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Posts 239 - 250 of 2,133
Posts 239 - 250 of 2,133
jbryanc
22 years ago
22 years ago
The Canadian national anthem is probably the only one whose citizens don't know the words to. I defy you to parse that sentence and win. They (the powers that be) changed them (the words to the national anthem) along about the time the Yanks made us go metric and everything stopped making sense.
Kirby, you are the product of a fairly normal imagination.
Kirby, you are the product of a fairly normal imagination.
OnyxFlame
22 years ago
22 years ago
And yet we're still not metric. Go whatever they call non-metric measurement!

Corwin
22 years ago
22 years ago
Its called imperial measurement (because it comes from the Brits I believe, which given that America changed just about everything else about them even vaguely British it kinda surprises me that they kept it).
Australians, surprisingly, know the words to their national anthem quite well because it's sung at lotsa sporting events. Although I reckon at least three quarters of the population either don't know there is a second verse, or would just substitute the words "More beer, more beer, more beer, more beer" until the chorus.
Australians, surprisingly, know the words to their national anthem quite well because it's sung at lotsa sporting events. Although I reckon at least three quarters of the population either don't know there is a second verse, or would just substitute the words "More beer, more beer, more beer, more beer" until the chorus.
jbryanc
22 years ago
22 years ago
In the mid-seventies Ford or maybe Carter decreed that North America would go metric by 19--. Mexico was already there, I believe. Canada dutifully followed along and actually began changing. We put up kilometre posts and changed the gas pumps to litres. Since American and Canadian gallons were different to begin with there was no extra confusion.
Then, those guardians of American democracy, the teamsters, said they weren't gonna change. That was that. Canada was halfway into the metric system and stayed there. There are possibly some advantages: division by 10, for example. But there is no possibility of working out gas mileage because we can no longer buy a gallon of gas nor drive a mile.
Thanks Jer, or was it Jimmy?
Then, those guardians of American democracy, the teamsters, said they weren't gonna change. That was that. Canada was halfway into the metric system and stayed there. There are possibly some advantages: division by 10, for example. But there is no possibility of working out gas mileage because we can no longer buy a gallon of gas nor drive a mile.
Thanks Jer, or was it Jimmy?
OnyxFlame
22 years ago
22 years ago
I don't care how irrational refusing to measure by metric is, there's just something uninspired about metric (not to mention the fact I'd hafta relearn everything I know). It's kinda cute confusing foreigners though...when it's winter and it's like 25 degrees outside and they wonder why I think it's cold, until they realize I'm not going by Celsius.

Mr. Crab
22 years ago
22 years ago
It was Jimmy. I remember now. They tried to change us over in the US too, but too many people used their firearms to shoot down the km/hr signs.
Fahrenheit is a better measure of temperature for the purpose of the human body. Celsius's increments are too large.
Anyone know how the length of a meter, volume of a litre, and weight of a gram were chosen?
Fahrenheit is a better measure of temperature for the purpose of the human body. Celsius's increments are too large.
Anyone know how the length of a meter, volume of a litre, and weight of a gram were chosen?
Corwin
22 years ago
22 years ago
Not sure exactly how they decided what the deal was, but one thing I do know is that they're all linked by one thing. Water. One cubic centimetre of water= 1 gram. A litre of water is therefore equal to one kilogram. A cubic metre is equal to one metric ton.
I remember having to study the origin of the metric system somewhere in my high school maths classes. I think it was a french instigated thing, they worked out the metre and the rest kind of flowed from there. I could of course be way off base with that.
I remember having to study the origin of the metric system somewhere in my high school maths classes. I think it was a french instigated thing, they worked out the metre and the rest kind of flowed from there. I could of course be way off base with that.
Corwin
22 years ago
22 years ago
Okay, it bothered me enough that I went and looked it up. Turns out I was about right. The following is quoted from
http://www.essex1.com/people/speer/metric.html
'the Metric System was devised by French scientists in the late 18th century to replace the chaotic collection of units then in
use. The goal of this effort was to produce a system that did not rely on a miscellany of separate standards, and to use the decimal system rather than fractions.
To obtain a standard of length a quadrant of the earth (one-fourth of a circumference) was surveyed from Dunkirk to Barcelona along the meridian that passes through Paris. The distance from the pole to the equator was divided into ten million parts to constitute the meter (spelled metre in some countries). The definition of the meter has become more and more precise through the years since. Currently the meter is the distance light travels in a vacuum in 1/299 792 458 second.'
Apparently the original standard of measure was imprecise so it went through lots of changes, using things like wavelengths of various types of radiation and laser.
As far as I can tell I was right about the volume and mass measurements being worked out using the metre and water as a base.
http://www.essex1.com/people/speer/metric.html
'the Metric System was devised by French scientists in the late 18th century to replace the chaotic collection of units then in
use. The goal of this effort was to produce a system that did not rely on a miscellany of separate standards, and to use the decimal system rather than fractions.
To obtain a standard of length a quadrant of the earth (one-fourth of a circumference) was surveyed from Dunkirk to Barcelona along the meridian that passes through Paris. The distance from the pole to the equator was divided into ten million parts to constitute the meter (spelled metre in some countries). The definition of the meter has become more and more precise through the years since. Currently the meter is the distance light travels in a vacuum in 1/299 792 458 second.'
Apparently the original standard of measure was imprecise so it went through lots of changes, using things like wavelengths of various types of radiation and laser.
As far as I can tell I was right about the volume and mass measurements being worked out using the metre and water as a base.
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