Re Connie Meskimen's comments on Daylight Saving Time exacerbating warming: It is hard to believe in this day and time that there are still people who believe that night and day are controlled by human beings. That the world rotates on an axis and moves around the sun is apparently an unknown scientific fact to some people.
Whether we put a time frame around this occurrence is a human need. There is no more daylight than usual, regardless of the time. I can't believe the Democrat-Gazette would even print such drivel. Oh, wait. Maybe it is because it is another attempt to bash liberals. How sad.
I am baffled by your accepting, much less featuring, the letter about Daylight Saving Time. Did the editor accept the premise that our warmer March was due to the extra hour of daylight? Or was the intent to show how illogical those opposed to the concept of global warming can be?
The bias of the writer is shown by "You would think that members of Congress would have considered the warming effect that an extra hour of daylight would have on our climate." There is later reference to the "liberal Congress." The notion reminds me of earlier arguments that with Daylight Saving Time, the hens would get confused and not know when to lay their eggs.
Nature and weather are, of course, unrelated to our choice of how we divide the day. In fact, it is only in relatively recent times that we divided the day into
24 hours and had clocks.
Re the letter from Connie M. Meskimen about Daylight Saving Time: Oh, please, please, please tell me that the date of that submission was
April 1.
A recent letter to the editor excoriated Congress for changing the start of Daylight Saving Time. The writer said that the abnormally high temperatures in March were due to the effects of the extra hour of daylight.
In fact, the letter even insinuated that the change to Daylight Saving Time was a plot by Congress to exacerbate the effects of global warming and make it a bigger political issue.
I have some bad news for the letter writer. In March, we had the exact same number of hours of daylight as we do every March. While Congress has the power to change many laws, it cannot change the laws of nature. All the members did was change the time on our clocks. They did not actually add any hours of daylight.
Having just read the letter from Connie M. Meskimen of Hot Springs, I'm at a loss to figure out how she thinks Daylight Saving Time, even if it is "another plot by a liberal Congress," could have any effect on how many hours of daylight or darkness there are in the world.
Congress may and does make a lot of dumb moves, but this is one thing it can't change. All those "legions of bugs and snakes" crawling around don't have clocks, just natural instinct, which tells them when it's warm enough and light enough to crawl around.
On the other hand, maybe it is I who don't understand Daylight Saving Time.
No doubt mine will not be the only response to letter writer Connie Meskimen. First of all, she is correct to acknowledge the changes we've all seen in seasonal patterns. Sadly, though, she apparently doesn't want to believe that this is indeed a result of global climate change, which will continue to have an impact on our environment until notable measures are taken to slow the damage being done to our atmosphere. To deny that the problem exists is just willful ignorance.
With regard to the extension of Daylight Saving Time, I would like to point out that this measure was enacted by a Republican-controlled Congress and signed by a Republican president as part of the Energy Policy Act of 2005. So much for her vast, left-wing, liberal conspiracy.
But perhaps her most bizarre thinking is that somehow Congress has created an extra hour of daylight out of thin air. Anyone with even a basic understanding of reality knows that the number of hours of daylight we have on any given day isn't altered by simply resetting a clock. We also know that this simple shift of time can help reduce the consumption of energy by delaying the increased need and use of electricity after sundown. Perhaps Meskimen can find an elementary school student to explain it to her.
Re the letter from Connie M. Meskimen: I am somewhat confused. She states that we've had the "hottest March since the beginning of the last century," and she goes on to blame Congress for that due to the earlier than normal time change.
Well, we did "spring forward" a few weeks earlier than we have in the past. What I am confused about is, no matter whether our clocks are set forward one hour or back one hour, don't we continue to have the same amount of daylight hours every day? I have decided, though, to be very careful about my voting in 2008. Whether conservative or liberal, I don't want to be guilty of voting in someone who has that much power over our weather!