Dear Paul,

Well done.

I am convinced that thoughtful well considered letters like yours have an
effect on the progress of metrication. Even if the only effect is to have
the column writer pause for a little thought before he attacks the metric
system again.

Cheers and best regards,

Pat Naughtin LCAMS
Geelong, Australia

on 2003-06-15 07.41, Paul Trusten, R.Ph. at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Dear Mr. Lewis,
> 
> I read with great interest your online column "In for a penny, in for
> a...kilogram" (May 29, 2003), and have spent the interim preparing my
> response. Since my parents did not raise me to speak and write vulgar slang,
> I waited two weeks so I could calm down before writing this.
> 
> Your article asks why the United States, after 28 years of considering
> conversion to the metric system, is still "pounding and inching along". One
> of the primary reasons for this, I believe, is because people such as
> yourself have newspaper columns, and singlehandedly, are in a position to
> publish opinions and information as prejudiced, as narrow, and as fractured
> as the material you put into the above-mentioned column. The prevalence of
> such dim views of a subject make me yearn to have a newspaper column of my
> own so that I could at least back up my widely disseminated opinions with
> facts. Does your paper have an opening for a new writer?
> 
> I start by saying that I am an American, native born and lifelong, who is
> proud of the United States and what it has done for its people and for the
> people of the world. I wholeheartedly support President Bush in his effort
> to protect the United States from terrorism. And accordingly, I condemn the
> French for their barbed opposition to our efforts to eliminate a great
> threat from Iraq. But there is one thing that I will always thank the French
> for, and that is their invention of the metric system.
> 
> 
> You say that the metric system is "boring and sterile", and "suitable only
> for mathematicians and other colorless folk". I've never before heard
> someone compare units of measurement for their entertainment value, and I do
> not measure things to be entertained. I measure things to accomplish some
> task, such as framing pictures, cutting paper, or judging how much space I
> need for a carpet. Sometimes I need to expand these measurements into larger
> units or reduce them to smaller units. The American plan of measurement,
> using 12 inches to a foot, etc., is so cumbersome and so silly compared to a
> decimal system that I would equate it to being sterile of thought. I long to
> use a measurement system in which all the units are decimally related. That,
> this inch-weary American feels, would be a most exciting and fertile change
> in our society. I yearn for what you call, almost with approval, "the
> all-too-even 10". No,  the  "Way Of Measuring Badly in America Today" (I use
> the acronym WOMBAT to describe our "system" of measurement, which is
> unsystematic)  is not, as you say, "just fine". It is bad for the individual
> user, and, as you shall shortly read, bad for America.
> 
> You were partially correct when you observed that the United States is one
> of only three nations not officially using the metric system. However, the
> Congress declared in 1988 that the metric system is the "preferred system of
> measurement for trade" in the United States. Congress has long known what
> the American people have been reluctant to recognize: that being alone in
> the world with our measurements is a major hindrance to our global
> competitiveness as a people, both in academics and in trade. American
> producers must produce one set of goods with US units for domestic sale and
> one set of goods with metric units for export, and this has to be a major
> incumbrance to our economy. So, I must disagree with your statement that our
> metrological kinship with Liberia and Myanmar is "a good thing". I think it
> is a very bad thing, since much of the world looks to the United States for
> wisdom, not backwardness.
> 
> Of all the provocative statements you made in your column, the one notion
> which irks me above all the others is your using that ignorance-perpetuating
> old ruse about metric units, making hard conversions of US units to metric
> and using them in a statement to show how supposedly cumbersome metric is,
> e.g., that Newville was 17.7028 kilometers from Carlisle. Please tell your
> readers that, in a metric America, one will say that Newville is about 18
> kilometers from Carlisle, period.  Once the US converts to metric, there
> will be no more frequent converting. There will only be metric units being
> used. Please stop spreading that kind of prejudicial venom, which I believe
> is a hindrance, not just to metric conversion, but to much of human
> progress.
> 
> You may know that the United States was the first nation to introduce
> decimal currency. Would you like to return to the "human touch" of the old
> British system of (this may not be right) 20 pence to the shilling and 12
> shillings to the pound, the system discarded by the British in 1971 in favor
> of our own decimal system?
> 
> I'm not a mathematician, but I would not describe mathematicians as
> colorless folk. On the contrary, I sense that their craft brought much color
> into the world, including the color pictures of all types we now see from
> around the world on our web browsers. These people are actually the color of
> the world, and a few of them, a couple of hundred years ago in France, gave
> the world an easy and convenient way of measuring things. Both as a
> patriotic American, and as someone who just has to measure stuff from time
> to time, I want to join that world. But I can't join it if American
> columnists like you persist in attempting to rob America of the measurement
> system it deserves.
> 
> Please reconsider what you have written.
> 
> 
> Sincerely,
> 
> 
> Paul Trusten
> 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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