Monthly Archives: November 2021

Daylight Savings Time

With today being the day that we return to standard time, this week has seen the semi-annual discussion about abolishing the switches between daylight savings and standard time.  It says something about where we are as a county that most of the discussions begin with the assumption that daylight savings is the norm and standard time is the aberration.

So let’s start with a brief history of how we track time.  For most of history, there was little need to keep track of time or at least not to keep an exact track of time.  Key celestial events (the equinoxes, the solstices, new moons, full moons) were the central feature of the calendar often marked by religious festivities.  But on a day-to-day basis, what mattered was sunrise and sunset.  Since most people lived on the property of their boss (whether semi-voluntarily as hired servants or apprentices or involuntarily as serfs, peasants, or slaves), the day started when the supervisor said it did (typically shortly after sunrise) and ended when the supervisor said it did (around sunset).  Other than sunrise or sunset, the only other key time marker was noon — when the sun was directly overhead.  If people needed to mark time, they used sundials (most accurate on the equinox or if you were close to the equator) or hourglasses.

Over time, mechanical clocks and watches replaced hour glasses as a way to keep track of time.  And, as workers stopped living on their employers’ property,  the town clocks became the official local time.  In most areas, noon remained when the sun was directly overhead. Continue Reading...

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Virginia and New Jersey — Gaffes and What’s Next

It is a quadrennial tradition.  The party in the White House has poor results in the gubernatorial elections in New Jersey and Virginia, and the pundits predict doom and gloom in the mid-term elections.  (Of course, then the party in the White House has losses in the House and maybe losses in the Senate and the pundits say “see we told you so.”  So what lessons should we take from this week’s results.

First, Terry McAuliffe did make a gaffe.  Using the classic definition of a gaffe, he told the truth that nobody wants to hear.  In his case, in response to questions about education, he noted that parents do not get to dictate to the schools what the schools teach.  This statement is partially true.   But as with most sound bites, explaining what was meant takes a lot of time and does not overcome the gut reaction to the original statement.

What is absolutely true is that public schools are not a system of private tutors.  Teachers are responsible for teaching a class of students.    For the system to work, Johnny has to be using the same books and Kathy.  So Johnny’s parents do not get to decide the materials that Johnny has to read for the course. Continue Reading...

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