Dear Stephen:

I support you rights. You have spoken them eloquently now I ask that you
leave the rest of us alone to get on with our lives.

If your right to imperial comes at the cost of one life is it worth the
price you ask us to pay? Simple question really - but one that is at the
heart of a huge discussion in the medical community at the moment. One that
I research.

If you wish to have your roads in imperial and your bananas in pounds that
is your right - me I prefer to kill fewer people and have to learn that 0.5
kg is one pound. But I am biased I have buried children who died due to
medical mistakes, and I prefer to stop the unnecessary deaths.

So I ask you respectively to take your arguments elsewhere, and leave us to
get back to the mission of this board.

No reply is necessary - or sought. 



John M. Nichols
Assistant Professor
Room A414 Langford AC  MS 3137
Department of Construction Science
College of Architecture
Texas A&M University
College Station, Texas 77843-3137
 
Phone: (979) 845 6541
Fax:     (979) 862 1572
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Stephen Humphreys
Sent: Thursday, 10 March 2005 7:26 AM
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:32441] Re: USMA announcement

The state is there to protect us - not tell us how to think.

I am glad that Welsh and English coexist in Wales, and I am glad that 
Imperial and metric co-exist in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland.

There will be no prolification of languages in Wales in the same way as 
there will be no prolification of measuring formats beyond metric and 
Imperial.  If there was then I could see your point in regulating such a 
prolification - but the situation is not one that's likely to happen.  Ever.

>From: "Philip S Hall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
>Subject: [USMA:32440] Re: USMA announcement
>Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 13:07:06 -0000
>
> > You are talking to a Welsh man.
> >
> > English road signs started to be put up in Wales during a time when the
> > teaching of Welsh wasn't compulsory.
> >
> > The people tore them down and dumped them outside council offices.
> >
> > Sound familiar?
> >
>
>What sounds familiar is making an issue out of state control for things you
>don't like and passive acceptance of for the things you do like.
>
>Phil Hall
>

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