Stephen,

I'm confused.  Are you saying that Britain is not really metric at all?  I 
thought there were only 3 countries that were not and Britain was not one of 
the three.  How can you be more metric then the US yet still not use metric 
mainly?  What exactly is imperial say compared to the English units we use in 
the US?  

Jerry




________________________________
From: Stephen Humphreys <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, January 25, 2009 10:29:09 AM
Subject: [USMA:42495] Re: Is there any literature on metrication in the US 
aimed at immigrants?

The "language of the street" - so to speak - is mainly Imperial in the UK.
I'd agree we're more metric than America - but I would not use the UK as a case 
study for the success of metrication on a nation!  ;-)

________________________________
Date: Sat, 24 Jan 2009 07:22:20 -0800
From: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:42442] Re: Is there any literature on metrication in the US 
aimed at immigrants?
To: [email protected]


Martin,

Why would they convert back?  Isn't Britain fully metric now like Australia and 
others?  I thought they converted in the 1960s, so by now only the real old 
should still remember older units. 

Jerry 




________________________________
From: Martin Vlietstra <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]; U.S. Metric Association 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2009 10:20:38 AM
Subject: RE: [USMA:42425] Re: Is there any literature on metrication in the US 
aimed at immigrants?


When traveling on the Continent, I have noticed that most British travelers 
tend to repeat the units that they have heard or seen – they tend not to 
convert back to Imperial units. 
 

________________________________

From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Jeremiah MacGregor
Sent: 24 January 2009 14:28
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:42425] Re: Is there any literature on metrication in the US 
aimed at immigrants?
 
Jason,
 
Do immigrants speak among themselves using metric units or do they conform to 
American practice of using English units even in their native languages?  What 
about the goods they sell in their native shops?  Are they sold to each other 
in metric units or English units (lbs of kg)? 
 
Jerry
 

________________________________

From:Jason Darfus <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, January 18, 2009 2:05:39 PM
Subject: [USMA:42355] Re: Is there any literature on metrication in the US 
aimed at immigrants?


On 18 Jan 2009, at 09:39, Pierre Abbat wrote:
> It appears that the immigrants try to conform to what they think is the way we
> do it. Is there any literature aimed at people who come here already knowing
> metric, but haven't lived through the introduction of metric in the 1970s,
> empowering them to push Americans to metricate?
> 
> Pierre

I think you're right in suggesting that immigrants, most of whom are inherently 
from metricated countries, feel it's not their place to complain about the way 
things are done here regarding measurement.  The thought of producing some kind 
of a handout to be given to immigrants in the grocery store has occurred to 
me.  This could be produced in an attractive way, written in multiple 
languages, and would ask the patrons to request of store management the posting 
of metric pricing signs in the produce, deli, and meats departments for 
example.  The stores would also have to be equipped with switchable scales, as 
all the grocery stores I visit use scales that are only capable of displaying 
"lbs".  I've written to the stores I shop at and my request has been summarily 
ignored, but they probably would take notice if they received many similar 
requests.  I've even offered to buy a new dual unit hanging scale for a local 
coffee roaster/store if they'd price
 their beans by the kilo or 100g in addition to their lbs.  Again there was no 
response.
 

________________________________
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