Immigrants may have a strong desire to "fit in" to American life, and part
of doing that is accepting the colloquial American way of measuring things.

Carleton

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Paul Trusten
Sent: Saturday, June 27, 2015 15:20
To: U.S. Metric Association
Cc: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:54757] Re: Metric Financial Services; Immigrants

Great question and a longtime question of mine, Martin. I wonder if
immigrants to the U.S. have been discouraged by the status quo from asking
for metrication.  It may be a commentary on the lack of popularity of the
subject in some circles, yet there is an advocacy among some in favor of it,
usually the occasional journalist, and now Gov. Chaffee.



> On Jun 27, 2015, at 13:57, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I was pleased to hear this morning a syndicated financial program on many
U.S. radio stations used square meters and kilograms to describe a new
farming technique in Kansas.  No Customary units, no apologies.
(www.edelmanfinancial.com).
> 
> One factor in metrication that I haven't heard discussed is the increasing
number of foreigners that are coming into the United States, legally and
illegally, particularly from Latin countries that use metric (Mexico, etc.)
I wonder why there hasn't been more of a push from these groups for more
metric.  I notice that Mark Henschel's program on National Public Radio
included two call-ins from European immigants, who advocated the metric
system.
> 
> Martin Morrison,
> Columnist, USMA Today
> 
> 

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