to
m id n ig h t
7
In 1947 the
Bulletin o f the Atomic
Scientists
created a Doomsday
Clock. Nowadays, this American
publication is an online magazine,
or journal. Each year, the
B u lletin ’s
directors decide if the clock’s minute
hand should move forwards, back
wards, or stay the same. On 26th Jan
uary the directors announced that the
Doomsday Clock had not changed.
It’s still three minutes to midnight.
The Doomsday Clock is not a
real clock. It is a symbol. ‘M id
night’ is a metaphor for a man-made
event that destroys the world. This
‘day’ can be described as doomsday,
Armageddon or the apocalypse. Ar
mageddon and the apocalypse are
mentioned in the Bible, or the holy
book o f the Christian faith.
In 1947 the clock was set at
seven minutes to midnight. Then,
the number o f minutes to midnight
represented the likelihood o f a nu
clear war. A group o f American
nuclear scientists started the
Bulle
tin
at the end o f the Second World
War (1939 - 1945). This was after
American warplanes dropped two
atomic bombs on Japan. The bombs
destroyed the cities o f Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. Japan’s leaders sur
rendered soon afterwards.
The destruction o f the Japanese
cities was the first and only time
that nuclear weapons have been
used in war. The scientists who set
up the
Bulletin
had helped to create
them. They believed that everyone
should be told about the dangers of
nuclear war. The scientists wanted
to explain that these weapons could
destroy the world.
In recent years, the
Bulletin
has
included other things it believes
endanger the human race. These in
clude climate change, diseases and
certain new technologies. The
Bul
letin
thinks that man-made viruses,
military robots or even computers
could wipe out mankind. This, they
argue, might happen if these types of
technologies became out o f control.
Throughout each year scien
tists working for the
Bulletin
meet
with other experts. They talk about
different threats and the chances
o f them happening. The
Bulletin
then decides whether the Dooms
day Clock’s hands should change.
Moving them forwards means that
the likelihood o f a catastrophic
event has increased. M oving them
back shows that the threat is less
likely. The clock’s minute hand last
changed 12 months ago. Then, it
moved forward by two minutes.
Since it was first created, the
Doomsday Clock has gone back
wards or forwards 22 times. The
closest the clock’s minute hand has
come to midnight was in 1953. At
that time, it was only two minutes
away. This was when the USA and
the Russian-led Soviet Union began
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