It certainly would, but I'm interested in your experiences with each, and not at all in platitudes about how REAL SCIENTISTS can use anything.
It isn't a platitude, dude. In physics, you choose your units for functionality.
I mentioned using units in which the speed of light was 1, unitless. I
wasn't kidding, or bragging - they are called
Lorentz-Heaviside Units, and are those used most often when working with Relativity. Quantum mechanics has the idea of "renormalization", which is basically a (sometimes painfully complicated) reformulation of your units so that things that look like they are infinite, aren't.
Particle physicists almost never works in any units that would make sense in your grocery store - masses are given in their equivalent energies (in "electron volts" - the amount of energy an electron gains passing across a potential difference of one volt).
Your typical physicist often works in units that normal folk on the street are not familiar with - we convert back to SI or Imperial units when we need to talk about things with laymen.
Now, your mechanical and civil engineers - they're the ones you want to talk about the Imperial/SI divide.