>
Elon Musk Reveals The Big-Name Democratic Donors Funding Attacks on Tesla Stores
Federal Judge Imposes $24 Billion Judgement Against China For COVID Cover-Up...
DEVELOPING: Massive Wildfires Break Out On Long Island Near The Ultra-Wealthy Hamptons...
Disney Introduces First Explicitly Christian Character in Almost Two Decades
Solar film you can stick anywhere to generate energy is nearly here
Honda's New Hydrogen Fuel Cell Produces More Power For Half The Price
Paper battery could take over for lithium-ion ... in EVs and beyond
Musk Begins Testing His Starlink Terminals in US Airspace System
Mercedes' Solid-State Battery Prototype Comes Out Of The Lab, Onto The Road
Scientists discover mysterious form of energy in Egypt's pyramids that should only exist...
Microsoft Majorana 1 Chip Has 8 Qubits Right Now with a Roadmap to 1 Million Raw Qubits
The car that lets you FLY over traffic jams! Futuristic £235,000 vehicle takes flight...
Floating nuclear power plants to be mass produced for US coastline
Authored by Jacob Burg via The Epoch Times,
Americans will again change their clocks on March 9, setting them one hour ahead to observe Daylight Saving Time in a yearly cyclical pattern that experts say leads to more car accidents, heart attacks, and strokes.
Efforts are underway to stop this process. Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) is touting a bipartisan effort known as the "Sunshine Protection Act," which would make Daylight Saving Time the national year-round standard.
In 2023, Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.) and then-Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) launched similar legislation under the same name. Rubio's bill passed through the Senate, but Buchanan's version stalled in the House.
Those efforts, or some version of them, may now come to fruition under the new administration.
President Donald Trump said in December 2024 that the Republican Party "will use its best efforts to eliminate Daylight Saving Time ... [which] is inconvenient, and very costly to our Nation."
That move, unlike Congress' efforts, would make Standard Time permanent, which is what Americans experience from November through March after setting their clocks back one hour.
While that would retain the exceedingly early winter evenings that many criticize, it would still mean an end to the time changes, which experts cite as the primary health and safety risk.