Indian Media are Models of Inconsistency, aren’t
they?
Regarding
what, who, or even how I say that, you may ask. This post is about to answer
the title question. The question may, for all I know, go unanswered. I am
lowering the readers’ expectations.
Take
an article in the English language newspapers or magazines published in India,
such as Times of India, The New Indian Express, The Hindustan Times, The Hindu,
Frontline, The Week, you would find numbers mentioned in–beyond purely Hindu
numerical–hundreds of thousands, crores, billions (all regarding population
counts), lakh crores, billions again (mentioning currency), cusecs (cubic feet
per second), cumecs (cubic meters per second), (water discharge from a
reservoir), acre-feet, cubic kilometre, (water availability), acre, square
kilometre (area of cultivable/cultivated land).
It
has been about 50 years since the world (the US being the exception that proves
the rule) discarded the British Standards of measurements. Out went inches,
feet, mile, cubic inches, acres; fortunately the unit of time, second remained
thanks to the SI (International System of Units, or as the French would say, Syst
As
a has-been technocrat who cut his teeth in the early to mid- to late 1970s and
suffered through the transition from the Foot-Pound-Second system (there was
also a unit Slug which I do not recall measured what, force or mass) to Centimetre-Gram-Second,
to Meter-Kilogram-Second (there was a finer distinction, between kilogram mass
and kilogram weight, related by the acceleration due to gravity; 1 kilogram
weight = 9.81 kilogram mass) and later to SI units, I have paid the price of
conversion(s), secular, I hasten to add. I do not wish to go through that
anymore.
In
my UG studies, it was confusion galore, between and among all the three
systems. During my PG studies, God saved me: It was exclusively MKS. During my
Ph.D course work, it was FPS. When I returned to India, it was SI. Again and
again, I turned myself into a pretzel. Or, more appropriate, a scene from
Charlie Chaplin’s movie Modern Times: gnashed between gear teeth, all
the different sets of units of measurement. Each gear wheel is a unit of
measurement and I was gnashed between them.
In
the above pictures, on the top you see Chaplin hedged between the central and the right-most wheels and at the bottom, between the left-most and the central. My take
is, industrialization did not merely bring machines into the workspace but made
machines out of humans, a leftist idea that Chaplin was more than suspected of
harbouring.
Fortunately,
I used a scientific calculator in my post-retirement (?) job as a member of the
faculty at a private university. There
was a ready-reckoner in most of the electronic calculators in use by the
students and the faculty; the factors for conversion between different units
from different systems were at hand. Though I stuck to SI units (all the books
have adopted this set of units as their standard), the fact that the students
can do such conversions at ease brought to my face a smile of satisfaction;
India is not stuck in the 1970s!
I
look forward to the day when no scientific calculator (including those used by
engineers of the US) would provide a ready-reckoner for conversion from SI
units. That would be the day light would travel at a speed of 299,792,458 m/s,
no ambiguity anywhere!
Now,
I come to the media outlets. Yes, acre-feet is a vivid unit when it comes to
measuring water used for irrigation–water would stand to a height of one foot
over a spread of one acre. It can be, more importantly, should be converted to
hectare-meter (a hectare is 104 square meter; 1 acre = 4,046.856 m2
è1 hectare =
2.471 acres; 1 hectare-meter = 2.471 x 3.281 = 8.107 acre-foot; and so on).
These days, when I unashamedly (as I am hardly 1.57 meters) ask exceptionally
tall Indian students how tall they are, they invariably tell me in meters. This
is fantastic! I do not have to do conversion! They are 30 cm taller than me.
In
peri-urban, semi-urban, and rural areas, masons working on small buildings (no
taller than two storey buildings) still do their calculations for the number of
bricks required only in inches. If engineers themselves are not shifting to SI
units, are we justified in asking such masons to shift their measurement
systems from one to another? Media can do its part. Be consistent. No more lakh
crores, only billions; no more cusecs, only cumecs; no more acre-feet, only
hectare-meter ...
I
have heard this somewhere and it sounds trite. Yet, I’ll repeat: Be the change
you want to see ...
Raghuram
Ekambaram
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