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Experts warn that the doomsday clock for nuclear war keeps moving in the wrong direction. Is peace still possible?
The Manila Times on MSN1dOpinion
The grave danger the SONA missed: Nuclear war
DOOMSDAY Clock is a yearly assessment by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, founded in 1945 by Albert Einstein, atom bomb ...
With 17 hours left on the clock and 10 hours until service, a strange sense of calm pervades The Bear. Sydney asks Richie ...
Norwegian writer and political activist Glenn Diesen has claimed that nuclear war is closer than ever during a conversation ...
Chris Ramsay on MSN10dOpinion
A 5,000 Year Old Doomsday Clock
Explore the ancient mechanism some believe was built to track the end of days—and why it's still ticking after 5,000 years.
On this week’s “More To The Story,” Daniel Holz from the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists discusses why the hands of the Doomsday Clock are the closest they’ve ever been to midnight.
Aspirational values are necessary but not sufficient to address the challenges so aptly captured by the Doomsday Clock.
Trustees warn that if Congress does not act, combined (Social Security) trust fund reserves are currently projected to become depleted in 2034.
Top nuclear experts gathered in Chicago to offer world leaders a playbook for reducing the risk of nuclear war.
It is time to become a nation that forges nuclear agreements, employs diplomacy, recognizes nuclear war is not winnable and works toward disarmament.
The Doomsday Clock was moved forward by one second to 89 seconds before midnight last January, signalling that the world is getting closer to an unprecedented catastrophe. The clock, which considers ...
Nuclear deterrence is no longer a two-player game, and emerging technologies further threaten the status quo. The result is a ...