posted
Another reason to abolish it, at least in the state of Alaska. Some say it's outlived its usefulness, but frankly, it never made sense here to begin with.
Posts: 1814 | Registered: Jul 2004
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quote:That is a strange notion. A summer trip to Alaska would cure you of that. Or make your head a splode.
Undoubtedly, my head would just go pop and make a horrible mess.
Actually, I wouldn't mind visiting just to see what it's like. But it would probably be like Las Vegas is for me. I love Vegas for three days; any longer than that and it makes me absolutely insane.
Posts: 2454 | Registered: Jan 2003
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Then again, I also hate it because everyone else I know has to add an hour to their clock and that royally screws up how often I get to talk to them.
Posts: 378 | Registered: Aug 2004
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posted
Ah, Las Vegas will do that to anyone. Any city that puts slot machines right next to the ATMs at the bloody convenience stores is just asking for trouble.
Posts: 1814 | Registered: Jul 2004
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posted
I have been told that even Indiana is going to do Daylight Savings Time starting next year(I've been trying to verify through further research with no luck), if this is true, it is a step in the wrong direction. Every state should be getting rid of Daylight Savings Time, instead of the few tates with the good sense not to be on it, going to it just to conform.
Posts: 376 | Registered: Sep 2004
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posted
Indiana has always had Daylight Savings Time, except for the corner of the state that Gary is in and the southwest corner. So for half the year, the whole state is on the same time; and the other half, the state is divided along the timezone lines. It's weird, but when I lived there, people seemed happy enough with it.
Posts: 2005 | Registered: Jul 1999
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posted
I like DST. So many people forget to set their clocks ahead that I can actually find a parking spot at church.
Posts: 1021 | Registered: Sep 2004
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posted
I think you meant Indiana has never had daylight savings time. Of course, as usual, there are people trying to get it through the legislature.
-----
Edit: while I return to correct mistakes in your post, I must also confess to mistakes in my own.
Mine first:
Indiana did have daylight savings briefly during 1918, according to an article in last Sunday's Greater Lafayette Journal and Courier (which, regrettably, wants to make you pay to view it).
Yours continued:
There is never a time that the whole state is in the same time zones. Counties near Chicago follow Central using DST and counties near Louisville follow Eastern using DST. The rest are Eastern without DST, which means now I don't have to wait as late to call the West Coast.
[ April 03, 2005, 08:42 PM: Message edited by: Cow-Eating Man ]
Posts: 98 | Registered: Jan 2003
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posted
Personally I enjoy daylight savings. In the summer the sun rises at 4:30 am and doesn't fully set until 10 pm. Without daylight savings it'd rise at 3:30 in the morning! Personally I have a difficult time sleeping when the sun is up, so with daylight savings I at least have a chance to sleep in until 5 or so in the morning before the sun, birds, and heat begin to wake me up (yes, I have blinds; no they are not effective at keeping the sun out), and with 18 hours of daylight a day, there's plenty of time after work to go for a nice long hike, or even go for a swim in the river before it cools off. It probably doesn't hurt that my internal clock is messed up by the three time zone shift that I experience when I go home for the summer, so I am actually tired at 10 pm, unlike during the school year when I go to bed around 1 or so.
Posts: 349 | Registered: May 2003
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posted
Southern Indiana does not have Daylights Savings Time.
Hatrack River, according to Alvin Maker, is in Southern Indiana.
We are in Hatrack River right now.
Hence--we are immune to Daylight's Savings.
on an unrelated Indiana Question---
With the Native American Groups requesting a more PC labeling of sports teams and anything else that uses their likeness in an innappropriate way, do we need to change the name of Indiana to Native Americanna?
Posts: 11895 | Registered: Apr 2002
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posted
I like living in Arizona for the same reason. Of course, this year I had to be in Iowa when it changed, on a night when the loss of that hour meant one less hour to spend with other Hatrackers. Grrrr.
Posts: 3546 | Registered: Jul 2002
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quote: From Ben Franklin's era until today, the story of daylight saving time has been a fascinating and sometimes bizarre amalgam of colorful personalities and serious technical issues, purported costs and perceived benefits, agendas of interest groups and policies of governments, pushes for uniformity and pulls for regional differences. In fact, the sunlight that stole through Ben Franklin's window on that Paris morning has preoccupied the thoughts of more than a few scientific minds, and the energies of numerous political leaders, in a host of intriguing and unexpected ways in the two hundred-plus years since it awakened Franklin.
Excerpted from Seize the Daylight by David Prerau. Used by permission of Thunder's Mouth Press.
Interesting trivia tidbits for the history buffs . . .
Posts: 5609 | Registered: Jan 2003
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posted
Hey, I'm not particular what it's called; I'd just be glad to have another option to call the state's citizens beside "Hoosier."
...though there is something kind of amusing about the school's sports teams having the same name as the state's inhabitants. It'd be like the UGA Georgians or the UNC North Carolinians.
Posts: 4077 | Registered: Jun 2003
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posted
This has nothing to do with DST, I just wanted to say I like the 'head a splode' phrase. I don't hang out on the net much these days (a wife, toddler, and upcoming baby cured me of that), and so if i'm behind on the slang, forgive. Head a splode is almost, almost, as good as my sign off acronym (which still hasn't caught on). Here it is. Plast. Abbr of 'Peace, love, and Souuuuullll Traaainnn." Learn it, love it, use it!
posted
I can't believe all you people whining. Am I the only person who actually enjoys having some daylight left to do something outdoors when he gets off work in the afternoon? I would prefer that we keep it like this all year long. Who cares if the sun is shining when I get up and go to work in the morning? I want the sun shining when I get home.
Posts: 4625 | Registered: Jul 2002
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posted
Sorry, Dan. Though I like your theory, southern Indiana in fact does follow daylight savings time. I was quite relieved to discover this, as Mr. Opera works in Louisville. I'm not sure how far the DST area extends, though.
posted
I'm a Hoosier, and I like not having to change my clocks. I'm forgetful enough as it is. I'd hate to have to remember to shift the times I do things. I'd inevitably be an hour late or early. I'm too old to change now. I can change timezones, that's okay, I get why that happens. But in my own home? Nope, not gonna happen. And I'll be crotchety about it, too!
Posts: 3141 | Registered: Apr 2000
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posted
Indiana is what you might call "patchy" in terms of observing DST. The southwest tip and the northwest corner both observe central time year round including DST. The sections nearest to Louisville and Cincinatti both observe DST as well as Eastern time.
Here's a really poorly designed map, but it gives you a basic idea of Indiana's current situation.
Posts: 129 | Registered: Sep 2003
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So ok, let me get this straight. We’d switch in November and again in March? Why not just make it all year round? If it’s good for two more months, why isn’t it good for 4 more or all 12!!
Posts: 2845 | Registered: Oct 2003
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posted
Here in Kansas that extra hour of daylight just means one more hour for the summer sun to burn up lawns.
Posts: 440 | Registered: Oct 2001
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quote: "The more daylight we have, the less electricity we use," said Markey, who cited Transportation Department (search) estimates that showed the two-month extension would save the equivalent of 10,000 barrels of oil a day.
The country uses about 20 million barrels of oil a day.
That would be a savings of 0.05%. As much as I would like to keep all year long, I don't think this is a valid reason.
Posts: 4625 | Registered: Jul 2002
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posted
And you know that God is offended when we reject the majesty of his creation and fiddle with time.
Posts: 2005 | Registered: Jul 1999
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posted
My main problem with DST is that, unlike everyone else, I'm awake when the time changes. For the last two years (but not this one) I was also at work, struggling to finish an eight-hour cleaning job in six hours. (An additional hour is lost because the restaurant closes late on weekends.) So I work harder for less pay.
Posts: 1114 | Registered: Mar 2004
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posted
So why change them for end of November to end of March. Basically that’s 4 months. Why not just leave it like it is for the rest of the year? Who likes it being dark at 4:30 PM in the winter. Yuck. Who cares if it’s still dark at 9 AM. Big deal. Plus no hassle of changing sleep patterns and clocks.
Posts: 2845 | Registered: Oct 2003
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posted
Yeah, but until we figure out where Eden was and what time it is there, we're just messing with it anyway, right?
Does anyone else find it amusing that it is just days after OSC complained about DST and the legislators are trying to fiddle with it even more?
I'm telling you, if you say it on Hatrack, the world takes notice. You can go to lesser known forums and say whatever you want but if you say it here, expect congress to act, or David Kelley to write a script about it.
Posts: 9871 | Registered: Aug 2001
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posted
This is where I chime in and say, "Thanks anyway, but I disagree. I enjoy my time off work when there's some daylight. The more, the better.
Now, I'm not sure about extending daylight savings time. I kinda like things the way they are.
<inflammatory> You can't remember to turn your clock ahead/back? Are these the same people who forget to file their taxes? The same ones who don't change the batteries in their smoke detectors? Jeez...some people. </inflammatory>
Posts: 1813 | Registered: Apr 2001
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posted
I don't change my clock. At least, not the one in my truck. For the summer it's 15 minutes ahead, for the winter it's 1 hour and 15 minutes ahead. No problem. My other clocks either change themselves or I set them to the correct time the first power outage after the switch. If I don't have to reset it 'cause it's blinking, it stays the same.
posted
I suppose I can understand the usefulness of daylight savings time when understood in the context of farm life and little or no electricity. However, since there are very few people in the US still living on farms or living without electricity, I think it's an idea that has long outlived its usefulness. With our flourescent lighting and multiple shiftwork and late-night tv, I think we have no need to continually fiddle with our clocks. That said, I'm really glad I live in Arizona, where the last thing we need is more daylight, but I still end up messing with my alarm clock because it automatically adjusts for daylight savings time.
posted
Wow, what a thought. You know how your clock has been programmed to change itself for daylight savings? If they extend it, won't we all need to get new clocks? Or VCR's. My VCR's are programmed already. I doubt there's a downloadable patch for those.
I can understand the downtown areas wanting to extend it so people will shop. I know in the winter here, it's dark by 5:30.
I just wonder if the extra fuel savings won't be spent making new VCR's and clocks.
Also, what time is it at the intersection of the Tigris and Euphraties? That's the real time. Right?
Posts: 9871 | Registered: Aug 2001
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posted
Accidents in the dark. Particularly accidents related to school children in the dark, waiting for the bus.
Posts: 15770 | Registered: Dec 2001
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posted
Bahh…. So switch the kid’s school by an hour then. Don’t switch everyone else. I wonder if this is a way to slowly get to so it stays the same year round. Ya know wean us into it slowly. Have it this way for a few years, then move it again in a few years. Then finally everyone will be sick of switching at the beginning of the month and back at the end of the month that they finally say ok, we’ll quit.
Posts: 2845 | Registered: Oct 2003
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