Top Gear is probably my favourite TV programme.
Knowing Clarkson and co you will either get no response at all - or a very 
heavy ribbing!!  :-)

From: pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com
To: usma@colostate.edu
Subject: [USMA:46390] Top Gear
Date: Sun, 10 Jan 2010 20:09:08 +1100

Dear All,
I have just submitted the following to the BBC car evaluation program, 'Top 
Gear':
Dear Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond, and James May,

I have watched your 'Top Gear' program on several occasions and I have enjoyed 
your style of presentation and your program's content.

My problem with watching your program is that you stress old pre-metric 
measuring words as though these had some relevance in the motor industry. I 
live in Geelong – a Ford manufacturing town – where we were aware of the 'world 
car concept' based on the metric system from the early 1970s. We knew then, 
that in the motor industry, the metrication process was both inevitable and 
irreversible and this has subsequently proved to be the truth.

I have no doubt that you have also seen the inevitability and the 
irreversibility of metric measuring in the motor vehicle industry in all car, 
truck, and bike manufacturing industries, yet your team seems to disregard 
metric measuring units like watts and kilowatts as if they don't exist.

In the Australian motor manufacturing industry most engineers simply accepted 
the simplicity and ease-of-use provided by metric units and then got on with 
improving the excellence of their engineering skills. Some whinged and whined 
and I suspect that these might be the people who are influencing your choices 
such as whether you use horsepowers or kilowatts.

As I watch your program I simply don't know whether you have a quite deliberate 
policy to lead the British people toward the ancient past of the Roman invasion 
of England (with their inches and ounces), and the French invasion of 1066 
(with their avoirdupois pounds, quarters, hundredweights, and tons), or whether 
you are acting innocently simply kowtowing to whingers and whiners in the BBC 
audience who operate on the principle that 'it's the squeaky wheel that gets 
the oil'.

I suspect (and hope) that it is the latter However, I have to say that I find 
it extremely sad to watch you promote untruths and obfuscation to the people of 
the UK – whether deliberate or not.

Some of the whingers and whiners you support possibly believe that they are 
avoiding the foreign metric system as a point of national UK pride. This is a 
totally erroneous view as the metric system was invented in England and first 
published in London in 1668 by Bishop John Wilkins (see 
http://www.metricationmatters.com/who-invented-the-metric-system.html ).

The French did not develop the decimal metric system from Bishop John Wilkins 
plan until more than 120 years later in the 1790s. You also know that many of 
the words appropriate to cars and their engines are quintessentially English 
words – the James Watt inspired watts and kilowatts are obvious examples.

Another concern that I have is that I think by your choice of old pre-metric 
foreign words, such as inch, ounce, and pound, you are actively sabotaging the 
education of children in the UK. I know that sabotage is a strong word so let 
me explain.

Children in the UK, especially children who might be interested in cars, 
motors, and mechanical engineering have to learn the metric system to 
understand cars and motors; then they have to find out about all of the old 
pre-metric words to understand your comments on 'Top Gear'. In my considered 
opinion, this is a pure and simple sabotage of these children's education as 
they feel they have to learn multiple measuring words simply to understand you 
and your comments.

I know of only one study of this from the USA, where Richard Phelps estimates 
that it takes USA children an extra year to learn the mathematics of inches and 
ounces when compared to (say) Singapore children who only need to learn the 
metric system; the USA has to spend an extra 10 % of its mathematics education 
budget just to be something like 37th out of 38 OECD nations in comparative 
mathematics tests. You are encouraging this same differentiation in the UK by 
your choice of measuring words – and I don't believe that this is at all fair 
to British children. You can view Richard P. Phelps' article after you register 
on the Education Weekly database at: 
http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/1992/12/09/14phelps.h12.html 

As a side issue, you are also perpetrating and continuing the totally 
unnecessary, and seemingly endless, discussion about the metrication of the UK 
as a whole. This is extremely expensive for the whole of the UK as a nation, as 
it is for all nations who resist the simplicity, honesty, openness, and 
worldwide application of the metric system. I have not specifically 
investigated this cost in the UK but you may be able to draw some parallels 
from this estimate I made for the USA after visiting there a year or two ago: 
http://www.metricationmatters.com/docs/CostOfNonMetrication.pdf 

Yours faithfully,

Pat Naughtin
Geelong, Australia
 Cheers, Pat NaughtinAuthor of the ebook, Metrication Leaders Guide, that you 
can obtain from http://metricationmatters.com/MetricationLeadersGuideInfo.html 
PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,Geelong, AustraliaPhone: 61 3 5241 2008Metric system 
consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has helped thousands of people 
and hundreds of companies upgrade to the modern metric system smoothly, 
quickly, and so economically that they now save thousands each year when 
buying, processing, or selling for their businesses. Pat provides services and 
resources for many different trades, crafts, and professions for commercial, 
industrial and government metrication leaders in Asia, Europe, and in the USA. 
Pat's clients include the Australian Government, Google, NASA, NIST, and the 
metric associations of Canada, the UK, and the USA. See 
http://www.metricationmatters.com for more metrication information, contact Pat 
at pat.naugh...@metricationmatters.com or to get the free 'Metrication matters' 
newsletter go to: http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter to subscribe. 
                                          
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