At 9  March 05, 02:07 PM, Pat Naughtin wrote:
>. . .
>Unfortunately, to many anti-metric people metrication  is about power over
>others and often they selfishly feel this as a loss of personal power over
>others. We often see rational debate about metrication issues subverted to
>an emotive exchange about who has power over who. This shift in emphasis is
>often used by anti-metric people for the simple reason that they know it has
>an immediate effect.

With all due respect, Pat, this "shift in emphasis" is a real response to a 
real issue. For many pro-metricationists, this IS about power -- the power to 
force others to measure in a certain way.

What is "selfish" about wishing to have control over one's life?

The fact is that most anti-metricationists do not object to OTHERS using 
metric, as long as they are not forced to do so. They don't care if you buy 
bananas by the kilogram, as long as they can buy them by the pound.

This is not to say I have any sympathy for someone who complains that they 
cannot buy something in a package marked as they wish, meaning 
pro-metricationists who complain they cannot buy a kilogram package of butter, 
or anti-metricationists complaining they have to buy soda pop in two liter 
bottles. In those cases, people are prefectly free to spend their money as they 
choose, buy products packaged as they prefer, exert pressure on manufacturers 
to make the changes they want to see.

Speaking about the USA, where I think the pro-metricationists really hurt our 
efforts is when they promote laws FORCING the use of metric. This DOES 
represent a loss of personal power of one's own life, meaning others are taking 
control of it.

I know there are the pessimists on this list who think the USA will never 
metricate without the government forcing the issue, but that is flawed 
thinking, in two ways: (a) the government has not forced the tremendous amount 
of metrication that has already occurred (and has sometimes slowed it down -- 
witness FPLA), and (b) those who promote forced metrication somehow think that 
government should force it on private companies even though it cannot metricate 
itself.

As I have stated many times on this forum: the US Federal Government is the 
single largest purchaser of goods and services in the entire world. If it 
simply metricated all of its operations (e.g., the BLM), and then required 
metrication of anyone who gets its money (e.g., if you get a development 
contract you must do the work in metric), the metrication of the USA would 
speed up 100 times, without imposing a single law on private individuals or 
businesses.

Jim 


Jim Elwell, CAMS
Electrical Engineer
Industrial manufacturing manager
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
www.qsicorp.com

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