All that the MP is concerned with is votes for himself.  The Eurosceptic
movement has convinced the British public (at any rate the stupid part of
the public) that metrication is something that is being forced on Britain by
the EU.  Common sense does not enter the equation. 

 

From: owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf
Of John M. Steele
Sent: 10 January 2013 11:24
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:52132] Re: U.S. and UK metrication

 

I wonder if the MP has ever considered fixing the daft rules on road signs
and beer, vs the alternative of wasting teaching hours on obsolete units.

 

Imperial - only good for drinking and driving.  Nope, I don't think that
will succeed as a tagline.

 

  _____  

From: Paul Trusten <trus...@grandecom.net>
To: U.S. Metric Association <usma@colostate.edu>
Sent: Wed, January 9, 2013 1:33:21 PM
Subject: [USMA:52129] U.S. and UK metrication

 

Dear Mr. Percy,

 

Thank you very much for your quick reply to my letter and especially for
addressing the concerns of a foreigner.  In the U.S., members of the House
of Representatives and the Senate rightly refuse to receive email from
anyone but one of their respective constituents, so I am honored by your
expenditure of valuable time.  Yet, I can also see by your second email that
I have pressed one of your hot buttons. I assure you it is also a hot button
of mine, and has been for 38 years.

 

I also apologize for my bumbling email-ery. I had wanted to finish my letter
to you, but if you keep reading my original message, you'll see it is
incomplete.   

 

On that last point I surely agree, except to say that there is confusion
enough on UK measurements without any change in education. On my visit to
Edinburgh in 2009, I had to ask what the speed limit signs meant. They
looked just like the ones in Germany: red circle around a number. I learned
by asking that they meant miles per hour. Perhaps it is time for the UK to
change fully to the metric system, roads included. My proposal is to finish
what was started. Partial metrication is not metrication. True metrication
is what was done in Australia: everything metric, right down to the grams of
steak in restaurants and the frame of reference in warning signs ("no
smoking within 5 meters").  I, above all people, do not want to promote
confusion in matters of measurement.  But metrication cannot succeed without
teaching only ONE system. I am told that metrication was the goal of your
government's actions in 1965, and, as is the case in the U.S., where an
abortive attempt was made to change to metric in the 1970s, our countries
still have work to do, as neither a man nor a country is an island any more.


 

Why this obsession with keeping the measurement of only beer in imperial
measurement? Is milk in imperial?  I shopped in Edinburgh, and and found
consumer products generally to be metric.  How can a nation exist with the
public emphasis on metric in some areas and a different emphasis in others?
Is there a particular romance in being nonstandard? 

 

I don't know if you have this problem in the UK, but here in the U.S., the
cultural prevalence of two systems of measurement, contrary to what you
wrote in your article, surely does us harm.  The healthcare system continues
to condone the use of teaspoonfuls and tablespoonfuls in medication orders.
Our Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP, www.ismp.org
<http://www.ismp.org/>  ) informs me that there have been, I believe, about
50 reports of unit mixups that have resulted in harm.  One teaspoonful is
approximately 5 milliliters, so if the units are confused, the result can be
a fivefold overdose. At this very moment, I am involved in working with U.S.
authorities to eliminate non-metric units in that part of healthcare in
which I am involved. 

 

I want to thank you very much for the opportunity for this dialogue, and I
know it must be a pain to have your Blackberry get you angry, but I have my
iPhone doing it all the time (grin). I hope to continue this conversation.

 

As I failed to identify myself before, I shall now say that I am,

 

SIncerely,

 

Paul R. Trusten
Registered Pharmacist
Vice President and Public Relations Director
U.S. Metric Association, Inc.
www.metric.org <http://www.metric.org/> 
trus...@grandecom.net
+1(432)528-7724

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: brigg.go...@gmail.com 

To: Paul Trusten <mailto:trus...@grandecom.net>  ; brigg.go...@gmail.com 

Cc: n...@nctm.org 

Sent: 2013-01-09 11:45

Subject: Re: It is called the INTERNATIONAL System of Units!

 

Hello there,

Imperial measurements are not going to be replaced on UK roads, not now, not
tomorrow and not any time soon. Nor are we going to allow the sale of beer
in litres. 

As such children must learn both. Why do you want to endanger road users and
put children at risk by not having them learn the ONLY legal measure on our
roads. Seems a bit backwards and ignorant of you. 

Regards
Andrew Percy. 

Sent using BlackBerryR from Orange

  _____  

From: "Paul Trusten" <trus...@grandecom.net> 

Date: Wed, 9 Jan 2013 11:39:38 -0600

To: <brigg.go...@gmail.com>

Cc: <n...@nctm.org>

Subject: It is called the INTERNATIONAL System of Units!

 

Dear Mr. Percy,

 

I am writing to protest extremely any move to revive the teaching of
imperial units in British schools
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationopinion/9790670/Modern-school
s-must-teach-imperial-measurements.html ).

 

To this, you may be thinking, : "Well, you Yanks broke away from us, so this
is none of your business." Not so.  Measurement is everybody's business.
And, the U.S. is one of the original signatories to the Meter Convention in
1875, thus making it a full partner in the building of the International
System of Units.  Still, what happens in the UK concerns us. I am writing
today, not only to British interests, but to the educational interests on my
side of the puddle in the U.S., to urge the elimination of the teaching of
pre-metric units in our schools with all deliberate speed.  

 

We shall show reverent respect to those old units, by which we lived our
lives for so many years. The Light Brigade will always ride half a league
onward, Robert Frost will forever have miles to go before he sleeps,  and
people will continue to describe a slow process as "inching along." But, in
terms of commerce and science, we have been in a global time for many years.
Our planet is tinier than it has ever been.  The inefficiencies (and, in my
profession, the dangers) of there being two extant systems of measurement is
a long-range practical problem that must be wrested from the political and
cultural objections of the moment. Our national identities should be tied,
not to our prejudice, but to our wisdom. To continue to teach the old units
is to nod to the perpetuation of their continued use. 

 

In your article, you state that the coexistence of two measurement systems
has not done your country 

 

Be they in London or Los Angeles, Manchester or Minneapolis, all school
children should be learning only the SI metric system of measurement in
school.  To do otherwise would be a grand leap backward, which is opposite
to the direction of the world. The chorus of naysayers, be they in your
country or mine, does nothing but pull both of our lands down like
quicksand.  These were the same voices that told the train riders to stick
with the stagecoach, and the automobile driver to revert to relying upon a
horse.  

 

 

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