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Monday, March 10, 2008
David Strom :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Hidden Cost of 'Good' Ideas
by David Strom
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What happens when politicians and pundits succumb to the notion that it is all right to micromanage our daily lives?

Well, for one thing, Daylight Savings Time. I bring this up because I am struggling to stay awake because I lost an hour of sleep to this abominable government regulation.

Daylight Savings Time is now and always has been a bad idea—the product of do-gooders who believe that they can tweak things from Washington to make the world a better place.

They tweak, we submit meekly.

Daylight Savings Time was invented by William Willet in 1905 because he was annoyed that his fellow Londoners slept through what he considered the best part of the day—the early morning. The solution proposed by this busybody was to use the power of government to force everyone to wake up when he thought they should.

The idea didn’t catch on until the advent of World War I, when other busybodies in government latched onto the idea that DST would help save energy, which was then at a premium due to the war. Like many bad ideas, nobody actually did the math to find out whether the underlying premise was correct, and modern DST was born.

It wasn’t until 1918 that the United States joined the bandwagon (soon after we joined the war), and due to the salutary pigheadedness of at least a few Americans it was not universally adopted. Unfortunately, Arizona and Hawaii are the only holdout states left.

Today’s version of Daylight Savings Time—which perversely lasts about twice as long as “standard” time—is still motivated by the supposed need to save energy. Our wise Congress decreed in the Energy Security Act of 2005 a modification that extended DST by another month in order to save energy and reduce greenhouse gases.

The do-gooders are wrong, of course. It is not so easy to tweak the real world in order to get the results you want.

Consider these facts:

Daylight savings time likely increases energy use, despite the fact that Americans use somewhat less lighting than without it. It turns out that heating and air conditioning usage goes up; · Billions of dollars were spent by individuals and companies change the DST rules in computer programs when Congress decided to tweak the rules, creating a mini-Y2K problem; Continued...

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About The Author

David Strom is the President of the Minnesota Free Market Institute. He hosts a weekly radio show on AM-1280 "The Patriot" in Minneapolis-St. Paul, available on podcast at Townhall.com.

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I agree
I hate govt mandates by busybodies like Eliot Spitzer, the state doesn't own our time.

On the other hand
I would just soon that we were permanantly on daylight savings time. I particularly like to have some time after work to get yardwork done so I can clear my weekends for more relaxing activities. DST provides just that! I am with him in that moving back and forth is a pain and changing it from year to year is a really bad idea.
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