The funny thing is that they're usually careful to prevent 'naughty' number 
plates.
Which, of course, means that someone is employed to think of every permutation 
of naughty words!  

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:43598] RE: A bartender's plea for presidential metrics
Date: Mon, 9 Mar 2009 20:28:16 +0000
































There is a town in England called Scunthorpe that I believe is sometimes
filtered out by very strict e-mail filters – and my cousins (who are Dutch)
came over to the UK on holiday
they had a good time looking for “naughty” three letter acronyms on UK
numberplates.  (At the time UK
number plates had the format “A 123 BCD” or “ABC 123 D”).

 









From:
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]

Sent: 09 March 2009 16:10

To: U.S. Metric Association

Cc: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:43593] RE: A
bartender's plea for presidential metrics



 



Some people have really strict e-mail filters.  I have one
friend who is a doctor in Salt Lake City (he's
Episcopalian, but in Salt Lake City)
whose company e-mail system would filter out the word "ass", even
though it is in the Bible.


 


Carleton


 




----- Original Message -----

From: "Bill Potts" <[email protected]>

To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>

Sent: Monday, March 9, 2009 2:43:17 AM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern

Subject: [USMA:43586] RE: A bartender's plea for presidential metrics


Carleton:

 

What's with the cute
spelling of ass. In the term "smart ass," the ass is a donkey.

 

Bill 









Bill
Potts, FBCS

WFP
Consulting

1848
Hidden Hills Drive

Roseville, CA 95661-5804

Phone:
916 773-3865 (preferred)

Cell: 916 302-7176 

Excellence
matters





 







From:
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Carleton MacDonald

Sent: Sunday, March 01, 2009 15:41

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:43318] RE: A
bartender's plea for presidential metrics

I think this
writer is being a smart a**.

 

Carleton

Third
Generation Native San Franciscan, in exile in Washington, D.C.

 





From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Jeremiah MacGregor

Sent: Saturday, February 28, 2009
12:17

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:43301] A
bartender's plea for presidential metrics





 





http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2009/02/27/FDDG15LUI7.DTL





 





You can even post a comment at the
end.  I think his drink recipe would be more effective if he used 25 mL
instead of 22.5 mL as 25 goes into 750 evenly, thus no waste when pouring from
a standard 750 mL bottle.  The rest of the amounts work out OK.





 





Jerry





 





 









Dear President Obama:


 


I do not represent the San Francisco Chronicle
on the issue I'm about to open up, but I think that I can safely say that I
speak for a large number of American bartenders when I ask you to consider
encouraging, or even demanding, that everyone in this great country of ours
make a far bigger effort to "plan the increasing use of the metric system
in the United States," words taken from the Metric Conversion Act of 1975.


 










That's right, Mister President, we made a
commitment to go metric more than 30 years ago.


 


I'm well aware, of course, that there are far
more important issues for you to tackle right now, but I think that if you
could see your way to giving this topic just a little thought, you might see
that, if this country took steps to join the rest of the world in their
metricity (yes, I just made that word up), there might be some advantages to
the switch that aren't immediately apparent.


 


Think, for instance, of all the jobs that would
be created. For a start, thousands of packaging designers would be called into
action to redesign labels on cans of soup, and bags of sugar and all manner of
boxes and cans and bottles and bags. Then all the gas pumps would have to be
recalibrated. That's a job and a half, huh? Next we'd have to retool the
machines that produce milk cartons so we could finally buy our milk in liters
instead of pints. (I hope, President Obama, that I don't have to point out the
fact that the liquor industry in America is one industry that went
metric years ago. So far ahead of the milk guys ...)


 


Is it also possible, Mister President, that our
exports will grow if we go metric. Your average chappie in Britain, I
believe, would be far more likely to buy an American apple pie if he knew that
it was 25 centimeters in diameter. Tell him it's a 10-inch pie and there's a
good chance that he'll buy an inferior English pie instead.


When you took the reins, President Obama,
countries that have not been enamored of us in recent years immediately gave us
another chance to show how great we could be. Surely we must seize this
opportunity to show them what we're made of. If we pushed the metric issue,
those Europeans would no longer be able to laugh at us behind our backs. Not
too very long ago I visited a bar in Paris
where I overheard one Frenchman say to another, "Oh, zoze Americains! Zeh
steel theenk in ounces, you know. Ooh la la!" I left that bar in a hurry
and went straight to the nearest McDonald's for a Royal Cheese (that's what the
French call a Quarter Pounder).


 


There's one more reason that I'm urging you to
work on this issue, Mister President, and it involves cocktails. As I'm sure
you know, the cocktail was invented in America, and American bartenders
have always been regarded as being the very best in the world, but the sad fact
is that we're beginning to lose ground. Bartenders in London,
Paris, Sydney,
Hong Kong, Bratislava, Moscow
and Rome simply
don't understand our recipes, you see. Ounces mean nothing to them.


 


If you act now, though, the bartenders of America will be
quick to order their metric jiggers, and American cocktails will be once again
be served at the best bars in the world. You just watch us, sir. We'll jump
right in there, and before you know it the rest of the world will once again
marvel at the creativity of the men and women who work behind the bars of 
America.


 


I've created a drink, Mister President, that we
could perhaps use to toast you if you can pull this metric thing off. The
ingredients are all American, and although most of them are made in California, 
I did include
an East Coast product, too. It comes from a family that supplied George
Washington's troops with their apple brandy. Pretty cool, huh?


 


In closing, President Obama, I'd like to wish
you and your family all the best for the next four, or eight, years, and if I
might be allowed to offer to show you around some of the fine bars we have here
in San Francisco, I'd be happy to pick up the tab next time you're in town.
(We'll go nonalcoholic if it's more politically correct.)




The We Really Really
Love Our New President Cocktail 

Makes 1 drink 



 22..5 ml ( 3/4 ounce) Laird's
     Bottled-in-Bond Applejack from New
       Jersey 
 22.5 ml ( 3/4 ounce)
     Germain-Robin Select Barrel XO Alambic Brandy from Ukiah 
 15 ml ( 1/2 ounce) ruby port
     from the Charbay distillery in the Napa Valley
     
 7.5 ml ( 1/2 ounce) Qi black
     tea liqueur made at the St. George distillery in Alameda 
 1 Meyer lemon twist from California, as
     garnish 


Instructions: Place all ingredients except the twist in a mixing glass. Stir
over ice and strain into a chilled American cocktail glass. Add the American
garnish.




Gary Regan is the author of "The Joy
of Mixology" and other books. E-mail him at [email protected].









 






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