• @[email protected]
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    1513 days ago

    But more evening sun means better light for evening events. I don’t know of too many early morning events other than work/commute and fuck the boss’ extra 5% productivity from the average person, I’d rather drive in the dark.

    • @[email protected]
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      613 days ago

      More evening sun means my night needs to start later, and the world doesn’t get pretty til late

      • @[email protected]
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        313 days ago

        Your logic doesn’t make sense. In other threads you’re arguing that you can’t go out when it’s hot, so stay inside instead. That’s how you get ready for bed anyway, by staying inside. How does the sunsun staying up later change your night routine at all?

        Guess what it does do? Make afternoon outdoor activities much safer. Biking, rock climbing, running, literally any outdoor activity is much safer in daylight.

        • @[email protected]
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          213 days ago

          Youre assuming

          1. I never want to go outside. That it would be healthy to do that.

          I want to avoid the sun. Dinner outside at my favorite restaurant, fucking on a famous homophobe’s grave, third outdoor activity normal people do.

          2A. Afternoon activities

          So do them in rhe afternoon during the two hours it’s light out!

          2B. Safer!

          Heat and heat stroke are hazards too.

          1. Staying inside is good for sleeping anyway

          Not everyone lives like you. Im gonna use the only time it feels nice to go outside to go outside, instead of rotting in bed forever.

          • @[email protected]
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            213 days ago

            Your logic gets more and more obtuse. You want to go outside, but you want to avoid the sun, you want to do activities outside, but only in a two hour timespan (completely ignoring commuting and that many activities take longer than that). You talk about heat stroke like it’s happening to every single person who goes outside.

            Not everyone lives like you. Im gonna use the only time it feels nice to go outside to go outside, instead of rotting in bed forever.

            This comment makes even less sense. You want to be outside, but you don’t want sun, but you want to sleep when it’s 8 pm, but that’s the coolest time of the day if it’s not dst. Like seriously, none of your argument makes sense. And fyi, I spend the majority of my day outside. Even working from home, I’ll work in a hammock outside. But I’m also not the average person. The average person commutes to a location to work and then has to come back home, get ready for their activities and then go from there. All of your suggestions are completely at odds with that.

            And fyi, shade exists. This is honestly one of the most troll conversations I’ve ever participated in, acting like the sun burns you the second you step outside and you want to be outside without the sun. If you want to be outside without the sun then go out when it’s dark. You can wake up at your normal 5am time and get a great amount of dark cool weather. And the rest of us can live normally.

      • @[email protected]
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        213 days ago

        Tbh id settle for a split difference, just get rid of the time shift. It’s more of an issue in the winter.

        • @[email protected]
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          113 days ago

          Basing everything on our system of description rather than using a rich descriptive system to define things is the problem of so much of our shit.