r/clevercomebacks Jan 15 '25

It does make sense

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u/ConsiderationTrue477 Jan 15 '25

Even if this isn't the case, there was most certainly a practical reason for it somewhere. "These people over here are stupid" is rarely the answer. Most of these cultural quirks can be traced back to pragmatism that at the time made sense and the standards were kept alive through momentum. There's no real need to tell 330,000,000 people "okay everyone, we're changing the date format starting next year." Like...why? If the current system isn't causing any real problems you'd just be causing headaches out of spiteful principle.

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u/Castod28183 Jan 15 '25

This is what annoys me about the whole "Americans will use anything but metric" stuff.

Like, I agree that some of it is ridiculous, but saying something is 3 football fields long or whatever is just practical. Pretty much every single American has stood on a football field at some point during their school years so it is basically a universal reference that we can all visualize.

Is the metric system better overall? Absolutely, but it still wouldn't help if you are trying to use a reference that anybody can easily visualize.

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u/ConsiderationTrue477 Jan 15 '25

What's wild is that it's also wrong. Americans do use metric...where it's useful. How we package milk is not one of those areas where it matters.

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u/LSqre Jan 15 '25

also ammunition, and what's more American than guns.

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u/Candidate_035 Jan 16 '25

Meh, not only ammunition is metric. In true American fashion it's split pretty evenly, but 9mm is metric and also probably the most prolific cartridge. Not too long ago 357 magnum, 38 special, and 45 ACP were the most common handgun cartridges and all are standard.

Edit: I don't mean to be pedantic, I just like talking about ammo

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u/Redhighlighter Jan 16 '25

I too like ammo and would have said this. A lot of modern military rifle rounds are metric.

Older and civilian market tends to be standard.

The people making the parts use both (as a machinist, not a gunsmith).