• @ReginaPhalange
    link
    496 months ago

    Because Americans will use practically anything before they use metric.

    • @blackbelt352
      link
      166 months ago

      We do such a shit job at teaching our own actual measuring system that nobody has an intuition what a pound feels like, what an inch and a foot look like and how to scale those up. So we resort to objects and comparisons instead of actual measurements.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        10
        edit-2
        6 months ago

        I don’t blame anyone for failing to teach imperial. It’s surreal.

        I grew up with both (gen x Australian), and when I lived through the transition, metric is a godsend.

        Feet. Pound. Stone. All I see are objects. But they are easily objective to the imagination.

        There are now only 2 countries left I believe, dragging their heels, and officially using Imperial

      • @MotoAsh
        link
        8
        edit-2
        6 months ago

        Ehhhhh… measurements aren’t that hard to learn. They’re still measuring the same kinds of things. All measurements are still arbitrary to a human.

        Basically the ONLY thing the metric system has over imperial is it matches our number system by being base-10. I know I know, it’s a BIG difference for a lot of calculations to not have to throw in non-matching unit conversions, and the metric system is ultimately based on absolute values pulled from the universe. At least by definition, as meaningless as that fact is to humans just looking at a length and going, “yup, that’s about 1 1/2 meters.”.

        Anyone who failed to build an intuition simply didn’t use units enough. A lot of US carpenters like imperial units for a similar reason most like the metric system: The ratios match up to what they work with. Most people work with base-10 numbers A LOT more than base 8, 12, or 16. Though for woodworkers, when boards come in feet, blades are clean fractions of inches in size, and buildings are sized 8’ tall, etc, etc, it all lines up nicely to reduce a worker’s mental load.

        I still think metric is superior, but imperial very much is not “senseless”. The biggest reason we’ll never switch is because so many industries have their ratios set for imperial units or interact with other American construction based on those ratios. Not to mention maintenance on things already built. It’d be a huge headache of a transition for many industries.

        • @blackbelt352
          link
          16 months ago

          It’s not that it’s hard to learn, it’s that we don’t have a strong intuition. It’s not that difficult to know there are 12 inches in a foot and 3 feet in a yard or that metric is entirely based around factos of 10. But its the intuition of what an inch looks like, what a pound feels like to hold in you hand. Most people wouldn’t be able to pick up an object and say, “that weighs about a pound” or look at an object and say “that’s about 3 feet long” but a lot of people do have an intuition what an energy drink can looks and feels like and can imagine getting hit by one, a lot of people have picked up a pineapple at the grocery story, people have the intuition of how big a football field is or how big a city bus is.

          • @MotoAsh
            link
            16 months ago

            I agree, that’s why I said, “… they simply don’t use the units enough.”

            I know imperial VERY well, but that’s because I lift weights listed in lbs and craft things all the time, which takes measuring. I also do 3d printing in metric, so I have a solid feel for millimeters, centimeters, and decimeters, but less so full meters because I seldom work on that scale.

            Considering I had an intuition for lbs as a child, though… I don’t really buy that people suck at their native units as adults. If they do, they’re simply not paying attention.

      • Sabata
        link
        fedilink
        86 months ago

        Our measuring system is so shit I rather use hamburgers as a distance than miles.

    • @LesserAbe
      link
      56 months ago

      It’s true, all Americans jointly held the camera to take this picture then sat down together to write the headline

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        06 months ago

        That’s right. We all got together and decided to write moronic headlines like this.

        It definitely isn’t just a handful of editors in a few newsrooms making these decisions on their own.

    • @StaticFalconar
      link
      -46 months ago

      As you prepare a cup of tea with a teaspoon of sugar…

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    96 months ago

    They’re doing that to poke fun at the “energy drink can sized hail” news headline from the other day.

    • @corus_kt
      link
      16 months ago

      First time I’ve seen AP news flexing their sense of humor, honestly. Unless the photographer just went ‘Nope, no other pictures’.

  • @LesserAbe
    link
    76 months ago

    The energy drink just happened to be on the ground where the hail landed