To overcome WOMBAT, we need to strap on our seven-league boots.


From: Pat Naughtin <[email protected]>
Reply-To: <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, 30 Aug 2009 20:22:33 +1000
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Subject: [USMA:45720] Re: Mandatory metrication

Dear John,

Do you remember this? I think that it is from the UK. Your reference to your
children made me think of it again.

##
Dear Editor,
I am 40. I have never been taught Imperial measures in school and yet I am
surrounded by people who talk about inches, pints, miles and ounces. I find
it quite obscene that I have to learn about measures that were declared
moribund before I could walk.
Why did the government listen to the old stick-in-the-muds? It didn't happen
with decimal currency because it couldn't. Talk to a twenty year old about
shillings and he will think you are talking about Austria, before the Euro.
This is how it should be. The past is a different country, we have moved on.
But why did we allow some conservative old fogeys to keep on talking about
their miles, pints, ounces, stones, feet and Fahrenheit? We should have
buried these things in the 1960s when we left the shillings and 240 pence in
the pound nonsense.
Tens, hundreds and thousands. So easy to calculate. So much easier than
twelve pennies in a shilling, twenty shillings in a pound, sixteen ounces in
a pound, fourteen pounds in a stone. Not to mention gills, chains, rods,
poles, fathoms, bushels and firkins.
A cube 100 millimetres by 100 millimetres by 100 millimetres defines a
volume of one litre, if you fill it with water it has a mass of one
kilogram. If you raise the temperature to 100 degrees the water boils. Cool
it to zero degrees and it freezes. This is simple, this is elegant, and this
is beautiful.
The oldies say: 'Don't talk to me about them kilo-whatsit things laddie I
think in inches'.
But, the oldies are trying to force me to think in old measures too ‹
despite the fact that all the old measures were scheduled for replacement
four years before I started primary school.
It is time we buried the imperial system. The only way do do it is to be
draconian about it. Do not allow people to ask for, demand or even talk
about imperial measures.
If you don't draw the line like that, the old fogeys will force it down our
necks for ever more. Why must my children, and probably theirs as well as
our grandchildren and great grandchildren, have to learn about pounds and
inches just because some older people will not make a little effort?
Name and address supplied

##

 
Cheers,
 
Pat Naughtin
Author of the ebook, Metrication Leaders Guide, that you can obtain from
http://metricationmatters.com/MetricationLeadersGuideInfo.html
PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,
Geelong, Australia
Phone: 61 3 5241 2008

Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has helped
thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the modern metric
system smoothly, quickly, and so economically that they now save thousands
each year when buying, processing, or selling for their businesses. Pat
provides services and resources for many different trades, crafts, and
professions for commercial, industrial and government metrication leaders in
Asia, Europe, and in the USA. Pat's clients include the Australian
Government, Google, NASA, NIST, and the metric associations of Canada, the
UK, and the USA. See http://www.metricationmatters.com
<http://www.metricationmatters.com/> for more metrication information,
contact Pat at [email protected] or to get the free
'Metrication matters' newsletter go to:
http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter to subscribe.
 

On 2009/08/30, at 19:59 , John M. Steele wrote:

> And who scuttled the teaching?  My two older children (now 36 and 40) BOTH
> learned metric-only in elementary school (in two different school systems
> because we moved).  My youngest child (30) learned a mixture and was pretty
> confused by it.  At least the second school system changed its policies
> between child #2 and child #3.  It is another example of the US "retreating"
> on metric, along with Imperial bricks, lighting fixtures, and highway
> construction, scuttled by special interests whining to Congress, and lack of
> enforcement, sucgh as NASA refusing to obey EO12770.
> 
> --- On Sat, 8/29/09, Pierre Abbat <[email protected]> wrote:
>  
>> 
>> From: Pierre Abbat <[email protected]>
>> Subject: [USMA:45716] Re: Mandatory metrication
>> To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
>> Date: Saturday, August 29, 2009, 10:51 PM
>> 
>>  
>> On Saturday 29 August 2009 20:31:59 Pat Naughtin wrote:
>>> > *    Why was metrication in Australia so successful ­ and so quick?
>>> >
>>> > *    Why is metrication in the USA apparently so unsuccessful ­ and so
>>> > slow?
>> 
>> Not having experienced metrication anywhere but the USA, I can only say why
>> it's been unsuccessful in the USA. I see two reasons:
>> *The process was scuttled by people who, for political reasons, rescinded the
>> requirements to set deadlines for metrication.
>> *School curricula attempt to teach both sets of units at once.
>> 
>> 
>> Pierre
>> 



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