
no longer superior it is still hard to break the habit and belief.  It would 
seem Americans would prefer to be dirt poor and unemployed than to adopt the 
ways of the "French".  

Other than the obvious  road signs and pint glasses in pubs, I see no other 
major uses of non-metric in the UK (the pint glass issue is somewhat a minor 
issue).  Being a pro-metric person who wants total metrication you may see this 
as the UK not being as fully metric as you would like it.

An anti-metric person would harp continuously on these two instances to claim 
the UK is not metric at all and ignore the 90+ % that is metric.  

Even road signs are not entirely non-metric in the UK.  There are signs along 
highways that show kilometre distances that are ignored by the anti-metric 
fringe.  There are signs that show metres but are marked off as yards (denied 
by the anti-metric fringe).  And soon there will be height signs, possibly 
width signs too, that will show metres (in addition to out-dated units), 
something the anti-metric fringe is opposing.

Even in pubs you can purchase products other than beer in metric amounts, such 
as wine and hard licquor.

Products in the supermarkets are sold in metric only sizes and even the scales 
used to weigh your asked for goods are metric only.  If you ask for an old 
amount you get a metric amount.  

You purchase petrol by the litre and hear weather reports in metric.

Remnant uses of old unit names exist in every country and may continue to do so 
for a long time. 

You should at least be grateful that the UK is not in the same position as the 
US.  

I highly doubt the US will ever regain its pre-eminence even if it does 
metricate.  No empire that has ever collapsed has ever returned to greatness.  
All have become insignificant and poor.  Look at Iran (Persia), Iraq (Babylon), 
Egypt, Greece, Rome and the UK.        







From: John Frewen-Lord <j...@frewston.plus.com>
To: U.S. Metric Association <usma@colostate.edu>
Sent: Thu, July 8, 2010 9:52:52 AM
Subject: [USMA:48093] attitudes




Does America not adopt the metric system out of sheer bloody-mindedness?  On 
the BP oil spill, this article I find very telling (mostly imperial 
unfortunately).  The UK is not much better, at least at governmental level.  
The day America changes its attitude to the rest of the world (of which SI is a 
fundamental part) is the day that the US will regain its pre-eminence, not 
until.
 
http://www.financialpost.com/Avertible+catastrophe/3203808/story.html#ixzz0sGacwW4e
 
John F-L
                                          
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