My last spiel (for tonight, anyway):

My friend, you have hit the nail on the head. I admire the way you home in on 
the main point.

My personal view is that the government is costing us money in the long run 
by not taking firm, positive action. Some of my friends prefer the approach 
of letting things take their natural course, but I view that as being about 
as tasteful as getting a flu shot or vaccination by having the needle moved 
inward at 1 mm per minute.

Dang it, let's just take that shot and get it over with. Let's set a 
deadline, an "M-Day", and make it happen -- far enough off to prepare, but 
close enough that our politicians can't chicken out and cancel things like 
they did in the 70s.

That's the way that Australia metricated and it was virtually painless. The 
Australian government convened all the responsible industry groups and told 
them to get their industries ready. The government prepared the people. Then 
it happened. Done.

That's the way Britain shifted to decimal currency in the 70s. That's the way 
that we recently shifted to decimal stock market operations (though this was 
not so government intensive). That's the way the European Union shifted to 
the euro. Two months overlap were alloted but within 2 weeks 95% of all 
transactions were done in euros! The French gave up their beloved Franc, the 
German their marks, and the Greeks gave up their 2000 year old drachmas!

Nowadays, everyone's pussyfooting around. The government is afraid the 
citizens are going to throw their 2 L Coke bottles at them while chanting "We 
don't understand metric units!" The agencies that could do more for metric 
awareness (the various math and science teachers organizations, the NSF, 
NASA, Dept. of Education) are afraid to stick their heads out. And everyone's 
waiting for the government to say "go".

Who's in charge of running our country and keeping our economic situtation 
hopeful? If this administration were truly serious about doing something to 
help American goods sell abroad, it would have something before Congress to 
set an M-Day before the next presidential election. And if Americans realized 
what was going on (or not!), if they realized how this dual-unit system is 
hurting their children's education, they would be writing to their 
congressional representatives demanding action.

For what it's worth, that's my opinion. In the meantime, I teach the metric 
system in addition to physics and astronomy. I encourage responsible agencies 
to teach the metric system. I also encourage NASA to teach the metric system 
as well as they teach astronomy and space science. Their artificial 
"translation" of metric information to feet and pounds while blaming it on 
the American public's knowledge is an insult to us all. If they can't explain 
and use meters, they can't explain and talk about meteors. 

-- 
James R. Frysinger                  University/College of Charleston
10 Captiva Row                      Dept. of Physics and Astronomy
Charleston, SC 29407                66 George Street
843.225.0805                        Charleston, SC 29424
http://www.cofc.edu/~frysingj       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cert. Adv. Metrication Specialist   843.953.7644

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