Sometimes the things I read here make me very surprised.  There's almost a 
paranoia involved.  Please can you believe me when I say, quoting a *tent* as 
10 x 10 foot does not make the USA Science Festival anti-metric.  Not even 
slightly. 

Ordinary people - far from also not equating a tent to anti-metricness - could 
be scared off or at least perplexed by such pseudo-warlike polarity on how 
people measure things.  At best telling someone that quoting a tent that way is 
not pro-metric will make them think that people who want metrication are quirky 
and odd.  At worst it would scare people off.

I'd be less concerned about some blurb which took the size of a tent off the 
packet it came in in feet and be more concerned with what gets discussed INSIDE 
that tent.  Isn't that what matters?
 


CC: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:46035] Re: Fwd: USA Science Festival
Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2009 07:26:21 +1100

Dear Paul,


Thanks for passing on the reference to the USA Science Festival information.


Sadly, I guess from their reference to '10x 10 foot' Festival tent, that this 
is not to be a fundamentally pro-metric event.


I am reminded that 'Scientists and Engineers for America and fifteen other 
science organizations' united to ask seven questions of the 2008 congressional 
candidates in preparation for the presidential elections in the USA last year. 
I was stunned that 16 science and engineering organisations were able to raise 
such significant questions without mentioning the resistance to the metric 
system in the USA at all. It reminded me of the line, 'There is an elephant in 
the room', but no-one wants to admit that it's there!



See the article, 'A metrication elephant':


                                          
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