
huwag kayong napapaniwala sa mga nagpupost dito na utak tae at
mga nakapagaral daw pero abang lang naman


etong pagkakaiba ng mga oras sa ibat ibang lugar ay maari din masagot sa
pamamagitan concept of time manipulation
The problem doesn't lie with the clocks. They run fast because time itself runs faster in space than it does down below. And the reason for this extraordinary effect is the mass of the Earth. Einstein realised that matter drags on time and slows it down like the slow part of a river. The heavier the object, the more it drags on time. And this startling reality is what opens the door to the possibility of time travel to the future.
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and another thing is this
United States has 9 standard time zones and corresponding Daylight Saving Time (DST) time zones (only for places that observe DST).
Standard Time Zones Daylight Saving Time Zones
Atlantic Standard Time (AST) = UTC-4.
Atlantic Daylight Time (ADT) = UTC-3.
Eastern Standard Time (EST) = UTC-5.
Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) = UTC-4.
Central Standard Time (CST) = UTC-6.
Central Daylight Time (CDT) = UTC-5.
Mountain Standard Time (MST) = UTC-7.
Mountain Daylight Time (MDT) = UTC-6.
Pacific Standard Time (PST) = UTC -8.
Pacific Daylight Time (PDT) = UTC-7.
Alaska Standard Time (AKST) = UTC-9.
Alaska Daylight Time (AKDT) = UTC-8.
Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time (HAST) = UTC-10.
Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Time (HADT) = UTC-9.
Samoa Standard Time = UTC-11.
Chamorro Standard Time = UTC+10.
See Time Zones Currently Being Used in United States
The United States was divided into four time zones on November 18, 1883, and jurisdiction for the zones was given to the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC). All places keep the same time within each time zone. The zones in the United States were intended to represent the mean times of four different meridians (not including daylight saving time):
Eastern Standard Time (EST).
Central Standard Time (CST).
Mountain Standard Time (MST).
Pacific Standard Time (PST).
A congressional act transferred the ICC’s responsibilities on time zone boundaries to the US Department of Transportation (DOT) in 1967. Today, the United States and its territories observe standard time within nine time zones. The United States’ time zones are defined in the U.S. Code, Title 15, Chapter 6, Subchapter IX - Standard Time. The US law on zones for standard time also states the term Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), referring to it as the time scale maintained through the General Conference of Weights and Measures and interpreted or modified for the United States by the Secretary of Commerce in coordination with the Secretary of the Navy.
DOT is also responsible for the rules governing DST (not all parts of the United States observe daylight saving time). Daylight saving time in many parts of the United States is in line with section 110 of the United States’ Energy Policy Act of 2005, which states that daylight saving time would begin on the second Sunday of March and it would end on first Sunday of November. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 does not alter the rights of the states and territories that choose not to observe daylight saving time.
States and territories in the United States that do not observe daylight saving time include: Hawaii, American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and most of Arizona except the Navajo Nation Community. Some parts of Indiana previously did not observe daylight saving time but the state is now united in observing the schedule despite being split into different time zones.

sa U.S.A plng yan ... .

wala pa yong sa mga utak tae na walang binatbat
