Top X Posts (formerly Tweets) for Daylight Saving Time Begins
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It’s time we pass the Sunshine Protection Act to make Daylight Saving Time permanent. Let’s give families in Florida and across the nation the much-needed benefit of more sunshine and make this ‘spring forward’ the last one! rickscott.senate.gov IN CASE YOU MISSED IT… Sen. Rick Scott Leads Bipartisan Effort to Make Daylight Saving Time...
Replying to @elonmusk No. Permanent DST is a mandate to wake early and sleep less. Daylight Saving Time costs hundreds of lives and thousands of dollars each year. Restore permanent Standard Time instead—the clock set to the sun!
Replying to @elonmusk We prefer fair and balanced clocks. Daylight Saving Time is a mandate to wake early and sleep less. Permanent Standard Time keeps the sun’s zenith at noon—best for health and safety!
Replying to @RapidResponse47 Dear Mr President, Gallup just released a poll showing most Americans want permanent Standard Time, not permanent Daylight Saving Time, by a two-to-one margin! Permanent Standard Time is naturally best for health, safety, and prosperity. Eliminate DST! Show more
Good Sunday morning! Is it just me, or does daylight saving time feel like the universe’s way of reminding us that time is an illusion? Today’s sunrise from Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA.
WRONG! Gallup Poll just confirmed the following: 48% - PERMANENT STANDARD TIME 24% - PERMANENT DST 19% - CURRENT CLOCK CHANGES It's not a 50/50 issue. The majority, similar to your election, want PERMANENT STANDARD TIME! It is not even close. Show more President Donald J. Trump Quote Rapid Response 47 @RapidResponse47 · 20h 0:43 POTUS on Daylight Savings: "It's a 50/50 issue and if something is a 50/50 issue, it's hard to get excited about it. I assume people would like to have more light later, but some people want to have more light earlier because they don't want to take their kids to school in the…
Replying to @elonmusk Yes ! Please @SecRubio see if you can get enough votes to keep daylight saving time! I would change my Clock one more time to see this happen. I know it’s not the most pressing issue but I love the longer nights!
— Americana at Brand Memes (@americanamemes) March 9, 2025
‘Daylight saving time’ is also sometimes called ‘daylight saving,’ ‘daylight savings,’ ‘daylight savings time,’ or ‘daylight time.’ So, listen to your heart.
Daylight Saving Time is the practice of setting clocks ahead by one hour from Standard Time during the warm parts of the year, so that evenings have more daylight and mornings have less. The primary purpose of this exercise is to make better use of daylight and conserve energy.
Proposed by George Vernon Hudson in 1895, the concept was not adopted until World War I as a way to conserve coal. The US officially instituted daylight saving time in 1918. However, the idea became largely unpopular, leading to its repeal in 1919. It was not until during World War II that the US saw the return of Daylight Saving Time, after which individual states and communities were allowed to choose whether to observe it or not until a federal law was passed in 1966 standardizing the start and end dates.
Today, most areas of the United States observe Daylight Saving Time, where the time is set forward 1 hour to extend evening daylight and reduce the need for artificial lighting. It begins on the second Sunday of March and ends on the first Sunday of November, providing an extra hour of evening light during the warmer months of the year.
Facts about Daylight Saving Time Begins
On March 16th, 2022, the U.S. Senate passed a bill titled the Sunshine Protection Act. The bill makes daylight savings time the new, permanent standard time, which takes effect in November 2023.
Benjamin Franklin first proposed the idea of DST in 1784. He wrote An Economical Project for the Journal of Paris, wherein he discussed the cost of oil for lamps as well as working while it was dark, and sleeping while it was day.
Daylight Savings Time changes at 2:00 a.m. This time is selected in an effort to provide the least amount of inconvenience to businesses and citizens.
DST always begins on the second Sunday in March, and ends on the first Sunday in November.
Hawaii and Arizona do not use DST. Only part of Indiana used it, but since 2006, it's used throughout the whole state.
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