doomsday clock
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Is it time to call time on the Doomsday Clock?
It’s been ticking down the seconds to nuclear apocalypse for three-quarters of a century, but it’s not so helpful when it comes to climate change.
Petri Damstén 💀/Flickr
Is apocalypse near? How the Doomsday Clock tracks nuclear, climate threats
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists will set the symbolic Doomsday Clock for the first time since the Ukraine war revived fears of nuclear disaster.
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Photo by Moritz Kindler on Unsplash
Doomsday Clock remains at 100 seconds to midnight amid climate change, cybersecurity and pandemic
The Doomsday Clock remains at 100 seconds to midnight. The new time on the clock — a metaphorical representation of how close humanity is to destruction — was revealed Thursday morning by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
www.nytimes.com
Doomsday clock says world remains '100 seconds' from disaster
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists said the clock’s position would remain unchanged from 2020, when its hands were set as close as they had ever been to a catastrophic “midnight.”
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Doomsday Clock 2020: Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 100 seconds to midnight
The symbolic clock represents how close we are to the end of the human species.
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www.theguardian.com
Doomsday clock stays at two minutes to midnight as crisis now 'new abnormal'
Warning that 'We are like passengers on the Titanic, ignoring the iceberg ahead' in face of nuclear arms and climate change threats.
Doomsday Clock 2019: "We’re playing Russian roulette with humanity"
Are we dancing on the brink of human extinction? The Doomsday Clock says yes.
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