2002-12-08

I'm pessimistic when it comes to the US making any efforts to convert.  I
feel despite being the only one using FFU, the US will try to its dying
breath to hold onto FFU and to promote it.  I feel any progress on the US
side is so little it goes un-noticed, except by us who really try hard to
find it.  I find any attempts to further promote SI is met with stiff
resistance to such a point, the progress turns into regression and the
status-quo remains.  Thus, there is really no progress at all.  At least as
far as Joe Sixpack is concerned

I'm optimistic as far as seeing US efforts as getting nowhere.  I'm
optimistic that US attempts to find a point of co-existence for FFU on the
world market is met with the same resistance  as SI meets in the domestic
market.  Even though many 3-rd world countries tolerate FFU, they are not
strong enough to give FFU the boost it needs to be an equal power with SI.
I am optimistic that a strong EU will be the force to limit and destroy FFU.
FFU's destruction will come from the efforts of world against the US, not
from change within the US.  Not being metric is already having its toll on
the US economy.  US exports to high value industrial countries would be
greater if the US designed and built its products to meet SI based
international standards.  Since they don't, US products don't sell well.

So, depending in which direction I am looking determines whether I am
optimistic or pessimistic.

John




----- Original Message -----
From: "Nat Hager III" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, 2002-12-07 17:28
Subject: [USMA:23827] Re: CNN article


> Thread #1:
>
> > Despite all of this resistance, the US is losing the battle.  It
> > can be seen
> > in the economy.
>
> Thread #2
>
> > In the long term, progress is non-existent.  The drips and drops
evaporate
> > and the status-quo remains.
>
> Posted from 2 different threads.  So are you optimistic or pessimistic,
> which is it?
>
> Nat
>

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