ID: 9e75e4 March 13, 2022, 11:33 a.m. No.15855901   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5942 >>5944

>>15855842

Lazy..yes.. Too lazy no!

 

The fact that you're having difficulty fitting DST into your reality is probably because it's man made..

You could have googled it (at a minimum) before getting all righteous and being combative..

 

Daylight Savings Time is an idea that has been around for more than 100 years, and was implemented nationwide in Germany a little over a century ago. Here is its history, and how (and why) it is used today.

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With the time about to jump ahead once more, it is interesting to take a look at the history of Daylight Savings Time and why we get an extra hour of daylight in the evenings for part of the year. Love it or hate it—and there are plenty of passionate people on both sides of the issue—it’s a firmly ingrained part of our culture in the United States, and shows no signs of going anywhere anytime soon. Congress has even tried several times in the past to extend it year-round, and the vote has been close each time. One day, we might see it happen, and then Daylight Savings Time would become just “time.”

 

While it is commonly associated with the United States now, the USA is not the only country to use Daylight Savings Time or even the first. The idea for it was first proposed in 1895 by a British entomologist named George Hudson. The German Empire implemented the first nationwide usage of it in 1916. Countries that use or have used it typically move the clocks forward by one hour at the beginning of spring, which sacrifices an hour of daylight in the morning in favor of an extra hour of it in the evening. Usually, around the beginning of autumn, the clocks are moved back an hour to standard time. Countries along the Equator have typically not used Daylight Savings Time because their sunrise and sunset times never change enough to warrant adjusting the clocks of their residents.

 

Most countries in the world have observed Daylight Savings Time at some point in their history, though not all that once observed it still do. And, equatorial nations in South America, as well as most of Africa and Southeast Asia, have never used it….more

 

 

Have some Boobs..