Valar Dohaeris
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The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has advanced its symbolic Doomsday Clock by 30 seconds, suggesting humanity is an alarming 2 minutes and 30 seconds away from the brink of an apocalypse.
It's a dramatic statement, but the clock's annual movement is determined by a board of preeminent global security and scientific experts, including 15 Nobel laureates. And they're deadly serious.
Each shift takes into account major threats to civilization, including climate change. However, it assesses — first and foremost — the threat of nuclear war.
This year the Bulletin is especially concerned with the rise of totalitarian and authoritarian regimes, and North Korea's recent weapons tests. But in an unusual move, it took aim at President Donald Trump's aggressive rhetoric on expanding US weapons programs, including his desire to proliferate atomic weapons — just one of which can wipe out millions of people in a matter of seconds — to other countries.
The Bulletin's board said in its full statement that, while it "takes a broad and international view of existential threats to humanity" and "the statements of a single person [...] have not historically influenced" its decisions, "wavering public confidence in the democratic institutions required to deal with major world threats do affect the board's decisions."
Below is a map that shows which countries have nuclear warheads and the best estimates of how many.
http://www.businessinsider.com/number-nuclear-weapons-us-russia-world-2017-1
It's a dramatic statement, but the clock's annual movement is determined by a board of preeminent global security and scientific experts, including 15 Nobel laureates. And they're deadly serious.
Each shift takes into account major threats to civilization, including climate change. However, it assesses — first and foremost — the threat of nuclear war.
This year the Bulletin is especially concerned with the rise of totalitarian and authoritarian regimes, and North Korea's recent weapons tests. But in an unusual move, it took aim at President Donald Trump's aggressive rhetoric on expanding US weapons programs, including his desire to proliferate atomic weapons — just one of which can wipe out millions of people in a matter of seconds — to other countries.
The Bulletin's board said in its full statement that, while it "takes a broad and international view of existential threats to humanity" and "the statements of a single person [...] have not historically influenced" its decisions, "wavering public confidence in the democratic institutions required to deal with major world threats do affect the board's decisions."
Below is a map that shows which countries have nuclear warheads and the best estimates of how many.
http://www.businessinsider.com/number-nuclear-weapons-us-russia-world-2017-1