If "slow as molasses" is mistaken for "deliberately carefully," at least we 
avoided rapidly and recklessly.
 
Some effort was made at the time to educate every schoolchild.  However, for 
the most part, there was no plan, no buy-in, no progress, except for some firms 
who had logical reasons of their own to go metric and did so.  Most of those 
firms refuse to be advocates for the process (mine included) and indeed conceal 
their metricness under a few token Customary conversions for customers.  Mum's 
the word.
 
With no backbone and no plan at the government level, metrication is completely 
stalled out in the US.
--- On Sat, 4/11/09, John Woelflein <[email protected]> wrote:

From: John Woelflein <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:44579] Re: cover letter of 1971 U.S. metric report
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Cc: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Date: Saturday, April 11, 2009, 10:46 AM


The intent was great, but what happened? Politics.
I have a huge sinking feeling about US metrication, like I am aboard the 
Titanic. I used to believe that, by this time, our country would be very nearly 
complete in its metric conversion program. Now I'm afraid it will never happen 
in my lifetime.


On Sat, Apr 11, 2009 at 3:23 AM, Paul Trusten <[email protected]> wrote:



The late Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans' words are, I believe, an excellent 
guide for the Nation to follow today (attached; may require magnification).
 
 
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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