I forgot about the pole as a unit of measure. But I think they were referring 
to the "10-foot pole" saying, since 10 feet is 3.048 meters. I was just joking 
about soft metrication. Had that been some kind of product or good, they would 
round it down to a nice 3 meters.

--- On Sat, 1/10/09, Bill Potts <[email protected]> wrote:
From: Bill Potts <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:42290] Re: the metric system, bureaucracy, and, uh, sodomy?
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, January 10, 2009, 6:53 PM



 

As a 
unit of measure, the pole would disappear completely (although I think it 
probably already has).
 
"I 
wouldn't touch that with a ten-foot pole" should remain, unaltered, as the 
metaphor it always was, along with "seven-league boots" and non-metaphorical 
names like inch worm. Idiots like Hannity can't see beyond conversion tables 
and 
don't (or won't) understand that, in any case, there's no point it trying to 
convert rough estimates using absolute precision. My suggestion that 
he (and others like him) won't understand it is 
because he's simply a blow-hard alarmist who will say anything, however stupid, 
to make (or believe he's making) his point.
 
Bill 




Bill Potts
WFP Consulting
Roseville, 
CA
http://metric1.org [SI Navigator] 



  
  
  From: [email protected] 
  [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
Sent: 
  Saturday, January 10, 2009 10:18
To: U.S. Metric 
  Association
Subject: [USMA:42288] Re: the metric system, 
  bureaucracy, and, uh, sodomy?


  
  
    
    
      Yeah, I saw that. That's such a shame, because they're 
        really grasping at straws. The metric system is fine in day-to-day 
life. 
        People think meters are too big? Every person in every other country 
        would think feet are too small. And if metrication were done correctly 
        the pole would be rounded down to 3 meters. ;)

People always tell 
        me that we shouldn't transition because people don't want it, but I say 
        that people don't know what they want. If people were educated about 
the 
        metric system, and I mean everyone and not just students, then the 
        stigma would go away.

--- On Sat, 1/10/09, Victor Jockin 
        <[email protected]> wrote:

        From: 
          Victor Jockin <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:42287] Re: 
          the metric system, bureaucracy, and, uh, sodomy?
To: "U.S. Metric 
          Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, January 10, 
          2009, 6:07 PM


          
          

          Here's another amusing one that I found on the 
          Hannity forum that Paul mentioned a while back.  Maybe some of 
          you saw it:
          
          
            Every country that uses metrics is either 
            Socialist, Fascist or Communist. I don't want to give up our 
            Republican form of government just so some engineers don't have to 
            use a calculator. Metricfied expressions like: "I wouldn't touch 
            that with a 3.048 meter pole" doesn't make sense and seems dumb to 
            say. What about membership in the "1760 Meter High Club"? It sounds 
            stupid!

Say NO to metrics!
          There's a pretty strong positive relationship 
          between support for metrication and educational attainment.  
          Also, social conservatives are generally fearful of instability or 
          change.  Those two attributes -- low intelligence, and a belief 
          the world is full of scary people who must be stopped -- produces 
some 
          hilarious prose.  Now if only there were fewer such people out 
          there.
            
          
          

          
          From: Paul 
          Trusten 
          Sent: 01/10/2009 9:30 AM
          To: U.S. 
          Metric Association 
          Subject: [USMA:42286] the metric system, bureaucracy, and, 
          uh, sodomy?
          

          What we'll be confronting as U.S. metrication 
          approaches--extracted from a corner of Facebook:
           
          WHY PEOPLE HATE IT

There is a good 
          reason why people only adopt the metric system when they are forced 
to 
          by unjust, bureaucratic governments:

Because it is inferior, 
          for day-to-day use. Systems which naturally evolved for the 
          convenience of the user are almost always better than systems set up 
          by ivory tower academics, and this is a perfect example of 
          that.

           
          
          
            
            
              

              
                
                  
                  
                    
                      Virginia D. 
                      Templeton 
                      wrote
at 3:34pm on January 6th, 
                      2009
                      The metric system 
                      is of the Devil. It was, after all, created by a cabal of 
                      God-hating French sodomites to make their genitalia sound 
                      bigger when bragging to potential same-sex "lovers" with 
                      the hope of picking them up for a night of wicked, 
                      debauched, feces-smeared buggery in the back room of some 
                      rat-infested "fromagerie." God hates it.
                       
                      I just thought I'd offer this up, 
                      because there are a lot of people in the U.S. who missed, 
                      or preferred to miss, the entire 1970s U.S. metrication 
                      movement, and will find 21st-century metrication just as 
                      objectionable, with the old religious and 
                      armchair-mathematics objections resurfacing.   
                      Unfortunately, "metric system" is a phrase that is still 
                      used either as a threat or as a joke among Americans. We 
                      shall need strong leadership to take us to our 
                    goal.
          Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
Public Relations Director
U.S. Metric 
          Association, Inc.
www.metric.org    
3609 Caldera 
          Blvd. Apt. 122
Midland TX 79707-2872 US
+1(432)528-7724
[email protected]




      

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