>From the first page at http://www.footrule.org

Press release  30 June 2003
US DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AGENCY TO ABOLISH USE OF LB/OZ AND PINT MEASURES

METRIC SYSTEM TO BE COMPULSORY FOR RETAIL TRANSACTIONS 
  

A WARNING FROM ENGLAND: DON'T DO IT! 
Under US government policy, transition to the metric system is voluntary in 
the USA. The law requires labeling for most packaged goods to show both US and 
metric systems so that consumers can choose which system they prefer.  

However, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), an agency 
within the US Department of Commerce, is to propose a bill to Congress that 
will end the use of inch-pound units for packaged goods.  Hints of NIST's 
intention appeared in November 2002 when it held a forum to:  

"identify areas of work needed to ensure the effective voluntary transition to 
the use of metric units in all commercial transactions"


To ensure something that is voluntary is a contradiction in terms!  The NIST 
proposal is now available on the internet. How does it get round US government 
policy that metric is voluntary?  NIST has developed a form of words that 
describes its proposal as 'permissible metric-only labeling' and which appears 
to offer a choice for business: 

  

A.     Metric and US customary; or

B.     Metric

  

IT'S A TRICK! 

The two labeling obligations proposed by NIST cannot lawfully co-exist.  It is 
impossible for the law to require both systems to be displayed while also 
stating that only metric need be shown.   

Accordingly, the only requirement under the NIST proposal is that packaged 
goods show metric. Producers may print lb/oz/pint equivalents, but such 
information is surplus to the legal requirement. Decoded, the phrase
'Permissible metric-only labeling' means compulsory metric labeling, since the 
word 'permissible' actually refers to inch-pound. 

The NIST proposal, if implemented, will mean the end of US measures as trading 
units for most packaged goods. It will be legal to describe a carton of milk 
as 473 mL but ILLEGAL as One pint. The upheaval and costs to business will be 
huge, since systems and processes will have to change to accommodate metric.  

BRITAIN'S DISASTROUS EXPERIENCE OF METRIC 

Britain knows all about compulsory metric conversion.  Since 2000, metric 
measures, invented in France in 1790, have been made compulsory by the 
European Commission. In 2001, trader Steven Thoburn was dubbed the 'Metric 
Martyr' after being convicted and fined for selling bananas in 
pounds and ounces. Packaged goods are meanwhile downsized on conversion from 
English to metric quantities with no decrease in price. Surveys show 85% of 
British people prefers feet and inches, pounds and ounces.    

WHAT A LOAD OF BALDERDASH AND POPPYCOCK THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT IS:

The archetype kilogram is stored in a vault near Paris and the USA requires 
permission from the French government to examine it. Thomas Jefferson said: if 
other nations adopt this unit, they must take the word of the French 
mathematicians for it; there is an end to it!  

If Americans want to defend fair play in the marketplace and freedom to use 
customary measures then they must wake up to moves now developing to force 
them to use metric.    




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