Subtitles section Play video
-
This is the Doomsday clock.
-
It was designed back in 1947 by artist Martyl Langsdorf.
-
And the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists sets the clock to show how much time we have
-
left until midnight.
-
Midnight in this case meaning nuclear armageddon and the end of humanity.
-
In January 2017, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists revealed that the clock ticked
-
30 seconds closer than last year to the end of times and cited, among other things,
-
climate change, cyber security, nuclear weapons and Donald Trump as causes.
-
At the announcement, executive director of the Bulletin, Rachel Bronson, said there were
-
two concerns that stood above the rest.
-
“The first has been the cavalier and reckless language used across the globe, especially
-
in the United States, during the presidential election and after.
-
And the second is a growing disregard of scientific expertise.”
-
Cold war and world conflict have influenced the clock’s time over the years, but disregard
-
for scientific expertise by global populist leaders, including an American president,
-
has never been cited as a doomsday factor.
-
That said, the newest changes to the clock are the smallest in its history, meaning doomsday,
-
thankfully, isn't necessarily any more imminent.
-
So how accurate is the Doomsday Clock, and why was it made in the first place?
-
The “Doomsday Clock” first debuted in 1947 as a graphic on the cover of the first
-
edition of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ magazine.
-
Artist Martyl Langsdorf was married to Alexander Langsdorf Jr., a Manhattan Project scientist.
-
Langsdorf and other concerned scientists founded The Bulletin two years prior, feeling a responsibility
-
to warn and educate the public about the possibly disastrous consequences of their creations.
-
Atomic bombs had been used for the first time in 1945, killing 130,000 residents of the
-
Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
-
Initially, the time on the clock depicted the hour hand pointing straight at the zero
-
hour, with the minute hand placed at just seven minutes before midnight.
-
The time was completely arbitrary, though.
-
Langsdorf just thought “it seemed the right time.”
-
The graphic quickly adopted the name of The Doomsday Clock, and eventually gained world
-
recognition as a symbol for the threat of an impending nuclear apocalypse.
-
Since 1947, the Bulletin has regularly adjusted the clock face when they perceive a change
-
in threat level, also taking into account other, non-nuclear factors, like climate change,
-
bio weapons and cyber threats.
-
Doomsday seems just a few ticks away now, but time on this clock doesn’t really reflect
-
actual time, nor is it particularly linear.
-
In 1949, the Bulletin set the clock to three minutes until midnight
-
due to Soviet Union nuclear testing.
-
“Truman’s dramatic announcement that Russia had the atom secret!” and to
-
two minutes until midnight in 1953 thanks to the US developing the hydrogen bomb.
-
But a decade later, the clock turned back to 12 minutes before midnight thanks to the US and
-
Soviet Union ending atmospheric nuclear testing
-
“A milestone in ‘63.
-
East and West ban the testing of nuclear weapons in the atmosphere.”
-
The minute hand has continued to fluctuate through a range of minutes before midnight
-
since then, from seven minutes ‘til in 1968 thanks to Vietnam,
-
to 10 minutes ‘til in 1972 at the signing of the first Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty,
-
“This is not an agreement which guarantees there’ll be no war, but what this is is
-
the beginning of a process that is enormously important.”
-
to three minutes ‘til in 1984 thanks to the heightened tensions between the US and
-
the Soviet Union during the Cold War, “None of the four wars in my lifetime came about
-
because we were too strong.
-
It is weakness that invites adventurous adversaries to make mistake in judgements.”
-
and all the way back to 17 minutes ‘til in 1991 after the end of the Cold War and
-
the signing of START, the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty.
-
“Whether about issues on which we agreed or disagreed, the spirit of candor and openness
-
a desire not just to understand, but to build bridges has shown through.
-
In every case, dangerous or potentially dangerous events dictated whether the minute hand moved
-
closer to or away from Doomsday, but 2017 is the first time since the Cold War that
-
the Bulletin expressed deep concern about the disposition of an American president toward
-
science and the nuclear weapons.
-
"First of all, you don't want to say take everything off the table, because you're a bad negotiator if you do that.
-
Look, nuclear should be off the table, but would there be a time when it could be used? Possibly."
-
Even though the outlook seems grim, it’s important to remember what the time on the
-
clock is really meant to show: it’s not Doomsday yet, and on THIS clock,
-
we can turn back time.