Yep, +/- 18 inches (45.7 cm.)
We teach our Cubs to measure in cubits, hands, feet, fingers ... as an exercise that they can apply to map scaling on-the-fly when they get older.
Yep, +/- 18 inches (45.7 cm.)
We teach our Cubs to measure in cubits, hands, feet, fingers ... as an exercise that they can apply to map scaling on-the-fly when they get older.
I'm not sure how many times it has to be said but the metric system didn't catch on in the U.S.A. because it's a stupid system and not very functional. After 40 years how many people think of their weight in kgs or their height in cms? As I pointed out in an earlier post the metre is no more a valid unit of length than is the the yard, the foot or the furlong. Standard distance between fence posts is 161/2 ft. how much is that in metric? 5.029 metres! Get the picture?
Well, over seven billion of us use the Metric system exclusively.
Perhaps it is North Americans that are a stupid and dysfunctional.
BTW, every measurement unit in the metric system is based on a natural phenomenon. There is nothing arbitrary about it. A meter is the chord of 1/10,000,000 of the distance from the equator to the North Pole. The rest of the metric system derives from that measure of the earth's circumference ... a gram is one cubic centimeter of pure water at the standard temperature and atmospheric pressure.
Yes, Canada did not do it right. When the Aussies went metric the yards on their football fields (rugby) changed to meters, and the furlongs in horse racing changed to meters. Canada had the right idea about metric back in the 1970s but the conversion process was buggered up by the PC governments of the 1980s who allowed a dual system to remain in place. And then there is good old fashioned human stupidity - I am still amazed at acquaintances who claim they don't understand Celsius after living with it for more than 40 years.
Well, over seven billion of us use the Metric system exclusively.
Same reason they call themselves Americans.
which they aren't.
I'm Canadian. Mexico has Mexicans.....WTF are people in the US?
Unitedstatesians?
snicker
How many countries in the world are comprised of "united states"?![]()
Wrong, it started out that way, but it has since been determined, that, THAT is not correct, as I pointed out earlier!
It's not that it was wrong, just that 18th-century technology was not accurate enough to detect that the Earth is a bit egg-shaped. The corrections were minor and they required high tech. No one has yet bothered to correct the Roman soldier's gait that the "mile" (mille ... thousand paces) is based on. I challenge you to walk an exact mile using a thousand paces.
Actually, I'm pretty sure it was 2000 paces (1000 on each foot)![]()
How many countries in the world are comprised of "united states"?![]()
I'm not sure how many times it has to be said but the metric system didn't catch on in the U.S.A. because it's a stupid system and not very functional. After 40 years how many people think of their weight in kgs or their height in cms? As I pointed out in an earlier post the metre is no more a valid unit of length than is the the yard, the foot or the furlong. Standard distance between fence posts is 161/2 ft. how much is that in metric? 5.029 metres! Get the picture?
Actually, I'm pretty sure it was 2000 paces (1000 on each foot)![]()
When Senior changed us over to the metric system it served his purpose, he overthrew the Clark government over raising the tax on the price of fuel which were measured in gallons, which needed to be done, Senior promised in that election that he would never raise tax on the price of fuel even by $0.01/per gallon. He won a majority government then he got the metric system run through parliament against the wishes of the majority of the taxpayers, he set the price per litre, before anyone could realize it he doubled the tax on the price per gallon that Clark was originally asking for. So it actually benefitted the Gov. of the day more than to help the citizens.
That's how I remember it
From that post I would judge that you don't know how to use either system. Obviously a system based on multiples of ten is far easier to use that one based on whatever measurement they could pull out of their backsides. Here's two problems for you:
How many square meters in a square kilometer?
How many square feet in a square mile?
I'll leave it to you to tell me which one you had to use a calculator for.
No it was 1000 paces. The word mile is derived from the Latin: mille passus Ithousand paces.) That actually makes sense, unlike the English mile which seems to have been pretty much made up.
Actually the largest amount of tax on gasoline is taken by the provinces. The federal tax is 10 cents per liter in every part of Canada. Provincial taxes vary from 33 cents a liter in Newfoundland to 13 cents a liter in PEI. In Nunvut, the NWT, and Yukon the tax is kept low. And then there are taxes applied by cities like Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver.
BTW I do not remember any promise by Trudeau regarding gasoline, but it was over 40 years ago.
Guess what?
Metric Moon
January 8, 2007: If you think in pounds and miles instead of kilograms and kilometers, you're in the minority. Only the United States, Liberia, and Burma still primarily use English units -- the rest of the world is metric. And now the Moon will be metric too.
NASA has decided to use metric units for all operations on the lunar surface when it returns to the Moon. The Vision for Space Exploration calls for returning astronauts to the Moon by 2020 and eventually setting up a manned lunar outpost.
https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2007/08jan_metricmoon
Isn't it interesting that the metric Russian space program has pretty much outdone the US since the Apollo Missions? Now, I'm not saying that metric is the reason, but it certainly is easier to work with.
A 1000 paces to a mile doesn't make any kind of sense. My paces are 35 inches.
From that post I would judge that you don't know how to use either system.
Now that truly would be cutting off your nose to spite your face.
No it was 1000 paces. The word mile is derived from the Latin: mille passus Ithousand paces.) That actually makes sense, unlike the English mile which seems to have been pretty much made up.