I learned both metric and imperial measurements in elementary, middle, and high school. From what I understand they only use metric in science classes now.
It didn’t make sense to me at the time. But the. I saw what happened to Core Curriculum, CRT, and US history. And it all makes a lot more sense.
It's a strange one though, isn't it? I was watching an exercise/nutrition video on YouTube earlier and the presenter was saying "to work out how much protein a day you need, multiple your bodyweight in lbs by X and that will give you the protein number in grams." It seemed so bizarre to combine the systems.
Edit: Just to add - in the UK we're taught entirely in metric in school, the bits mentioned above are just hangups / how it's done.
In particular a foot is an extremely intuitive unit of measure. It covers a number of use cases better than meters or centimeters.
I also prefer Fahrenheit now that I'm used to it. Fahrenheit has a nicer range for the temperatures we live our lives at, whereas Celsius compresses that range so much.
Unintuitive US units: Miles - I still have a very hard time with how far this is, km was much nicer.
2. Cost. There is a direct cost (like remarking everything), and indirect -- all the chaos and errors because of mixing up units. To foot the bill is hard sell in Congress.
3. Peer pressure: because of size of economy, US can request whatever it wants from partners. UK had to move to metric when joined EU.
That said, I am very supportive of metric. We are paying price for the imperial units. Every car shop has two set of wrenches. (BTW, it is metal, production -- read climate impact. May be not big, but still impact we could avoid.) All the software must show controls for units. We need to train professionals (like doctors) to live in two worlds. And the list is endless. [Did I mention translation bugs? For example, outside temperature translation is 9/5 Celsius + 32, but difference between outside and inside is 9/5 Celsius. :-( -- real bug I caught in critical industrial control system. ]
I am not sure where does US stands today. For example, I think metrics is teached in school. Most food is dual marked. So, maybe, it is not rejection, but rather slow move?
Feels like something that's only going to go in one direction, even if not quickly in some cases.
Then... it just never completely took. Then those changes went away.
Part of it was political, surely (Carter spearheaded the metric change; Reagan coming in was super conservative), but I think you underestimate just how hard it is to get 50 halfway-independent states and millions of people to all agree on an entirely new system of measurement (not just of distance, but of volume, temperature etc.) when in millions of people's brains, the number 72 means "comfortable" (in Fahrenheit) and 100 means "hot!" (again, in Fahrenheit... you can't say "temps are in the triple digits!" in Celsius and have it mean anything other than that you're boiling), a tall man is "over 6 feet tall!", the average weight of an adult is 180 pounds, ovens get heated to 375 to bake something usually, shoe sizes (in inches), belt lengths (in inches), heck my baby's perfect bathwater temperature is exactly "100 degrees" (F, measured via infrared thermometer), going "100MPH" is VERY fast, 0 degrees F is VERY cold (-17C), etc. etc.
It's still used in some spaces like science, but in places like tooling it's both... I have 2 sets of EVERY TOOL (well, every tool with a fixed size at least, like sockets and allen-head wrenches), the metric version and the imperial version, it's maddening- basically the worst of all options is to get stuck in the middle, and that's precisely what happened with tooling.
Lastly, the digital tooling to automatically or easily convert is getting more common (a certain Reddit bot comes to mind which automatically converts any Imperial measurements cited in comments to metric), heck a browser plugin could probably do it for you
I also think it's nice that different countries do things differently. It gives you identity and makes the world a more diverse and interesting place. I love that the UK has measurements like "stone" when describing a person's weight and that they use miles per hour for driving and kilograms for buying food and drive on the left side of the road.
For example, I find that metric distance as commonly used doesn't have a good equivalent to feet for working with medium lengths. By "as commonly used" I mean that, while I could theoretically use decameters, in practice average people seem to only use millimeters, centimeters, meters, and kilometers. That makes it difficult for me to estimate medium lengths in metric. For example, it's awkward to describe someone as 1.83 meters or 183 centimeters tall. It is much easier to describe them as 6 feet 2 inches.
To a somewhat lesser degree, the same seems to be true for volume. In practice people only seem to use milliliters and liters. That leaves me with no good equivalent to cups or gallons.
For everything else, what's the point in the government mandating it? There's no political desire for it because society in general doesn't care, and society doesn't care because the costs outweigh the benefits. There's no practical advantage to the average person to learn their height in meters instead of inches and feet, or to have to start shopping for hectograms of food when ounces work just fine.
(1)https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn17350-nasa-criticised...
All joking aside, the metric system is widely used in the US for guns and drugs.
In the early 20th century, the U.S. inch was effectively defined as 25.4000508 mm (with a reference temperature of 68 °F (20 °C)) and the U.K. inch at 25.399977 mm (with a reference temperature of 62 °F (17 °C)). When Johansson started manufacturing gauge blocks in inch sizes in 1912, Johansson's compromise was to manufacture gauge blocks with a nominal size of 25.4mm, with a reference temperature of 20 °C (68 °F), accurate to within a few parts per million of both official definitions. Because Johansson's blocks were so popular, his blocks became the de facto standard for manufacturers internationally, with other manufacturers of gauge blocks following Johansson's definition by producing blocks designed to be equivalent to his.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauge_block
They just apply their weird conversions on top of the metric system, but fundamentally they use the definitions of the International System of Units.
E.g. Pound is legally exactly 0.45359237 kilograms where kilogram is defined by setting the Planck constant h exactly to 6.62607015×10^−34 J⋅s (J = kg⋅m2⋅s^−2), given the definitions of the metre and the second.
Previously kilogram was a block of metal stored in France. But the copies of kilogram were diverging and there was no way of knowing where the changes were coming from. So now the kilogram is defined with regard to the physical properties of the universe as opposed to specific object.
E.g. a meter is exactly the distance traveled by light in a vacuum in 1/299792458 seconds. Where second is exactly the duration of 9192631770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom.
First, the 10-based units of the metric system isn't in fact its biggest utility--it's the fact that everyone agrees on the size of the meter, as opposed to the traditional foot, where every country had its own slightly different length of a foot. With those other customary units pretty thoroughly dead, there's little confusion as to the size of a foot.
Second, as a few people have noted, customary units actually tend to be somewhat more convenient to use than a strict metric system. Note that the metric system comes up with 1 liter = (1/10 m)^3 or 1 hectare = (100 m)^2 to try to synthesize useful volume or area units from regular length. In many regards, Fahrenheit is really a more comfortable measure of ambient air temperature than Celsius is. The metric system's fastidiousness in 10-based increments is more useful if you're doing tasks like measuring the area of an irregularly-shaped plot of land, or scientific calculations, but is less useful for more pedestrian tasks like measuring out how much flour you need for the cake you're baking.
Third, it takes a very long time (at least a generation) for people to get used to new units. You see this in the UK, where imperial units are still used for lots of things despite official metrication. Residual use of customary units for things like cookbooks or tool dimensions will take a very, very long time to root out.
Finally, there are lots of things that depend on the precise units that are hard to move. The US actually has two definitions of length, the international foot (which has 1 in = 2.54 cm exactly), and the survey foot (which has 39.37 in = 1m exactly). It's been trying to phase out the survey foot for decades, and that's still in progress because quite literally the coordinate planes that are used in several states for plotting land in the US are based on the survey foot. Even small differences in units there can lead to inaccuracies of several feet in determining the bounds of your plot of land.
The US uses something called US Customary Units:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_customary_units
Both US Customary & Imperial derived from British units but they have always had large differences. There was an effort to reconcile the two but it was an abandoned when Europe decided to adopt the metric system.
Still differences remain:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_the_imperial_and...
I was standing at one taking a look and an older couple came over and loudly exclaimed "It's a damn sacrilege to the memory of those young men who built the road they would go and change it like that."
They were adamant changing it to kilometers was unacceptable, because old reasons.
"That's how we've always done it" drives so much of what humans do it's not even funny. Speaking for my own countrymen, we still mint the penny, write checks, wear ties, shake hands, use imperial, speak English, work 40 hours a week, have 2 political parties, tip waitstaff, etc. not because they are objectively the best solutions, but because that's how we've always done it.
2L bottles of soda, 2.4L engines, 100m races, 5K runs, 2cc injections, 20 kilo drug busts, 11mm wrenches, M5 screws
I can imagine what it would be like if you told me you went on a 5 mile hike with your 6'6" friend on a 63 degree day. If that was 8km, 2m, and 17 degrees I have much less intuitive sense of what happened. And I don't see much advantage to switching - it doesn't matter which units you use so long as you're consistent within the domain of use.
What's the downside?
Ivintually thes well bi feni and iviryoni well undirstand that i and e ari swappid. But thiri well bi a bet of temi to git adjustid wheli that happins.
Honestly, HN will moan about how much work and how dangerous the stupidest clock or UTC change is but keep proposing to change every unit used by a quarter of the world's economy. Blows my mind.
Since there is no practical benefit, most people don't care and aren't going to go to the effort. A vast amount of non-metric physical tooling already exists -- replacing it would be extremely expensive. For things like engineering, it doesn't matter because the units have to follow the values anyway; there are many common unit systems in engineering that are neither metric nor US imperial, and working across unit systems is something you always have to do anyway.
tl;dr: low ROI and high cost to switch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRnuY1Vao0o
The timestamp where he's directly talking to what I mean:
https://youtu.be/nRnuY1Vao0o?t=1192
In it, he mentions the main reason why he doesn't use the metric system: he can't. Inches and feet and miles and ounces and pounds are so deeply ingrained in his mind. Even when he tries to relate to metric, its always in relation to imperial units, because to him its not about 30 centimeters its about a foot. Its not about a kilogram, its about two pounds. He can do the conversions in his head usually, but actually visualizing how far 5km is means converting it to miles which he can conceptualize.
Its like learning another language. Sometimes people are really great about just remapping their brain, but many people just end up internally translating things instead of actually deeply adopting the language. And if they're going to just be constantly translating it, it'll just be uncomfortable for them, and they won't want to do it. Because to a certain extent, what's the harm in my speedometer being primarily miles per hour? What's the harm in having a sign say "Rest Stop 5mi" instead of "Rest Stop 8km"?
I'm pretty similar to Johnny here. I can easily visualize ~300mi on a map. 300km? I know it is a good bit shorter than 300mi, but just at a quick off the top of my head I wouldn't quite know how far that really is. I'd be just doing the conversions in my head which takes me a second to think "ok, so divide by 1.6ish, so that's a little over 180 miles..." which I'd then use to conceptualize how far that is.
Changing to metric isn't just changing all the highway signs. Sure, that could be done in just a few years if we wanted to. Its changing how everyone actually thinks, how everyone is actually wired. That's what holds up the US from actually adopting metric.
But in the end, I still do use some metric. This drink I'm drinking has its nutrition label in grams/milligrams/Calories. My child got 1mL of iron supplements and vitamins this morning. It will be a long series of small steps before people get used to the change. Just swapping all the road signs overnight isn't going to lead to very happy people.
Back when most of Europe adopted metric, 40% of the population were illiterate. Tons of people didn't really deal with a lot of weights and measures in their daily lives. We live a very different world today than when metric was adopted in most of the world.
There was a push toward adopting the metric system under Carter but since then the right wingers have been largely in control of the political discourse.
It’s simply customs. And the system works. Why change?
It’s similar like asking why European football clubs wouldn’t want to change to the draft system of the US leagues.
European soccer is commercialized to a degree which is unthinkable for Americans, who are commonly regarded as the bigger capitalists…
In fact, I've seen the argument made that feet, inches, miles, cups, teaspoon, Fahrenheit, etc are superior to meters, centimeters, km, mL, Celsius, etc for everyday use. As I've seen it presented, this argument contends that centimeters are too small, while meters are too large for many common things you want to measure, such as the height of a person. Likewise cups and teaspoons are actual objects that you could visualize and get a general sense of the amount without even knowing the actual measurement. Same kind of thing for Celsius: the most common usage of temperature measurement for the average person is air temperature. For the set of air temperatures commonly experienced on Earth, Fahrenheit provides more precision.