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  • And now last week tonight asks, How is this still a thing this week?

  • Daylight saving time.

  • How is this still a thing?

  • Like most Americans, you've been groggy all day after losing an hour of sleep to daylight saving.

  • And as you struggle to remember how to change the clock on your king microwave, you may have wondered, why is this happening?

  • Four years?

  • Conventional wisdom has been that it benefits one particular group.

  • I know it started because of farmers.

  • I'm almost sure of that.

  • But that's not actually true.

  • It gives that extra time to plan extra time.

  • Thio artist.

  • It has nothing to do with farmers.

  • I remember lives ago, hearing that it was for the farm people.

  • The foreign people want nothing to do with this.

  • As they themselves will tell you.

  • I know really know farmer that I'm aware of that benefits from from actually farm activities on daylight savings.

  • Of course, daylight saving doesn't benefit farmers.

  • Cows don't care what time it is because their cows and cows are idiots.

  • So if it's not for them, who is it for?

  • The modern Daylight saving was introduced during the first World War as a fuel saving measured by the Germans.

  • That's right.

  • You lost an hour of sleep this morning, thanks to Kaiser Wilhelm on.

  • Well back then, Daylight saving may indeed have saved fuel.

  • In the modern era, energy consumption is a little more complicated.

  • In fact, when Indiana adopted daylight saving in 2006 guess what happened.

  • The data shows that daylight saving actually led to a 1% overall rise in residential electricity.

  • Of course, it did, because switching on a lamp an hour later in the summer.

  • It doesn't really matter when you're blasting an air conditioner and staying up all night psychotically scrolling through instagrams of your exes honeymoon to Morocco.

  • But that's not to say daylight saving doesn't have any effects at all.

  • Studies show there is an increase of car accidents and work related injuries the week after the time change.

  • That's right.

  • What you lose and sleep, you gain in mortal danger.

  • Despite all this, 70 countries around the world still observe daylight saving.

  • And yet, by going by local news reports, none of them could tell you why.

  • From Australia.

  • Well, daylight saving is almost over for another year, and with it comes the usual debate over its merits or lack thereof.

  • To Italy.

  • It's a pain in the ass, basically, to even the Germans, the people who started this whole mess.

  • It's the time change for many people is ridiculous.

  • Whether it's an hour ahead or later is complete nonsense, complete nonsense.

  • And that's coming from a country that thinks this is a word on that this is dancing.

  • So if it doesn't benefit our energy bill, our health or our stupid, stupid cows, it has to make you wonder daylight saving time.

  • How is this still a thing?

And now last week tonight asks, How is this still a thing this week?

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