Anonymous wrote:It is too late now to switch to metric. And it has nothing to do with Tucker Carlson.
Anonymous wrote:Metric is already standard in scientific fields and academia. And kids already learn metric at school, and have been doing so for many years. The challenge is the building industry. It’s so much better to measure screws and things in mm but they insist on 3/8 of an inch because it’s the way they’ve done it for decades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is boat speed still calculated in knots and distance in nautical miles?
Same reason we call it “the head” and “the galley” instead “the bathroom” and “the kitchen” - to remind you non-boaters that you’re an inferior life form.
Anonymous wrote:Why is boat speed still calculated in knots and distance in nautical miles?
Anonymous wrote:1. Cost of conversion is high.
2. At any point in time, more US people are comfortable with imperial measurements than with metric.
I am a scientist and the MD/DDS always comments about it when I answer their questions with “250 milliliters” or “163 centimeters”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a vent: As a parent that just had to help my kid calculate distance (inches, yards, miles), WTF haven't we adopted the metric system?!
Why? Namely because of nitwits like this: “They’re not using gallons and miles in North Korea. They’re using the metric system—so are Iran and China. I can’t imagine why we’d want any of that in our country,” Tucker Carlson said in an interview. - WSJ
Same thing with all measurements (volume or capacity). Base 10 is just easier to calculate.
The Metric System was created for lower I.Q. lay-people to use.
Many kids and adults these days struggle to even learn how to use the Metric System, so it won't matter any even if we changed everything from Imperial to Metric.
So kids and adults these days who use the Imperial system are too stupid to use a system created for lower IQ people?
How does that even make sense?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a vent: As a parent that just had to help my kid calculate distance (inches, yards, miles), WTF haven't we adopted the metric system?!
Why? Namely because of nitwits like this: “They’re not using gallons and miles in North Korea. They’re using the metric system—so are Iran and China. I can’t imagine why we’d want any of that in our country,” Tucker Carlson said in an interview. - WSJ
Same thing with all measurements (volume or capacity). Base 10 is just easier to calculate.
The Metric System was created for lower I.Q. lay-people to use.
Many kids and adults these days struggle to even learn how to use the Metric System, so it won't matter any even if we changed everything from Imperial to Metric.
So kids and adults these days who use the Imperial system are too stupid to use a system created for lower IQ people?
How does that even make sense?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a vent: As a parent that just had to help my kid calculate distance (inches, yards, miles), WTF haven't we adopted the metric system?!
Why? Namely because of nitwits like this: “They’re not using gallons and miles in North Korea. They’re using the metric system—so are Iran and China. I can’t imagine why we’d want any of that in our country,” Tucker Carlson said in an interview. - WSJ
Same thing with all measurements (volume or capacity). Base 10 is just easier to calculate.
The Metric System was created for lower I.Q. lay-people to use.
Many kids and adults these days struggle to even learn how to use the Metric System, so it won't matter any even if we changed everything from Imperial to Metric.
Anonymous wrote:This is a vent: As a parent that just had to help my kid calculate distance (inches, yards, miles), WTF haven't we adopted the metric system?!
Why? Namely because of nitwits like this: “They’re not using gallons and miles in North Korea. They’re using the metric system—so are Iran and China. I can’t imagine why we’d want any of that in our country,” Tucker Carlson said in an interview. - WSJ
Same thing with all measurements (volume or capacity). Base 10 is just easier to calculate.