The Doomsday Clock, created 76 years ago by atomic scientists to warn against a human-made apocalypse, has moved to 90 seconds to midnight.
I was not yet 1 year old when the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists initiated the clock in 1947 at seven minutes to midnight. It’s moved up and down since then, but never as near to midnight as now. Its best showing came with the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 when the Bulletin moved the clock back to 17 minutes before midnight.
Remarks from the Bulletin in 2018:
While the Doomsday Clock update is scary, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists said they aren’t trying to make a prediction.
“... we study events that have already occurred and existing trends. Our Science and Security Board tracks numbers and statistics—looking, for example, at the number and kinds of nuclear weapons in the world, the parts per million of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the degree of acidity in our oceans, and the rate of sea level rise,” Kennette Benedict, senior advisor to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, wrote. “The board also takes account of leaders’ and citizens’ efforts to reduce dangers, and efforts by institutions—whether of governments, markets, or civil society organizations—to follow through on negotiated agreements.”
Here’s an excerpt from today’s much longer press release from the Bulletin:
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