Did you know that in the Southern Hemisphere, some countries observe Daylight Savings Time through the winter, starting in October?
Not all of them, which leads to some confusion. The northern region of Brazil does not, but the south and western areas do.
In Australia it’s a mixed bag — Queensland, Western Australia and the Northern Territory do not observe it, the rest does — which means the continent has three times zones for half the year and five the other half.
In Africa, only the Canary Islands, Ceuta and Melilla in Spain, Madeira in Portugal, and Morocco observe it, with roughly the same periods as the Northern Hemisphere. Namibia’s DST begins in September, and Egypt has gone back and forth about it.
Which means that when you risk your life to violate the laws of physics and travel back through time to stop a researcher in São Paulo from accidentally triggering a self-replicating nanobot designed to fight cancer that will instead keep replicating until it destroys all human life on the planet, Timmy, you need to double-check your clock settings!
Honestly, if the nanobots hadn’t already killed you I’d kick you right in the leg. I am that annoyed.