American construction workers hate metric, and every young architect quickly learns to produce prints in AS, regardless as to how great the metric system is to his trade.
Slow down there, the metric system isn't a conspiracy,
I didn't claim that it was a conspiracy.
it based on units of 10, and it evolves from counting on 10 fingers,
Again, I'm as familiar as anyone else is in the system. I'm employed in a job that requires it's use. I know what it's good for.
it is the dominant market choice and has outperformed every competing system since its inception in the late 1700,s .
This is false. It's the dominate choice because Europe was so screwed up with slightly different versions of the Imperial System beforehand, and it's the dominate choice today because developing nations have a vested interests in conforming to their primary markets. The domiance of computers help keep it in use, but it's far from a market based victory. Most of the nations that employ it today were forced to by government edicts.
It uses logic as a way to connect similar values eg. 1cc (cubic centimeter) is equal to 1 gram of water. 1 square km = 10,000,000,000 square cm. And 0.0 degrees Celsius is the temperature at which water freezes, and 100 degrees Celsius at sea level is the temperature at which water boils, knowing that you can common sense the temperature space and volume.
And a pint is a pound of freshwater. The major advancement of the Metric system was using base 10, which is good for mathmatics. Like I said, AS is primarily a base 2 system, which is easier for the human mind to conceptualize withut calculators or pen and paper. Notablely, however, caluclators didn't exist when the Metric system was in accendency; which is why it had to be forced upon most populations. Although it did encourage the study of arithmatic among the masses.
It allows efficiencies in mental calculations that surpass any other system. You can convert between units by changing the name or scale as easily as moving a decimal place.
Which, pratically speaking, isn't a particularly widely used mental calculation, in the real world. Think about it; while it's trivial for you to convert distances that you measure in centimeters (the width of a table, for example) to distances that you would travel in a car (in kilometers) how likely are the average perosn to ever do such a shift of scale outside of the context of a math class? Yes, it would be very difficlut for me to change thes same scale in AS; moving from inches (or feet) to miles, shifting between scales of measurements is not a regualr use of either system by common people.
America would fall of the earth if it had to compete in a free market with the old imperial system, just be grateful your government holds ignorance as a virtue.
America does compete with the "Imperial system", and every American child learns metric in school; but there are very good reasons that the American Standard dominates within the US itself. One of which is that base 2 is easier to do practial calculations in your head in, beyond simple changes of scale.