Be gentle with yourselves, dear readers. You lost an hour of sleep due to the American system of daylight savings time (DST), by which we move our clocks forward one hour in spring to give us more daylight in the afternoon. “Arise!” says your clock. Your body says, “Too early!”
Should we keep this system of moving our clocks backward and forward? President Trump signaled in December 2024 his desire to get rid of DST, observing that it was both “inconvenient” and “very costly to our nation.” More recently, he has hedged on pushing for a change because Americans are divided on it: “And if something’s a 50-50 issue, it’s hard to get excited about it.”
Though Americans are not unanimous on the issue, there is evidence that a majority support keeping one standard of time. If we want to truly Make America Healthy Again, year-round Standard Time is one tool to do so.
DST is not an ancient custom hallowed by constant usage. Until 1883 in America, most local communities set their own clocks. The adoption of standardized time zones was required by the system of railroads—everybody needed to be on the same clocks so that the trains not only ran on time but did not crash.
DST was introduced in 1918 alongside our now familiar four time zones (five were created at the time, including Alaska) as part of the Standard Time Act. (The official name is “daylight saving time,” but even my spellcheck tends to prefer “savings.”)
The point of DST was to stretch working hours and conserve energy during World War I. The next year DST was repealed, but many communities and even states kept it. The standardization of the clocks was not complete.
National DST was mandated again during World War II for the same reasons as it was during World War I. It was made optional afterward for the same reasons: it was controversial. My father told me that when he lived with his grandmother in Indiana during World War II, she refused to operate by DST. Standard time, she would say, was “God’s time.”
Up until Congress’s 1966 Uniform Time Act, some states and parts of states used DST while others didn’t. And the states didn’t all switch their clocks on the same schedule. If standard time is God’s time, God alone knew what time it was in any given part of the country. The Uniform Time Act was intended to clear up some problems with who was in which time zone; it also made clear when states should spring forward or fall back so that travelers and businesses would be able to plan better.
Yet, even after 1966, allowances were made for different states. In 1973, Congress passed the Emergency Daylight Saving Time Conservation Act, which introduced a trial period of year-round DST from January 1974 to April 1975, but the experiment only lasted till October of the first year because many people expressed concern about the darkness in the morning.
Since that time, there has still not been pure consistency. Hawaii and Arizona opted out of DST altogether (though not the Navajo Nation in Arizona), as did Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, the Mariana Islands, Guam, and American Samoa. The Indiana of my youth was divided until 2006. Some counties (mine included) still adhered to my great grandma’s doctrine, some did not. In 2006, the whole state adopted the program.
Indiana’s adoption followed a period in which there was high support for DST. When Gallup asked Americans about DST in 1990, 74% supported it. In 1999, 73% did. But that support has declined. A new Gallup poll (the first to ask since 1999) shows Americans support abandoning DST by a 54-40 margin (6% are uncertain about the issue).
But should we simply adopt DST as the universal standard? President Trump’s ambivalence about action because of the division among Americans was in part because he thought most people want permanent DST. “I assumed people would like to have more light later,” he said. Not surprising given that the native New Yorker president has been living in Florida, where then-Governor Rick Scott signed the Sunshine Protection Act in 2018. That bill would make DST permanent, but it requires Congressional approval. It never got it.
The reason the Sunshine Protection Act has not been able to pass is because of reasons that President Trump has discovered, namely that “some people want to have more light earlier because they don’t want to take their kids to school in the dark.” According to the NCSL state DST legislative tracker, since Florida’s 2018 bill, 18 states have “enacted legislation” for year-round DST, meaning that once we spring forward we would stay sprung. But many others do not.
A federal Sunshine Protection Act bill has been introduced in both houses of Congress since 2018; a 2022 version passed the Senate but never got out of the House. There is a reason for that. The Gallup poll did not just ask whether people liked changing clocks. It also asked a separate question as to whether people would prefer permanent standard time, permanent DST, or the clock switching. 48% preferred permanent standard time; 24% permanent DST; and 19% like what we have now.
That permanent standard time might win is not surprising. Americans are not alone in having experimented with year-round DST and rejecting it. In an article in favor of permanent standard time, neurologist Joanna Fong-Isariyawongse writes that since 1968, Russia, the U.K., and Portugal all tried year-round DST at some point. Russia and the U.K. dropped it after three years, while Portugal hung on for four. “All of these countries found that the switch caused widespread public dissatisfaction, health concerns, more morning car accidents and disrupted work schedules. No country is currently on year-round daylight saving time.”
The original arguments for DST included the hypothesis that it would result in energy savings. But economist Laura Grant examined studies in both the U.S. and abroad. What she found was that there was no decrease in energy usage under DST. In fact, in a study of Indiana after adopting statewide DST, the result was an increase in energy usage.
Grant linked to plenty of studies showing the increase in accidents, workplace injuries, and even disruptions to heart health. As Fong-Isariyawongse observed, however, even permanent DST seems to show many of these results.
Given these findings, it is no surprise that the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) position statement lays out a case for permanent standard time based on “chronic harmful effects of DST on human physiology, health, performance and safety, and on economics,” for which they have a variety of data.
AASM argues that the main reason for these downsides is that standard time aligns with our internal body clocks while DST does not. We are meant to get up in the sunlight and go to bed in the dark! AASM presents evidence that even after months of DST, the human body clock does not adjust. The end result is a loss of sleep for almost everybody—with all the problems that this entails.
There is a fair argument for allowing some states with particular situations to use DST part of the time. For the rest of us, however, the way forward to Make America Healthy Again is the way that aligns the clocks on our walls and in our phones with the clocks inside our bodies.
Americans declared independence under the aegis of “the Law of Nature and Nature’s God.” In the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson was referring to the moral law within our nature. But part of that moral law is to seek the commonweal of the people, taking account of our bodily natures.
Those bodies have internal rhythms that make us want to get up with the sun, see it above us at noon, and go to bed as it dwindles in the west. Permanent standard time achieves that. DST does not. And there is plenty of evidence that it has hurt our health.
To Make America Healthy Again, let’s move back to God’s time.
David P. Deavel teaches at the University of St. Thomas in Houston. A past Lincoln Fellow at the Claremont Institute, he is a Senior Contributor at The Imaginative Conservative. Follow him on X (Twitter) @davidpdeavel.

Please, yes, let’s never change the clocks again (after restoring to Standard Time this Fall, or sooner).
The number of hours of daylight on any given day is not determined by what the time is on the clock. Between the Vernal Equinox and the Autumnal Equinox, there’s the Summer Solstice— the day with the most hours of daylight. The reverse is true at the Winter Solstice— the day with the fewest hours of daylight. Changing the time on the clocks does not have any effect on that.
If individual communities, businesses, schools, etc prefer to have more daylight hours before, or after, their opening and closing hours, they can adjust their hours of operation to suit their needs. We don’t all have to suddenly change our daily rhythms. Be forewarned, however, day length in December is going to be 9.5 hours or less no matter what time the kiddos get on the bus in the morning. (Or off, in the afternoon). It’s just a fact of nature.
There is ample evidence that DST is bad for your health, physically and mentally. It needs to end.
I’ve never liked daylight savings time which is just another political misname for something the politician’s force upon the public. I get up at 4:30 AM regardless of DST or Standard time. DST means I go to bed in broad daylight and have an extra hour of darkness in the morning. Energy savings, I can’t see where anyone is saving any energy, they’re going to be using the same lights morning or evening.
Banish DTS.
If Congress mandated that everyone in the US would virtually move east one time zone, there would be an insurrection. But that’s what it effectively is every March. All we are certain DST accomplishes is to increase accidents for about a week. (And the “fall-back” in fall also produces similar problems.)
Just leave us alone!
When the sun peaks in the sky, it’s noon (1200). Makes the most sense. DST I thought was for the farmers, who with modern technology, don’t really need it any longer?
I don’t care if it is daylight savings time or standard time just make one or the other permanent. I worked in a dangerous work place and the disruption of a persons circadian rhythm caused a lot of accidents and I always wondered it there was an uptick in auto and other accidents too. There is really no real purpose to change the times.
Please, put DST in the grave. What a dumb idea from day one.
I agree. Permanant Standard Time is the healthiest way to go. I am praying my state opts out of DST this fall with passage of a bill in the legislature which will give us Permanent Standard Time. MAHA
I vote for standard time year round.
Keep standard time is a plus.
No, do not eliminate daylight savings. Either keep it the way it is or make daylight savings time permanent. Do not make the darker more dreary evening hours the norm all summer. Thankfully I am retired and can therefore largely ignore it is the gummint makes the wrong choice, but others cannot.
I am in favor of making daylight savings time permanent. I like having extra daylight hours in the evening, versus the morning. OK, go ahead and beat up on me….
Last year we (in CA) voted too do away with DST but they still are using it so guess our votes don’t count. There are still 24 hrs in the day and the same amount of daylight regardless of what the hell you call it. Dems are so ignorant it’s ridiculous.
While I lean in favor of DST yearlong I would prefer we do either one or the other, all year round!
DST Again (With apologies to John Denver)
It’s five o’clock this morning and the sun’s not on the rise,
My watch says it is six o’clock but we know that my watch lies.
I set my watch ahead last night for daylight savings time.
Against nature each and every spring we commit this crime.
It’s DST again, I’m sorry it stays dark so late.
It’s DST again but please don’t shed a tear.
It’s DST again, and I wish you could tell me
Why I must change nine clocks and watches each and every year.
From ten last night to six this morn, eight hours should have been
But only seven hours passed to six from last night’s ten.
An hour sooner then they should, my dreams they did abort.
If I’m a grouch it is because my sleep was cut one hour short.
It’s DST again, I’m sorry it stays dark so late.
It’s DST again but please don’t shed a tear.
It’s again, and I wish you could tell me
Why I must change nine clocks and watches each and every year.
If you expect the sunset at seven you must wait
For it will stay high up in the sky until nearly eight.
If we had only waited until early May
Nature would have stepped in and lengthened the day.
It’s DST again, I’m sorry it stays dark so late.
It’s DST again and so we must pretend
Until eight months pass and we set the clocks back
Then go on about our lives as if nothing has happened.
I agree that we need to end the twice a year switch but disagree on the author’s solution.
The answer is year-around Daylight Saving Time.
In Maine, the far eastern part of the the Eastern Time Zone, we love the arrival of DST. Our earliest sunset at the shortest day of the year is somewhere after 3:00 pm. By this time of year we hate the early sunsets and the arrival of DST brings a new sense of optimism to everyone. We should actually be in the far western side of the Atlantic Time Zone. If anything, keep DST year round.
I like the longer light on summer evenings but would be happy to split the difference on a permanent basis at a half hour. So, no falling back an hour or springing forward an hour. Just permanently in the middle. That would seem to be a satisfactory solution for those who like one way or the other.
With all due respect to DD, this is utterly absurd. If anyone “lost” an hour’s sleep it was due to their own choice. Around 5:30 Friday evening, I moved my clocks ahead by one hour and began living on DST. It’s been a piece of cake, no different than flying to the Central Time Zone. Never missed a beat.
I’m up at 5:30 AM and even on DST, while there is a bit of light on the eastern horizon, it is still not daylight. I’m in bed by 9-9:30 and during DST, that is long before dark, which is around 10:15 PM here in Columbus OH.
I lived on the east coast (CT) for 33 yrs, where during DST the sun begins to appear at 4:45 AM and it’s dark at 9:30, compared to 5:30/10:15 here in Ohio. In the dark of winter, on Standard Time, that translates to dark at 5:00 PM on the east coast, and 5:45 PM, here. People there go home from work in the dark.
A better solution (if there need be one), would be to divide each time zone in half to 30 min. time zones on a permanent DST schedule. Keep the western end of the zones on DST and permanently move eastern clocks ahead by half an hour.
As far as parents (I am one) concerned about sending kids to school in the dark, it’s temporary and short-lived. “Improvise, overcome, adapt.”
That being said, a one-hour time change does not amount to “jet lag”.
I prefer DST. The argument about getting up in the dark has a flip side. I hate going home in the dark after work. There are kids on busses in the winter that don’t get home after dark now. All the arguments are really mute in my opinion. Wouldn’t it just be easier to change the time we did things instead of changing clocks twice a year? When school starts at 8:00 a.m. kids on rural areas have to get up and meet their bus in the dark. Not safe. Plus, latch key kids spend more time without supervision. Why not start school at 9;00 a.m. Studies have been presented to educators that kids don’t learn as much in the early hours, and that the best attention for starts about 9:30 a.m.
I really don’t care which time wins, just so we can stop changing the dang clicks twice a year. We should look at noon being when the sun is straight up in the sky, and set the time zones accordingly.
.
I personally prefer more daylight in the evening. Those long summer days are wonderful. Either way just make it one way or the other.
Make Daylight Saving Time PERMANENT. We are here now, lets stay here.
Note please that the hours of daylight every day do not change with an act of congress. The old farmers had it right. Wake up with the sun, and eat lunch at high noon. Click time and real time will never match anyway.
Please, please, please— just pick a time and stick with it.
In my experience with this discussion over the years including in these comments, a lot of people expressing an opinion one way or the other are unknowingly confused as to which is which.
For example, they’ll say “I HATE daylight saving time!!1!!” and go on to explain why they hate it and why they love the extra hour of daylight on summer evenings, and you realize it’s actually standard time that they “hate”, not DST. Or vice versa.
I don’t know why anyone would prefer standard time. Just saying…
Next time, move it 30 minutes between the two and then leave it be. Everybody wins!
Loser.
Please please please stop DST! I agree with the sleep medicine folks, it harms us, and literally makes us less productive, less happy, more rushed and stressed ????
Standard Time please. I see no real need to get daylight at 7 a.m. in Mid-February / Early March and then have to get up in the dark again when Daylight Savings Time arrives, which takes about 5 weeks to work back to daylight at 7 a.m. It is extremely annoying to a lot of people to have to do this.
great article,with facts and history , I love amac because
For those of us who tend to stay up late, the extra daylight time to work outside is appreciated. If DST goes away, my husband and I will miss it.
We voted to NOT have DST anymore and we are still having it, ….WHY? It’s stupid for starts. There are still only 24 hrs in a day and same amount of daylight hours, the clock is just different.. We DO NOT WANT DST…..Why can’t the idiots in charge see that?
Keep Daylight Time, if you don’t want to change the clocks!
Just DO IT already!
How long must we continue to endure this insane clock turning?
The studies prove the heart attack rate increases, as well as, extreme fatigue for a few days has an unidentified effect on our daily routines and relationships. Harder to get scientifically, but just listen to the grumbling at work and home.
Congress quit kicking the can down the road, FIX IT? NOW!
Standard Time all year, go with nature!
AZ and Hawaii are smart!
Why not put it on a ballot. Let the majority of the people decide which time they prefer and leave it year round. This changing the clocks twice a year is not natural to the human body and disrupts everybody’s rhythms. I have hated it all my life. And i hate all this talk every year to stop it but nothing ever changes. We the American voter should make that a top priority on who we vote for.
Yes, make it Standard Time!!
We definitely need to stop the asinine changing of clocks. If it is truly a health issue, which apparently there is evidence to back it up then just do it. Pull up your adult pants and make the decision sooner than later to stop the changing of clocks forever.
Sorry, don’t need a PhD to tell me about Daylight Savings (as if we could put daylight into an account to use later). BTW, it’s Daylight Saving (no s) Time. And for the record, I don’t care. It’s no different than flying from one time zone to another.
Put it to a vote ! Let America choose.
AMEN David. AMAC: Please send these responses to our “Representatives” in the DC Swamp. One of my “Representatives” thinks we need to be on DST year round : ( STANDARD TIME PLEASE!
I don’t mind DST, I just don’t like the “extended” version. Growing up it went from about April to October which seems reasonable. I also am old enough to remember when they did away with it and it didn’t go well.
Let’s leave time alone. Get rid of DST. Perhaps this will reset people. I thnk have the battle is twice a year when we spring forward and fall back people put anxiety upon themselves and it is fake. One extra hour sleep in the fall and one less in the spring is not worth all of the drama. Let time be time.
Why can’t we just split the difference 30 minutes { to appease everyone } and LEAVE THE CLOCKS ALONE !!!
I have said for years that I feel so much better on “God’s time” – standard time. I dislike changing the times, and it just feels better to get up with the sun, and wind down as it gets dark. So what if it’s darker during the winter?!? It’s supposed to be that way! Hope President Trump sticks with Standard Time!
I hate daylight savings time. This shift of time twice a year is unhealthy for a lot of us who just don’t make the change easily.
I prefer standard time but at this point I just want the changes to STOP.
Please, for the sanity of older people, just dump the DST. It is isn’t saving time for anyone. It just makes some of us sleep deprived and crazy.