Martin - I have always believed you regarding those little signs. I have never 
doubted you - because I knew anyway.  There was never a need to 'try'.My point 
is - there is no 'm', no 'km' and nothing other than a number on them- there is 
nothing there to hint at the measurement units used.  They are not there for 
general consumption (I think everyone knows this) but used as a way of locating 
you in an emergency. I understand you might use them for whatever reason but 
please ask 50 people what they say about these little signs - see what sort of 
response there is.  You don't have to get concerned with my opinion of you , 
btw, because you have always been very good arguer, reasonable and realistic 
when you debate.  It's a pleasure to read your posts.  Although I would love 
for you to admit the significance of those signs you talk about ;-)
Here's a scary thought - I've been in the same debate as you (going back the 
defunct bwma board together) for OVER A DECADE! 

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:48203] Re: attitudes
Date: Mon, 12 Jul 2010 22:07:17 +0100
























Steve H ought to already knows this –
I have been trying to educate him about that matter on other boards for many 
years. 
Since I first drew it to his attention, the Government have erected driver 
location
signs.  I am sure that he knows what they are, if he doesn’t, he can
always go to the Wikipedia article which will guide him through authoritative
references.  Most of the motorway article concerning English motorways have the
Driver Location Signs at each junction cataloged – one of the anomalies
is the M4 where only the English part has driver location signs.

 









From:
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stephen 
Davis

Sent: 09 July 2010 19:28

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:48142] Re:
attitudes



 





Steve:





 





There are kilometre signs on all British motorway's -not
opinion, fact.





 





99.9 per cent of pre-packaged goods are in hard metric-not
opinion, fact.





 





All loose goods in supermarkets are weighed in metric at the
checkout, not opinion - fact.





 





There are dual measurement signs on British roads,
particularly for bridge heights, not opinion, fact.





 





Wines and spirits are sold in metric measures in bars in the
UK
- not opinion, fact.





 





Like it or not, almost everything voiced by Anthony and
myself is 100 per cent fact.





 





"What is being 'tried on' here is submitting a minutae
of very feeble 'less than side issues' against something so obvious it more or
less punches you in the face and revealing this pedantry as the sum of the
argument being put across."





 





I'm showing you facts you continually try to deny.  Any
one of them can be easily looked up.  It's like me saying "David
Cameron is the Prime Minister" and you continually saying "no he's
not!" in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary 





 





But, as I've said before, you know this full well.





 





But I suspect you'll carry on trolling!









----- Original Message ----- 





From: Stephen
Humphreys 





To: [email protected]
; [email protected]






Sent: Friday, July 09,
2010 3:02 PM





Subject: RE: [USMA:48126]
Re: attitudes





 



It's a fact that not all road signs in the UK are in
English.

Better put out that roadsigns are multilingual then.

Stephen - you must realise that the whole subject here is very
opinionated.  The debate would not exist otherwise.  What is being
'tried on' here is submitting a minutae of very feeble 'less than side issues'
against something so obvious it more or less punches you in the face and
revealing this pedantry as the sum of the argument being put across.

I had to fill my tyres with air the other day - the machine would ONLY give me
PSI.  Thus do I rush here to claim that the entire tyre making industry
and the economy surrounding it is purely imperial?  What I saw was fact -
the gauge only said PSI - therefore there is no room for any more
opinion.  Correct?



 

(By the way - using those emergency sticks just to try to put out
that there's this metric manna on our roads - that's scraping the barrel a
teeny bit isn't it?) 



 







From: [email protected]

To: [email protected]

Subject: [USMA:48126] Re: attitudes

Date: Fri, 9 Jul 2010 14:14:20 +0100



Except that, those things I mentioned happen to be facts,
not opinions.





 





Which you well know.







----- Original Message ----- 





From: Stephen
Humphreys 





To: U.S. Metric
Association 





Sent: Thursday, July 08,
2010 10:28 PM





Subject: [USMA:48113] Re:
attitudes





 



I think I will survive you saying that you have a
different opinion to me, steve ;-) 



(Now where's that cigar....)







From: [email protected]

To: [email protected]

Subject: [USMA:48108] Re: attitudes

Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2010 19:31:57 +0100



"Other than the obvious 
road signs and pint glasses in pubs, I see no other major uses of non-metric in
the UK
(the pint glass issue is somewhat a minor issue).  Being a pro-metric person
who wants total metrication you may see this as the UK not being as fully 
metric as you
would like it."





 





"Even road signs are not
entirely non-metric in the UK. 
There are signs along highways that show kilometre distances that are ignored
by the anti-metric fringe."  





 





"Products in the supermarkets
are sold in metric only sizes and even the scales used to weigh your asked for
goods are metric only.  If you ask for an old amount you get a metric
amount."  



Erm...all of the above happens to be entirely true, NOT
bunkum as you suggest.





 





Nice try, but no cigar!  You continually try to suggest
most of the time that the above is not entirely true....I'm happy to put you
right.





 





PS





 





And yes....you did say ALMOST total bunkum, though, as ever,
you never state which parts actually are bunkum...strange that!





 





 







----- Original Message ----- 





From: Stephen
Humphreys 





To: U.S. Metric
Association 





Sent: Thursday, July 08,
2010 4:20 PM





Subject: [USMA:48096] Re:
attitudes





 



Hopefully most on the list will remember all this as
(almost) total bunkum from previous attempts.  The anti-US spin is just
the cherry on the cake.   For clearer realistic responses and final
outcomes please refer to the previous times that this consolidated effort below
have been raised and put to bed.  These can be found via searching on the
USMA list archives via the web front end rather than the distribution list.

 







Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2010 07:29:56
-0700

From: [email protected]

Subject: [USMA:48095] Re: attitudes

To: [email protected]



America has always
thought of itself as being holier than thou.  When you have a superiority
complex it makes you look inferior all of a sudden if you adopt the practices
of those you have always looked down upon.  Now that America is no
longer superior it is still hard to break the habit and belief.  It would
seem Americans would prefer to be dirt poor and unemployed than to adopt the
ways of the "French".  



Other than the obvious  road signs and pint glasses in pubs, I see no
other major uses of non-metric in the UK (the pint glass issue is
somewhat a minor issue).  Being a pro-metric person who wants total metrication
you may see this as the UK
not being as fully metric as you would like it.



An anti-metric person would harp continuously on these two instances to claim
the UK
is not metric at all and ignore the 90+ % that is metric.  



Even road signs are not entirely non-metric in the UK.  There are signs along
highways that show kilometre distances that are ignored by the anti-metric
fringe.  There are signs that show metres but are marked off as yards
(denied by the anti-metric fringe).  And soon there will be height signs,
possibly width signs too, that will show metres (in addition to out-dated
units), something the anti-metric fringe is opposing.



Even in pubs you can purchase products other than beer in metric amounts, such
as wine and hard licquor.



Products in the supermarkets are sold in metric only sizes and even the scales
used to weigh your asked for goods are metric only.  If you ask for an old
amount you get a metric amount.  



You purchase petrol by the litre and hear weather reports in metric.



Remnant uses of old unit names exist in every country and may continue to do so
for a long time. 



You should at least be grateful that the UK
is not in the same position as the US.  



I highly doubt the US
will ever regain its pre-eminence even if it does metricate.  No empire
that has ever collapsed has ever returned to greatness.  All have become
insignificant and poor.  Look at Iran
(Persia), Iraq (Babylon), Egypt, Greece,
Rome and the UK.        



 





 









From: John
Frewen-Lord <[email protected]>

To: U.S. Metric Association
<[email protected]>

Sent: Thu, July 8, 2010 9:52:52 AM

Subject: [USMA:48093] attitudes



Does America
not adopt the metric system out of sheer bloody-mindedness?  On the BP oil
spill, this article I find very telling (mostly imperial unfortunately). 
The UK
is not much better, at least at governmental level.  The day America changes 
its attitude to the rest of the
world (of which SI is a fundamental part) is the day that the US will regain
its pre-eminence, not until.





 





http://www.financialpost.com/Avertible+catastrophe/3203808/story.html#ixzz0sGacwW4e





 





John F-L









 







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