With Daylight Savings once again coming up, it never fails for it to spark discussions about its purpose in modern times. People hate it widely while few seem to be okay with it and depending where you live, others don’t even know what the deal is.

Politicians have actually put it on the docket to be voted on, but seems to have lost traction. Quite frankly, this is an issue that should be done and over with. Just end it, but please end it when we have the clocks dialed back than forward, because I wouldn’t like time going faster than it already is.

  • FreshParsnip@lemmy.ca
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    12 minutes ago

    Here in Canada, parliament has been discussing universal basic income for years. Economists have proven it would save the government money. It would be a win-win. Do it already.

  • FreshParsnip@lemmy.ca
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    15 minutes ago

    I want to stay on daylight saving time year round. I agree, the fact that we keep changing the time twice a year is ridiculous. There’s no reason. Who is demanding we do this? We’re doing it solely because of tradition, like in the story “The Lottery” where they stone a random person to death every year for no reason, just because of tradition. Ironically, this is something I can see Trump getting rid of, it would be one of the very few things I’d support him on (along with abolishing pennies)

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    4 hours ago

    People with young kids do not want daylight savings time all year around because it would be dark when they go to school. People like myself would like dst all year around because we hate it being dark at 4pm.

  • whotookkarl@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 hours ago

    Daylight savings, pennies, the electoral college, gerrymandering, monopolies, the oil industry, for profit prisons healthcare and education, poverty, borders, militaries/armies, interest, capitalism, countries, shirt tags

  • LincolnsDogFido@lemmy.zip
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    6 hours ago
    • Doorbells and dogs barking in commercials
    • General purpose household lighting above 3500K color temperature
    • LED rope lighting bordering a storefront’s windows and doors
    • Terrible cereal bags
    • Turn indicators being on the inside corner of headlight assemblies
    • 4 legged chairs/stools/tables at restaurants. By employing a 3 leg standard, they’re incapable of being wobbly
    • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      3 legged chairs sounds like a nightmare, why not 4 legs with basic suspension mechanisms in the legs? 3 legged chairs is such a bad idea I’m questioning the validity of most of the rest of your screed. How do you propose 3 legged chairs to work without being a tipping hazard? 1 leg in the front or well off the back (impeding the walkway behind the chair)

      • LincolnsDogFido@lemmy.zip
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        1 hour ago

        The heat press or glue or whatever is too strong and keeps me from opening the bag cleanly. Top tier cereal bags essentially peel open and leave a clean hole at the top of the bag to pour from.

      • Vupware@lemmy.zip
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        2 hours ago

        Not OP, but I would say a lot of cereal bag plastic has too much elasticity. This means that you will pull in the bag in attempts to open it, but the plastic will just stretch, until all of a sudden the elastic tension (?) is released and the energy is distributed through a hairline crack in the bag that goes halfway down. The sudden release of energy can also cause the cereal to go everywhere.

  • invertedspear@lemmy.zip
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    6 hours ago

    States can opt out of DST like AZ and HI. But the federal government doesn’t allow for states to opt in to permanent DST like CA tried to do.

    I agree we should just ditch it at the federal level. But states are welcome to ditch it whenever they want, as long as they actually ditch it, and not try to make it an all year thing.

    • HubertManne@piefed.social
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      4 hours ago

      Some states have chosen their timezone. Whats the difference between dst all year around over just moving the timezone over?

    • bampop@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      It really is amazing, all the insights, the discoveries, the knowledge, the artistry, the technology that the human race has acquired. Historically, every time we thought we knew the limits of our potential, we have gone far beyond those limits. Except that we still haven’t figured out how not to hand over control of everything to the absolute worst of us. Like literally put our most deluded narcissistic psychopathic pedophiles in charge of the entire fucking world.

      • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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        15 minutes ago

        This is the purpose of the American Experiment. To devise a society that won’t ever truly be occupied entirely by the worst of us.

    • pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      I’m in Australia and it still shits me to tears that I can’t mathematically communicate with Americans. We just changed one day and it was done.

      That said, the Australian mainland is running 5 different timezones right now. Some zones are only 30 minutes apart. We also have a little island just off the coast of Sydney where the DST shift is 30 minutes. The entire planet does an hour. We’ve introduced this edge case for the sake of 400 people and some stick insects.

    • YiddishMcSquidish@lemmy.today
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      17 hours ago

      Anyone tangentially studying anything scientific with real life measurements in the US is versed in metric. Imperial really is for the dum dums and their precious feel feels.

      • UPGRAYEDD@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        I just wish i didnt have to own 2 sets of tools. Even if we officially swap, im still going to have to keep 2 sets because of all the legacy junk around.

        Really though, phillips heads screws bother me more than anything else. There literally designed, on purpose to strip.

        • YiddishMcSquidish@lemmy.today
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          16 hours ago

          Fuck, I forgot about auto work.

          Also, I think hex heads are more prone in smaller applications. Phillips should’ve been the square head.

  • Janx@piefed.social
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    20 hours ago

    Private health insurance companies. Study after study has shown that Americans pay more, get worse care, and are completely at the whim of these unnecessary middlemen. What the fuck!? EVERY OTHER MODERN COUNTRY HAS SINGLE-PAYER. It’s efficient, it’s obvious, it works.

    The United Healthcare CEO further enriched himself by denying more legitimate claims than any other company. A private company, that can decide whether you can afford to live or die. Entire families are completely bankrupted over medical bills. Every. Single. Year. In the United States of America. It’s the entire reason Luigi Mangione garnered so much understanding and sympathy. (Not that it could have been him, he was at my place, we were playing Super Nintendo…)

  • eightpix@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago
    • Expensive education

    • Cities planned for cars

    • 5-day work weeks

    • Grey’s Anatomy

    • Nuclear weapons

    • Racism

    And I agree with the others who’ve said:

    • Fossil fuels, particularly coal

    • Private health insurance

    • MimicJar@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Grey’s Anatomy

      As someone who still watches let me assure you we all want it to come to an end. There was even a moment a few seasons ago where Meredith left and it seemed like we were set up for a perfect send off.

      But it just kept going. Meredith is weirdly sometimes back despite living in Boston. But next season is probably the last season, and I’ve watched it all at this point, so what’s a little more. Right?

      (It’s also still fine as background TV, so that’s probably why I still keep up.)

        • DasFaultier@sh.itjust.works
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          15 hours ago

          I personally find nothing wrong with him, that’s why I put it in quote format.

          It’s an old Scrubs quote by Dr. Cox, who would rattle down long lists of things he dislikes or that he finds wrong with the world in general, ending it with: “… and Hugh Jackman.”

          The comment above mine reminded me of this.

    • QuincyPigBoy@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      As a person who was an atheist for my entire adult life, so 20 years, we are incorrect. It has become very clear to me over the last two years that a notion that we are born, die and its lights out forever is wildly naive. I’m not sure which religion is correct, if any, but there’s something. Google Zoroastrianism if you’re open minded about. I’m not saying that it’s the one hit the abrahamic religions base a lot of their values on i and it predicates all the religion theatrics.

      • chunes@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        It’s naive to think death is lights out forever but not for the reason you said.

        The clue is in your incomplete chronology: born -> die -> lights out forever.

        It was also lights out forever before birth, but then it suddenly wasn’t.

      • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        I would like to have a genuine conversation with you about your take. What happened to you in the last two years that had you about-face on your (lack of) faith?

        I used to be religious growing up (it was a familial expectation). Then I kinda half-heartedly gave up, and I became agnostic. Eventually I decided that there is no God as we know it, but I do not deny the idea that there was some greater hand at play in our existence as a species.

        Things do feel a little too coincidental to simply be random. For existence, our existence in general: the earth had to form in just the right place in space, and the temperature and oxygen levels had to level out to a specific point for humanoids to form and grow.

        I know that can all be explained by science, and I am not disputing any science. But that’s my anecdotal opinion on why I feel there is something/someone out there bigger than us (but not a God).

        Like I said, I’m genuinely curious on your take.