The columnist is actually frustrated by the increase in metric usage in the US 
and in his life.  Being a reporter he may be aware of the huge loss of 
employment in the US as inch based companies close up in the US and reopen in 
metric China and elsewhere.  When unemployed Americans have to start watching 
where their money goes, newspapers are one of the top victims.  

Eventually it hits people like Glynn Moore when due to lack of sales his 
employer is forced to close it doors.  

I wonder if people who hate metric that much realize the consequences of that 
hatred or simply don't care until they are living on the street.

Jerry 




________________________________
From: John Frewen-Lord <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, April 18, 2009 7:45:59 AM
Subject: [USMA:44731] Re: Is this a joke or is it supposed to be serious?


I agree that what this columnist said is utterly stupid.  Howver, I think we 
can be encouraged by the responses - not one totally agreed with him, and even 
those who sort of sympathised qualified their comments by saying that the US is 
really out of touch and must change if it wants to be a part of this world.

John F-L 
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Han Maenen 
To: U.S. Metric Association 
Sent: Saturday, April 18, 2009 12:18 PM
Subject: [USMA:44730] Is this a joke or is it supposed to be serious?

I was on the USMA site on the page 'Published articles about metric - 2009' and 
found this: 
 
Metric is no way to measure 
By Glynn Moore| Columnist 
 Augusta (Georgia) Chronicle, 2009-Mar-16, 1p., Moore,G.; Metric is no way to 
measure. [http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/2009/03/16/moo_514811.shtml] 
 
I can hardly believe that an intelligent person can spout such trash. All the 
old scare mongering canards are back again like:
A body temperature of 37.77 degrees, converted from 101.8 degrees 
Fahrenheit - too accurate. 
A weatherman predicting  26.7 C = 80 degrees Fahrenheit. That is new to me: 
nature has standardized the weather to the Fahrenheit scale (and I also suppose 
to the inHg and the inch of precipitation). Using metric the weatherman would 
predict 27 degrees of course.
A speed limit of 55 mph equates to 88 km/h. In metric it would be 90 km/h.
"As globalization continues, a football field is destined to become 91.44 
meters long". Of course, if American football should go metric one day, it 
would be wile to move to a 100 m field. Although soccer still uses soft 
converted measurements.
 
Not one valid argument against metric, just garbage. Maybeis this supposed to 
be funny.
 
Han


      

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