Canadian here. It really depends on if it's a cultural use or something the government might have an influence on through legislation. They can force industries to label packages in metric, but they can't force grandma to change her manually-transcribed recipes. The other big influence is obviously our neighbours to the south. A lot of industries haven't switched over there, and we get their products. Main culprit here would be the construction industry, lumber and hardware is all in US customary units and I hate it.
The motherfuckers who do this take said turn at like 2km/h, they're not racing at all
Something something dining philosophers.
Well, isn't murder a crime? There's your broken law...
Buttered white bread dipped in stew is the best way to eat bread. You should try it before you diss it
Québécois here. My mother in law served us something very similar for lunch today. It was very good!
Looks like we kept the french language but not the french cuisine...
Have you watched Idiocracy? I consider myself a smart guy, and having children is my way to fight against the world getting stupider.
Also, it is a joy. Yeah, it's expensive, and yeah, it's a ton of work. But it's like working on a very big project that you know you'll be proud of when it's done. I didn't understand it before because I only experienced other people's children, but it's different with your own children in a way that's hard to explain.
Oh, my sweet summer child...
From this thread, looks like you're right, sadly...
People in this thread act as if the Romans were baboons.
No, people 4000 years ago were still people, i.e. they had roughly the same brains as we do. This means their creativity and intellect was pretty much the same as we have now; they were more than capable of inventing techniques to carve and move large rocks. They didn't have modern technology, but they still had technology.
Also, building stuff by piling up rocks is so basic, it's normal that it evolved in parallel on different continents. OP's pic actually shows a few different solutions to the problem; some of them make neat rows while others are more "random" in their approach.
Even if Assange himself was openly interfering in US politics, how is that relevant? If he isn't a US person, and he's not on US soil, why would he be bound by US law? US law isn't universal law, you know.
The fact that the battery is usually the part that has the longest warranty should tell you everything. I have never seen a warranty on an engine longer than 5 years and 100 000 km, but batteries are routinely 10+ years.