Paul,

US bars don't serve in pints.  The serve in glasses or bottles.  Most bars have 
numerous varieties, you usually ask for the brand you want.  Some bars still 
fill a glass from a tap, others have gone over completely to bottles.   Beer is 
usually bottled or canned in ounces, with 12 ounces (=355 mL) being the most 
well known.  

I can't think of any other product that is sold in pints or where the pint is 
so ingrained it can never be replaced.  So as for a war due to the 
disappearance of pints, none will never happen; because for all purposes known, 
the pint has already disappeared.

Jerry 



________________________________
From: Paul Trusten <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, March 28, 2009 9:50:14 PM
Subject: [USMA:44169] the pub--ground zero for the metric system?


Pubs and taverns are bastions of freedom. The American Revolution was 
hatched in the Buckman and Monroe Taverns of Lexington, Massachusetts, scarcely 
3 kilometers from where I grew up. So, I guess you could say that the pint is 
symbol of freedom's ferment (grin). But, I fear that this same obsession with 
the standard serving size of a brewsky will also befall us Yanks, as it 
has in other countries. That won't be the end of it on this side of the pond, 
though. In the U.S., there will be all kinds of requests for exemptions from 
metrication and all kinds of fears that metrication will take over in areas in 
which it may not belong.  Upon the announcement of the EU decision on 
supplemental indications, we saw headlines about "British can keep their pints 
(of alcoholic beverage poured in pubs)," as if this measure was the 
shibboleth of metrication in Europe. 
 
During the deliberations of a future U.S. Metric Board, these very 
psychological issues have got to be talked out.  The measurement of goods 
served  has to be clarified, so we won't have more customary-unit 
martyrdom.   However, the U..S. pint is smaller than a half liter, and, 
as Pat suggests, there could be lobbying by the American brewing industry 
to keep it as a serving size. Does metrication belong in the pub, though? Can't 
bar patrons request a size that it outside of legal metrology but agreed 
upon in the drinkers' world?  I would hate to see a Liliput-Blefuscu 
war break out over quaffing a few.
 
 
Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
Public Relations Director
U.S. Metric 
Association, Inc.
www.metric.org    
3609 
Caldera Blvd. Apt. 122
Midland, Texas 79707-2872 US
+1(432)528-7724
[email protected]



      

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