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The announcement of the new time on the Doomsday Clock is imminent. (It’s scheduled to start now.) As a reminder, you can watch live here. What happens when the Doomsday Clock time is announced?
The clock was its farthest from midnight — a sizable 17 minutes — in 1991, with the end of the Cold War and the signing of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty between the U.S. and Soviet Union. The ...
The Doomsday Clock was first introduced in 1947 as a way to warn "the public about how close we are to destroying our world with dangerous technologies of our own making." The site adds that the ...
The Doomsday Clock, a symbolic representation of how close humanity is to total annihilation, has been moved one second closer to midnight, marking the closest it has ever been. The Bulletin of ...
The world has been just two minutes away from an “apocalypse” for the last two years – at least, that’s what the Doomsday Clock is saying. At 10 a.m. ET on Jan. 23, the Bulletin of the ...
The Doomsday Clock is updated every year by members of the Science and Security Board for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a Chicago-based group of experts in the fields of nuclear risk ...
The Doomsday Clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight, the closest to catastrophe in its nearly eight-decade history. Here's a look at how — and why — it's moved.
This year’s Doomsday Clock Statement landed like a damp squib in a Trump-swamped corporate news cycle on January 28th. The Bulletin of the Atomic ...
The Doomsday Clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight, the closest to catastrophe in its nearly eight-decade history. Here's a look at how — and why — it's moved.
The Doomsday Clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight, the closest to catastrophe in its nearly eight-decade history. Here's a look at how — and why — it's moved.
The Doomsday Clock now stands at 89 seconds to midnight, the closest to catastrophe in its nearly eight-decade history. Here's a look at how — and why — it's moved.