It's About Liberty: A Conservative Forum
Topics => General Board => Topic started by: oldcoastie6468 on October 30, 2013, 10:54:10 AM
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Fall back one hour this Saturday night/Sunday morning. Daylight Savings ends.
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Fall back one hour this Saturday night/Sunday morning. Daylight Savings ends.
Thankyou for the reminder!! ::kissface::
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Fall back one hour this Saturday night/Sunday morning. Daylight Savings ends.
Thankyou for the reminder!! ::kissface::
Yer welcome, Toots! :-*
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To whom it may concern,
Leave the damned clocks alone! Ahead, behind, Spring, Fall... ::pullhair::
Pick one and stick with it!!!
::taz::
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To whom it may concern,
Leave the damned clocks alone! Ahead, behind, Spring, Fall... ::pullhair::
Pick one and stick with it!!!
::taz::
I definitely agree with that! ::whoohoo::
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Nobody want's 9am sunrises, nor 4am sunrises, so fall we must.
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No More Sunlight in Arizona and Hawaii
Arizona (with the exception of the Navajo Nation) and Hawaii and the territories of Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Guam, and American Samoa are the only places in the U.S. that do not observe DST but instead stay on "standard time" all year long. And if you've spent any time in the sweltering summer sun in those regions you can understand why residents don't need another hour of sunlight.
The Dawning of DST in Indiana
Until April 2005, when Indiana passed a law agreeing to observe daylight saving time, the Hoosier state had its own unique and complex time system. Not only is the state split between two time zones, but until recently, only some parts of the state observed daylight saving time while the majority did not.
Under the old system, 77 of the state's 92 counties were in the Eastern Time Zone but did not change to daylight time in April. Instead they remained on standard time all year. That is, except for two counties near Cincinnati, Ohio, and Louisville, Ky., which did use daylight time.
But the counties in the northwest corner of the state (near Chicago) and the southwestern tip (near Evansville), which are in the Central Time Zone, used both standard and daylight time.
The battle between the old system and DST was contentious and hard-won—bills proposing DST had failed more than two dozen times until finally squeaking through the state legislature in April 2005. As of April 2, 2006, the entire state of Indiana joined 47 other states in observing Daylight Saving Time. But it wasn't quite as simple and straightforward as all that—telling time in Indiana remains something of a bewildering experience: eighteen counties now observed Central Daylight Time and the remaining 74 counties of Indiana observe Eastern Daylight Time.
New Federal Law—Springing Forward in March, Back in November
Months after Indiana passed the law that got it in step with the rest of the country, the federal government announced a major change in Daylight Saving Time. In Aug. 2005, Congress passed an energy bill that included extending Daylight Saving Time by about a month. Since 2007, DST starts the second Sunday of March and ends on the first Sunday of November.
More than one billion people in about 70 countries around the world observe DST in some form.
Here are interesting facts about some of these countries:
Most of Canada uses Daylight Saving Time. Some exceptions include the majority of Saskatchewan and parts of northeastern British Columbia. In the fall of 2005, Manitoba and Ontario announced that like the United States, they would extend daylight time starting in 2007. The attorney general of Ontario commented that "it is important to maintain Ontario's competitive advantage by coordinating time changes with our major trading partner, and harmonizing our financial, industrial, transportation, and communications links." Other provinces have indicated that they may also follow suit.
It wasn't until 1996 that our NAFTA neighbors in Mexico adopted DST. Now all three Mexican time zones are on the same schedule as the United States.
Also in 1996, members of the European Union agreed to observe a "summer-time period" from the last Sunday in March to the last Sunday in October.
Most countries near the equator don't deviate from standard time.
In the Southern Hemisphere, where summer arrives in what we in the Northern Hemisphere consider the winter months, DST is observed from late October to late March.
Three large regions in Australia do not participate in DST. Western Australia, the Northern Territory, and Queensland stay on standard time all year. The remaining south-central and southeastern sections of the continent (which is where Sydney and Melbourne are found) make the switch. This results in both vertical and horizontal time zones Down Under during the summer months.
China, which spans five time zones, is always eight hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time and it does not observe DST.
In Japan, DST was implemented after World War II by the U.S. occupation. In 1952 it was abandoned because of strong opposition by Japanese farmers.
link (http://www.infoplease.com/spot/daylight1.html)
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Oh good grief. And this, no doubt, from some of the same people that argue against States having their own currencies. They'll just screw with the time instead.
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Whenever we travel to AZ, I pick up the CB Mike and ask what time it is. It's really confusing around the 4 corners area. Pacific time, AZ time (No DST) or Mountain time. I always ask around there, too.
And IN time is interesting when we go to Buffalo, NY.
Most of the time the cell phones correct to the right time, but........
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I like gaining the extra hour but dislike having to get up out of bed @ 2:00 AM to change the friggin' clocks back...
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... ;)
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I like gaining the extra hour but dislike having to get up out of bed @ 2:00 AM to change the friggin' clocks back...
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... ;)
I'm sure glad you put the wink there!
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::rockethrow::
;)
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My mom once forgot she'd already turned the clock back before bed and when she woke up the next morning she turned it back an hour again!
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One of the marvels of this technological age is that many clocks reset themselves automatically, like the 'pooter and the cable box. It's the other ones that drive me crazy: The coffee maker, the microwave, the stovetop, the clock radio, the wristwatch, etc. The only clock I can't reset is my body clock.
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Yeah, I love those automatic reset alarm clocks. Like the one that reset last weekend, because that was the original programming. ::pullhair::
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Yeah, I love those automatic reset alarm clocks. Like the one that reset last weekend, because that was the original programming. ::pullhair::
Yep; our XM Radio receiver does the same thing.
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Whenever we travel to AZ, I pick up the CB Mike and ask what time it is. It's really confusing around the 4 corners area. Pacific time, AZ time (No DST) or Mountain time. I always ask around there, too.
And IN time is interesting when we go to Buffalo, NY.
Most of the time the cell phones correct to the right time, but........
... but getting on the CB and asking for a 10-36 is sooo much fun and breaks up the boredom. ::thumbsup::
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Whenever we travel to AZ, I pick up the CB Mike and ask what time it is. It's really confusing around the 4 corners area. Pacific time, AZ time (No DST) or Mountain time. I always ask around there, too.
And IN time is interesting when we go to Buffalo, NY.
Most of the time the cell phones correct to the right time, but........
... but getting on the CB and asking for a 10-36 is sooo much fun and breaks up the boredom. ::thumbsup::
Actually, it does, nowadays. The CB is not used mainly for what it was designed, not all the BS that it used to be. I can go for hours without hearing anything on it. I mainly hook it up because it has the weather channels on it.
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Nobody want's 9am sunrises, nor 4am sunrises, so fall we must.
I do!
Before DST mankind wasn't so concerned with the time...it is a linear construct, nothing more.
Why do we have to dick with it?
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If we didn't dick with it, then we'd have to Bill, or Joe, or Tom, or maybe Steve with it. :supercool:
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As a kid I grew up near the western edge of the eastern time zone, about as far west as St. Louis, MO, with Lake Superior to the west. It was daylight until 10:30 pm. Even at the east end of Lake Superior it is daylight until 10:00 pm.
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As a kid I grew up near the western edge of the eastern time zone, about as far west as St. Louis, MO, with Lake Superior to the west. It was daylight until 10:30 pm. Even at the east end of Lake Superior it is daylight until 10:00 pm.
I would like that. I hate it when it gets dark early. At 8 pm it seems like it should be 10 pm it's been dark so long.
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I don't mind. It's setup now so it clicks off right as sunrise approaches 8:00, and flips back on when the "new" sunrise is before 8:00
I remember the early 70's when they let DST go the full year. Sunrise was 8:30 in Iowa, so 9:00 in Minnesota. Sending kids to school in pitch dark wasn't very smart. Even a Poli Sci retard could figure that one out, after only a year.
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Changing back and forth between times can screw up your biological clock, too.
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Changing back and forth between times can screw up your biological clock, too.
When my kids were little I learned not to do anything the Monday after in the spring because losing that one hour really messed them up. Fortunately, homeschooling allowed me that luxury of not having to get them out the door.
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It messes up your pets' clocks, too.
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I H8's it! In fact I refuse to change the clock in my car...drives people nuts...I tell them if it matters so much to ya, do math!
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I hate this crap too. It's another progressive thing from Prussia. I say use the same time year round. If people don't like the timing of sunrise and sunset, move to the tropics. It's called seasons.
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::clapping::