Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Scientists Just Moved The 'Doomsday Clock' Closer To Midnight—And We're Definitely Not OK

Members of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists unveil their Doomsday Clock
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

The clock representing armageddon is now at '90 seconds to midnight'—the closest it's ever been.

The countdown to nuclear proliferation and the loss of the current world order is more tangible than ever, thanks to the efforts of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and their Doomsday Clock. According to the group, the impact of Russia's war in Ukraine has brought humanity the closest to nuclear proliferation it's ever been.

History remembers 1945 as the year of the atomic bomb. The two bombs that leveled Hiroshima and Nagasaki were instrumental in disbanding the Axis Powers and ending World War II. However, this accomplishment has been eclipsed by the destruction these weapons left in their wake.


That such destructive power could be—and had been—successfully harnessed would fuel fears of a potential nuclear holocaust through the Cold War era. The ominously named clock was devised as a symbol to let humans know just how close we are to destroying ourselves—and the planet—with midnight representing global disaster on the apocalyptic scale.

The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists—known for its advocacy in the science and global security realms—announced they'd moved the hands of the Doomsday Clock to 90 seconds to midnight, the closest it's ever been.

The video below shows the movement of the clock over the decades up to the present day.

Footage of the announcement is included below.

Bulletin President Rachel Bronson said at the online announcement that "the situation is becoming more urgent" and crises "are more likely to happen and have broader consequences and longer standing effects.”

To highlight the extent to which the war in Ukraine has threatened global stability, the group announced clock movement in the Russian and Ukrainian languages for the first time.

This sobering announcement is underscored by the fact that Russian President Vladimir Putin "repeatedly raised the specter of nuclear use," said Steve Fetter, dean of the graduate school and a public policy professor at the University of Maryland, who emphasized Putin "might make desperate moves if no other options are available that he regards as acceptable.”

In a press release, the Bulletin detailed other "threats and threat multipliers beyond the most immediate risks related to the Russia-Ukraine War" such as nuclear weapon proliferation in China, Iran increasing its uranium enrichment, missile tests in North Korea, and bio-threats due to the "total number and diversity of infectious disease outbreaks," laboratory accidents, and biological warfare.

The group noted that efforts to mitigate the climate crisis have been undermined by the war in Ukraine as global carbon emissions rebounded from the COVID-19 pandemic and as nations "dependent on Russian oil and gas have sought to diversify their supplies and suppliers, leading to expanded investment in natural gas exactly when such investment should have been shrinking."

The adverse impacts of disinformation and disruptive technology cannot be underestimated either, according to the group, because "cyber-enabled disinformation continues unabated" in the United States and around the world, although it did say there is "good news" in that the American electorate rejected election deniers in 2022.

Still, the group's announcement has received a largely mixed response.




While the Doomsday Clock has continued to make headlines over the last few years as geopolitical rivalries have intensified, few of the Bulletin's announcements received as much press as the one it made in 2015, when it moved the hands of the clock to three minutes to midnight, the closest they'd been since 1984.

At the time, Lawrence Krauss, a chair on the Bulletin’s Board of Sponsors and a foundation professor of the School of Earth and Space Exploration and Physics departments at Arizona State University, said that the clock is an estimate “that the world is as close to the brink as it was in 1983 when US-Russian tensions were at their iciest in decades.”

The group said it decided not to move the hands of the clock in 2016 in a bid to strengthen relations between world leaders who “continue to fail to focus their efforts and the world's attention on reducing the extreme danger posed by nuclear weapons and climate change.”

More from Trending

Millie Bobby Brown
Michael Buckner/Variety/Getty Images

Millie Bobby Brown Tells The Media To 'Get Off My F—king Case' After Cruel Scrutiny Over Her Looks

Stranger Things Millie Bobby Brown has called out the media—again—for their portrayal of her appearance in their headlines.

Brown's career was hard-launched when she was ten years old when she introduced the iconic "Eleven" character in the Stranger Things franchise, and the public has really struggled to accept the fact that she's a human being who will grow and change like the rest of us, meaning she can't stay ten years old forever.

Keep ReadingShow less
Glenn Close
Edward Berthelot/WireImage

Glenn Close Offers Hilarious Reaction After 'All's Fair' Is Met With Abysmal Reviews From Critics

Well, Disney+ and Hulu's new Ryan Murphy series All's Fair hasn't exactly gone according to plan, garnering some of the worst reviews in the history of television.

And star Glenn Close had a perfect response to the critics.

Keep ReadingShow less
Gavin Newsom
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Newsom Offers Scathing One-Word Response To 8 Democrats Who Caved And Voted With GOP To End Shutdown

California Governor Gavin Newsom criticized the eight Democratic Senators who voted with Republicans to end the government shutdown by advancing a spending deal that notably omits an extension of expanded Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies.

Under the current agreement, the enhanced subsidies would expire, though senators would have the option to revisit the issue later in the year. Supporters of the compromise say that deferring the vote was the only viable path forward, as many Republicans refused to discuss the subsidies until the government reopened.

Keep ReadingShow less
artificial intelligence
Aidin Geranre on Unsplash

People Reveal How They Lost Their Jobs To Artificial Intelligence

The concept of artificial intelligence (AI) dates back thousands of years with ancient myths. Later, inventors would create automatons that moved independently through the use of gears, cogs, and springs.

But for a long time, the idea of an artificial brain was relegated to science fiction.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Barack Obama
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Alex Wong/Getty Images

Trump Slammed After Seemingly Believing Patently False Post From Satirical Website About Obama

President Donald Trump was called out after he shared an article headline about former President Barack Obama—without realizing it came from a satirical news site published nearly nine months earlier.

The post came from the Dunning-Kruger Times, a satirical website, claiming that Obama is making millions in "royalties" from Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies. The piece from the site makes the specific false claim that the advisory Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) had stopped paying Obama $2.6 million a year in "royalties associated with Obamacare."

Keep ReadingShow less