Can anyone give me any crazy reason (other than it would cost a lot to change the road signs) why the United States doesn't use it? I'm not sure if some of you have been introduced to numbers but it kind of repeats. 1-10 over and over...
Maybe some truth to that. 100 miles to Lexington on a sign sure looks better than 160.9 kilometers.Somehow, 'Muricans can comprehend just fine when they buy their Mountain Dew by the 2-liter and their illicit drugs by the gram. But posting road sign distance markers in kilometers, or changing the 12oz can of Milwaukee's Best to .355L, would turn their world upside down.
.35 caliber or so.Anyone know how big 9mm ammo is?
Not really.It’s the same reason the USA calls futbol soccer. Americans always have to put their spin on things
Science, medical/medicine, dental, military, energy, electronics, firearms, jewelry, manufacturing, narcotics, and auto industries (to name a few industries) switched over metric a long time ago or are very largely operating using the metric system. Anything pertaining to international affairs uses metric. The consumer goods industry is largely switching over to the metric system. Now some of this usage of metric system usage may not have translated over to the consumer-facing portion of the industries, but behind the scenes it's all done in metrics and then converted to whatever the appropriate imperial standard would be.Can anyone give me any crazy reason (other than it would cost a lot to change the road signs) why the United States doesn't use it? I'm not sure if some of you have been introduced to numbers but it kind of repeats. 1-10 over and over...
It’s the same reason the USA calls futbol soccer. Americans always have to put their spin on things
Impressed as I can be but you know way too damn much about this.Yeah, not the case at all.
The name soccer was started in Britain. When they established set rules and guidelines for soccer they had to differentiate from their other sport, Rubgy Football, and the US sport, Gridiron Football. They called it Association Football. Over the proceeding decades the name Association Football was bastardized into Assoccer, and then just Soccer. Somewhere along the line they stopped calling it soccer and went back to calling it football. The US was already calling Gridiron Football just Football. So we stuck with using the name Soccer.
Ohio included.Tell the british and their former territories to drive on the right side of the road.