Dear Han and All,

Another example is the resistance to the current (almost complete) attempt to 
rid the world -- and particularly the world's children of polio.

Resisters have spread rumors such as 'polio vaccine will give you AIDS' and 
'polio vaccine will change your genetics'.

Folk who resist change can sometimes seem truly desperate.

Cheers,

Pat Naughtin
Currently in Salt Lake City UT.

---- Han Maenen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
> I had trouble loading this article on my computer. Sometimes my browser does 
> not load pages for some reason I can not yet fathom (!) This article is the 
> same stuff that we have heard from Napoleon in the early 19th century up to 
> the BWMA and Inch Perfect today. This eternal obsession with fractions and 
> division by three. Once again the metric system is depicted as rigid and 
> inflexible. It is my conviction that what was convenient under the old 
> measuring units can be used in the metric system. A meter, a kilogram and a 
> liter can be divided by 2 and 4. The use of 25 and 300 mm modules is 
> perfectly possible. Even the US fl.oz. finds life after death in a way. What 
> was a fluid ounce becomes 30 mL. A Dutch pound equals 5 ounces of 100 g each, 
> etc., etc. In many cases the BTU can be regarded equal to the kilojoule. This 
> flexibility was understood from the beginning, except by Napoleon and other 
> enemies of the metric system. Weights and measures as objects were often 
> structured a!
 s follows: 2, 1, 0,5 (m, L, kg), and then also the decimal series were used. 
There is nothing wrong here.
> 

> 
The one thing that is a definite no-no is giving unit names to 25 and 300 mm 
modules, or 2 and 0.5 m, kg, L. This was also argued in the beginning of the 
19th century.
> 

> 
As for division by 3: Many USA and UK units cannot be divided by three either. 
In many cases when it is possible it is not clearly visible and has to be 
thought out, like the 231 cubic inches of the US gallon. Can 231 be divided by 
3? Yes, it is 77, but you don't see it at once.
> 

> 
'Liters exceed human thirst.' That is BWMA and Inch Perfect-prattle. I still 
can quench my thirst with a half liter.
> 

> 
And if the author wants to prove his case against the metric system by pointing 
to the resistance it has met and stil meets, I can name many innovations which 
have encountered fierce resistance and even teetered on the brink because of 
that resistance, just as the metric system was brought to the brink of the 
abyss under Napoleon. Operating under anesthetics, vaccination against smallpox 
and other diseases, antisepsis brought to us by Semmelweiss and Lister. Judging 
from the resistance these innovations encountered, there must be some advantage 
in operating without anesthetics, contracting full blown deadly infectious 
diseases, or medical personnel not washing their hands before an operation or 
other treatment. Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis - the Viennese doctor who combated 
puerperal fever in the 19th century by insisting that medical personnel wash 
their hands in a disinfectant before treating or examing women in labour- was 
driven insane by the opponents of cleanliness and he !
 died in an asylum in Vienna.
> 

> 

> 

> 
The BWMA and Inch Perfect c.s. will be very pleased with this article.
> 

> 

> 

> 
Han
> 

> 

> 

> 

> 

> 
The Trouble with the Meter - MIT -
> 

> 
 
> 

> 
The Trouble with the Meter By Ed Tenner May 2005 
> 

> 
1 of 1
> 

> 
Amid the ideological and religious upheavals of the last 200 years, the metric 
system has spread around the world as an exemplar of science and rationality. 
But in both its champions and detractors, it has evoked as much passion as 
reason...............
> 

> 
 
> 

> 

> 

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