Why didn't the USA ever adopt the Metric System? (Short Animated Documentary)

The USA is famously one of the few countries on Earth that doesn't use the Metric System. So why doesn't it? To find out watch this short and simple animated history documentary.
A special thanks to my Patreon Supporters below:
Jens Koch-Nommensen
Øystein Alsaker
Carl Österbrand
Sergio M. Vela
Dennis Vandeban
Michael Kram
Hasmuffin
CharÉTS
Franco La Bruna
Don Bonnigan
Ian Whitcomb
Adam Barrett
Bradley chaulk
John
Southside Mitch
Justin Kubusch
Matthew Literovich
Heath Robertson
JakeBak0905
Ethan
Person
sharpie660
Vance Christiaanse
Paul Munro
Shauna K
Nathan Mendelsohn
Phoenix Fats
ConspiracyPizza
Philip Yip
Sean D.
Piotr Wojnowski
Martha Grondin
Travis Mount
Mario Peshev
Joooooshhhhhh
Aaron Conaway
Jane Sumpter
Joshua Rackstraw
Christopher Godfrey
Andy McGehee
Steven Gibson
Phillip Gathright
Jack Nelson
Barry
Erik Hare
Tony Belmonte
Adrian Marine
John Orr
Joshua Schneider
Andreas Mosand
Alex Teplyakov
Jamie van Brewen
Andrew F
D. Mahlik
Dr. Schtnizel
Peter Marino
Thomas McGraw
Konstantin Bredyuk
Brooks Woolson
Nick Macarius
Evan Ellingson
Zhao Liu
DocOzz13 .
Ron Johnson
Arthur Hosey Jr.
Dana Spurgeon
zockotron
Chase Labiste
Shawn Morse
Angel Aguiñaga
Katie Flinn
Keith A. Layton
Tactical_Jackal
Bernardo Cavalcanti
William Swiacki
Allen Rines
MGS2600
Nolan Peale
Sahni
Roman Kynčl
Ciege Engine
John Garcia
Matthew Toles
Chris Winther
Liam Gilleece
mgnesium.poetry
Carl Blanton
Tim Stone
Jacob Zachs
Contdoko12
Bernice
Chris Weisel
Zach Rust
Joe DeVito
Clayton Schuman
Michael Galloway
HelloAgain
Andrew Patane
Tino
Vilena5
Bradley Backoff
Jason Vandeventer
Serius_Loyola
Zachary Pascalar
Jason Gould
Brian George
Matthew O'Connor
Matt Reed
blaZzinG_FurY
ARandomPaperClip
Leena Al-Souki
KNSTRKTVST
Windischgraetz
Dullis
Blue Cardinal
Aaron Larrow
Justin Short
William Adderholdt
Ben Drums 24
george tyler
Wilhelm Screamer
ThePalestRose
Bartosz Zasada
Perry Gagne
Hexapuma
Patty Culp
Anthony McCann
Oliver Jenner
Steven Mastronardo
Joseph Reinsch
Tyler Jenkins
Bodo Nuber
Joseph Hutchins
Colm Byrne
Joel Cromwell
Curt Helmerich
Clay Carroll
Magdalena Reinberg-Leibel
Stefan Møller
Juan Castillo
Andrew Niedbala
Ahmed Roshdi
Thomas McGill
B Dryad
Ned Burke
David van Reyk
Logical Insanity
Chach
Geoffrey Sparrow
Dexter_McAaron
Liquid Chief
Joel Wasserman
No way
Warren Rudkin
Tim Sweeney
bas mensink
BattleGoat Studios
James
Ian Smith
Burt Clothier
Ali Sadighian
kevinh
Ethan Harlow
Matthew Ward
Matt Busch
Little Ernu
Steve Bonds
Romney Manassa
Yared Cristiano
Chris Wreker
Robin!
Alen
Ryan Lowe
Bren Ehnebuske
anon
William Clark
Yosef Waysman
Mars Project
Richard Wolfe
Jonny Minogue
Melissa Prober
Donald Weaver
Vegard Tønnessen
nullptr
Manny F
Colonel Oneill
Juan Benet
David Spellmeyer
Zach Weakland
Anthony Uk
Thomas Wang
SirAlpaka
hefcluba
Mark Ploegstra
I'm Not In The Description
Mik Scheper
Hiro P
Azul Bravestrong
Brian Giordano
JT96
Yuichiro Kakutani
Bruh 11
Ryan Haber
Alex G.
Tim Stumbaugh
luvrhino
SketerK
Emily Glover-Wilson
Nathan Ngumi
Joseph Kerckhoff
Tristan Kreller
Andrei Listochkin
Jeffrey Schneider
Emily D
Wolf
Charles Doolittle
Scott Oppel
Sethars
Sophie Winter
James R DeVries
Allen
Igor Stavchanskiy
Gregory Priebe
pdswanfleet
LambOfLeg
Sara Birnbaum
Phil and Lisa Toland
Lech Duraj
Dr. Howard Dr. Fine Dr. Howard
John Gross-Whitaker
Isabel Harrison
Kevin Phoenix
Tom Ebert
Hunter Bayliss
Robert Brockway
Dustin Koellhoffer
Will Sullivan
Ian M
Dutchball Animations
Rita Cragwall
Seth Reeves
Tranier Bocaj
Peter Konieczny
AltHistoryConjectures
Danny Anstess
Chasen Le Hara
Zachary Oertel
Riley davidson
YugiJitsu Games
Eric Askins
0_DannyBoy
Roko Lisica
George Caponera
Dan Reiher
Colm Boyle
Sean Long
Nathan Snyder
Kinfe85
Doug MacLean
Kirk Hoffman
Laurent Othacehe
mohd
Miky Hidalgo Morriss
אורי פרקש
Dr. Sarno
Heytun
Harley Raptopoulos
Rob Rollins
Andrew Sever
Shakira Graham
Mickey Landen
Nicholas Menghini
Christopher S Nelson
Paul McGee
Lindorien
João Santos
Abdallah Al-Ammari
Daniel O'Reilly
Typhoon2401
Deadlock
Markus Lindström
Michael Corson
blei95
Kasi
Jan Bart Verbist
M Scho
Ploshtinska polyudnica
Schwarzer Hai
Robin_Col
Olaf
biohazardgamer
James
Tarsirrus
Ben L
Rhys Little
Ash Elford
Jackarice26
Harrison Tatem-Wyatt
Twinny Hill
Gina Service
zemnmez
KingKyumber
Rhys Jackson
DarkLycan
Phil Johnston
Roberticus1992
Tom Pollard

Пікірлер: 7 600

  • @timmccarthy872
    @timmccarthy872 Жыл бұрын

    Interestingly, Thomas Jefferson did have one major success in metrifying the USA: decimalized currency. The American dollar was one of the world's first currencies to be divided in 100 parts.

  • @GoatTheGoat

    @GoatTheGoat

    Жыл бұрын

    That is amazing. I never knew the metric system invented the number 100. I guess you learn something new every day.

  • @fana9863

    @fana9863

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GoatTheGoat It has probably more to do with the fact that 100 cent is 1 Dollar is 10 Dime.

  • @SNBullen0002

    @SNBullen0002

    Жыл бұрын

    @@fana9863 all of which has nothing to do with meters.

  • @Alusnovalotus

    @Alusnovalotus

    Жыл бұрын

    But do we really need pennies, nowadays??

  • @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714

    @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GoatTheGoat The english money system is not decimal.

  • @angiki9988
    @angiki9988 Жыл бұрын

    If only James Bisonette had been there to implement the metric system.

  • @jamesbissonette8002

    @jamesbissonette8002

    Жыл бұрын

    Seems like it would be difficult

  • @biomuseum6645

    @biomuseum6645

    Жыл бұрын

    Also Kelly Moneymaker

  • @tek1645

    @tek1645

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jamesbissonette8002 James Bissonnette

  • @deutschesmanutter1395

    @deutschesmanutter1395

    Жыл бұрын

    what about boogoley woogely

  • @aidanrock8719

    @aidanrock8719

    Жыл бұрын

    @@beanseason6515 stlll mad that your channel never took off and you got 7 views on your last upload

  • @kimberlyperrotis8962
    @kimberlyperrotis8962 Жыл бұрын

    As an elementary and middle school student in the 60s and 70s, we constantly studied for the “big conversion to the metric system”. Then, one day it was dropped and never mentioned again. I learned as a young adult, that it was the high cost of industry retooling that killed it. I became a scientist, using mainly American Practical Hydrologic Units for work and could well believe it, every day was a crazy mix of systems and units from here, there and everywhere. We all wasted a lot of time converting quantities all the time to use them in equations.

  • @CHixon

    @CHixon

    Жыл бұрын

    Spot on.

  • @edsmith3791

    @edsmith3791

    10 ай бұрын

    I remember that same 'big conversion' that was coming in the early 80's.

  • @Terrell070

    @Terrell070

    7 ай бұрын

    Same here, 70s and 80s. I remember the commercial that said "you get more from a liter".

  • @juanmanuelpenaloza9264

    @juanmanuelpenaloza9264

    4 ай бұрын

    And then I start working in auto mechanics and everything is in metrics. Even Ford and GM cars. I mean we still use standard for miles and weight and such. But mostly tools and threads are easier in metric.

  • @libbychang413

    @libbychang413

    3 ай бұрын

    i was one of those of those kids too...we had to learn "freedom units" outside...

  • @JackClayton123
    @JackClayton123 Жыл бұрын

    I had an argument with my American instructor in the late 80’s as to wether or not a quart was just larger or just smaller than a litre. As a Canadian in the sciences, I was familiar with both and we were both adamant that each of us was correct. It was only after I realized that Canadian (Imperial) and US quarts were not the same size. So yes, we were BOTH correct.

  • @mckenziekeith7434

    @mckenziekeith7434

    Жыл бұрын

    These types of disagreements are so much easier to resolve nowadays with the internet. Half the arguments I had in college with friends could have been answered in 30 seconds of googling. But google didn't exist yet back then.

  • @krane15

    @krane15

    Жыл бұрын

    He's another argument you might want to considers. You can't both be correct. That flaw in logic disturbs me beyond measure. So please, never say that again. But if you do, know that its a fallacy in logic.

  • @mckenziekeith7434

    @mckenziekeith7434

    Жыл бұрын

    @@krane15 did you actually read the whole comment and understand it?

  • @cosmefulanito5933

    @cosmefulanito5933

    11 ай бұрын

    @@mckenziekeith7434 Yes. And no. No both can be correct. Please use the Metric System as all humans on this world do.

  • @mckenziekeith7434

    @mckenziekeith7434

    11 ай бұрын

    @@cosmefulanito5933 If you read the whole comment and understood it, then you would be able to see how yes, they were both correct. The problem is that they were using unstated assumptions about the units they were using. Unstated because they didn't even know that there were two different types of quart. I agree, the metric system is better. But I do still sometimes use quarts and gallons for volume.

  • @OmegaTaishu
    @OmegaTaishu Жыл бұрын

    "Went the extra 1609 meters" This channel is pure gold

  • @Antebios

    @Antebios

    Жыл бұрын

    Gold, Jerry, GOLD!

  • @silverblueshadow

    @silverblueshadow

    Жыл бұрын

    I didn't pay attention to that until I see your comment, then I understand. So true it's such gold

  • @zhengyangwang214

    @zhengyangwang214

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't get it. Someone explain please

  • @morganholon2648

    @morganholon2648

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zhengyangwang214 1609 meters equal one mile

  • @johnthomas2485

    @johnthomas2485

    Жыл бұрын

    I love the "Freedom Units" sign lol

  • @anttibjorklund1869
    @anttibjorklund1869 Жыл бұрын

    "This is when president Gerald R. Ford went the extra 1609 metres...." I bloody love your humour.

  • @ericremotesteam

    @ericremotesteam

    Жыл бұрын

    2:21, I was just about to mention that joke. That was pure gold. 👌

  • @suspectnutria

    @suspectnutria

    Жыл бұрын

    I don’t get what the number is supposed to mean

  • @anttibjorklund1869

    @anttibjorklund1869

    Жыл бұрын

    @@suspectnutria 1609 meters is roughly 1 mile. "To go the extra mile" is a phrase meaning to go further than needed to achieve something.

  • @renatopinto3186

    @renatopinto3186

    Жыл бұрын

    @@suspectnutria he meant the "extra mile". It's an idiom.

  • @timmmahhhh

    @timmmahhhh

    Жыл бұрын

    I love his bloody humour too! And that's British humor with a U as you so correctly wrote.

  • @briane3657
    @briane3657 Жыл бұрын

    When I was in a U.S.Junior High School in the early 1960's, we were given a lot of instruction in the Metric System, being told that somewhere in the near future we would be switching over to it. Obviously that did not happen. However, When I was in the Army National Guard, all measurements were in Metric: Weapons, Bullets, Maps, etc.Our medicines that we are prescribed are also in the Metric System. And we also have a Decimal Feet measurement used by engineers in site planning. When I was an Architect I use to wish we were using the Metric System, which would have avoided fractions when writing dimensions.

  • @smalltime0

    @smalltime0

    6 ай бұрын

    That's partially for NATO/Allied inter-operability. I imagine that the US army does more joint operations with NATO/Allies, who all use metric, rather than Liberia - the only other nation on Earth using US Customary

  • @corneilcorneil

    @corneilcorneil

    17 күн бұрын

    Nasa is using metric. For a good reason

  • @annadupont7615
    @annadupont761511 ай бұрын

    I grew up in the 70's in the US, and we did a bit of trying to learn Standard to Metric conversions, which as you might imagine, didn't stick. But when I became a scientist, I learned metric pretty flipping easily because that's what's used 100% in science - you learn by doing. After 35 years of using liters and meters at work and cups and feet at home, I can easily use both. One area where metric is far superior: trying to describe the length of something small - millimeters are perfect! The argument that switching to metric would require new package labeling is laughable, as the vast majority of our packages are labeled in both ounces and grams. But the most amusing was my mom's argument against converting to the metric system: she said she didn't want to have to throw away her old measuring cups and buy new ones for cooking. I had to remind her that she could still use her old ones for her recipes - no one was going to come into her house and confiscate her measuring cups! 🙄

  • @ChessedGamon
    @ChessedGamon Жыл бұрын

    Since the US still uses metric for teaching physics, it's put me in the weird position where I use things like Fahrenheit to talk about the weather but intuitively switch to Celsius to talk about how hot it would be if you were a kilometer away from the core of the sun

  • @sovietunion7643

    @sovietunion7643

    Жыл бұрын

    i do believe it would be very hot.

  • @deusvult6920

    @deusvult6920

    Жыл бұрын

    Right, bc you totally know that 🙄 this is why people don't trust the religion of science

  • @Martan404

    @Martan404

    Жыл бұрын

    @@deusvult6920the religion of science 😂 it can be calculated using math

  • @bigbad5067

    @bigbad5067

    Жыл бұрын

    @@deusvult6920 bro really called science a religion 💀💀

  • @bigben9889

    @bigben9889

    Жыл бұрын

    @@deusvult6920 i mean i don't think people go around praising newton or einstein

  • @blueseercontent
    @blueseercontent Жыл бұрын

    Your friendly reminder that the Brits still very much use "miles" all the time. In fact, the signs going from Kmh to Mph is one of the few ways you can recognize you've crossed from Ireland into Northern Ireland.

  • @DomWeasel

    @DomWeasel

    Жыл бұрын

    Keep in mind (as my Irish housemate constantly rages to me) most Americans are unaware that Ireland and Northern Ireland are separate countries.

  • @jakleo337

    @jakleo337

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DomWeasel Not foe much longer.

  • @mikeynth7919

    @mikeynth7919

    Жыл бұрын

    My Canadian relatives do the same.

  • @evilgenius919

    @evilgenius919

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DomWeasel yeah that's not really true though. Politics around Northern Ireland are much more well known than you might think.

  • @blueseercontent

    @blueseercontent

    Жыл бұрын

    @XXV I realize that, but in Northern Ireland, the speed signs are in miles per hour, while in the Republic they're in kilometers per hours. I would know, I've literally been then.

  • @centralscrutinizer6108
    @centralscrutinizer6108 Жыл бұрын

    Your sly humor in presenting these subjects it's the best, love your content!

  • @travisspicer5514
    @travisspicer551410 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the effort put into the newspapers. Make my day

  • @davidmitchell1391
    @davidmitchell1391 Жыл бұрын

    I'm British and 70 years old. In the days of £ (pounds), S (shillings) and D (pence) every school child had to learn by rote the times tables of 1x1 through to 1x12, as there were 240 pence to the pound, and of course calculators just didn't exist back then. (£1 = S20, 1S = D12). On Monday 15 Febuary 1971, we changed to decimal currency (£1 = 100NP). About a week later I found the old currency almost impossible to calculate!

  • @MrBonners

    @MrBonners

    Жыл бұрын

    what? no pieces of 8? no furlongs and hogsheads?

  • @billwilkie6574

    @billwilkie6574

    Жыл бұрын

    No. Only rods, poles, perches, chains, groats, and cloth yards. Ah, whatever happened to the old Babylonian system based on 360?

  • @graemeoneill1490

    @graemeoneill1490

    Жыл бұрын

    Living in New Zealand we had to make do with the system of country of origin. during the 1970-80s. We not only had Metric, Whitworth, American but also a temporary 'Unified' thread that didn't match any of these original standards. We also had liquid, land area measure mixes as we converted to SI system.

  • @richardhead1848

    @richardhead1848

    Жыл бұрын

    I find this fascinating!

  • @SniffyPoo

    @SniffyPoo

    Жыл бұрын

    have a bizarre non-decimal currency breakdown was a complete waste of time for everyone

  • @maw4734
    @maw4734 Жыл бұрын

    The White House interior sets that change to reflect the building’s complete gutting/rebuilding during the Truman era were a nice touch. Well played, HM.

  • @giladpellaeon1691

    @giladpellaeon1691

    Жыл бұрын

    Have you checked out the spinning newspaper articles? They are worth it.

  • @itsblitz4437

    @itsblitz4437

    Жыл бұрын

    Good attention to detail!

  • @kennethbropson8019

    @kennethbropson8019

    Жыл бұрын

    Did anyone notice "douchebag" spelled out?

  • @chicagotypewriter2094

    @chicagotypewriter2094

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kennethbropson8019 where at?

  • @kennethbropson8019

    @kennethbropson8019

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chicagotypewriter2094 At 2:03 - 2:06 at the top of the screen.

  • @ndub1257
    @ndub1257 Жыл бұрын

    In the heavy construction industry we use what is called engineer scale or also known as "tenths scale". All measurements are based on feet, but are broken down to be a multiple of ten, hundreds, thousands etc. Like the metric system it simplifies the measurements so you don't have fractions or odd units. Most Americans use and are familiar with both American standard and metric as many products have both measurements, such as a drink would have ounces or quart, and also milliliter or liter equivalents on the labels. The one exception is Fahrenheit to Celsius and vise versa, that one still seems tough to convert in your head.

  • @Milesco

    @Milesco

    8 күн бұрын

    That's interesting. But it seems to me that if you're going to decimalize your measurement system, why not just adopt metric units, which are _already_ decimalized and widely used? By using decimalized feet, you're just reinventing the wheel.

  • @aidanwolff3213

    @aidanwolff3213

    4 күн бұрын

    @@MilescoMaybe we prefer the exact length of feet rather than meters, I honestly think it’s a more useful measurement. Your comment really doesn’t make any sense in the aggregate my guy.

  • @Milesco

    @Milesco

    4 күн бұрын

    @@aidanwolff3213 Actually I agree with you. Personally, I prefer feet to meters. I think the foot is a more convenient size. Meters are too large, and centimeters are too small. But for technical / commercial applications, I think that's less important. So that's why I said that if they're going to decimalize feet to avoid fractions and twelfths, they might as well just take the final step and use metric units already. Metric units already exist, they're also decimal-based, and they're widely used throughout the world -- unlike decimalized feet, which _nobody_ uses, not even in the USA (except, apparently, the heavy construction industry, if the OP is correct). Just my humble opinion. 😊

  • @somebuddyX
    @somebuddyX10 ай бұрын

    That Gerald Ford joke was gold.

  • @therwfer
    @therwfer Жыл бұрын

    "Nerds told 'no'" is a headline that could still pop up on a weekly basis.

  • @SidheKnight

    @SidheKnight

    Жыл бұрын

    - Nerds: "We should do something about Climate Change" - Govt & Corporations: "NO".

  • @Mukyoukai

    @Mukyoukai

    Ай бұрын

    Also, funny Elden Ring reference hidden there

  • @AlRoderick
    @AlRoderick Жыл бұрын

    They do use the metric system extensively in the US military, presumably because almost everywhere the service is expected to be fighting is going to have road signs marked in kilometers

  • @brushnit9212

    @brushnit9212

    Жыл бұрын

    also metric makes the maths of military related things (ballistics, energy, volume, etc) easily calculable and sharable with peers

  • @jokuvaan5175

    @jokuvaan5175

    Жыл бұрын

    Soldier: "Sir, I managed to intercept enemy communications saying that they were going to attack 54 kilometers south of Citytown." Commander: "Okay excellent work....So...how much is that" Soldier: "Idk. I thought you'd know"

  • @FDNY101202

    @FDNY101202

    Жыл бұрын

    Nah .. it's because NATO.

  • @Hollows1997

    @Hollows1997

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s in order to be able to integrate with allies who use metric, same for us here in the UK.

  • @justalostcause4425

    @justalostcause4425

    Жыл бұрын

    I prefer imperial system. Distance in kms and height in cms sounds goofy asl.

  • @youremakingprogress144
    @youremakingprogress14410 ай бұрын

    I appreciate the information and education, and the videos always make me chuckle. I love the Easter eggs in the newspapers and elsewhere.

  • @fritsdaalmans5589
    @fritsdaalmans55899 ай бұрын

    I LOLed at 1:39 at your New Jersey Tabloid frontpage 😀

  • @g00dbyemisterA
    @g00dbyemisterA Жыл бұрын

    The articles on the newspaper at 1:40 are just amazing, hats off to your history matters, hats off

  • @douglasboyle6544

    @douglasboyle6544

    Жыл бұрын

    Vampires!

  • @LesWebsterGoldArdeoGang

    @LesWebsterGoldArdeoGang

    Жыл бұрын

    "Thou art maidenless" lol

  • @Alusnovalotus

    @Alusnovalotus

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol the last two were *chef’s kiss*

  • @danreed7889

    @danreed7889

    Жыл бұрын

    I laughed myself

  • @giladpellaeon1691

    @giladpellaeon1691

    Жыл бұрын

    I started to use metric then found myself shopping for "To Serve Man".

  • @deathsquad8891
    @deathsquad8891 Жыл бұрын

    As a Romanian, the paper article about Metric promoting cannibalism because Transylvanian vampires eat humans is hilarious

  • @Resnicanin

    @Resnicanin

    Жыл бұрын

    That is like when there was a fight dominance in US for AC or DC use of current systems between Nikola Tesla and Thomas Edison, Nikola Tesla was a for AC which was far more energy effective for using it on longer distances over DC, Thomas Edison who was for DC current (he manufactured more products for DC) tried to do public example of how bad AC current was by doing a public lab show where he exposed an elephant to AC current in which during the show elephant died, and he was like: "See? This is what AC current could do to you!"

  • @trajan75

    @trajan75

    Жыл бұрын

    You're right' Everyone knows that vampires don't eat people, they suck peoples' blood. Zombies eat people. I'm glad we could clear this up.

  • @chicagotypewriter2094

    @chicagotypewriter2094

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Resnicanin Not saying Edison was right in any way, but the elephant fact can be taken with more than a grain of salt The elephant in question was Topsy, who under a horrible life in the circus had squished 3 handlers to death. One of those "savaged her with a pitchfork" and another had "tried to feed her a lit cigarette" And at the time, electrocution was seen as a "humane way of disposing of a living being." In fact, the ASPCA gave Edison two thumbs-up to kill the pesky pachyderm this way. And had fed the elephant half a kilo (460 g) of potassium CYANIDE that day, mixed in with carrots So yes he did execute it, but AC wasn't the only thing that killed Topsy (I reread this comment & realised I switched the names & currents originally - whoops!)

  • @509Gman

    @509Gman

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chicagotypewriter2094 I’d say you missed the point about Edison being an opportunist and a showboater. AC can kill you just as dead. It isn’t the “how the elephant died” that we care about, it’s the gain Edison wanted to get from it.

  • @chicagotypewriter2094

    @chicagotypewriter2094

    Жыл бұрын

    @@509Gman That's very true and a good note to remember as well!

  • @johndoyle4723
    @johndoyle4723 Жыл бұрын

    I graduated in the UK as an Engineer. I started Uni in 1969 and we adopted the SI units, Metric in other words, but also had to learn a bit of BTUs and cubic inches etc. When I got a job in industry, I had to relearn FPS. We still have our pint and cars do MPG(but not the US gallon),petrol is sold in Litres, so you have to convert to UK gallons to get MPG.

  • @richardsteinberg9696
    @richardsteinberg969611 ай бұрын

    America is essentially the only country in the world that does not use the metric system (other than a few small exceptions). It is also the richest country per capita in the world (other than a few small exceptions). Perhaps there is a connection?

  • @lisette2060

    @lisette2060

    10 күн бұрын

    Lame nonsense, exceptionalism based on narrow mindedness isn't admirable.. How about your life span expectancy, which is valuable measurement of a nations success?

  • @aidanwolff3213

    @aidanwolff3213

    4 күн бұрын

    @@lisette2060I’d prefer 70 rich years over 80 poor ones my dude

  • @MrTorocop

    @MrTorocop

    17 сағат бұрын

    that's not even true, USA is in 8th place

  • @tankman66
    @tankman66 Жыл бұрын

    I think one of the reasons it failed in the 70s is because gas prices were so volatile and people thought it was a trick by the government to charge more for gas, since nobody knew how many liters were in a gallon.

  • @marcushendriksen8415

    @marcushendriksen8415

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, that would be pretty funny. "I don't understand this system, must be a scam", it's a miracle progress was made at all

  • @ilyatoporgilka

    @ilyatoporgilka

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans also always use fixed showers.

  • @charlestonianbuilder344

    @charlestonianbuilder344

    Жыл бұрын

    America moment

  • @patheticbread6861

    @patheticbread6861

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilyatoporgilka That’s not true every shower I’ve ever been in is adjustable

  • @ilyatoporgilka

    @ilyatoporgilka

    Жыл бұрын

    It is always impossible to “put off”.It is unmovable(stationary).

  • @JeanLucCoulon
    @JeanLucCoulon Жыл бұрын

    In 1976, I was a student and I subscribed to an electronics magazine in the USA. The figures were in Imperial with metrics in brackets. A few years later, the figures were in metrics with the imperial equivalent in brackets. In 1980 (IIRC), the metrics had totally vanished.

  • @travisfinucane

    @travisfinucane

    Жыл бұрын

    I, too, measure my amperage with good ol American "zaps per square inch".

  • @MortonLuvz2drum

    @MortonLuvz2drum

    Жыл бұрын

    Reagan was my wake up call as an early adult. I really didn't know much about Nixon, but when Reagan announced the Ketchup packet as a serving of vegetable for the American student lunch, I started realizing just who cared about what. And, just how lazy we were to become.

  • @MichaelJohnson-vi6eh

    @MichaelJohnson-vi6eh

    Жыл бұрын

    I am.sure Ronnie Reagan didn't know a liter from a lamppost - he just attracted the kind of people around him that foreign concepts were to be squelched and foreign countries were to conquered or cowered.

  • @oftin_wong

    @oftin_wong

    Жыл бұрын

    Science articles in the US are also often written with both units It's quite distracting and it makes you lose focus on the content

  • @2Greenlid

    @2Greenlid

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MichaelJohnson-vi6eh So remind me what countries Reagan conquered? I bet you like his killing inflation and economic boom from 1982 on….

  • @havardhanto5449
    @havardhanto5449 Жыл бұрын

    Your videos are gold! 0,5 History Matters video = 1 education

  • @luuchoo93
    @luuchoo93 Жыл бұрын

    The chalkboard at the end killed me.

  • @kuwa333
    @kuwa333 Жыл бұрын

    In the Philippines, we use both systems (metric and imperial) all products have metric (LARGER TEXT) and imperial (smaller text) measurements. But in schools, we rarely use imperial.

  • @hatorimorningstar3996

    @hatorimorningstar3996

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think we ever used it at all if I recall correctly (The Imperial System).

  • @Spoonishpls

    @Spoonishpls

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah lots of countries still use lots of native units every day

  • @cymtastique

    @cymtastique

    Жыл бұрын

    We have it here too, but it's usually like this: Imperial (Metric)

  • @belg4mit

    @belg4mit

    Жыл бұрын

    Everything is dual-labeled in the U.S too. We are officially metric, it's just that in everyday use folks favor the customary units.

  • @muzi1737

    @muzi1737

    Жыл бұрын

    It's never usually taught in schools because the Philippines officially uses the metric system since the Spanish Era. We only ever used imperial because of the Americans (even though under their rule we still officially use the metric, under Act No. 1519, s. 1906)

  • @IslamRespect_WOMENsigma
    @IslamRespect_WOMENsigma Жыл бұрын

    We honestly take for granted how good quality these videos are and how accessible it is.

  • @kaliyuga1476

    @kaliyuga1476

    Жыл бұрын

    Bro shut up

  • @chiensyang

    @chiensyang

    Жыл бұрын

    You should thank James Bissonette and Kelly Moneymaker for supporting History Matters.

  • @ilyatoporgilka

    @ilyatoporgilka

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans also always use fixed showers.

  • @richardcampbell2438
    @richardcampbell243812 күн бұрын

    As a mid-century atavistic Canadian I use the following measures. Volume: Litres, gallons (US & Imperial), cups, quarts, fl ounces & dry ounces, grams kilograms, ton and tonne, millilitres, barrels, cubic feet and metres, yards, the tun, boxcar, 20 & 40 foot containers. Lengths: Metre, centimetre, millimetre, kilometre, mile, yard, foot, inch, furlong, rod, hand, span, fathom, cubit. Now how to use some of these measures. Some of these are specific to my form. My thumb ~1 inch wide, foot ~0.75 feet, my little finger tip ~1 centimetre wide, sternum to fingertip just shy of a yard, fingertip to finger tip just shy of a fathom, fingertip to fingertip to far wrist=10 feet, 1 hand~6 inches, 1 mile ~ the distance that 20-20 eye sight can distinguish left truck headlights from right ones

  • @selfworm
    @selfworm8 ай бұрын

    1:40 I LOVE that news paper

  • @Pangloss6413

    @Pangloss6413

    21 күн бұрын

    Your username is cool

  • @eksortso
    @eksortso Жыл бұрын

    I like how soda bottles and milk jugs tell the story of metric in the U.S. very clearly. Your typical pop bottle is two liters, because you can sell it across borders without too much fuss. Milk jugs, on the other hand, carry a gallon of milk, which is so heavily regulated by local jurisdictions that it can't even be sold across state lines!

  • @Toxicin2

    @Toxicin2

    Жыл бұрын

    American pop is 2L? How much sugar percentage wise is in it?

  • @squidman9343

    @squidman9343

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, it probably has around 200 grams of sugar. Assuming that the 2 liter soda is the same as its canned version (let’s say coke), a 12 oz or 335 ml soda is 39 grams of sugar. Times that by 6 and you’d get 234. Some stats might be wrong and I used coke since it is probably the most popular soda, but I should somewhat close at least.

  • @ruprecht8520

    @ruprecht8520

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Toxicin2 You don't drink out of a 2L bottle, you use it to fill glasses. The bottles you drink from are smaller.

  • @peters1127

    @peters1127

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ruprecht8520 I have seen many people drink out of Two liter bottles and it looks strange but they do it in the summer time just siting outside at party's etc.

  • @ruprecht8520

    @ruprecht8520

    Жыл бұрын

    @@peters1127 Yes it happens but I didn't want Toxicin2 to think that's the common way.

  • @crazyguy32100
    @crazyguy32100 Жыл бұрын

    And in Canada since our largest trading partner was for sure going metric we did. Sort of. Nowadays you are 6'3" tall, 165lbs, buying gas in litres to put in a 5 gallon jerry can, getting in your 1/2 ton truck with a 5.7L engine and a 38 gallon tank that makes 400hp on 35" tires and heading home at a little over the posted 60km/h limit while drinking coffee from a 16oz travel mug. Returning to your house that is 30' wide made of 2x6s on 5 acres of land and 12km from town (you live an hour from the nearest city of >50,000), you get your chainsaw that has a 42cc engine and 16" bar and cut 4 cord of wood. It's 24C in the house when you turn your oven (propane from a 500lb tank) on to 400F and put in an 18" pizza that weighs 1.6kg before going to your 20cu/ft fridge to get a 2L bottle of pop, don't forget to wash your hands in water heated by a 60 gallon tank with 2400w elements in it. Since it's winter your boat that will make 75 knots is in storage but the 110mph snowmobile is a go, just make sure any ice you cross is >5" thick. You need to live here to understand our measuring system.

  • @exbrickie

    @exbrickie

    Жыл бұрын

    I had thought Canada was fully metric until I went to a Canadian grocery store

  • @derrickthewhite1

    @derrickthewhite1

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, the untold story is that a lot of the British commonwealth is only sort of on metric, having failed to make the transition in one place or another. It is really hard to get adults who can vote to change their measurement system.

  • @Grandpasimpson102

    @Grandpasimpson102

    Жыл бұрын

    When I was a kid growing up in western Canada, everything in the store had a label in French and English and was measured in Imperial and Metric. For the longest time, I thought Imperial measurements were just the French translation of the metric ones.

  • @locketom

    @locketom

    Жыл бұрын

    If you tell me someone is183 cm tall I have no clue how tall they are, but if you say someone else is 6' tall I know exactly how tall they are, even though they're the same height.

  • @THEScottCampbell

    @THEScottCampbell

    Жыл бұрын

    Nobody made you go metric. Except your government, which didn't give a rat's ass what the Canadian people wanted. Plus Britain was going metric so it was vital for Canada to imitate everything England was doing. That has always worked out so well.

  • @Rogue_Centurion
    @Rogue_Centurion3 ай бұрын

    I perfectly understood his freedom units of measurement he put at the end

  • @nik65stgt60
    @nik65stgt6011 ай бұрын

    Great content!

  • @paultapner2769
    @paultapner2769 Жыл бұрын

    The things you learn. I thought Imperial had been around...always. Didn't know it was that comparatively young. I'm British and grew up in the 70's and only got taught metric in school. But imperial has never quite died out here.

  • @Jin-Ro

    @Jin-Ro

    Жыл бұрын

    "...never quite"? Imperial is dominant in the UK. Everything is miles, yds and Lbs. Did you missed the bit where the EU tried to force metric on us and people got pissed off so they U-turned? 🙄

  • @eternalfailure4081

    @eternalfailure4081

    Жыл бұрын

    Car speed, people's height and babies weight only thing measured in imperial in the UK. I'm in my 40s and have no idea how many ounces in a pound as have never used then once in my life.

  • @imonbanerjee2997

    @imonbanerjee2997

    Жыл бұрын

    The imperial, unlike the empire, doesn't die

  • @madensmith7014

    @madensmith7014

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Jin-Ro they were pissed mainly because the French invented the metric system

  • @zaleost

    @zaleost

    Жыл бұрын

    In the UK it would probably be more accurate to say we use an odd hybrid of both system. Where there are something that we specially measure in one and other things that we often measure in the other.

  • @something2424
    @something2424 Жыл бұрын

    From my experience in the midwest and government jobs, metric is used for most professional environments, and in standard conversations we use imperial. This is not the case in the south and professions like construction, but growing up we were taught metric alongsode imperial and most know both here.

  • @TheKeksadler

    @TheKeksadler

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it's fair to say that most Americans "know" both systems. The issue is that Americans often don't know how to apply the measurements as well as in US Customary.

  • @morewi

    @morewi

    Жыл бұрын

    Living in the midwest I never encountered metric outside of a science class.

  • @tunahxushi4669

    @tunahxushi4669

    Жыл бұрын

    I must know both fluently now... many reasons... but yeah...

  • @something2424

    @something2424

    Жыл бұрын

    @@morewi yeah maybe it is less a regional thing, but I think we know it better than we let on, no evidence to support, just my hunch and experience.

  • @itself227

    @itself227

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm from the South and we were taught the metric system in school, but I have never used it since.

  • @cevq6126
    @cevq6126 Жыл бұрын

    2:23 "went the extra 1,609 m ... " (love it!)

  • @eriknystrom5839
    @eriknystrom5839 Жыл бұрын

    It’s not just about decimals like Distances : mm - cm - dm - m - km Mass: gram - kg If you intend to study physics you should set your mind to the metric system because all physics units are derived from the metric system. Force : 1 Newton (N) is the force that gives an object with the mass 1 kg an acceleration of 1 meter per second square Energy: 1 Joule (J = Nm) is the unit of energy, equal to the force of one Newton acting through one meter. 1 Joule is ALSO equal the electric energy unit Ws (Watt second) !!!! Power ( Energy/ time): The unit of power is Watt (W) which is the same as joules per second (J/s). So the electric units are nicely connected to the mechanical units with the added unit Ampere for current !!! If you intend to study science you must get used the units defined as SI (MKSA = Meter, Kilogram, Second, Ampere )

  • @johnbee7729
    @johnbee7729 Жыл бұрын

    Fun Fact - metrification has made massive inroads in the USA via the automotive industry. Bolts, nuts and other fasteners are metric due to the globality of the automotive supply chain. So in US Measurement country, its automotive technicians are using metric sockets n spanners, excepting for quite old vehicles and some unicorns.

  • @MrFarmer110

    @MrFarmer110

    Жыл бұрын

    You can't begin to understand how much it pisses me off when I'm working on a vehicle and I find that some of the parts are in Imperial, and some are in Metric. I'm just like, pick one or the other!

  • @J-1410

    @J-1410

    Жыл бұрын

    Quite old meaning early 2000s and unicorns meaning most vehicles ever made.

  • @Rocketsong

    @Rocketsong

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrFarmer110 I had a Jeep once. Two bolts on the starter. One was SAE one was metric. That took a long time to figure out while under the vehicle.

  • @rturner4205

    @rturner4205

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean, Metric bolts and nuts, but when we're torquing a bolt, we still use Ft-lb compared to Nm. Also obligatory magic 10mm socket growing legs and walking away.

  • @williammagoffin9324

    @williammagoffin9324

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrFarmer110 That was an issue in WWII, some planes used both imperial and US customary units for fasteners and such. So the bolts would have different threads, you'd have one set for the engine and one set for everything else.

  • @manofcultura
    @manofcultura Жыл бұрын

    I think it needs to be said here that the biggest reason is because it took 20-30 years to standardize measurements across all states. The US was one of the first country to have a standardized system across all territories. So when Metric became a thing across Europe in the early 1800s. Many Americans simply didn’t want to go through another 20-30 year period of standardization since at the time the federal government had limited means to enforce it.

  • @stevii3940

    @stevii3940

    Жыл бұрын

    You do realise that measurements were standardized in Europe way before Metric was invented ?

  • @manofcultura

    @manofcultura

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stevii3940 lol no. France itself before their revolution had 3000 kinds of weights

  • @nhandinh7404

    @nhandinh7404

    Жыл бұрын

    @@manofcultura sounds like a nightmare XD

  • @darth3911

    @darth3911

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stevii3940It wasn’t standardized as the way your thinking it to be. There was different standards for each European country but each country had there own versions standardized within there own borders.

  • @stevii3940

    @stevii3940

    Жыл бұрын

    @@manofcultura lol yes. Just England as an exemple/ It was standardize since Henry the 8th. of course it wasn't precise, like was the Metric system at it's strat but it was a standardize system

  • @calculusfan1
    @calculusfan1 Жыл бұрын

    In Delaware, USA, our Route 1 uses metric for exits. The exit numbers are based on kilometers rather than miles, but there are still mile markers along the route.

  • @pingpong3311

    @pingpong3311

    8 ай бұрын

    Apparently everything on R 1 used to be in metric but all of it got replaced except for distance markers and exits.

  • @drkirbkennethkirby7634
    @drkirbkennethkirby7634 Жыл бұрын

    Most of us use both. There are some things that imperial makes more sense to measure with because the increments are useful. I know celsius and farenheit but prefer to use F because it conveys more detail. I know it's not quite the same as volume and weight metric system, but just as an example

  • @brucedanton3669
    @brucedanton3669 Жыл бұрын

    This is an odd one really. Here in Britain too both the imperial and metric units are used. Although distances on roads are in miles, kilometers are sometimes used, whilst for fuel-petrol/diesel it is in litres, although it used to be in gallons. Thank you!!

  • @brucedanton3669

    @brucedanton3669

    Жыл бұрын

    And the weather too is measured in Celsius-formerly Centigrade-rather than Farenheit, which it used to be also.

  • @brucedanton3669

    @brucedanton3669

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @jfrancobelge

    @jfrancobelge

    Жыл бұрын

    When you see a distance on a road sign, does it clearly indicate miles or kilometers? Otherwise those who are not familiar with the region might be surprised, it takes 50% more time to drive 20 miles than 20 kms. And what about the speed limits and car speedometers?

  • @Gohka

    @Gohka

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@jfrancobelge Nope there's usually nothing on road signs in the UK that signify whether the number you're looking at is miles or kilometres but it's gonna be miles like 99% of the time. Speed limit signs are the same but again very rare you would find a speed limit sign in KPH in the UK and if you did it would probably have both MPH and KPH on it. Our car speedos are in miles per hour but most cars have a second row of notches and numbers for kilometres per hour as well. The UK is really all over the place with it's adoption of Metric, like most drinks come in millilitres or litres but milk is still in pints. If you buy a bottle or can of beer from a shop it comes in like a 500ml bottle but if you buy beer in a pub it's gonna be in pints. Yet everything else in a pub (wine measures, shot measures) are done in millilitres. People (mainly older people) talking about the temperature will flip-flop between celsius and fahrenheit depending on which one sounds more extreme (100F sounds a lot hotter than 38C for example). TV screens are measured in inches still, a person's height is measured in feet and inches, weight in stones and pounds. Cooking weights however are usually done in grams, kilograms, etc. Blueprints or furniture measurements usually have both feet/inches and metres/centimetres on them. Honestly there's way more things that I'm forgetting but I just wish we'd pick one and stick to it lol.

  • @Ireallymissmymind

    @Ireallymissmymind

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jfrancobelge Speed limits and distances on public roads in the UK are measured in miles. There may be some exceptions, where the same is also given in km./kph near ferry ports. As for speedometers, most dials these days are marked in both kph and mph - or have a supplementary display showing kph (as in my Skoda) - or are digital and can be set either way.

  • @bluesbest1
    @bluesbest1 Жыл бұрын

    I dipped my toe into the manufacturing field for a bit and it's amazing just how much we'd have to change in order to fully convert to Metric.

  • @gobblox38

    @gobblox38

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd imagine it would be a phase in process that would happen over a decade or two. That would require new products to be explicitly metric though.

  • @t_c5266

    @t_c5266

    Жыл бұрын

    What's amazing is how much it wouldn't matter too. Everything is measured in decimals in manufacturing. If your DRO is showing you the right numbers, it doesn't matter if it's metric or imperial

  • @Barnaclebeard

    @Barnaclebeard

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not like you'd have to invent everything. Literally every other part of the world uses SI in all their processes. All the tools required already exist and are waiting in warehouses across your own country.

  • @peterdisabella2156

    @peterdisabella2156

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Barnaclebeard At this point it would just feel like giving up. Im fine with clinging onto it till the day we perish.

  • @joeyager8479

    @joeyager8479

    Жыл бұрын

    Not really. almost all standard ball bearings are metric. All vehicle tires are metric. All of the products the we buy from China are all made to metric (SI) standards - you just don't know it because you probably never worked on any of them. I was a machine designer for over 45 years and learned to work with both. Linear dimensions are easy to convert to close approximations from one to the other.

  • @adamr4198
    @adamr4198 Жыл бұрын

    The table at 2:58 is hilarious. 🤣

  • @amethystanne4586
    @amethystanne4586 Жыл бұрын

    I make things using fabric and wood. I switch back between metric and imperial measurements. 3/8 inch is the same size as 1 cm. I also crochet. A size 1.9mm hook is my go-to when using #10 crochet thread, 1.40mm with #20 thread, 3.5mm with #3 thread.

  • @yokosomike
    @yokosomike Жыл бұрын

    I’m an American graphic designer taught to measure in inches. I studied in Switzerland and was introduced to the metric system. I returned to the USA and again worked in inches. I now live in Japan and work in the metric system again. I actually prefer the metric system as I feel it is more precise and looking at paper sizes the whole concept of taking an A3 size sheet of paper folding it and it becomes an A4… again it becomes an A5 and so on. It’s just a great concept. Working in inches feels like I’m going back in time when the rest of the world is metric.

  • @Spido68_the_spectator

    @Spido68_the_spectator

    Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact : the proportion of paper sizes is defined by 1 thing : sqrt(2). Do 29,7/21 or 32/24 (both being A4 format) and you get sqrt(2)

  • @rainerausdemspring3584

    @rainerausdemspring3584

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Spido68_the_spectator This is trivial mathematics. AND - DIN A0 is exactly 1 square-meter. The DIN formats were invented in Germany - we love bureaucracy.

  • @Pandemonis

    @Pandemonis

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rainerausdemspring3584 France : invents the SI / metric system for international language of numbers Germany : Yeah, bureaucracy ! (Although the DIN format is proper genius)

  • @rainerausdemspring3584

    @rainerausdemspring3584

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Pandemonis "International language of numbers" - Ugga Agga

  • @pamndz1

    @pamndz1

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s because metric is designed for science and mathematics while imperial is designed for human measurements. Each serves a different purpose but imperial is undoubtedly superior. You’re just not use to it.

  • @ryansearle6157
    @ryansearle6157 Жыл бұрын

    As an American, I loved the “freedom units” at the end and can confirm that the conversion rates shown are accurate

  • @ilyatoporgilka

    @ilyatoporgilka

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans also always use fixed showers.

  • @brothersvenaroo

    @brothersvenaroo

    Жыл бұрын

    clearly it’s 10 freedoms per constitution, as clearly stated in the bill of rights

  • @TheDoctor1225

    @TheDoctor1225

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilyatoporgilka How many more times are you going to post this pointless comment? You were refuted above. Enough already. Your use of "always" is enough to have discredited you from the beginning.

  • @MiMi_MoMo

    @MiMi_MoMo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheDoctor1225 LMAO, right? And if he thinks this random, and very incorrect thing, about our showers, imagine how his brain will explode when he finds out we **DO** use the metric system. Like, do these people seriously think we sent a man to the moon using imperial measurements? Lol. You can’t even go to the doctors without being weighed in kg, and when you pick up a prescription from the pharmacy, it’s always in mg or some other metric measurement. Sure, we talk about the temperature in Fahrenheit and our height in feet, but when it comes to anything with science involved, we use the metric system. Honestly videos like these that perpetuate lies are very annoying.

  • @jeffreygao3956
    @jeffreygao39564 ай бұрын

    They totally should switch to metric!

  • @williamrosenow6176
    @williamrosenow6176 Жыл бұрын

    Back in the 90s my state tried but when building roads and bridges the old guys were foreman's. We built bridges based on 150mm=6 inches and 300mm=a foot. A foot is 304.8mm and 6in=152.4 so problems happened. 16mm=5/8 so they thought they were the same because a wrench would fit the smaller wrench sizes but the numbers diverged more than they thought.

  • @jennyjohn704

    @jennyjohn704

    11 ай бұрын

    No wonder so much US road infrastructure is now falling apart....

  • @lawrencepsteele
    @lawrencepsteele Жыл бұрын

    There was also that ill-fated venture in 1793 when Jefferson sent a ship to France to get the kilogram standard. On its way back, the ship ran into a storm, which blew it so far off course that they managed to get themselves and the ship captured by pirates. Long story short, the pirates got the standard and Sec of State Jefferson didn't feel he had the clout to secure funding for a second voyage. Who knows, if it weren't for that storm, the US might have been one of the first countries to adopt the metric system.

  • @Tony-.

    @Tony-.

    Жыл бұрын

    if you know the conversion formula, then you don't need the second standart, you can make it by yourself. You can also make the standard yourself using the historical first sample method. So the story sounds very American

  • @thomasrinschler6783

    @thomasrinschler6783

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tony-. That's not how it was done in 1793. Back then, you had to have an actual bar/weight/etc1 that was copied with exacting precision from the original. Every country, when they used different measurement systems, had these stored in some secure location, and when they adopted the metric system, they had to send someone to France to get copies of the originals. Using math for this sort of thing was just something that wasn't done until the 20th century.

  • @Tony-.

    @Tony-.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thomasrinschler6783 I agree, it's reasonable. Scientific progress was different and it was cheaper to buy an ingot than to create it at the risk of making an error. But if you live across the ocean and you have European technologies, then exceptions appear to every rule) In the same USA, they used the metric system when necessary and without any standards.

  • @1pcfred

    @1pcfred

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank God Divine Providence saved us from that ignoble fate.

  • @joangg
    @joangg Жыл бұрын

    Ironically, the USA, Liberia and Myanmar have also benefited immensely from the metric system because now they only have to convert their imperial units to one international system to work with the rest of the world rather than to dozens of different local systems.

  • @codyyoung5946

    @codyyoung5946

    Жыл бұрын

    Fucking spam bots in these comments

  • @qwaeszrdxtfcgvbqwaeszrdxtf5733

    @qwaeszrdxtfcgvbqwaeszrdxtf5733

    Жыл бұрын

    Aka somewhat using the metric system :p

  • @ArchusKanzaki

    @ArchusKanzaki

    Жыл бұрын

    ....I think you're missing the point here. Sure, metric eliminated "different local systems", but now US is one of the "local system" from the outside world.

  • @angelainamarie9656

    @angelainamarie9656

    Жыл бұрын

    Our measurements are all standardized in terms of metric units. Actual stem professionals have been using metric this whole time

  • @ezrafaulk3076

    @ezrafaulk3076

    Жыл бұрын

    As an *American* , I say, you know America, maybe there's a *reason* most of the rest of the world adopted the Metric system.

  • @MrJacobThrall
    @MrJacobThrall11 ай бұрын

    I remember being quite surprised by this, as a kid. Growing up in the reluctant-to-change-to-metric UK, I knew that Americans spelled "colour" as "color" and called the second floor of the building the "second floor", etc. - it seemed like a culture of using the easier variant that didn't have leftover bits of old-fashioned complications. So, using the measurements that are broken down the same way as numbers - get to ten then start again - rather than the old-fashioned complications (12 of those, then three of those, then 1760 of them) would be what they'd do.

  • @cattysplat

    @cattysplat

    10 ай бұрын

    My UK parents grew up being taught imperial for the most part in the 1950s and 60s. They still know about all the conversion rates and pre-decimal currency is still natural to them when to me it all seems like some ancient Victorian methods of doing measurement and currency.

  • @MrBattlecharge
    @MrBattlecharge Жыл бұрын

    I like how @1:05 America is one of the only countries to send a letter not signed with "all oir love" or some nice remark like that, but instead its just "from America". A stark resemblence of reality.

  • @cliffordsymons9521
    @cliffordsymons9521 Жыл бұрын

    We adopted Metric in Canada in the 70s and there are old people who are still furious about it. I used to have to take a patient's blood pressure before his temperature because if he saw his temp in Celsius he'd get pissed off and spoke his BP

  • @robertortiz-wilson1588

    @robertortiz-wilson1588

    Жыл бұрын

    Rebel Canadian

  • @geoffreyherrick298

    @geoffreyherrick298

    Жыл бұрын

    My car gets forty to the hogshead and that's the way I likes it! -Abe "Grandpa" Simpson

  • @TuberMad
    @TuberMad Жыл бұрын

    Ah, yes! I'm glad your video cites the "Banjoes/Bigfoot Compromise" - it is a *pivotal* milestone from the 1980's in our diplomatic relations with Canada, vis a vis determining how many players Canada is allowed to field in the NHL.

  • @johnladuke6475

    @johnladuke6475

    Жыл бұрын

    For anyone curious, the amount of players Canada may provide to the NHL is "all of them, except a handful of Russians and Swedes".

  • @MrBig1946
    @MrBig194615 күн бұрын

    I also remember the “big conversion” movement to Metric in the 1970s. It was supposed to happen in conjunction with the World’s Fair scheduled for Knoxville, Tennessee. Knoxville had already converted all the traffic signs for speed limits and distance to Metric from Imperial. Banks, etc., that had electronic signs flashing the time and temperature were converting to Celsius. And, of course, the bottom fell out. Knoxville was stuck with Metric to change back for the Fair while the rest of Tennessee and the U.S. stayed on Imperial.

  • @patrickhenry7186
    @patrickhenry718611 ай бұрын

    Well done with the script, drawings, humor and focus. But the dialog is read so fast that it sometimes slips into a jumble of words. Slow down a bit. Thanks.

  • @jonwillett7351
    @jonwillett7351 Жыл бұрын

    As a construction manager here in Canada, I can tell you most trades still work in Imperial. Often construction plans for public projects are in metric, and I spend a good part of time converting everything so that the workers understand what it is they're supposed to be doing. 3.28 and 25.4 are my mathematical friends.

  • @Svensk7119

    @Svensk7119

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice! I like that! Metres to feet, mike-mikes to inches!

  • @friskjidjidoglu7415

    @friskjidjidoglu7415

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve read that private stuff and most tools are in Imperial. Aside from Quebec, ofc.

  • @TRDiscordian

    @TRDiscordian

    Жыл бұрын

    @@friskjidjidoglu7415I find most tools are in both tbh.

  • @justanotherguy2824

    @justanotherguy2824

    Жыл бұрын

    Even working in central Europe I have frequently to convert mm in inches for our US customers. Even from Australia, which officially is metric since decades, I received drawings for new buildings formally in metric, but obviously designed in imperial units and then converted. I have the impression the building industry is one of the most conservative branches.

  • @larryhutchens7593

    @larryhutchens7593

    Жыл бұрын

    I worked at American Airlines for 20 years mainly rebuilding aircraft engines. I transferred to the docks (working on live aircraft) & was assigned to the Airbus a-300 line. All the dimensions for layouts of upgrades were in metric. All the mechanics working there went to the laborious chore of converting everything to English measure (which most Americans call "American measure). I went out & purchased a Stanley metric tape measure and avoided the constant and aggravating use of the calculator. Co-workers treated me like a traitor even though I could work faster in metric than they could making all the calculator moves. When using a calculator you end up with a decimal answer anyway so why not just use metric. Also, I had worked as a machinist so I could transfer decimal parts of an inch into close fractions, I had memorized down to 1/16" in decimal.

  • @DanielDavis1973
    @DanielDavis1973 Жыл бұрын

    As an American engineer i'm completely fluent in both systems. There is one caveat I will point out, technically the US uses the metric (SI) system in several ways: 1) Our military is largely metric (partially to facilitate NATO interactions) 2) Our measurement system is actually defined in terms of metric units. 3) We use the standard hour/minute/second system like the rest of the world which is part of the SI system (even after France tried to decimalize it) 4) Virtually all goods bought in the US have both metric and customary units on the packaging.. i.e. a coke shows both ml and ounces. Also, The dollar is decimal based so may not be metric but follows the same idea. Fun Fact: The US measurement system is basically the same as the revolutionary war period UK system. The UK actually changed after the fact when the "Weights and Measures Act 1824" was passed. This is why the British commonly use a "stone" as a unit of weight especially when weighing human type critters whereas we don't. Also, our gallon and the UK gallon are different volumes which makes for interesting gas/petrol mileage comparisons.

  • @A.J.1656

    @A.J.1656

    Жыл бұрын

    I never used metric in the military.

  • @rearin9560

    @rearin9560

    Жыл бұрын

    And a lot of scientific fields in the US also use the metric system/SI, with more following every day. It's ironic how the US uses the metric idea for the dollar and yet something completely weird for everything else. When 12 inches is a foot and 3 feet is a yard that becomes a bit annoying to work with. Also I didn't know that part about the US vs UK gallon! Interesting.

  • @A.J.1656

    @A.J.1656

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rearin9560 12 inches is the best part. 12 evenly splits into 2,3 or 4. It makes 10 look like a chump. Lol

  • @DanielDavis1973

    @DanielDavis1973

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rearin9560 A US gallon is roughly .83 of a UK gallon.

  • @DanielDavis1973

    @DanielDavis1973

    Жыл бұрын

    @@A.J.1656 I was referring more to the equipment itself rather than the people. A lot of it is designed specifically to be interoperable with allied equipment.

  • @kirkmorrison6131
    @kirkmorrison613110 ай бұрын

    I remember the push in the 1970s. I hated, constant conversation I had to do on products between store brands. I also found Celsius even though I used it at work too hard to use around the house as I grew up on Fahrenheit. 33.5 to 34.2 on a chemical bath at work was fine, but at home 75F seemed much more practical

  • @aleuttrel2260
    @aleuttrel2260 Жыл бұрын

    In the machining industry in the u.s. we use inches but can still us metric, but when talking real precision, inches are way better due to the size of the individual units... We can measure to .0001 in inches with a micrometer, the best you can measure with metric is .01 of a millimeter, and .0001 of an inch is smaller then .01 of a millimeter. .01 of a millimeter is only .0004 of an inch, and we do not have micrometers that can measure .001 of a millimeter with out having a computerized micrometer or a laser micrometer. Until hand held micrometers become way more precise, using inches will always be more precise...

  • @Markus_Andrew
    @Markus_Andrew Жыл бұрын

    I'm an Aussie, born in 1960, and I remember when Australia went metric in the early 70s. Having been taught the Imperial system during my early school years and the metric system in my later years, I'm comfortable with both. But I personally believe the metric system to be the better of the two as it's far more straightforward, being all in multiples of ten. The approach I chose to get used to metric was not to convert to Imperial in my head, but instead to familiarize myself with the intrinsic sizes of the metric measurements. For example, I wouldn't think of a centimeter as being "roughly half an inch", or of a kilometer being "about five-eights of a mile" - instead I familiarized myself with the actual metric sizes themselves. Even so, I'm still just as likely to say "ten feet away" as "three meters away". I freely use either depending on where my mind is at the time 🙂 But I can understand why the US doesn't go metric at this point in time. The Imperial system is simply too entrenched there, and changing everything to metric would not only be a colossal undertaking, but would be hideously expensive. Just think about what would be involved - all the road signage, instrumentation, labeling on products, equipment for manufacturing those products, regulations and documentation... the list goes on and on. It simply would not be a viable, nor cost-effective, course of action in the US today. It was doable in 1970s Australia because we had a fraction of the US' population at the time and a fraction of the infrastructure. Had we stayed with Imperial, switching to metric today would be a daunting task for us as well.

  • @rongarza9488

    @rongarza9488

    Жыл бұрын

    @Markus Andrew America (the United States of America) has not converted to metric for the same reasons as why there is still discrimination here, why Christian prayer is still desired in public schools, why abortion bans are being forced on others, why citizens can buy assault weapons (or any weapons), why people voted for the Orange Julius, and on and on: because we have a bunch of idiots here.

  • @larryhutchens7593

    @larryhutchens7593

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, if you work in metric use metric measuring devices and you do not need to constantly convert anything. If you are working in what you call imperial then simply use imperial measuring tools no conversion needed. Why complicate things unnecessarily?

  • @mendocinobeano

    @mendocinobeano

    Жыл бұрын

    Like you I was 11 years old when we converted to metric in Australia. I remember it became illegal for a few years at least to sell things like rulers with imperial measurement markers on them. Presumably to give it enough time to bed in the conversion. Imagine make imperial rulers illegal in the US. QAnon would go nuts.

  • @larryhutchens7593

    @larryhutchens7593

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mendocinobeano QAnon goes nutz practically every day so that would be nothing new.

  • @csuporj

    @csuporj

    Жыл бұрын

    It's easier to get 1/3 of 12, than of 10. Non-metric was optimized for everyday use, metric was optimized for scientific calculations.

  • @needtoknow6423
    @needtoknow6423 Жыл бұрын

    You know it's a good day, when History Matters has released a new video... and new potential meme templates with it.

  • @carlrevans

    @carlrevans

    Жыл бұрын

    I nominate "Shut Up Nerds." Based on the fact that it is hilarious and the singular, actual, no foolin', honest-to-God real reason that we haven't actually adopted the metric system.

  • @julianodriozola

    @julianodriozola

    Жыл бұрын

    especially is they are out of the world cup in just a couple of hours

  • @julianodriozola

    @julianodriozola

    Жыл бұрын

    i guess not. Good for them

  • @G6JPG
    @G6JPG5 ай бұрын

    Love the US units at 2:57.

  • @alexpozniak4106
    @alexpozniak4106 Жыл бұрын

    "Nerds told 'No' " and other nerd jokes in your vids always get a good laugh out of me.

  • @hugolafhugolaf
    @hugolafhugolaf Жыл бұрын

    I'm from Canada. We use the metric system officially but in real life, it really is a 50/50 thing. Road distances are measured in kilometers, but short distances/measurements (houses' sizes, lot sizes, distance from one street corner to another) are in feet. Same with height/weight of people : we use feet and lbs. We use liters for fuel and some bottles (ex : 750 ml of wine), but no one buys a 1.44 l bottle of whiskey. They buy a 40 oz.

  • @Doogie2K3

    @Doogie2K3

    Жыл бұрын

    And it's a completely *different* hodgepodge of metric and Imperial from Britain, because nothing makes sense.

  • @mbogucki1

    @mbogucki1

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, unless you are in Quebec which has civilized units of measurement. But in Ontario we use imperial units for that nonsense because we ship so much of the building material to the US. As a designer is also annoying though amusing, especially when some builder has to convert my metric into some ungodly fractional inch.

  • @BeedrillYanyan

    @BeedrillYanyan

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting. It's almost the same case as us here in the Philippines. We're officially metric but I'm reality we're more like 50:50, in almost the same way as you have described. I suspect many other countries are the same way too. It's just that the internet likes to come up with any excuse to ridicule America.

  • @songcramp66

    @songcramp66

    Жыл бұрын

    It is a strange thing indeed. We tend to say temperature in Celsius but cook in Fahrenheit. Though colloquially we use feet and lbs for weight/height, my ID says my measurements in metric. You'd think it would make us Canadians good at converting between the two but I find I'm not quite that great at it.

  • @vevericac3294

    @vevericac3294

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BeedrillYanyan the Philippines were formerly ruled by the USA, so it is kind of understandable

  • @CosmicCleric
    @CosmicCleric Жыл бұрын

    Loved reading that New Jersey Tabloid ... "Such calls were immediately dismissed as promoting cannibalism." And then it goes on about vampires. And the feeling woman responding to a survey during childbirth just put it over the top! Nice attention to detail, well done!

  • @Svensk7119

    @Svensk7119

    Жыл бұрын

    What? No entiendo. Explique, por favor.

  • @CosmicCleric

    @CosmicCleric

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Svensk7119 Pausa el video en 1:39 y lee el periódico que ves.

  • @Svensk7119

    @Svensk7119

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CosmicCleric Ocho harasho! Spasiba. Tusen takk. Sheh-sheh! Y gracias por la respuesta in Español! Necesito practicar mas.

  • @CosmicCleric

    @CosmicCleric

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Svensk7119 You speak English well (per your other comments), so I don't know why you originally asked me in Spanish, but you're welcome. P.S. In case you are a bot, could you please respect my time and leave me alone? I would appreciate it, thank you.

  • @Svensk7119

    @Svensk7119

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CosmicCleric I have never heard any speak so politely to a potential 'bot before... I am a living, breathing human being, so, no no, I haven't been 'bot. I spoke in Spanish for I wanted to speak it. I never get enough practice. And your Spansk was excellent. Spanish. Your Spanish was excellent.

  • @tomk4484
    @tomk448410 ай бұрын

    Growing up in interior Alaska I always liked it when the temperature was at -40.

  • @edmerc92

    @edmerc92

    3 ай бұрын

    Fun fact - -40 is the same in both F and C!

  • @tomk4484

    @tomk4484

    3 ай бұрын

    Yep you figured out why I liked it. Didn’t need to specify!

  • @jasonfullerton7763
    @jasonfullerton776319 күн бұрын

    Soldering in electronics assembly in the US: 1) Reflow is always degC. 2) Hand solder is always degF. 3) Wave solder can go either way. My unit conversion app gets heavy use as an engineer in the US.

  • @Imhomeinspections
    @Imhomeinspections Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact: As a kid in the 70's and 80's I was ONLY taught the metric system in school. Which was worthless outside of school, since no one used it. Right after I graduated high school, it was decided that schools would go back to teaching the old system. Hence all my education in the metric systemic is useless here in the USA, and yet, I was never taught the system we actually use.

  • @kieraethan

    @kieraethan

    Жыл бұрын

    What state were you in? I was in Maryland for late elementary, middle school, and high school in the 70s and distinctly remember teachers telling us we *had* to learn Metric, because the country was inevitably changing. But it was taught as an afterthought (I still know none of it) and gradually went away by the end of the decade. OTOH, my husband is a physician and lives in a world where both exist: at work, it's mostly metric, and they convert without even thinking about it (pounds to KG, for example); at home, no metric. Though his learning of metric mostly started in college science classes (he's from rural Illinois and wasn't taught it at all in the 70s), so the societal move then retraction had nothing to do with it.

  • @amplesstratleholm7609

    @amplesstratleholm7609

    Жыл бұрын

    As someone who is not American, I have an opposite problem. Apart from inches (which is similar in length from the tip of the thumb to the first line/joint), I find myself not using the Imperial system. I guess if America weren't so big in the world's economy, I and other Asians wouldn't be going to the trouble of learning how to convert from one measurement to another and vice versa.

  • @chrispitterle8831

    @chrispitterle8831

    Жыл бұрын

    As an engineer, I hate the imperial system. There is nothing better about the imperial system from what I can see.

  • @dannypipewrench533

    @dannypipewrench533

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chrispitterle8831 As an amateur engineer aspiring to be a real engineer, the way I see it is: 1. Measure in US Customary, so I understand how big everything is. 2. Convert to Metric, so calculations do not take long. 3. Convert Metric results back to US Customary, so I understand what everything is doing and do not hurt myself.

  • @nloughner2015

    @nloughner2015

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dannypipewrench533 that seems like a good approach from a napkin math side of things. When you get into the thermal sciences side of engineering the metric system makes life so much easier. Unfortanatly there are many cases where the common measurment is not a compatible unit (kg to lb, one is mass one is force) The converstions balloon on these so significantly, especilally when the values ahould be simple.

  • @greganthony4426
    @greganthony4426 Жыл бұрын

    I mean, go to a grocery store in the US and everything you buy will have metric values on it as well for weight, volume, etc. All medicines and nutrition facts are in metric as well. We kind of have a weird hybrid, but people will always tell you their height in feet and how far away a town is in miles. It's a mess, but as I understand it, I could tell a Canadian or British person my height in feet and inches and they world know exactly what I'm talking about.

  • @435cyberteam9

    @435cyberteam9

    Жыл бұрын

    The Brits and Canadians would probably understand because (at least us brits anyway) use a hybrid system that is just insane. So many of us understand both. Although the younger generations are more accustomed to metric and have no idea what most imperial measurements are. Which is a good thing imo, at least we're getting a standard. May have taken a while, but we're getting there. Just some of the measurement systems we use: Weight and height of most objects, metric Weight and height of people, imperial Speed, imperial (although I think metric is becoming more common despite imperial still being the standard) Distance, imperial (but again, metric is becoming more popular and is slowly becoming more common than imperial) Measurement of liquids, honestly I have no idea. Sometimes it's litres, sometimes it's fl oz, sometimes it's pints, it depends on the day I guess. And don't even try to look at British baking or cooking guides. Some use metric, some use imperial and some use both. Some things use both ounces/lbs and grams/kg. It's funny. We bully the Americans for using mostly imperial and refusing to switch over to metric, yet we use a hybrid system that would confuse pretty much any immigrant or tourist that chose to come here. Never go to the uk, it's a confusing mess and none of us have any idea what is happening or why.

  • @Keldiur

    @Keldiur

    Жыл бұрын

    Canadians too also use hybrid systems. Many contractors and private building companies still use imperial out of habbit. Food prices are displayed prominently in pounds to make it look cheaper. And any human measurement is done in inches and feet because we are a bit too immature thinking a meter is too big for height measurements and centimetres are a bit too small for... other measurements.

  • @dahawk8574

    @dahawk8574

    Жыл бұрын

    Grocery stores... ok. Show me anyone who sells beer or soda on "10-packs". Or a 10-pack of eggs. Where I shop, it is always six-packs, 12-packs and 24-pack. Now go to the Home of Metric. Look at the EU Flag. They could have picked any number of stars for their flag... They picked 12. Contrary to popular belief, metric is NOT a Base 10 system. It will always be infused with Seconds. And when you understand the reason why Metric Time was such a dismal failure, then you will understand the Achilles Heel of the entire metric system. It fails when you attempt to do a division as simple as divide by three. Or divide by four. It is simply not harmonious. And this is why there will never be Metric Music, where measures are divided into 10 beats, with octaves divided into 10 semitones... Because it sounds HORRID. All music you listen to uses octaves divided into 12 semitones. Just like our clocks. If it was 10, and that was forced on us, then everyone would be throwing their stereos out the window. Metric is simply not harmonious. Grab a six pack and have a drink to that.

  • @kourii

    @kourii

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dahawk8574 Dude what are you talking about? Metric doesn't have anything to do with counting things only by tens. French people can have three children without having to have some more to be metric enough, and they didn't have to change their tricolore to some sort of 'decimal flag'. You sound unhinged. Go spend a nice even third of a dollar on a 2-litre of Coke and enjoy having no metric in your life

  • @dahawk8574

    @dahawk8574

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kourii: "You sound unhinged." Maybe you should go and try to find a Metric Watch, and go find a composer of Metric Music, and if you succeed in such a quest, then we might be able to resume a rational conversation. But you will fail, if you try to find these things. They do not exist. Or rather, you might be able to find a metric watch in some kind of Museum of Failed Inventions. kourii: "Go spend a nice even third of a dollar on a 2-litre of Coke and enjoy having no metric in your life" I've already explained how Coke is sold in 6-packs. And in 12-packs. Have you ever seen it sold in a 10-pack? I have not. These are HARD FACTS that I have presented. You refusing to accept them is not a problem with me. It speaks to your relationship with reality. kourii: "French people can have three children without having to have some more to be metric enough..." Notice what happens, biologically, when a French person has a child. Two gamete's fuse to form a zygote. This is ONE single cell. Perhaps you are aware of how this cell then develops into becoming a human being... One cell divides, becoming 2. It divides again, becoming 4. Here is the sequence: 1 > 2 > 4 > 8 > 16 > 32 > ... Do I need to go on? For every country which has converted to metric, this is still how their babies are made. It is no different, regardless of which measuring system a government attempts to impose. This happens to be a NATURAL sequence which MIRRORS the system maintained in the USA. It is likewise a number sequence which fits quite well with ALL composers of music. Look at any sheet music, from Bach to Daft Punk. You will find these numbers sequenced above in their music. Daft Punk is two French dudes, and every song they have ever put out is infused with this natural sequence. Look for any Metric Sequence of numbers, and you will not find it. Because if they attempted to do this, then they would immediately fail as musicians. Because... Metric Lacks Harmony. Go ahead and bury your head if that's how you wish to deal with these hard facts. Yes, I AM the problem here. I am the one who is unhinged. Sure, if that makes you feel better. Believe whatever you want to believe. Go petition the EU to change their flag to 10 stars, and see how far you get. Here's another item you can go out and look for, but you will NEVER FIND: - A metric compass. Because as soon as you divide a circle into: - North, - South, - East, - West, That extremely simple, basic division will drive you AWAY from Base 10. You will NEVER find any compass. Nor will you ever find any GLOBE that has been divided into slices of 10 for either Latitude nor Longitude. And this is the ultimate irony of metric... They set out to define the meter, with this goal of eliminating fractions. And what is the very first thing they do? The choose to divide the globe into FOURTHS. They decided to base the meter on 1/4th of the distance between the Equator and the North Pole. This fact right there should make it clear to anyone how metric was doomed from Step 1. It contradicted its own principles from the very start. Eliminate fractions by starting with a fraction. Now consider the units used in ANY airplane you have ever flown in. The standard here is KNOTS. Nautical miles per hour. Notice how NO ONE uses km/hr. Because it absolutely makes no sense. A unit that was defined based upon the globe is USELESS when navigating the globe. Everyone still uses this HARMONIOUS system which was adopted from the Sumerians and Babylonians. Division by 12. Division by 24. Division by 60. It will NEVER become metric. Because Lat/Long, compasses and TIME are all harmonious. Whereas metric is not, and cannot ever be. Ok, you can now FILE ALL of this information into your UNHINGED (Do Not Ever Open, even in case of Emergency) bin. Promptly discard. Even better if you just never read any words that I have presented. That is one sure way for any believer in Metric to not have their views threatened by simple facts. I AM THE PROBLEM HERE. You and your beliefs are perfectly find. Nothing to see here. Move along...

  • @muopos
    @muopos Жыл бұрын

    Real estate in Japan is fun. Everything primarily depicted in tsubo = one tatami mat, roughly 2 square meters. I grew up with US system but lived in Europe for bouts. US system has the following advantages: average US highway speed is 60 mph, one mile a minute, no thought time speed conversions (this roughly extends to fuel consumption because you know you will burn roughly 2 gallons for a car and 3 for a truck over that distance); base 12 and base 16 counting systems have more whole subdivisions than base 10. A third of 12 is 4, a third of 10 is 3.33 etc. Biggest advantage is Pint versus half liter. US system is based on feel, what seems right in day to day life. “I’d like another half liter” can’t be said aloud with a strait face. We all still use nautical miles and yards and cables on the high seas too!

  • @remycallie
    @remycallie Жыл бұрын

    As someone from New Jersey, I love the "New Jersey Tabloid" telling the nerds that we won't be using the metric system! In reality, everyone understands the metric system because it's used for many things. We just like our own system better for ordinary day-to-day things.

  • @brucewilliams6292
    @brucewilliams6292 Жыл бұрын

    Actually, many areas of commerce and industry use the metric system in the US; primarily the auto industry as it is global and the US military (for the most part outside of ship navigation) uses metric. Many US machine shops are becoming "metric only". This will continue to build over time. In fact, my local hardware store has just as many metric screw, nuts, and bolts as imperial. Thanks for the great video.

  • @ilyatoporgilka

    @ilyatoporgilka

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans also always use fixed showers.

  • @jonathanm9436

    @jonathanm9436

    Жыл бұрын

    I think most of science does too.

  • @jiraffe9600

    @jiraffe9600

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilyatoporgilkaThe fuck is a fixed shower?

  • @ezrafaulk3076

    @ezrafaulk3076

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jiraffe9600 I think it's the kind of shower with a showerhead you can't adjust the position of.

  • @haroldbalzac6336

    @haroldbalzac6336

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilyatoporgilka I don't have a fixed shower.

  • @kosatochca
    @kosatochca Жыл бұрын

    I like how Canada has basically procrastinated the adoption of the metric system in almost the same fashion as America has done but rarely gets any ridicule today. Canada being: if I stand still, I’ll be invisible

  • @Juanguar

    @Juanguar

    Жыл бұрын

    But they did implement it eventually 1975 to be specific

  • @tyrongkojy

    @tyrongkojy

    Жыл бұрын

    Basically we're not dicks about it.

  • @floflo1645

    @floflo1645

    Жыл бұрын

    I thought Canada use both? I lived there for a year and never had to use the imperial system.

  • @Keyring7031

    @Keyring7031

    Жыл бұрын

    Canada officially uses metric though. People still use imperial for certain things, but that’s in an unofficial capacity.

  • @axmajpayne

    @axmajpayne

    Жыл бұрын

    Same with Britain. They like to pretend they use metric, but they are almost as bad as the US about not using it.

  • @vr6swp
    @vr6swp Жыл бұрын

    The US did in fact start converting over to the metric system, in the late 1970’s during the Carter administration. Schools began putting more emphasis on metric measurements, and states starting putting up highway signage in both miles and KM. Seems like people were saying the changeover was supposed to be completed by sometime around 1990 (?). I don’t remember when this started to fall by the wayside, but Carter getting the boot in 1980 was probably the catalyst

  • @kylewood8327
    @kylewood8327 Жыл бұрын

    It tried back in the 60’s when I was in grade school. I remember teachers trying to teach it.

  • @stevenglowacki8576
    @stevenglowacki8576 Жыл бұрын

    I did some consulting work for a steel distributor soon after I got out of school the second time with an accounting degree, originally having studied math and science and thus being fully used to the metric system. I was really surprised when the business was doing everything in pounds. The real kicker is that when they ordered from China, they had to order in 100 kg batches, so it was always of question of what multiple of 220 lb they were ordering.

  • @ilyatoporgilka

    @ilyatoporgilka

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans also always use fixed showers.

  • @troybaxter

    @troybaxter

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilyatoporgilka “fixed showers”. The nozzle still rotates, just doesn’t disconnect from the wall for most showed. That is not the case for all showers, but most.

  • @SiverJohn
    @SiverJohn Жыл бұрын

    I actually have my grandmother's measuring cups from the Gerald R. Ford period and they have markings for cups but in the bottom each cup tells you how many cL it is. Pretty neat (also really good measuring cups).

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    @lawrencedoliveiro9104

    Жыл бұрын

    “cl” is a measurement I only see nowadays on wine bottles. A common way of measuring car fuel consumption in SI-using countries is litres per 100 km. Conveniently, you can reinterpret the numbers as cl/km without having to do any conversion.

  • @Gameflyer001

    @Gameflyer001

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lawrencedoliveiro9104 sometimes beer bottles as well, especially in Europe. 33 cL = 330 mL (i.e. the standard amount for a can or bottle of beer).

  • @kieraethan

    @kieraethan

    Жыл бұрын

    Wine bottles (and Scotch) are metric: 750 ml. This way, we Americans have no idea how much we're drinking and no need to feel guilty!

  • @randykintzley5923
    @randykintzley5923 Жыл бұрын

    The Chalk board at the end is hilarious. 2 banjos == 1 bigfoot

  • @ssesf
    @ssesf Жыл бұрын

    When I noticed goods being sold in a supermarket in Santa Marta, Colombia, by the pound, I first assumed it was by the American pound/454g, but it was another way of saying ½kg.

  • @shawnpendley8322
    @shawnpendley8322 Жыл бұрын

    I was in school in the '70s and learned it. Then it mysteriously disappeared. There is, however, one stretch of highway in southern Arizona between Tucson and Nogales, Mexico that is still metric.

  • @hbowman108

    @hbowman108

    Жыл бұрын

    It's because right-wingers are too afraid of Mexico to ever use it, find out, and complain.

  • @n_v9386

    @n_v9386

    Жыл бұрын

    There was actually a campaign by the government in the 70s (led by Pres. Ford) to switch us to metric. Your school was probably part of this program. Pretty neat.

  • @MrBonners

    @MrBonners

    Жыл бұрын

    Ronald Reagan canceled the metrification program in the first year of his Presidency.

  • @PrivateMcPrivate

    @PrivateMcPrivate

    Жыл бұрын

    We should bomb it for being un-american lol

  • @rwboa22

    @rwboa22

    Жыл бұрын

    When the Delaware Route 1 Turnpike (since renamed the Korean War Veterans Memorial Highway) opened in 1993, every highway sign that used a measurement (save for the speed limit signs) was in metric, up to and including the exits (as we were anticipating President Clinton signing legislation that would have metricized the entire US). Since then, the Delaware Dept. of Transportation (DelDOT) has replaced all but the exit numbers with US Customary units signs.

  • @christosgeorgiafentis4825
    @christosgeorgiafentis4825 Жыл бұрын

    I just want to make it clear to everyone who doesn't live in the US that we do rely on the metric system in certain industries. I work at a cargo agency that deals with all sorts of freight that enters the country internationally, and it is all measured in meters and kilos. Very rarely has anyone asked me how much something is in pounds or feet. I haven't worked in domestic trade, but I'm sure they know metric too.

  • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN

    @DENVEROUTDOORMAN

    Жыл бұрын

    Well here in Colorado we do kilos and have a Radio Station in Colorado Springs Kilo 94

  • @moe2470

    @moe2470

    Жыл бұрын

    I work on earthmoving equipment & caterpillar & John Deere use alot of metric bolts & nuts.

  • @zen1647

    @zen1647

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, it's actually non-industrial, non-professional, uneducated, people that don't use metric. Scientists, engineers, medical and military professionals, and global traders all use metric in the US.

  • @AmericanZergling

    @AmericanZergling

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zen1647 Military uses everything. I've used both standard and metric as a mechanic, though a lot of the newer equipment tries to push metric. I'm sure other industries such as engineers and traders will use a mix of both too. The two domains which seem truly dominated by metric are science and medicine.

  • @raymondweaver8526

    @raymondweaver8526

    Жыл бұрын

    Most STEM industries such as pharma use metric. We are taught in metric at University

  • @mikemanship
    @mikemanship Жыл бұрын

    A lot of countries use hybrid systems these days even if they claim to be totally metric. Look at Canada, they use ounces for drinks and lbs for people weight like the US. I think New Zealand also uses some hybrid measures too. The UK of course is supposedly metric but still uses miles and feet and inches and TVs seem to be measured in inches globally. I personally find the power of 10 factor for Metric measurements around the home too excessive, that's why feet and inches are still preferred I think. I would like to have seen some of persistent imperial measurements metricized though, such as making an inch exactly 2.5cm, a mile 1.5km, a lb exactly half a kg and a gallon exactly 5 litres. Still it doesn't really matter what you use these days as conversions are available at the touch of a button.

  • @OmmerSyssel

    @OmmerSyssel

    Жыл бұрын

    How about relating to reality, instead of assuming you're leading the game? Only two or three countries are still clinging to your long outdated imperial system!

  • @SeoulMan
    @SeoulMan Жыл бұрын

    "My car gets 40 rods to the hogshead, and THAT'S the way I likes it!"

  • @neilbain8736
    @neilbain8736 Жыл бұрын

    The thing that really gets me is that even the UK and US fluid ounces are different by about just over 1ml in one direction and 0.9ml in the other.

  • @bighands69

    @bighands69

    Жыл бұрын

    The ignorance in the modern world is off the charts. Imperial/traditional is not a set standard and here is the thing metric is not a set standard either. Imperial is a system of fractions that perfectly align with calculus and geometry it is the reason why a clock is still based in 12 hour cycles or 24 hour cycles. It is the reason why the pyramids were built using such a fractional system and why electrical energy is modelled using a fractional system. The scale of the inch is in relation to the human body, that is in relation to distance on earth and is the reason why ancient civilizations could survey site that were miles in length without using a long big of string.

  • @neilbain8736

    @neilbain8736

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bighands69 This is indeed correct. Decimal was never historically considered logical. It extends to 'real money' of 240d (old pence) to the £. This is base 12 with handy factors of 1,2,3,4,6,12 and handy fractions inbetween. Before calculators every one in a society using it could instinctively do all the necessary day to day calculations and more.

  • @CHALETARCADE

    @CHALETARCADE

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bighands69 Me thinks your British bias is off the charts! Science only uses the metric system for a very good reason, it's infinitely more practical than the IS, just ask any scientist, they'll confirm this.

  • @peterebel7899

    @peterebel7899

    Жыл бұрын

    This can't be right. 0.9ml are non existent in either nation!

  • @MrBonners

    @MrBonners

    Жыл бұрын

    US gallon is smaller then a UK gallon.

  • @tromedlovdrolmai
    @tromedlovdrolmai Жыл бұрын

    and yet, most people I know here in the US use a mixture of both Metric and US Imperial. Most science classes use Metric, but people also have to learn US Imperial to drive and stuff. And soda. Most soda cans are 12 oz cans, but when you want bottles of soda, you either have 16 or 20 oz bottles, usually for cold sodas from stores, or you have 1 liter, 1.5 liter or 2 liter bottles

  • @cryf1840

    @cryf1840

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't forget the 16.9oz bottles that have different bar codes than the 500ml bottles.

  • @J-1410

    @J-1410

    Жыл бұрын

    US Customary. Imperial is different.

  • @Rocketsong

    @Rocketsong

    Жыл бұрын

    In science we gernerally use "Non SI units acceptable for use with SI". Because most metric units are just terribly sized. So we measure energy in electron-volts, large distances in light years, atomic mass units for small things, solar mass units for large things...

  • @danielbishop1863

    @danielbishop1863

    Жыл бұрын

    And occasionally you'll see Imperial pints of imported beer, which are "20 oz" in Britain but "19.2 oz" here due to our fluid ounce being bigger.

  • @caleb1413

    @caleb1413

    Жыл бұрын

    @@danielbishop1863 You'll occasionally see metric-only cans of beer too, which funnily enough are usually in my experience from the U.S.

  • @TnseWlms
    @TnseWlms Жыл бұрын

    I once heard an eight year old ask, "Why do we have to learn about the metric system in school?" "Lots of reasons. For one, we're practically the only country left in the world that doesn't use it." "So why can't every other country just go back to the old way?"

  • @twiggledy5547

    @twiggledy5547

    19 күн бұрын

    Based kid

  • @MrPropanePete
    @MrPropanePete7 күн бұрын

    Here in Australia we adopted the metric system in 1966. I was 17 at the time and used to the old pounds, shillings and pence, half-pennies, miles, yards, feet and inches. It didn’t take long to adjust but I would still convert kilometres to miles in my head to judge distances. I still sometimes do that today but don’t really need to as I “think”metric now. Visiting the US is funny for me, the currency is metric but everything else isn’t. Measuring a plank of wood at four feet, seven and five eights is just hilarious.

  • @matthewwebster3341
    @matthewwebster3341 Жыл бұрын

    First off, great video series you have been making. I really enjoy how you breakdown these topics into easily digestible parts especially considering full grown adults have the same attention span as a gnat. Anyone who watches this should pause on the news articles and signs, they can be a great laugh. As an engineer in America, I really do hope we eventually move completely to one system or the other. Each one can be used to great affect (metric is easier, base 10 and all) but going back and forth between systems, on the same project, is torture. Just pick one system and stick to it! BZ, keep bringing us great videos!

  • @AsbestosMuffins
    @AsbestosMuffins Жыл бұрын

    its great especially when you work in a factory thats all in US units and are doing QC which is all mandated in Metric and your equipment is setup all in metric, you do a lot of conversions

  • @apacheattackhelicopter8185

    @apacheattackhelicopter8185

    Жыл бұрын

    Did your employer mention they include free brain exercise as part of the social package?

  • @rcisneros8567

    @rcisneros8567

    Жыл бұрын

    Ouch. That does suck.

  • @seanzappulla71
    @seanzappulla71 Жыл бұрын

    They should start talking in celsius on TV when they are doing the weather and it wouldn’t be very hard. Here in Australia we switched over night with the TV weather from F temperatures to C temperatures from what i was told and the same with the road signs. From what I was told it happened very quickly.

  • @ytsux9259
    @ytsux9259 Жыл бұрын

    As a math enthusiast, I'm fluent in both measurement units. I can convert both units in my head very easily and precisely.

  • @manas0211
    @manas0211 Жыл бұрын

    0:50 it's the first time I have ever seen someone use the correct map of British India. It's not all red since there were many princely states that weren't under direct British rule. Gg!

  • @caladonius5132
    @caladonius5132 Жыл бұрын

    As a person who grew up in the '70s, I had to learn both in elementary school. I can use both easily and can do a mental estimate when converting from one to another. So, I kind of feel lucky in a way.

  • @bigbloopboy8892

    @bigbloopboy8892

    Жыл бұрын

    Everyone is taught the metric system in Chemistry / Physics / most sciences lol

  • @vincedibona4687

    @vincedibona4687

    Жыл бұрын

    But you don’t teach those courses to third graders. Basic math, yes. JFC.

  • @ilyatoporgilka

    @ilyatoporgilka

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans also always use fixed showers.

  • @Innno0

    @Innno0

    Жыл бұрын

    Monke

  • @MrPhilsterable

    @MrPhilsterable

    Жыл бұрын

    @@vincedibona4687 We were taught both in elementary school at least as late as the 90s.

  • @tajr.2650
    @tajr.26506 ай бұрын

    SNL skit was ON POINT. 😂

  • @danieldishon688
    @danieldishon688 Жыл бұрын

    I love the paper that simply reads "Nerds told No" lol 😆

Келесі