I suppose an alternate title could be:
"Oh oh, Toto, I think we ARE in Kansas"

An Indian foreign student complains about learning physics in US Customary:
"Anyway, talking about conversion brings me to something I am constantly 
annoyed 
by. Why is there a difference in standards of measurements in the U.S. and why 
has noone been successful in doing something about it yet? 

Having wasted twenty-two minutes just converting units to make my calculations 
simpler, I can not help but wonder if this is all a grand plot devised to ruin 
my peace of mind. Understanding physics with imperial units feels like trying 
to 
perceive the dimensions of the subject in a neo-cubist painting.
 
Why is Stone a unit that weighs fourteen pounds, when every stone I have 
encountered weighs only a fraction of a pound? The last time I checked, a slug 
was that slimy mollusc I saw crawling on a stone leaving a trail that led to 
the 
football field.
 
I find it ironic that the U.K. has adopted the Metric system, while the U.S. 
still clings on to the sloppy, impractical Imperial system."
 
http://www.thesunflower.com/opinion/article_58d86820-7984-11e2-b976-0019bb30f31a.html

 
Since I have never heard the stone used in the US, I do wonder if he is 
exaggerating a bit.  But if you have learned physics using metric measure, 
trying to relearn it in Customary must seem bizarre.  But it seems clear that 
some colleges are determined to set bad examples for future generations.

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