You must have been peeking at the Political Action section of SI Navigator
(http://metric1.org/action.htm). <g>

Bill Potts, CMS
Roseville, CA
http://metric1.org [SI Navigator]

Couldn't resist the plug.


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
Sent: Friday, June 06, 2003 15:12
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:25952] point #4


4.National.

Article I,  Section 8, of the United States Constitution provides, in part,
that the Congress "shall have power...To coin money, regulate the value
thereof, and of foreign coin, and fix the standard of weights and
measures;..."

 As part of the same concept as that of coining money (a truly national
arrangement), the US Constitution empowers the US Congress to establish a
standard of measurement for the United States. That the US Congress has ever
fulfilled its responsibility under this article is debatable. But the
jurisdiction is clearly theirs, even though a few states, left to dangle
without the federal metric mandate promised but not delivered under the 1998
US Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21),  have
nevertheless forged ahead to design highways using wholly metric standards
(some of thes states abandoned the effort because they were not part of a
national measurement change).  Attempts at  metrication in the US shall
never survive such a metrological Civil War, with non-metric states
bordering metric states. It must be a process as national as the
Constitution conceived it to be.

Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
3609 Caldera Boulevard, Apartment 122
Midland TX 79707-2872 USA
432-694-6208
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

"There are two cardinal sins, from
which all the others spring: impatience
and laziness."
                          ---Franz Kafka

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