UK metric debate in the House of LordsHello Pat,

All of your points are true and well-taken.  But these anti-metric reactions in 
the UK House of Lords are the visible manifestation of something that goes far 
beyond metrication.  Many people throughout the EU, particularly in Western 
European nations, are becoming increasingly dissatisfied with it.  This 
dissatisfaction stems from the fact that their lives are now being regulated by 
bureaucrats in Brussels whom they cannot directly vote for or against.  Also, 
on issues such as capital punishment, the EU government is out of step with 
national majorities and pluralities of its people (this was revealed by polling 
at the time of Saddam Hussein's execution).

Not only are many British people angry that non-British politicians are telling 
them what units to use, but I know Germans who are angry that so many Italians 
have moved into their country due to the new "borderless" EU regulations and 
Dutch farmers who are angry because they had to destroy many of their 
not-proven-to-be-ill cattle (during the foot-and-mouth disease epidemic) due to 
EU agricultural regulations.

As frustrated as I sometimes become with my senators, congressman (we only have 
one for all of Alaska), and president, I am secure in the knowledge that I can 
directly vote for or against them.  Because they know that too, they *do* 
listen to me and to my fellow citizens.  The citizens of the EU member nations 
have no such direct control over the EU government, and as a consequence the EU 
ministers can merrily craft their regulations "in a vacuum," as I've heard 
British friends of mine complain.

It's ironic that the British are now getting a taste of something not terribly 
dissimilar to that which prompted our revolution in 1776.  Instead of taxation 
without representation, it's regulation without representation.  The 
psychological effect of this pressure from a distant leadership that does not 
understand the needs of its people may have the same results; Just as we 
changed to a decimal currency system and even reformed English spelling to 
express our defiance toward Britain, if the EU forces the metric issue the 
British may dig in their heels and cling to Imperial measures (and perhaps even 
expand their use) to express their defiance toward the EU.


--  Jason   
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Pat Naughtin 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Monday, January 15, 2007 2:23 AM
  Subject: [USMA:37742] UK metric debate in the House of Lords


  Dear All,

  You might be interested in this debate entitled 'EU: Non-metric Terms' held 
in the UK House of Lords on Monday 2006-11-27.

  http://www.theyworkforyou.com/lords/?id=2006-11-27a.541.0&s=speaker%3A13076 

  The debate seems to me to be liberally larded with misinformation and 
thoughtless nationalist posturing with the main arguments being based on some 
vague idea of tradition and a strong personal distaste for foreign ideas.

  My first reaction was to comment on all of the mistruths and errors contained 
within the thoughts of the various participants, but then I realised that they 
all had one thing in common — they seemed to have no idea how much their 
non-decision is costing their nation. 

  All parties to this debate seem to be quite unaware of the costs of 
non-metrication in the UK.

  Here are some questions that I think might usefully be asked in the House of 
Lords in their next metric debate:

  ◊ How many UK businesses have lost European orders or contracts because they 
could not do the job in metric?

  ◊ How many UK businesses have not even been approached for quotations or 
estimates because European businesses automatically assume that businesses in 
the UK cannot do metric work?

  ◊ How much time and paper is wasted each day in UK offices as people try to 
layout page designs in inches and fractions of inches when they are using 
metric paper sizes? My estimate is about 10 % of office paper is wasted every 
day because of measurement issues. See the article, 'Page borders — Inches or 
millimetres' at http://www.metricationmatters.com/articles 

  ◊ How many UK businesses have had to pay a premium for metric parts because 
they only bought enough for a specific job?

  ◊ How many have made costly mistakes in converting a metric job to old 
pre-metric measures?

  ◊ How many people have had to be terminated because they could not work in 
metric units? How much does it cost to find and employ their replacements?

  ◊ How much are the people of the UK prepared to pay to be different to 
everywhere else in Europe?

  ◊ How much does it cost to have someone buying one fastener when they need 
the other and having to make a second trip to the store to rectify the problem?

  ◊ How much does it cost to retrain UK school leavers in old measures when 
they have been taught the metric system at school every year since 1965?

  ◊ How many UK citizens cannot find employment in other countries because it 
is assumed that they won't be able to use metric units?

  ◊ How much extra does it cost UK industry for duplicating products in both 
metric and old pre-metric measures?

  ◊ How much extra does it cost UK industry for keeping both the metric and the 
old pre-metric inventories separate?

  ◊ How much extra does it cost UK industry to have stores that have to carry 
both metric and old pre-metric measures?

  ◊ How much extra production costs are involved with making products like 
fasteners in both metric and old pre-metric measures?

  ◊ How much has not-going metric really cost the UK? My estimate is about 10 % 
of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or about £114 billion per year ($223 billion 
USD). See: the article 'costs of non-metrication' at 
http://www.metricationmatters.com/articles for details of this estimate in a 
USA context.

  ◊ How much is it going to cost the UK for not being metric between now and 
when the politicians finally accept that the complete adoption of the metric 
system in the UK is not only the most sensible decision that the House of Lords 
could support but also that it is inevitable anyway?

  Cheers,

  Pat Naughtin
  PO Box 305, Belmont, 3216
  Geelong, Australia
  Phone 61 3 5241 2008

  Pat Naughtin is the editor of the free online monthly newsletter, 
'Metrication matters'.
  You can subscribe at http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter

  Pat is also recognised as a Lifetime Certified Advanced Metrication 
Specialist (LCAMS) with the United States Metric Association. He is also editor 
of the 'Numbers and measurement' section of the Australian Government 
Publishing Service 'Style manual – for writers, editors and printers'. He is a 
Member of the National Speakers Association of Australia and the International 
Federation for Professional Speakers. See: http://www.metricationmatters.com 

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