Dear Glynn,

I am sharing your terrific column with the entire metrication community. Thank 
you very much for coming on board, and perhaps bringing your readers with you!

SI-incerely,

Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
Public Relations Director, USMA


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Moore, Glynn 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: 23 March, 2009 09:16
Subject: Follow-up column about the metric system


 
 

Paul,

Thanks again for your information about the metric system. Here is the link to 
my follow-up column (and, because my computer skills don't shine through in 
either system, I also pasted it below.)

 

Sincerely,

 

Glynn

 

 

It's at http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/2009/03/23/moo_515626.shtml

 

 

 

 

 

Glynn Moore

Day News Editor

The Augusta Chronicle

(706) 823-3419

[email protected]

safe:morris

 

 

Is it time to meter our way toward the metric system?

 

By Glynn Moore | Columnist

Monday, March 23, 2009

After writing last week that I was in no hurry for the United States to adopt 
the metric system of measurements, I learned that what I was opposed to was 
"metrication."

That word arrived by e-mail from Paul Trusten, the public relations director 
for the U.S. Metric Association Inc. His group works to change the nation from 
an unwieldy system of weights and measures to the base 10 system used by much 
of the world.

"We exist for metric," he wrote after I told him I had never even heard of 
metrication or, for that matter, the U.S. Metric Association. He acknowledged 
my reluctance to give up the "English system" of measurements I had grown up 
with.

"Even as leading national spokesman in favor of U.S. metrication, I understand 
your struggle on the issue of two different systems of measurement," Mr. 
Trusten wrote. "Even I cannot deal with the metric system as it is used today 
in the U.S."

The metric system -- the International System of Units -- is applied hit or 
miss in the United States today, it seems. Packaged products list both systems, 
and a few road signs inform us in kilometers instead of miles, but that 
mishmash is what gives people like me such headaches, Mr. Trusten explained.

"We cannot be living in a constant state of conversion (no nation does!)," he 
wrote. "We have to change over to metric as the sole national standard. Once we 
do that, your frustration will end."

(Well, I have plenty of frustrations, but this is a good place to start, I 
suppose.)

"Metrication is an all-or-nothing process," he went on, because our need to 
convert such things as Celsius to Fahrenheit and ounces to milliliters slows us 
down terribly.

The metric system (10 millimeters equal 1 centimeter, 100 centimeters equal 1 
meter, 1000 meters equal 1 kilometer) would end all that, he said, because no 
longer would we have to care about what it means in inches, feet, yards and 
miles.

According to the association's Web site, www.metric.org, if we all learn six to 
eight everyday metric units, we will soon be "thinking metric."

By the way, most readers responding to last week's column via e-mail and 
chronicle.augusta.com/moore said it is nigh time the United States catches up 
with the rest of the world.

But wait, there's more! Open your calendar to the second week in October -- 
which contains the 10th day of the 10th month -- and circle it. You don't want 
to miss out when the rest of us are celebrating National Metric Week.

Reach Glynn Moore at (706) 823-3419 or [email protected].

>From the Monday, March 23, 2009 edition of the Augusta Chronicle 

 

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