[Infowarrior] - Doomsday Clock to be moved closer to midnight
Richard Forno
rforno at infowarrior.org
Wed Jan 17 09:01:48 EST 2007
Doomsday Clock to be moved closer to midnight
* David Byers
* January 16, 2007
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21067189-2703,00.html
THE END of the World is closer than at any time since the Cold War, a group
of scientists is set to declare this week.
The keepers of a symbolic Doomsday Clock - a world-famous symbol designed by
the US-based Bulletin of Atomic Scientists to chart how close we are to
Armaggedon - have announced they are moving its hands forward.
According to the University of Chicago-based organisation, worsening climate
change and the increasing threat of nuclear war are threatening our
survival. The clock's hands will be moved forward next Wednesday.
The clock, which has appeared on the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists
magazine's front cover since 1947, is currently set at seven minutes to
midnight - with midnight marking global catastrophe.
In a news release previewing next Wednesday's event, which will be co-hosted
by the British physicist Stephen Hawking, the organisation would not say
exactly how far the clock would be moved forward - but explained that a
change was necessary because of "worsening nuclear, climate threats" to the
world.
"The major new step reflects growing concerns about a 'Second Nuclear Age'
marked by grave threats, including: nuclear ambitions in Iran and North
Korea, unsecured nuclear materials in Russia and elsewhere, the continuing
'launch-ready' status of 2,000 of the 25,000 nuclear weapons held by the US
and Russia; escalating terrorism; and new pressure from climate change for
expanded civilian nuclear power that could increase proliferation risks," it
said.
The clock was last pushed forward by two minutes to seven minutes to
midnight in 2002, amid concerns about the proliferation of nuclear,
biological and other weapons and the threat of terrorism in the aftermath
the attacks on September 11, 2001.
The last time it was closer than that to midnight was in 1988, when the Cold
War was beginning to show its first signs of coming to an end and the clock
showed 11.54pm.
With the time set to be put forward again, it is inevitable that it will be
at a closer point to midnight than at any time since that year - and perhaps
closer.
When it was created by the magazine's staff in 1947, it was initially set at
seven minutes to midnight and has moved 17 times since then.
It was as close as two minutes to midnight in 1953 following U.S. and Soviet
hydrogen bomb tests - and as far away as 17 minutes to midnight in 1991 in a
wave of optimism as the Soviet Communist regime collapsed and the
superpowers reached agreement on a nuclear arms reductions.
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