There may be something to this, in addition to the Republican Party successfully convincing its constituents to vote against its better interest to maintain a system that is ridiculously expensive for the consumer and just as ridiculously lucrative for the medical insurance industry.
The automotive industry went metric a long time ago, I believe it’s true for most manufacturing in the US.
Isn’t it weird that we sing the national anthem at sporting events?
That’s true enough. But that’s a reason not to switch (and, to be fair, a good one) - it’s not a reason that US system is inherently better, which I have seen people claiming.
Like this blog, for instance - a whole load of vague points that make no sense or aren’t even relevant (A whole section on Harry Potter? Really? On a science blog?).
I have to say, though, I do like the cups system for cooking. That does make sense to me.
City council meetings, functions at the local school, and for students, and their teachers, every damn day.
I’m very happy to be a citizen of this nation, but the pledge is creepy as Hell.
Only Americans get Canadian change. Canadians use debit cards.
I still don’t get how you guys tip your strippers.
In some ways it gets worse; those volunteers often have to raise the money for their equipment (including the trucks) themselves. Including insurance for when we get injured or killed. We’re just a strange people like that; ready to risk ourselves for a neighbor we may have never met. But the trend is playing out; many departments are really struggling to find people to volunteer.
Our volunteers train and learn standing next to the professionals in many cases, so there really isn’t a lot of difference person-to-person. What makes it needed is our size and how much is rural/small town. Something like 95% of Pennsylvania (in terms of square miles and not population) or better falls under VFD protection. To turn all those positions into government paid and funded jobs would break our budget more than it is already broken. The option to leave it unprotected just isn’t something we “Americans” are comfortable with. So we have the system we have.
Something for the YMMV department; I think the same thing about Canada every time I hear their National Anthem sung.
I won an argument with my Father in law?
Dammit, he’s dead.
You can leave “rural” out of that last sentence; in my part of Dallas, the beer selection is highly dependent on the income level of the clientele. A gas station in say… Uptown, Allen, Plano or Frisco might have offerings from New Belgium, Odell, and a few Euro imports as well as the Big 3 beers, Corona, Dos Equis and usually Tecate.
Go to a gas station in a poorer part of town, and it’ll be the Big 3, various malt liquors and cheap stuff like “Steel Reserve”, the common Mexican beers, and maybe Heineken as the only non-Mexican import.
Do not most people believe that their own way of doing things is the best?
:rolleyes:
You may come back with a bunch of loonies and toonies, but you won’t come back with any pennies (at least not any that you didn’t arrive in Canada with).
I think this is the only valid objection to adopting metric. Other than that, I’m all for it.
Wait until they’re asleep or nearly so, then come up behind them and push.
Actually I’ve found it to be the opposite. When I was in the UK & Ireland I was surprised how early most places closed, and on Sunday how a lot of places weren’t even open!
You don’t want to think about where the card reader is.
Good point.
However, I can speak with some authority on this - in the UK, we only recently switched over to metric, and I’m old enough that I was taught both systems, but grew up with imperial as the prevalent one.
But despite growing up with imperial, as soon as I realised metric was a thing that I could use, I was all over that. It was so much more intuitive to me.
Europeans: “Americans are hung up on incomprehensible dating rituals. Imagine having to pick the girl up at her house! They’re so repressed it’s pathetic.”
Asians: “My first day in an American school, I thought I was in a live-action porn movie because boys and girls were holding hands right out in the open. Americans are so decadent!”
I’unno. They can’t both be right.
… you do realize that Europe and Asia are on different continents, right?
I became familiar with it in engineering school. I am curious if you have a technical education.