53 comments

[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 129 ms ] thread
Would the UK go back to imperial money as well? The system of guineas, crowns, pounds, quids, shillings, pence and farthings is really well-suited to the feudal system that Rees-Mogg and Johnson seem to admire and want.

Would using imperial money let merchants do dark patterns better? Like the USA pricing gasoline to the mill, $4.499 feels a lot less than $4.50.

How would imperial money be more suited to a feudal system?
If my memory of AoE2 serves, there’s even an entire Age between them.
In the UK gasoline is also priced to the thousandth: prices are in pence per litre with one decimal point. E.g. at the moment you might see "182.9" for diesel, which of course means £1.829 per litre.

I suspect this comes from a time when a Pound was a lot compare to the price of petrol...

It isn't ideal bringing politics into this, but in my opinion it isn't possible to discuss it without.

This is a political distraction designed to distract BOTH sides (pro & anti Tory government). It is working fantastically since people are discussing this rather than the PM committing crimes, getting caught, and then changing the ethics code to avoid resignation (and multiple no confidence letters from back-benchers).

Ultimately this is a consultation with no teeth. Industry are against it since it will add significant cost and regulatory problems, and with the UK already struggling under Brexit importation issues, it would be very self-destructive. It only really appeals to a very old, very pro-Tory demographic, that is rapidly disappearing.

But again this is all a political distraction, they will do this consultation, milk it as much as they can, and then pocket it. Or just make it officially optional which nobody will utilize but have some technicality they can point to.

I don’t follow UK politics. What are the crimes?
Allegedly breaking own just-introduced rules on gatherings for staff parties during pandemic. (Is what I assume GP is referring to.)
Is that what passes for "committing crimes" in the UK these days?
It’s particularly galling when the prime minister introduces very strict regulations, that even the queen has to abide by (infamously mourning for her husband alone), and then members of the administration throw large parties at the prime minister’s residence.

Sure, it’s not that bad from an absolute perspective, and probably no one was hurt by it, but the public generally expects individual members of the government to abide by the law no matter what.

Maybe Boris Johnson can go tell people who couldn’t mourn their loved ones, or people who got fined for mourning their loved ones, or grand parents that couldn’t meet their grand kids, etc. how him breaking the rules so he could have some parties and drinks that prevented them from doing all of that was not that bad from an absolute perspective.
I only meant that it was unlikely that anyone got COVID as a result of the parties. The fact that all those people were unable to be with their loved ones while Boris was at an office party is absolutely horrible, and the fact that he didn’t abide by his own rules is reason to resign, as I see it.
Of course, the other crime, that requires him to resign is lying to Parliament, except he changed the ministerial code so he wouldn’t have to resign.
Lots of politicians in America violated their own stay at home orders, like Gavin Newsome. While I agree it’s bad, hypocritical, what have you, I wouldn’t say it’s “committing crimes”—even just from the perspective of expecting to be understood by others. I read the OP and thought I had missed some real news.
You're playing semantics, and worse you're playing semantics with people from a different country, of course they're going to use words differently than you.

With that said, I think there's a hole in your reasoning -- If the people who enacted these laws had found you breaking them they would damn well have called you a criminal for doing so.

No, OP is playing semantics. “Committing crimes” has a meaning in ordinary usage, and it doesn’t encompass violating administrative rules. Here in Maryland, a speeding ticket is technically a misdemeanor violation of the criminal code. Nobody would call that “committing crimes”—because that would be confusing to other people.
It was quite literally a crime in the case of Boris Johnson, which is why I called it “committing crimes.” For Gavin Newsom, my understanding is that it technically was abiding by the rules because the restaurant was open air, but I’m not super familiar with the case. If it actually was against the rules, he should have resigned and let someone who shares his political views but didn’t break the regulations be the new governor. A political leader should at least be legally unimpeachable, and ideally morally too.

The problem with the CA recall is that the only major opponents had a very different political position to him, but switching the state’s political control over a personal scandal seems absurd.

Yes, breaking the law is considered committing a crime. It might not be a particularly big crime and likely wouldn't normally warrant more than a warning. But when the people who just passed the law immediately go and break it, the crime itself isn't the issue. The problem is the attitude that the law doesn't apply to those in charge. It is literally the sort of thing that has caused revolutions. People want a just society.
Under convention, a British MP that is convicted of a crime is expected to resign. No Prime Minister has ever been issued a fine or committed a crime before.

Johnson (and the UK treasurer) were both issued a fine for disobeying the COVID restrictions, while in Number 10 (and 11) the official residences.

They offended numerous times, including immediately before a press conference to deliver more onerous restrictions, and before the funeral of Prince Phillip, where the Queen (like many others) was mourning alone.

The Queen wasn't required to keep the COVID restrictions (she is literally "above the law"), but she dutifully obeyed them.

It's not the nature of the crime, it's the complete lack of remorse or even the perception that there was any harm.

There’s nothing alleged about it. The police charged him for it. And he accepted it.
Ok. (Police charging someone with something doesn't mean guilty, but fine.) I haven't followed it, I think it's unintersting, I was just explaining what other commenter was referring to.
"Industry are against it since it will add significant cost and regulatory problems, and with the UK already struggling under Brexit importation issues, it would be very self-destructive."

That isn't the case is it. Lots of people with vested interests say there are issues, but it turns out they just want government to ease the path for their operations and bring in lots of immigrant lorry drivers so they don't have to pay a proper wage. Pandering to exporters and big business is why Brexit happened in the first place.

There is no reason for the EU directive and it should be scrapped. The market can then decide what weights and measures are appropriate for their supply chain. That allows an increase in competition which is always a good idea.

Very likely little will change other than milk will return to just being in pints, beer will have a pint label on it and we can sell things to the USA in the measures the USA uses, while potentially avoiding the relabelling required for US imports.

The UK import mechanism is entirely under the UK's control. If it is onerous then now we are out of the EU we can streamline it. Given our very strong consumer laws we don't need the 'hard shell' approach so beloved by the EU. The extensive liability of the retailer will ensure standards are maintained via back pressure in the supply chain.

There has never been a single suggestion by government that imperial measures will be required. Just that their use won't be banned as the primary measure - as it is now.

Relabelling won't really be avoided as the US measurements are slightly different to the Imperial measurements. A US pint is about 95ml less than an Imperial pint
Last i looked the US gallon was different from Imperial gallon.
Be honest with us, you've never in your life thought about switching back to the imperial system until it was recently mentioned. In other words it was a complete non-issue for you until someone made it an issue for you.

> There is no reason for the EU directive and it should be scrapped. The market can then decide what weights and measures are appropriate for their supply chain. That allows an increase in competition which is always a good idea.

Let's run with this idea. Perhaps the government should invest in the development of several new competing standards, all in the name of competition. Do you think this would be a good idea?

This is complete nonsense. There are many distinct advantages to using the same weights and measures as the majority of the world, except the US (not excepting the US military, that have been using metric measurements since the early 80s).

There is literally no requirement for this "inquiry" and it's entirely about ruffling up the Tory/leave fools.

"Pandering to exporters", like the Scottish salmon farmers and the other agricultural exporters, like the manufacturers that now have to fill in EU custom forms and don't even have the benefit of a supposed US market.

Leaving the EU was always a nonsense, from the same people that think "Fog in Channel, continent cut off" is true. EU doesn't need the UK, the UK cut off its nose to spite its face by leaving its primary market, both economically and geographically.

There is literally no advantage to returning to imperial measures from metric.

There is no one, either in importing, or exporting, or domestic industry calling for a return to metric measures. What's next? Return to pre-decimal currency?

> The UK import mechanism is entirely under the UK's control.

If that were true, the Northern Ireland Protocol wouldn't be the political disaster that it is.

The brexit comments I find interesting, but pretending the metric system is meaningless or without reason is just daft.

It's called standards. And standards make life easier. Shockingly poor opinion on an IT forum where we get to experience good and poor standards on an extreme scale.

> beer will have a pint label on it and we can sell things to the USA in the measures the USA uses

You are likely unaware of it, but the pints and gallons used by the US are entirely different from the pints in Blighty. One of the reason why using customary measures has been discontinued by anyone smart.

I say this as an American who uses imperial units everyday, please don't.
Oh come now, we Brits are far too imperious to use your silly American measures. No to your Gills, we'll stick with our Hogsheads thank you.
Weird to seek out an expensive change with only downsides but the opening paragraph says it all:

> The UK has a long and proud history of using imperial measures and their use is closely associated with our culture and language.

Ah yes, the same pitch that sold Brexit.

Nothing like bringing back pints to distract from Partygate.
I get the point of metric, but doesn't a centimeter seem a little too small and a meter a little too big?
That's why there is the decimetre. For some reason I've noticed it's not that common here in Singapore, but back in Sweden where I grew up, it's used all the time.
Globally the decimetre is really only used for volumes via the cubic decimetre aka litre.
That's very weird, since it's such a useful unit. I've also noticed that the decilitre also seems to be underused outside of Sweden.
Simple answer - no. If pretty much all you've ever known is cm and m then they same as natural as anything else you grew up with.
Well, you know that customary imperial fractional units work a lot better with IEEE754 math than metric fractional units…
I was born in and have lived in the UK for my entire life. Although this document correctly asserts that we use imperial units in certain use-cases, my anecdotal experience is that I don’t really understand those units at all. When I buy milk, I know roughly how much “2 pints” is, and I know roughly how long it will last me. Similarly, when I see a distance in miles I mentally multiply it by 1.6 to roughly estimate what the distance is in kilometres. When people ask my height, I often give it in both feet/inches and centimetres, but the former means nothing to me. It’s just some words I’ve memorised that directly translate to my height. My point is - I see a divide in the UK. I was born after 1990 and I think many others like me have a similar relationship with imperial units - they don’t “think” in them or understand them at all. It’s my parent’s generation who seem to understand and think in imperial units.
I grew up in a metric system country, and moved to the US. Miles are not a problem, I'm driving 60mph, I see that I have to drive 120 miles it will take me 2 hours. A pound is roughly a half kilo. A pint is about half a liter. But what drives me mad is Fahrenheits after 15 years in the US I still struggle with it.
It sounds like you have a similar process to me - you don’t actually “think” in or understand the imperial units - you have just memorised benchmark amounts and conversion metrics. That’s why you can’t get your head around fahrenheit - the conversion isn’t an easy one to mentally apply every time.
I'm in my mid 50s in the UK and I was only ever taught metric units - I have no idea how imperial units work. Miles are a unit I only use when driving (and always think of it as 1.6km) and distances and heights seem natural to me in km and m (even though I am working my way round the Munros!).
How many munros are you at? I’m currently on 49!
72 - although progress has stalled somewhat recently :-(