Dear Mike,

Good letter. Congratulations.

Cheers,

Pat Naughtin CAMS
Geelong, Australia

on 2002-08-19 00.39, Mike Joy at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Below is an e-mail sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] today. Floods of these
> kinds of comments to these blind filmmakers will speed up the metrication
> process in the US. Go to it.
> 
> 
> 
> Sirs,
> 
> How disappointing that Stephen Baldwin, the narrator of Power Zone (a
> Discovery Channel documentary about satellites and the ski dome in Tokyo)
> used only your customary units to describe all the measurements and
> dimensions in it.
> 
> It's hard to imagine in this day and age that you Americans are completely
> blind to what's going on in the world right now, and, worse, that you're
> all so arrogant that you really don't care what people think about you.
> 
> How can you possibly carry on like this, not even realising that you're the
> last country in the world to use the metric system?
> 
> Your documentary was completely spoilt because of the use of measures that
> only people within your country can understand. What's the point in sending
> your documentaries outside the US if no-one can understand them?
> 
> People like you should not be perpetuating the acute embarrassment caused
> to your countrymen every time you show scientific documentaries like this
> by using an antiquated and dead system of measures.
> 
> It's really time you do something and ask your film producers to use metric
> measurements. EVERYONE (including Americans) can then understand what
> you're talking about.
> 
> This is the 21st century in case you don't realise it, and at present
> you're alone in a metric world.
> 
> No more 'feet' and 'Fahrenheit please. Our kids don't want to know.
> 
> Sincerely,
> 
> Mike Joy
> Perth, Australia
> cc: US Metric Association listserv.
> 

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