"Everywhere else on the planet, it goes day, month, year. Chronological order. From small to big."
Small to big is ass backwards. When you say or write the time of day do you start with the seconds, then the minutes, then the hour? Obviously not. Big/broad to small/narrow is the logical way of organizing things. Look at how your folders are organized on your computer, for example. Are you familiar with the concept of "narrowing things down"?
In the case of the U.S., we put the year at the end because it changes so infrequently that it's not usually needed for everyday usage of dates. For example, if you made a doctor's appointment on June 25th for the next week, they would just tell you, e.g., July 2nd. For the units of time that change most frequently, we order them the way they are supposed to be ordered, big to small: month/day/hour/minute/second/etc.
"It's an unfortunate system"
No, it's a logical system. Your system is ass backwards, like I said.
"similar to America's stubbornness in accepting the metric system, despite it being used by those in the scientific fields."
That's ironic. Are you using a metric (decimal) clock and calendar yet? No? Why not?
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