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I'm for the shorter workday/siesta solution myself. :)
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This has been done before. I believe that at one point in the '70s the country stayed on DST all year long. In the winter, kids were waiting for school buses in the dark.
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More and more repercussions of this are coming to mind. Microsoft will have to come up with patches for their operating systems because they're coded to change the time automatically based on the April/October thing.
I just bought my kids alarm clocks (I'm trying so hard to get them up in the mornings!) and my son's knows the time automatically (microchipped with the info) and automatically adjusts for DST also. You have to code which time zone you're in initially (Eastern is default) and have to manually mess with it if you live in Indiana or Arizona. I'm just missing how this would save anything. I'm going to use the lights either first thing in the morning or last thing at night either way.. no difference. I'm up from 5:30 am til 11 pm either way. Dee |
I think their thinking is that OVERALL, more americans are up later in the evening than are up earlier in the morning. (I dont know how they would quantify that though)
I also read one time that in WWII the US (and England) was on War Savings Time, which was TWO hours ahead of Standard Time. That wouldda meant here in San Antonio, in the summer, the sun wouldnt have set until about 10 PM, which is really late here. The other thing people are forgetting is that the summer days are much longer than the winter days. So even if DST is extended through the end of November, the sun would set at 6:30 instead of 5:30. Still early enough to get the kiddos to bed at a respectable hour. |
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Looks like the measure passed out of committee today. They said on CNN that it was expected to pass with ease as part of a larger energy bill. It would extend DST by two months. It would take effect immediately. DST would begin at the start of March and run through the end of November.
Sounds cool to me I guess. |
Several Series of Thoughts on DST! Sounds like a Bug Spray!!!
1. Kids would not be standing in the dark when the bus came to take them across town to school. But Dark when they came Home. 2. The Farmers needed to be able to work in the Fields later to grow food for us. Oh, SHIT, someone foregot to tell the Cows!:rolleyes: 3. The Legislatures need more time to go out after a hard day of toiling on how to screw us to hit the links to relax. I am not sure, But I vote for # 3!:mad: |
this figures with the people who are in congress today.
thats all I'm saying :rolleyes: |
They tried to extend DST in the Louisiana Legislature for the whole year. It did not pass. But I guess it would be awkward being the only state to have year-round DST
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The real problem with school starting when it's too dark out is that SCHOOL STARTS TOO EARLY. Why does anybody think kids learn anything when they have to get up before the ass crack of dawn? School should never, ever, EVER start before 8:00. EVER.
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I rad the article today on cnn.com regarding the chage. There was a comment that reps from farming states saying that "it would effect the livestock" HOW?????
There is still the same about of daylight- no matter what the clock says-- if the farmer works sun up to sundown- how does the effect the livestock? What am I missing? |
Damn Wendi it wasnt the friggen Farmers or the Hens and Cattle, it was the Dim Wits in Congress that wanted to play Golf!!!!!:mad: Oh, said Farmers or Kids Going to School getting Bussed!
Where Ya From Girl!;) Oh, Never Mind.:cool: God Damn City Farmers of TV never been Milking Cows and Plucking Eggs!:mad: |
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