Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for March 10, 2024

  1. Missing large
    Len W. Premium Member 9 months ago

    Uh, no. If he’s waking them up in the morning, it’s a Lost hour of daylight with sunrise an hour later.

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    mpguy2  9 months ago

    Daylight Saving time is like cutting one end off of a blanket and sewing it back onto the other end. It’s useful from about the middle of April until just past Labor Day. After that, it’s pretty much of matter of whether you want your darkness in the middle of the morning or the middle of the evening.

     •  Reply
  3. Bluedog
    Bilan  9 months ago

    Uh-oh. Here comes the barrage of DST haters.

     •  Reply
  4. 654px red eyed tree frog   litoria chloris edit1
    Superfrog  9 months ago

    To kill off an idea that dumb you need a much bigger rock.

     •  Reply
  5. Step 1
    mr_sherman Premium Member 9 months ago

    Thank you, Mr. B Franklin – NOT.

     •  Reply
  6. Missing large
    AllishaDawn  9 months ago

    But we aren’t actually getting more sun. Friday and Saturday we had about 12 hours of sun. Today and tomorrow we will still only get about 12 hours of sun. We won’t get ‘more sun’ for another month or so.

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    parforden  9 months ago

    Thanks for the reminder. I totally forgot.

     •  Reply
  8. Noodleman 2  2
    Cornelius Noodleman  9 months ago

    I set my clock too far ahead and had to do it over.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    SHIVA  9 months ago

    I’ve changed the time on 3 devices, the clock in the car, tomorrow!!

     •  Reply
  10. Pexels pixabay 278823
    Doug K  9 months ago

    The “extra hour” comes at the end of the day (sunset) instead of the beginning (sunrise).

     •  Reply
  11. Img 1931
    Sanspareil  9 months ago

    I like saving thyme along with marjoram and parsley and sage and basil and oregano etc etc etc

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    ewaldoh  9 months ago

    I know we’re in Wiley World when the guys set their clocks backwards … or did he move the sun forewords … or did this make sense to anyone who’s sitting in the dark at an hour that –just yesterday– gave some hint of daylight despite the rain?

    I hate DST but I hate messing with the time twice a year even more; yet nobody is willing to go with my idea of a permanent 30 minute compromise. It’s like living in DC.

     •  Reply
  13. The brain
    ArtyD2 Premium Member 9 months ago

    Sorry, I thought he invented the tampon.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    dflak  9 months ago

    I get up in the morning to walk. It will be dark again for about a month.

    I do have to admit that since I like to barbecue my dinner, that the extra hour in the evening is more useful to me than the extra light in the morning. I can eat at 6 or 7 instead of 5:00.

     •  Reply
  15. B model art
    Funniguy  9 months ago

    I’m going back to bed now.

     •  Reply
  16. Cobra 1
    [Traveler] Premium Member 9 months ago

    Hey, when we want the sun to rise later, no problem. We set our clocks ahead an hour, because we’re Americans and that’s what we do.

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    DiminishedFirst  9 months ago

    Wiley can use this again in October by changing the punchline to “The curse of being behind the times.”

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    preacherman Premium Member 9 months ago

    It is now 8:37 DST and I just remembered to set my car’s clock to DST.

     •  Reply
  19. Missing large
    david_42  9 months ago

    I only hate changing the clocks. DST or Standard, just stop the switching.

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    Gen.Flashman  9 months ago

    Problem is at least in Texas it is too hot (90+) between 6-9 (the daylight saved hours) to be outside/take an after dinner walk with the dogs.

     •  Reply
  21. Boston
    MS72  9 months ago

    …and God saw that it was good, and early.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    [Unnamed Reader - bddb15]  9 months ago

    We d

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    [Unnamed Reader - bddb15]  9 months ago

    We don’t have DST in The Cayman Islands however it still screws me up because I cannot figure out what time it is when I phone friends & family in the US.

     •  Reply
  24. Pirate63
    Linguist  9 months ago

    Love the torch instead of a lightbulb as a meme for a bright idea. No anachronism there Wiley! Clever!

    There’s not much difference year-round in the sunrise & sunset times where I live, because we’re close to the Equator. We, sensibly, keep Standard Time all the time!

     •  Reply
  25. 250
    ladykat  9 months ago

    It only feels that way.

     •  Reply
  26. Pilgrim
    Newenglandah  9 months ago

    I read somewhere about a native American who, when someone tried to explain how DST give an extra hour of daylight, responded “only a white man would cut a foot-wide strip off the bottom of a blanket, sew it to the top of the blanket, and think he lengthened the blanket”.

     •  Reply
  27. Missing large
    GreenT267  9 months ago

    People have been needing to know ‘the time’ since civilizations began. The sky has always been an important timekeeper: the sun and the moon divided the day into two parts. Easy – wake up and work in the light; sleep in the dark. Then lamps and candles became common and people could do more stuff in the dark. Ancient Egyptians set up shadow clocks dividing the days into hours. For both work and religious purposes. The problem was that shadow lengths varied over the course of the year. Diagonal star clocks, which made use of the movements of the constellations, had a religious function: with their help, the deceased should be able to ascend to heaven more easily. The Egyptians also invented the water clock in the 16th century BC [Amenhotep III]: water draining from a vessel showed the time completely independent of the season or light.

    Similar water clocks were also used a bit later in Babylonia and China. And in ancient Greece, water clocks were used in court to limit speaking time. “Time has run out” refers to the water clock.

    The Romans adopted the principles of water clocks and sundials from other cultures. The Moors and Arabs also used them. When the Roman Empire collapsed, the knowledge of ancient timekeeping perished. Time-telling pretty much stood still.

    During the Middle Ages, improvements were made to sundials and water clocks and the candle clock was developed around 900 AD. But the most important time indicators were bells on the town and church towers. In 1335, the wheel clock was invented and in each town the doorman or “watchman” was responsible for keeping time for everyone — “9 o’clock and all is well.” At least until the tower clock was developed and everyone could hear the hour rung.

    During the Renaissance, time marched on, getting more accessible and complicated, more useful, more demanding. Hourglasses, home clocks, pocket watches, wristwatches . . . no longer just people telling time, but time telling people.

     •  Reply
  28. Missing large
    smgray  9 months ago

    Time is an artificial construct invented by man. Neither the sun nor the Earth care about it. Pick one and stay with it so we know when to leave to arrive at work, for the airlines and trains to have definitive schedules and to give teachers a reason to mark someone “tardy.”

     •  Reply
  29. Img 20220514 wa0005
    grange Premium Member 9 months ago

    We don’t have DST which, by the way, I like. Even so, and much to my chagrin, we had to restart our phones this morning because they insisted on running with the lemmings, and woke us up an hour early.

     •  Reply
  30. Gocomic avatar
    sandpiper  9 months ago

    I’m with the ‘pick one and stay with it’ group. While I am retired so there is no ‘work schedule,’ I would prefer EST, which is where I began 88 years ago, but I will adapt as I have since this ‘mankind playing with the solar calendar’ thing began.

    Typically, it began with a congress that just couldn’t help mess with something out of their mandate, while they were totally unable to handle the many ordinary problems already on their menus. Just like the congress that now is kneeling to His Lordship, Buttercup The Indicted.

     •  Reply
  31. 161326 jus dis crow
    RitaGB  9 months ago

    Today is the shortest day of the year. 23 hours.

     •  Reply
  32. Picture 7 banjogordy crp 100
    Banjo Gordy Premium Member 9 months ago

    Don’t need DST in 2-Sun AZ.

     •  Reply
  33. Missing large
    garysmigs  9 months ago

    each town had their own time before railroads, ah, the really good old days!

     •  Reply
  34. Missing large
    Rauderi  9 months ago

    I can’t be ahead of my time. The hour moved up!

     •  Reply
  35. Missing large
    Otis Rufus Driftwood  9 months ago

    I actually was able to sleep well at the start of Daylight Saving Time for once in how I planned things. That said, I would love to be rid of it for good.

     •  Reply
  36. Missing large
    leroywilcoxson  9 months ago

    Move it 30 min. and leave it alone.

     •  Reply
  37. Apollo 11 launch 04
    Steverino Premium Member 9 months ago

    I am ahead of my time. I set my clocks ahead yesterday evening.

     •  Reply
  38. Missing large
    JoeStoppinghem Premium Member 9 months ago

    Standard Time is God’s Time.

    And God’s Time is America’s Time.

     •  Reply
  39. Notatroll
    Whatever happened to common sense?  9 months ago

    Daylight Stupid Time should have been abolished decades ago. It serves no purpose. It doesn’t “make the days longer,” or “save energy,” or “help the farmers,” or any of the other misconceptions that continue to circulate.

    The extra sunlight during the spring and summer months is the result of the Earth tilting on its axis, not because people have messed with their clocks. The Sun doesn’t move. With DST, you are merely getting up one hour earlier, which creates the illusion of a “longer day.”

    Standard Time is the true measure of time and should be permanent. Anyone who wishes to continue pursuing that mythical “longer day” is free to get up an hour earlier during the spring and summer months.

     •  Reply
  40. Kirby close up with poppies behind   close cropped
    mistercatworks  9 months ago

    Daylight Saving Time is perpetuated by guys in suits who want to play an extra round of golf in the evening. It is demonstrably hard on the body. The Sun makes the time. Exercising in the morning is better because it gets your body going for the day. It is much, much harder getting up in the dark to do that for a couple of extra months.

     •  Reply
  41. Anishnawbe
    Allan CB Premium Member 9 months ago

    “Only a white man would cut 2 inches off the top of blanket, sew it to the bottom of the blanket, and say the blanket was longer.” ~ Chief Whitefeather

     •  Reply
  42. S bearcolorsmall
    Bookbear Premium Member 9 months ago

    Yep! That be me. I realize that time is an artificial concept, but pick a time and %&*$ing STICK WITH IT!

     •  Reply
  43. Louis2
    PoodleGroomer  9 months ago

    My sundial still reads the same.

     •  Reply
  44. Desktop 07
    WTP  9 months ago

    This is the worst day of the year when they steal an hour of my sleep, made up only when we switch back on my favorite day of the year. Would someone get me some coffee?

     •  Reply
  45. 136061 pic
    Mike Baldwin creator 9 months ago

    Wiley is an inspiration!

     •  Reply
  46. Daffy duck1
    Stargazer1950  9 months ago

    Why don’t they just split the difference, move the clocks ahead 30 minutes and leave it there?

     •  Reply
  47. Pupil
    Ka`ōnōhi`ula`okahōkūmiomio`ehiku Premium Member 9 months ago

    I love the fractured ‘Zs’ that Wiley uses as a waking-up.

     •  Reply
  48. Valstone
    vlbrown Premium Member 9 months ago

    but… that hour is in the evening…

     •  Reply
  49. Missing large
    swenbu Premium Member 9 months ago

    I don’t have time to find out what anyone else thought about the “lightbulb” idea! I thought it was clever!

     •  Reply
  50. Missing large
    Robert Craigs  9 months ago

    I used to do rotating shifts. Seven 12 hr shifts per fortnight. First group: Mon, Tues 06;00-18:00; then three nights 18:00-06:00, Starting Wed evening. Next group started at 06:00 the following Wed. Third group was a 3 day-shift weekend and two nights. We laughed at people complaining about DST one hour time changes. We had a twelve hour time change twice per fortnight. It takes about a year to get over living that way! I survived my long commute and long shifts by getting a nap on my lunch breaks.

     •  Reply
  51. Whatever
    unfair.de  9 months ago

    In the end we’re all still cavemen.

     •  Reply
  52. Curious cat
    Curiosity Premium Member 9 months ago

    One of the dumbest ideas ever. A lot of the world has moved away from it.

     •  Reply
  53. Curious cat
    Curiosity Premium Member 9 months ago

    Ummm, it doesn’t work that way. The “extra” daylight is supposed to magically appear at the end of the day, not the beginning. No wonder they reacted so badly!

     •  Reply
  54. Missing large
    Rabies65  9 months ago

    They showed great mercy by not flogging him before crushing.

     •  Reply
  55. The wanderer
    anomaly  9 months ago

    What is this ‘hour’ of which you speak?

     •  Reply
  56. Camera1 016
    keenanthelibrarian  9 months ago
    Verily I say unto you, no prophet is accepted in his own country. (Luke 4:24)
     •  Reply
  57. Boris badenov
    thedogesl Premium Member 9 months ago

    Just pick one and stick with it. But apparently we’re incapable of even agreeing on that. No wonder we’re so screwed up.

     •  Reply
  58. Missing large
    pflutke59  9 months ago

    Since I retired, and now live in Arizona, this doesn’t affect me at all. Rise when I want to, ignoring what the clock says. I imagine that those that work in agriculture and other activities not tied to an artificial schedule, also use the sun as their guide, and ignore the clock on the wall.

     •  Reply
  59. Missing large
    PaulGoes  9 months ago

    He’s ahead of his time because he moved the clocks forward

     •  Reply
  60. Amazing fox photos 25
    eddi-TBH  9 months ago

    That idea has lost momentum.

     •  Reply
  61. 8c8a2b88 b943 4341 8658 bea1e9116261 1 201 a
    cbedda  9 months ago

    Thanks – always blamed Ben Franklin for making it popular

     •  Reply
  62. Toughcat
    bakana  9 months ago

    No wonder so many ReichPublicans love Daylight Savings time.

    They get to Lie about what time it is for 6 whole months.

     •  Reply
  63. Cathy aack
    lindz.coop Premium Member 9 months ago

    My favorite day of the year…nice driving home from a movie tonight in twilight.

     •  Reply
  64. Missing large
    fjblume2000  9 months ago

    Don’t you think it’s time for our illustrious (or is it illustrated?) Federal legislators buckled down and got some real, serious work done? DST was good for its time (That’ a pun, son!) and its place BUT it ain’t down on the farm — just ask any cow waiting to be milked (which is udder foolishness as cows don’t talk to humans!) … Sorry, boys and girls … it was yuust to good to resist. Also sprach Zarathustra! They (cows) don’t watch no clock no how!

     •  Reply
  65. Camera1 016
    keenanthelibrarian  9 months ago

    And, of course, we all realise that sleeping time is wasted time, DON’T WE?

     •  Reply
  66. Missing large
    ckeller  9 months ago

    Two-step process for actually enjoying watching a sunrise: 1) Watch sunset. 2) Replay it backward in your head.

     •  Reply
  67. Not sure if i miss you or i miss insulting you meme
    Craig in Melbourne  9 months ago

    Summer time impacts those closer to the poles more than those who live near the tropics. The local time of sunrise and sunset doesn’t vary as much near the equator, no matter the season days are around 12 hours long. I can understand why AZ and TX may not see the value. But DST does mean that daylight isn’t wasted on sleep. Sure, there are those outliers who get up at 3am every day, but DST or not, you’re still going to be getting up in the dark. For all the cries about the impact on the body and sleep – it’s one hour twice a year! Surely everyone can get used to the change within a week – that’s 50 weeks where sleep should not be impacted. And coming into winter, we get a lovely extra hour in bed :-)

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Non Sequitur