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.
Over the past seven decades, the clock has been adjusted forward and backward multiple times. The farthest the minute hand has been pushed back from the cataclysmic midnight hour was 17 minutes in ...
And the clock’s hands have moved back and forth ... In response, the bulletin moved the clock to 17 minutes to midnight. The clock did not change during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 because ...
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The world might be falling to pieces, but at least we’re counting down to doom in style. The Doomsday Clock is perhaps the ...
The clock last moved in 2023, when the Bulletin set the hands of the clock at a minute and a half to midnight—closer than it had ever been before, including during the Cold War. “Because the world is ...
Leonard Rieser, chairman of the board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, moves the hand of the Doomsday Clock back to 17 minutes before midnight on Nov. 26, 1991. (Carl Wagner/Chicago ...
prompting the Bulletin to set the clock hand to 17 minutes to midnight. The original Doomsday Clock was all about the threat of nuclear annihilation. Little more than a week into President Donald ...