The Metric system is the tool of the devil!

Am I correct to say Ford once used tenths of inches in its cars? I seem to recall you need special tools to work on some classic Ford cars.
A Google brings up nothing much.

Thanks for that, Kenobi, those links were fascinating. I now have a mental picture of that old Nazi Werner von Braun, having been hustled back to the USA after the war, being brought before military officials to be “deprogrammed” - not of Nazism, but of SI units. Jesus.

j

I have to ask: did your English colleague address the additional layer of complication caused by the fact that a US quart is not the same as an Imperial quart?

(In the days before you could instantly resolve such questions by googling them on your phone, I once had an absurd cyclical argument with a US friend about gallons which were not the same as gallons because the pints they were made up of were not the same as pints because…)

j

Surely that is satire. No one is that dumb.

Thanks for that; it really got my day started well. I’ll be sharing that with friends & family all day.

The video is from Buffy Browncoat, not from FoxNews.

Their big argument for “customary” units is that a third of a foot is 4 inches — nice and simple. I think a reason that anti-Metricism hasn’t caught on among FoxPotatoes is that many of them couldn’t correctly answer “How many inches in a third of a foot?” anyway.

Go ask one of those guys if a century is metric. :wink:

How about Top Ten lists? :dubious::smiley:

Easy, if you’re wearing your 7-league boots. :wink:

Unfathomable.

Just FYI, the metric system has been “the preferred system of weights and measures for United States trade and commerce” pursuant to federal law since 1975. It’s just not mandatory.

As for the OP, it would be nice to get a summary or description of the linked video. I’m not watching a second of Tucker Carlson on the off chance that I might find something amusing.

He even threw in a gratuitous reference to Robespierre (which he also pronounced correctly).

The OP is a summary of the linked video: it’s Tucker Carlson & a guest talking about how the metric system is a tyranny imposed by liberals even tho feet and inches are way better because people have limbs. The guest seems to be making it his personal crusade and Carlson is sympathetic.

That’s far more information than the OP offers. Thanks.

He did. He also addressed volume ounces vs. weight ounces and referred to the Americans as “you Colonials”, with a tone where the font used in a comic book would have had a name along the lines of Drippy Corrosive Poison. We were surprised he didn’t leave smoking holes in the floor.

I don’t know about animal health products, but you get a somewhat similar thing with children’s medicines, too. Dosing is given in metric (mL), based on weight in US customary units. It actually never occurred to me that it’s odd to mix units like that, because I’m used to medicines being dispensed in metric weight and volume units, but most people only know their weights in US customary units. I’m all for standardizing in metric, but it really isn’t that hard to reconcile the two in situations like these.

Well, as a cyclist, we have both centuries (the default is metric) and Imperial centuries (so named).

My pace per chain is 14 which works out 4.7 feet but I measure mine on uneven terrain which is more realistic but probably shortens it a bit.

I take your point, but the two situations are not quite the same. Measuring a child in pounds and then dosing is mL based on the weight is one thing*; actually making a medicine and expressing the strength in grams per pound - to make to a final concentration of grams per gallon or ton - is that not weird? A medicine - one of those high tech, highly regulated things?

Anyways, if that doesn’t do it for you, Nava’s stories should.

j

Really? In everything I’ve read or heard it is the other way around. There is a century (160.93 km) and a metric century (100 km).

Here’s a link to a very common topic amongst popular cycling rags:

This matches my experience. I did a “Summer Century” ride here in the PNW earlier this month and it was 100 miles.