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We should end the practice of daylight saving time

Results so far:

Agree
63% 70 votes Total: 112 votes
Disagree
37% 42 votes

Agree

by Rosemary Redfern

Created on: November 04, 2009

The practice of daylight saving time started during the second world war. It was to give civilians more time to enjoy a day and try to live a normal life before the night air raids started and as an energy saving initiative to aid the production of essential materials. These needs are no longer present but the practice has become entrenched in everyone's thinking. The discussions have raged for years because no one can decide what is the best thing to do. What started as an emergency measure has become a problem.


Nowadays no useful function is served by continuing. The inconvenience is not worth the trouble. Twice a year we all have difficulty adjusting our biological clocks, farm animals are unaware of the change and the time wasted changing all the clocks in a house is unnecessary. Energy saving is done differently now. Most of us have trouble remembering whether the clocks are to go forward or back. The little mnemonic, Spring forward, Fall backwards helps - if you can remember it.


The arguments for changing clocks also depend on where you live. Those whose homes are near the arctic circle or the antarctic have one set of criteria, and those further south or north, another. There is no real need to alter times of milking just because a tool says it is a certain hour, but we are conditioned to try and fit in with the rest of the world. Thought about like that the practice is plain daft.


What is forgotten is that whatever the clock says, the amount of daylight and dark remain the same. How humans chose to use those times is a fact of our societal organization. The clock is only an instrument for measuring an unknown concept we have designed for our convenience to allow us to run businesses, trains, airlines and communication systems with coordination. Our personal sense of time varies with what we are doing and how much we are enjoying it or not.


The world's time is controlled by Greenwich Mean Time with the lines of longitude giving changes of time zone. The issue, if we no longer altered the clocks, would be, do we continue to use GMT as the base time or do we use summer time as the measure instead, or even base the clocks on somewhere else in the world.


It always feels good in spring when the clocks go forward because we appear to be having longer days. Equally the change in autumn is depressing because if heralds a long, dark winter. Both of these are an illusion. In fact the whole discussion is about an illusion.

Learn more about this author, Rosemary Redfern.
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Disagree

by Jim Snyder

Created on: November 02, 2009   Last Updated: November 03, 2009

It seems as though every year when it's time to turn my clock back, I think how ridiculous it is that we still adhere to this archaic time-honored tradition. Even though many of my clocks adjust themselves, it still irks me that I yet have to change the time on several, the car's being the worst.

I can never remember how to change the infernal device in the first place, so I end up not watching the road as I maddeningly push and hold buttons that do almost everything but adjust my clock. And you know what, even with the time change, it's still fairly dark out in the morning, and there are deer and Amish running wild on the streets.

But aside from the mild inconveniences and another impetus to be crabby about something, I think I would miss the subtleties inherent in the ritual. I can guarantee that I would bitch and moan about its being gone. For one thing, aside from those in the alcohol distribution arena, it is not an overly-consumerized function.

How many societal ritualized traditions do we have left that can boast this lack of crass commercialism? And then there's that little saying: spring forward, fall back. I'd hate to see that relegated to Trivial Pursuit questions that those born after a certain date can't fathom, like according to Hoyle or not worth a plugged nickel.

As you might guess, I live in a rural agricultural area that has a large Swartzentruber Amish population and abundant wildlife. Obviously neither the Amish nor the deer benefit nor lose anything because of the construction of the seemingly arbitrary time change ritual.

Nor, I suppose do most agricultural folk for whom this bizarre practice was ostensibly intended. But, honestly, are those good enough reasons to abandon it altogether.

I like the romance of it. Autumn in Ohio is an amazing occurrence, especially for those of us who still can feel the awe of the turning, falling and burning leaves, the harvest activities, the apple cider, the pumpkins, the hay rides, the Halloween rituals, and on-and-on.

Even surrounded by all this rustic beauty and charm, there is no time of the year that brings me closer to the workings of Nature and Man's eternal struggle to exist within it. I don't want to lose any of it; including asking my wife every week in October when we need to turn the clocks back.

Learn more about this author, Jim Snyder.
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