lpetrich
Contributor
Here's Why Lincoln Chafee's Metric System Suggestion Actually Makes A Lot Of Sense
4 Reasons The US Shouldn't Switch To The Metric System | The Daily Caller -- I don't know if this is intended seriously.
1. All the Communist countries that use the metric system: all 5 remaining ones
2. All the Communist countries that don’t use the metric system: none
3. All the countries that don’t use the metric system, but don’t have the bald eagle as an official animal: Burma and Liberia
4. All the countries that don’t use the metric system, and DO have the bald eagle as an official animal: the US of course
No, America shouldn't go metric - CNN.com
Does anyone want to bring back ells or cubits or chains or furlongs?
Then some whining about cultural diversity. Sheesh. There's nothing that say that one can't use special units for this or that, as long as they are related to an overall system of units.
Our View: U.S. should embrace metric system - Opinion - The Bulletin - Norwich, CT
Those who reject the metric system are miles behind Lincoln Chafee | Dave Bry | Comment is free | The Guardian
Metrication
Lincoln Chafee says Ronald Reagan talked about converting to the metric system | PolitiFact -- only half trueIt's not for lack of effort by would-be reformers who would prefer the U.S. leave the so-called customary system of measurement and go metric. Back in the 19th century, former President Andrew Johnson signed into law a measure making use of the metric system lawful. In the 20th century, a pair of laws -- the Metric Conversion Act of 1975 and the Omnibus Trade and Competitive Act of 1988 -- tried to speed the transition. In 1991, an executive order from then-President George H.W. Bush declared the metric system to be "the preferred system of weights and measures for United States trade and commerce."
Most recently, a petition on We the People urging a shift to the metric system gathered almost 50,000 signatures.
4 Reasons The US Shouldn't Switch To The Metric System | The Daily Caller -- I don't know if this is intended seriously.
1. All the Communist countries that use the metric system: all 5 remaining ones
2. All the Communist countries that don’t use the metric system: none
3. All the countries that don’t use the metric system, but don’t have the bald eagle as an official animal: Burma and Liberia
4. All the countries that don’t use the metric system, and DO have the bald eagle as an official animal: the US of course
No, America shouldn't go metric - CNN.com
ThenThe idea that we should change our daily system of weights and measures is certainly bold. However, Chafee's putting it forth as a kind of apology to the world for the last dozen years of U.S. international behavior -- rather than on the basis of how much it would cost the American people and what benefits it would bring them -- is staggeringly wrong-headed.
Except that pre-metric measurement units were a cacophonous Babel, with every little place having its own values of units, and sometimes its own units. Check out Nicolas Pike's A New and Complete System of Arithmetick, published in 1822.And world heritage it certainly is: our customary measures encompass ways of measurement that date to pre-history and were in continuous use in every culture, everywhere prior to the metric system's global dominance.
We use base 10, so why not? Computers use base 2, but internally, and we make them accept and emit numbers in base-10 form for our convenience.A move to the meter is not a vote for open-mindedness. That has been clear to me every time I have been scolded by a European or South American on the stupidity of a system that divides by twelfths and sixteenths rather than tenths.
Like how a mile is 5280 feet?In a time when our world is becoming ever-more abstract and artificial, it is ever-more important that we keep a grip on what is essential and real.
Then some whining about cultural diversity. Sheesh. There's nothing that say that one can't use special units for this or that, as long as they are related to an overall system of units.
Our View: U.S. should embrace metric system - Opinion - The Bulletin - Norwich, CT
andIn a particularly stubborn and nonsensical expression of American exceptionalism, the United States stands as the only industrialized nation to use the convoluted English system of weights and measures and mostly shun metric.
Here, water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit and boils at 212; 12 inches make a foot; and there are 5,280 feet in mile. In the rest of the world, water changes state at zero and 100 degrees (Celsius, of course); 100 centimeters make a meter; and there are 1,000 meters in a kilometer.
Clinging to the English system of weights and measures is not only harming the United States’ global standing, but also crippling students and engineers who must juggle two systems, one of which is incredibly unwieldy. In 1999, for example, NASA lost a $125 million Mars orbiter because of a unit mix-up between engineering groups.
Those who reject the metric system are miles behind Lincoln Chafee | Dave Bry | Comment is free | The Guardian
Lincoln Chafee’s presidential platform? Adopt the metric system, of course. - The Washington PostAs Chafee pointed out, the United States is one of three countries in the entire world to eschew the metric system. The others? Liberia and Myanmar.
I support the new candidate’s efforts toward internationalism. I do think it’s symbolic of a better, healthier diplomatic stance and that American exceptionalism is a poisonous idea. It’s time we stop being a rogue nation in this regard. Let’s join the global family.
Chafee for president! If only for the easier math.
Chafee, a Republican-turned-independent-turned-Democrat, gave a brief and chipper address that called for America to re-engage with "international community" with diplomacy and "symbolic" moves. That meant everything from barring campaign donors from becoming diplomats, to allowing Edward Snowden to come home without punishment, to bringing America into the Metric system.
"It doesn't take long to realize that 34 degrees is hot," joked Chafee, reminiscing about some time he spent in Canada.
Apparently Canada is a major inspiration for Chafee's call to end the absurdity that is the United States' -- what is it called again -- Standard system.
Compromise units like a "metric foot" of exactly 30 cm, a "metric pound" of exactly 500 g, etc. -- that's what France had for a while.There are three common ways that nations convert from traditional measurement systems to the metric system. The first is the quick, or "Big-Bang" route which was used by India in the 1960s and several other nations including Australia and New Zealand since then. The second way is to phase in units over time and progressively outlaw traditional units. This method, favoured by some industrial nations, is slower and generally less complete. The third way is to redefine traditional units in metric terms. This has been used successfully where traditional units were ill-defined and had regional variations.