Excellent article, with broad-reaching implications, Jim. The "personal 
choice" ethos of Americans is why I would agree with you that politically 
forced metrication via government is the hard path to take and least likely 
to succeed.

But that is also why I espouse (as I have here before) control and shaping of 
the available choices. Rather than our government passing laws to force 
metrication, it should merely repeal laws so as to de-legalize non-metric 
units. Let the lub, floozie, or tootsie be whatever Joe or Jane wants it to 
be. Give them the same legal stature as the infamous "two scoops of raisins" 
or a load of laundry. When people want to make sure that they conduct 
commerce (including buying food for their table) in terms that afford them 
legal protections, then they can only use metric units. Otherwise, they're on 
their own!

For many purchases, folks use the "yay big" system anyway. They choose between 
large, larger, largest, and rediculous sizes at the beverage station in their 
favorite greasyburger stands with no thought in mind whether those sizes are 
defined in floozies or milliliters --- or nothing at all. But when a vendor 
has to tell the USDA what the nutritional profile of its product is, metric 
units would be the only ones available and those would be the only ones 
remaining as legal indicators on the packaging.

Decreasing the number of laws and regulations has a basic appeal to most 
Americans, as the article implies. That's easier to sell to the voting public 
than increasing the number of laws or even merely changing them. Guess what, 
packagers! We're going to shrink the USDA, FDA, FTC, and other regulations 
manuals by deleting anything that refers to non-metric units. That's less 
homework for your legal beagles.

Jim

On Thursday, 2004 February 26 17:55, Jim Elwell wrote:
> I've long maintained on this forum that US metrication should be voluntary,
> while others, particularly some non-American members, have vehemently
> preached that we should pass laws to force metrication onto the American
> people.
>
> If you have an interest in the topic, you may find this short article quite
> interesting. You can read it at the URL below, or it is attached as a PDF.
>
> "Differences in American and European Worldviews" by Russell Berman, a
> Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution.
>
> http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/pubaffairs/we/2004/berman01.html
>
>
> Jim Elwell, CAMS
> Electrical Engineer
> Industrial manufacturing manager
> Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
> www.qsicorp.com

-- 

James R. Frysinger
Lifetime Certified Advanced Metrication Specialist
Senior Member, IEEE

http://www.cofc.edu/~frysingj
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