It is corrected by sleeping backerds and waking up the day before to try again
It’s not. There is no problem.
1:59 AM CDT 11/04/2018
1:00 AM CST 11/04/2018
It would only matter if they were twins
For the record....I don’t see what difference it would make
Squeeze your pelvic muscles powerfully and breathe shallowly for 59 seconds and hold that kid in.
As with police reports, I think they have to use the DST on the report/certificate. But the reader would have to look at it carefully.
Oh man, is this really that important enough for a thread?
Just tell the expectant mother to take a break and stop pushing for a minute or two.
So the second twin could legally be born before their elder sibling.
One is daylight time and the other is standard time
Have another shot on me!
so are you saying that twin boys one born at 1.59 and then the other at the new 1.20AM etc ...in that case the 2nd son would really be the elder entitled to inherit etc ???
Interesting...
maybe that was the case of Esau and Jacob
;)
Is the date correct?
Is this a Female issue?
Drs and nurses have discretion in determining time.
Look it up. The time changes at 2am so every event stays on the same day. What wouldve been 0201 becomes 0101 and you do the second hour over.
The international date line’s
An imaginary cleft.
Today is on the right side
And tomorrow’s on the left.
So when you cross it, do you then arrive
The day before you left?
That’s how it’d work, it’s quite berserk, you see.
So if you were born in China
While I’m born in Carolina,
Well, then, you’re a day ahead of me, you see.
So the way I’ve got it reckoned,
If we’re born in the same second,
Then why should you be a day older than me?
-Animaniacs
Civil time in the U.S. is not monotonic in jurisdictions practicing daylight savings time. It goes backwards one hour every year, currently at 02:00 AM local civic time on the first Sunday in November. (To avoid trick or treating after dark up north.)
In cases where it is considered necessary to unambiguously order or identify instances of time, one would use a monotonic time scale. As another poster has pointed out, one such time scale would be local standard time. In the U.S., and most of the world, standard time zones are offset from UTC (colloquially, but called GMT) by an integer number of hours. In order not to waste early morning daylight, in the summer most jurisdictions shift civil time ahead one hour between the second Sunday in March and the first Sunday in November.
These days civil time is denoted by a two letter abbreviation, the time zone, and “T”. Eastern Time is ET, central time CT, and so on with MT and PT. When DLST is in effect ET means EDT, otherwise it means EST, Eastern Standard Time. Use of EDT and EST, and similar is discouraged, except to make distinctions. Where necessary.
A commission in Massachusetts recently recommended adopting DSLT year round, but only if the rest of the country in the Eastern Time zone agreed.
Which is the first born in terms of royal twins?
Have you considered how much time you apparently have on your hands to waste?