Arnold Ragas (candidate for reelection to Georgia House),

I am sorry that you have not had a chance to reply to my little "brain
teaser".

The  first  calculation result  is 63/64ths of an inch which is
exactly  25.003125 millimeters.  The second calculation result is
25 millimeters.  If you were to draw a line using each measure, I'm certain
that you would never be able to tell the difference.

Obviously, you would have had to determine the lowest common denominator
using the inch fractions whereas the adding of the millimeters would have
been simple.

Construction in the U.S. still uses fractions of inches and I can't help but
wonder how much more efficient that industry could be if they used metric
measures.  Construction is but one example, unfortunately.

I am not an engineer or an academic.  I am just an ordinary retired
accountant who fears that my grandchildren are not being taught what they
need for the global competition which will be upon us.  My children, now all
adults and presumably of your generation, failed to learn the International
System of units so I freely admit that we failed all of you. Don't do it to
another generation!

I am of the opinion that fractions are being overtaught in schools because
we unduly cling to their daily use.  Fractions of inches, 12 inches to a
foot, 36 inches to a yard, 3 feet to a yard, 16 ounces to a pound, 16 fluid
ounces to a pint, 2 pints to a quart, 4 quarts to a gallon, and the list
goes on.  To top it off, what on earth is a barrel?  For all intents and
purposes, I consider a fraction as a step toward computing a decimal.

The only way many  industries function is to pick one of the measures for a
specific application and decimalize it.  However, by clinging to what I call
King George III Colonial units, they give up the full decimal
interrelationship between all portions of the International System of units.

The International System of units (SI-metric), totally decimal based with
logical relationships between elements of distance, capacity, area, energy,
weights, power,  temperature, etc. is very simple to use when given a
chance.  When Congress passed the Metric Conversion Act in 1975, I, at age
39, began to teach myself what I would need as a consumer.  Then, much to my
consternation, the next 25 years have been given over to false starts and
much backpedaling.  On top of that, at state level, the southern states are
even more backward than all other regions of the nation.

Prepackaged goods in stores shows grams, kilograms, milliliters and liters
in addition to the antiquated measures.  When I recently wrote to a major
corporation stating that I would channel my business to the company in their
field who first changed all their sizing to rational metric sizes, I did
receive a reply.  However, the reply took the theme that their company
obeyed all relevant laws and that I should address my concerns to agencies
of the government.

I believe that we must convert to the International System of units.  I
believe that we must do so expeditiously.  I believe that it must be done
with cooperation between federal and state governments, public and private
education, plus individual industries.  Commerce includes all of the
foregoing.  Australia did it that way and they succeeded within a decade.

Unfortunately in the U.S., government, industry, and education continue to
act as it the rest of the world is going to regress from using SI-metric to
using King George III Colonial units.  I do not believe there is any chance
that this will happen.  For one thing, the units from which most of the
world's nations changed  were their own local antiquated units,not the
British or so-called American units.  Secondly, the U.S. continues to say
that it is going to change to SI-metric, but then backs down at the
slightest resistance always pleading fear of cost.  The auto industry
established that changing to metric saved money.  Like it or not,
globalization is here and the rest of the world does not want products in
pounds and ounces or in feet and inches.

I do write countless emails to companies and newspapers expressing my
pro-metric views so I am trying to influence them.  I do this because I have
been told by elected officials that it is not the business of government to
involve itself in measurement matters. The latter attitude is impractical to
the point of nonsense.

What does every gasoline pump in Georgia have on it?  A valid Georgia
Department of Agriculture verification of accuracy stamp must appear on
every commercial measuring device.  What is a speed limit but government
involvement in measurement matters?   Does not government have to make laws
and lead  when needs require action?  Two centuries ago our Congress
responded to a chaotic situation among states when ports on their coasts
competed to make their individual measures more attractive to importers and
exporters than the next. Unfortunately, in spite of urging by our earliest
Presidents, Congress  passed up the chance to get in on the ground floor of
the newly developing metric system because of fear of the unknown.

You are a candidate for the state legislature and because much law in the
area of measures is determined at state level, I feel we must start here.
You can do what is necessary to put Georgia in the group of states who
accept metric labeling under the Uniform Packaging and Labeling Regulations
(UPLR).  You can do what is necessary to put our DOT among those who use
metric measures in construction.

We will not be able to change the rest of the world from SI-metric, so we
must adopt SI-metric here for daily use in order to conform.  To do
otherwise displays an incredibly arrogant attitude.

Sincerely,

 Norman Werling



> Here  is the problem stated again.
>
> Step one is to add the following:
> 1/64
> 1/32
> 1/16
> 1/8
> 1/4
> 1/2
> -------
> 63/64
> -------
> Now add the following:
> 1
> 2
> 4
> 5
> 6
> 7
> -----
> 25
> -----
> Sorry that you did not participate,
>
> Norman V. Werling
> 1240 Hunters Drive
> Stone Mountain, GA 30083-2545
> 404-292-9328
>
>
>

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