Baby Blues by Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott for August 14, 2022

  1. Ava2
    C  over 2 years ago

    None so deaf as those that will not hear

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    sirbadger  over 2 years ago

    Is our money metric? It is decimal.

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  3. The rat
    Ratkin Premium Member over 2 years ago

    It’s actually a good question considering the kids’ goal and tools they have. If he really wanted to help, he’d check the label and see it’s a five-gallon bucket, measure the full depth in millimeters, divide by five, and show Hammie the mark on ruler to use.

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    Templo S.U.D.  over 2 years ago

    Hammie, I thought you weren’t ready to go back to school.

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    some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Of course, there are a million millilitres in a cubic metre, because metric is cool like that.

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    David Huie Green LoveJoyAndPeace  over 2 years ago

    Cross-sectional area in square millimeters times millimeters of height gives the number of cubic millimeters. Divide that by 3,785,412 cubic millimeters per gallon gives you the number of gallons. If you changed cross-sectional area to square centimeters, you would divide the product by 37,854.12 since there are that many square centimeter-millimeters per gallon.

    And, of course, to find the cross-sectional area, take the diameter, square it, multiply by pi/4.

    (But everybody knows that.)

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    rasputin's horoscope  over 2 years ago

    Yep- typical Dad over-explanation; typical Kid comprehension of over-explanation.

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  8. Mrpeabodyboysherman
    iggyman  over 2 years ago
    Metric tools are much easier to figure out, like 13 is one mm bigger than 14, as opposed to 5/8 is one bigger than 9/16 !
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    Jeff0811  over 2 years ago

    That’s like comparing apples with oranges. The kid may as well ask, “How many oranges are there in applesauce?”.

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    Rufus The naked mole rat  over 2 years ago

    Destroying speech bubbles. Breaking the fourth wall.

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    WaitingMan  over 2 years ago

    The last president to suggest that America go metric was Jimmy Carter. The idea didn’t go over too well. We’re America! We’re right and the rest of the world is wrong!

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  12. Boston
    MS72  over 2 years ago

    Imagine what it was like before they standardized the foot. Finding 5280 people and lining them up single file with their right foot on a straight line…

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    NeedaChuckle Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Other than temperature, I like metric. 25 sounds cold to me.

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    rwhoward51  over 2 years ago

    The metric system does have a connection — a cubic centimeter of water weighs one gram, and 1000 cubic centimeters are in a liter, which weighs 1 kilogram — length, volume and weight of the most basic fluid of life.

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  15. Red skelton
    Daltongang Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Hammie, are you referring to a US gallon or an Imperial gallon? The devil is in the details Hammie.

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    strandedonearth Premium Member over 2 years ago

    More curious as to why they want to measure a gallon…

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    GKBOWOOD Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Love Hammie wading through all the words – very creative!

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    Jerry in Chelsea  over 2 years ago

    Back in the 1970’s, it looked like the United States was going to go metric, just as the other English-speaking countries were doing. I was strongly in favor of it. Congress passed the Metric Conversion Act of 1975, which encouraged, but did not require, conversion to metric. But in the end the movement went nowhere.

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    Teto85 Premium Member over 2 years ago

    If we know how many millimetres tall and how many millimetres across your bucket was we could figure that out.

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  20. Mrpeabodyboysherman
    iggyman  over 2 years ago

    Usual comment “Go ask your Mother”!

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    paullp Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Two observations:

    Darryl should have stopped after the explanation in panel four.

    Love the way Hammie is walking through and disrupting the letters in panel five!

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    tung cha cha cha  over 2 years ago

    TMI

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    The Quiet One  over 2 years ago

    Yeah, that might have been a little too much of an explanation for Hammie.

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    kab2rb  over 2 years ago

    Sums it up.

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    Jogger2  over 2 years ago

    The units of measurement used by the United States are defined in SI terms. For example, a yard is defined as exactly 0.9144 meter.

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    Blu Bunny  over 2 years ago

    Hammie got home schooled.

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    Not the Smartest Man On the Planet -- Maybe Close Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Nice use of graphics in panel 5.

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    KageKat  over 2 years ago

    Short answer is, it depends on the radius/diameter of the bucket, I would think. If you have that, you can calculate how much volume a millimeter of liquid is, and then go from there.

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    Dgwphotos  over 2 years ago

    Well, if you know how big a bucket it takes to hold a gallon, you can figure out how many cubic millimeters per gallon.

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    ToneeRhianRose  over 2 years ago

    There are 3785411.784 cubic millimeters in 1 gallon.

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    Le'Roy Hawkins  over 2 years ago

    The correct answer is fajita.

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    WDD  about 2 years ago

    How about milliLiters?

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    Sherlock5  7 months ago

    You could could figure the volume in cubic millimeters.

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