> 
> Might work in the USofA but in the UK not so. When the UK converted to metric 
> weights, large numbers of shop owners were convicted and fined for selling 
> goods on a non existent weight scale (imperial pound and ounces) instead of 
> kilogrammes., even though the scales were accurate.


Only in tabloid land.  A handful of merchants who had been repeatedly warned by 
trading standards decided to push the point in some UKIP-style "it's all the 
EU, innit?" quest for martyrdom.  Regrettably, the courts had little option but 
to grant them their wish.  One was using scales which weren't stamped by 
weights and measures, which is an offence in its own right.   One was selling 
short measure, which is an offence irrespective of what measure is used.  A 
couple were refusing to display metric measure in parallel with imperial 
measure.  There's even been a case the other way around, involving litre beer 
glasses, in which Miliband Minor quite rightly told Doncaster Trading Standards 
to do something useful with taxpayers' money rather than wasting it.   Half a 
dozen cases isn't "a large number" and the cases were the very definition of 
people itching to be convicted to "make a point" or "out of principle" or 
something.

ian
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