Victor, we don't need modest funding. We need extraordinary funding, like the 
funding illustrated by some of the recent Internet posts about how to dramatize 
the huge sums Congress is throwing around. Lobbyists pay many millions of 
dollars to affect legislation.  

A friend of mine sent me one of those money cartoons. It starts with a $100 
bill and shows what one teradollar of $100 bill stacks would look like. It 
would take up hectares (Oh, no, guys, please don't spend 25 posts to figure 
that one out!).

But, do you see me stopping? No way. I shall continue to use the bully 
footstool of USMA, and my own voice, to advance the goal of U.S. metrication.  

Just a reminder that USMA is a non-profit organization, and therefore cannot 
lobby like FMI does.  


Paul
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Victor Jockin 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: 02 April, 2009 18:04
  Subject: [USMA:44283] Opposing FMI


  With some modest funding to hire the right talent, we could probably assemble 
an array of organizations and interest groups that could effectively pressure 
FMI to drop opposition to metric-only, or to counter their weight in congress 
(perhaps immigrant groups, food importers, educators, scientific and medical 
organizations, etc.).  A bunch of the members of FMI are not even American 
companies, and wouldn't take much to sway, if they're even aware of FMI's 
stance on this issue today.  And metric conversion is probably number 12,712 on 
FMI's list of legislative priorities.

  There really are no efforts to raise the funds we would need to have any hope 
of making an impact, right?  Can anyone comment on why not?  Since joining USMA 
about a year ago, this has surprised me more than anything else.

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