Federal Reshuffling of Our Days
by
Gail Jarvis
by
Gail Jarvis
I
have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night.
~
Sarah Williams
With
the problems our nation is currently facing, many people may not
view a critique of daylight savings time as a subject of consequence.
Indeed, they may wonder why I would waste time over something as
seemingly trivial as DST. But the federal government’s arbitrary
reshuffling of our days is a typical example of inappropriate bureaucratic
behavior and, in my opinion, quite significant.
I
have been an opponent of daylight savings time (I know it should
be "saving" rather that "savings" but I’ll use
the government’s terminology) for as long as I can remember. For
years I have sent grumbling letters to the editors of local newspapers
at the onset of DST. When my letters appear, I always hear from
many people who agree with me. But a significant number disagree.
I am amazed that so many actually support this arbitrary time change.
Supporters
of daylight savings time claim that days, hours and minutes are
simply arbitrary constructs of man, therefore man is at liberty
to change them to accommodate his needs. Although a "day"
is in essence, a creation of mankind, its structure is far from
arbitrary. Prehistoric man set noon as the moment when the sun is
at its highest point in the sky. With noon as a fixed point, morning,
afternoon and night could be placed in their relationship to noon.
When the sun rose, it signaled the beginning of day. When the sun
went down, it signaled the beginning of night. Night is as essential
as day to our health and well-being.
The
animal kingdom also conducts its activities around this concept
of a day, often called the "rhythm of nature." The blooms
of many plants open when the sun rises and close when it sets. Of
course, there are nocturnal animals and plants but they also adhere
to the circadian rhythms. When civilized communities developed,
the rhythm of nature continued to determine how days were broken
up into hours usually based on shadows projected from sundials
strategically placed to determine the location of the sun. This
same rhythm of nature model was used when time was eventually "standardized";
standardized by creating time zones across the country based on
the earth’s rotation around the sun.
For
millennia this concept of a day worked well. But it was inevitable
that man would eventually try to alter the rhythm of nature. Benjamin
Franklin may have been the first person to conceive the idea of
saving daylight. As a resident of Paris in the 1780s, Franklin focused
his keen mind on the amount of candles and oil for lamps Parisians
were using after the sun went down. Franklin’s projections on the
overall cost of candles and oil consumption by Parisians led to
a proposal for an official delay of the onset of darkness. This
experiment of saving daylight was tried, without much success, not
only in Paris but other parts of Europe. Still over the years, DST
has continued to intrigue bureaucrats, especially as governments
grew larger and more intrusive.
We
are told that 25% of our power usage is for lighting and small appliances
used by families in the evening hours. The government maintains
that by moving the clock ahead one hour, we can reduce the amount
of power we consume by about one percent each day. I don’t know
what this estimate is based on but I do not believe it. I have never
found anyone who has noticed any reduction, however small, in their
monthly power bills during DST. If there is a savings by government
agencies or large corporations, it certainly has not been passed
along to the public.
Do
government bureaucrats think that these "small appliances"
are only used after the sun goes down? Do they honestly believe
that TVs, stereos, VCRs, DVDs, video games, home computers, ovens,
dishwashers, microwaves and all the other appliances are only used
after sunset? Do they also believe that sunlight passing through
windows completely negates the use of electric lights? Millions
of Americans live in apartment complexes with windows on only one
side of a four-sided unit. Sunlight from windows on only one wall
will hardly provide enough lighting for the average apartment dweller.
And I hope these bureaucrats don’t think that an extra hour of sunlight
reduces the use of air conditioning.
But
if a theory sounds good, politicians do not usually spend a lot
of time analyzing the data justifying it. They blithely pass a law
like daylight savings time without knowing if it will be beneficial
or not. However, that doesn’t prevent them from referring to the
law as "progress." Being something of a Luddite, I always
cringe when I hear a politician use the word "progress."
It usually means something that works well is being replaced by
an untested theory. In the case of DST, it is a theory that moves
us further away from nature and the rhythm of nature.
To
make things worse, politicians rarely amend or repeal a law even
though the conditions for its original justification might have
changed. To their way of thinking, if daylight savings time seemed
like a good idea in 1966 it must still be a good idea in 2005. Of
course there are the herd mentality politicians who simply follow
along a recent example can be found in Indiana, one of the places
that had wisely resisted DST. In April, the Indiana legislature,
by a slim majority, voted to impose DST on the state. The Indiana
House Speaker encouraged the vote with this comment: "Now is
the day to tell the rest of the world that we are willing to step
into the 21st century." I think the people of Indiana
would prefer their legislators to base their votes on something
more substantial than showing the world that the state was willing
to step into the 21st century.
Other
arguments for DST it reduces traffic accidents and promotes commerce are also questionable. Studies in various countries on the reduction
of traffic accidents as a result of DST have produced conflicting
conclusions. And I doubt that there is any hard data that indicates
that shifting one hour of daylight from morning to evening will
significantly increase commerce. But these kinds of dubious claims
seem to be good enough for our legislators.
From
an aesthetic standpoint, daylight savings time has robbed us of
the night; that mysterious and most therapeutic part of the day.
Darkness provides solace from busy daylight hours unless one simply
replaces the noisy restlessness of the day with frenetic television
programs in the evening. But an end to DST would allow us to once
again to sit outside in the quiet of the evening, without the television
set or the cell phone, and try to recover the lost art of conversation
while experiencing the curative powers of sunsets, stars and moonlight.
Especially
annoying to me is that DST prevents us from enjoying the ancient
human tradition of viewing sunsets. I always remember watching fantastic
sunsets as a child. Often the entire family would sit outside talking
and reminiscing as we watched the sun sink below the horizon. Even
more spectacular is viewing the sunset from the vantage point of
a beach. There are amazing, magical-seeming color changes in the
sky blue, gray, orange, red and violet eventually the sun becomes
bright red and slips into the ocean.
I
also remember searching for constellations in the night sky. Many
in the current generation may find this activity a little boring
compared to watching the latest segment of "Desperate Housewives"
on television. But, as a young person and even as I grew older,
it was exciting to try to locate those clusters of stars as their
positions changed with the seasons. And young children enjoy discovering
the interconnectedness of constellations like the Big and Little
Dipper and Orion. It teaches them patience, doesn’t set their nerves
a jangle and isn’t likely to cause Attention Deficit Disorder.
Luckily,
the number of people who want daylight savings time ended is growing.
There is even an End Daylight
Savings Time website that has become a focal point for those
who want this intrusive annual time change ended. The site provides
information about DST and encourages opponents to let congressmen
in their states know their feelings (as I have done). It also provides
how-to information as well as a petition that can be signed to urge
the return to year-round Standard Time.
The
late Canadian journalist and author, Robertson Davies, said this
of DST: "I object to being told that I am saving daylight when
I am doing nothing of the kind. I even object to the implication
that I am wasting something valuable if I stay in bed after the
sun has risen. As an admirer of moonlight I resent the bossy insistence
of those who want to reduce my time for enjoying it. At the back
of the Daylight Savings scheme I detect the bony, blue-fingered
hand of Puritanism, eager to push people into bed earlier, and get
them up earlier, to make them healthy, wealthy, and wise in spite
of themselves."
The
poll numbers regarding approval of DST are confusing. We are told
that the majority like it. But in these same polls, the percentage
of those opposing the annual time change is identical to those favoring
it.
Having
an agrarian predisposition, I believe our society is moving too
far away from the rhythm of nature. I also believe that this estrangement
from nature contributes to the malaise of our overly-medicated generation.
Uninterrupted, year-round Standard Time would not be a panacea for
our discontent but I think it might be a first step in the right
direction.
June
16, 2005
Gail
Jarvis [send
him mail] is a free-lance writer living in Beaufort, S.C.
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© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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