It is 6 minutes to midnight (or should I say Doomsday?!), page
Pages:
ATS Members have flagged this thread 1 times
Topic started on 10-11-2011 @ 03:17 AM by Dalbeck
First off all let me tell you I'm not a big believer in any 2012/ doomsday theories, but having the current developments and political issues (Iran...) back in my mind I think the following story may have a true meaning, but first check out this link:

Doomsday clock

There is a clock at the University of Chicago called the Doomsday Clock whose time perpetually lingers just shy of midnight. On this clock, midnight metaphorically represents full nuclear war bringing an end to all civilization, and the clock is meant as a gauge to constantly indicate humankind’s proximity to this horrific event.


When it was introduced in 1947, it was set for seven minutes to midnight. Since that day, its minute hand has wandered around on the upper-left quarter of the clock face, inching closer to 12:00 when the threat of nuclear war grows, and crawling away as the risk fades. It has been as close as two minutes to midnight in 1953, and as far as seventeen minutes in 1991. If its caretakers ever set it for midnight, it will probably be the last thing they ever do.


The custodians of this clock have been the men and women of the Board of Directors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. The Bulletin is a publication which was founded in 1945 by many former Manhattan Project physicists, and over the years contributors have included Albert Einstein, Edward Teller, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Carl Sagan, Wernher von Braun, Al Gore, Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke to name but a few.


Today it stands 6 minutes to midnight. Whatever it means I guess we have to see for ourselves.

Like I said I'm not a believer in the Nibiru and Maya stories but it's quite remarkable how near the clock is to our proposed end...

What do you think about the clock?


reply posted on 10-11-2011 @ 03:21 AM by Burnerz
reply to post by Dalbeck



still breathing atm, ill let you know when that stops


reply posted on 10-11-2011 @ 03:37 AM by Dalbeck
reply to post by Burnerz



Nooo You didn't read the entire thread, did you It's not actually about "minutes"... The clock was set up in 1947 and the minutes just represent our time in years/ months....



reply posted on 10-11-2011 @ 03:42 AM by PutAQuarterIn
reply to post by Dalbeck


This clock is more to illustrate a point, more than mark a prediction. They change it occasionally, to let you know s*** is getting serious, but still it's only ment to encourage people to pay attention to current events. They hope the more people aware, the more you might put yourself into a cause aimed current threats.
The time represents, threat level not time span. In 1991 it was set to 17 min till midnight, because we signed a treaty with the soviet union. (The ''safest'' we have been since the conception), currently it is a 6 min to midnight (better than 2007, but out of 19 revisions we are currently only better off than 1949, 1953, 1984 and 2007)
I personally don't think we could really stick a time line on the end (whatever may cause it)
edit on 10-11-2011 by PutAQuarterIn because: remove
edit on 10-11-2011 by PutAQuarterIn because: add



reply posted on 10-11-2011 @ 05:55 AM by Freelancer
reply to post by PutAQuarterIn



Perhaps 50 years ago this doomsday clock might have been useful in symbolizing how close mankind was to a nuclear war, today however its pointless and really should be discontinued. Think about it, we know mankind can just as easily be wiped out or severely hit from any number of causes, from large asteroids, Solar flares, outbreaks of deadly viruses to out-of-control nuclear power stations which this doomsday clock does not take into account.


reply posted on 10-11-2011 @ 07:52 AM by Dalbeck
reply to post by R3N3G4D3



Hehe what a coincidence about Sky News

I don't believe in any doomsday theory tho but I thought it was an interesting read nontheless


reply posted on 10-11-2011 @ 10:29 AM by karen61057
reply to post by Dalbeck



I am familiar with the clock and I think it is more a social indicator than a prediction type of clock. It's been hovering in the 5-10 min range for a long time. And yeah things are not exactly great at the moment. Still I have faith in mankind and that is what is represented in those five minutes between where we are and total annihilation.


reply posted on 11-11-2011 @ 12:24 AM by Dalbeck
reply to post by karen61057



Thanks for your comment! Yes I also do have faith in mankind and hope everything's is going to be okay



reply posted on 14-2-2012 @ 09:53 AM by saige45
It has been mentioned on this thread already but I wanted to reiterate a point.

The Doomsday Clock is a symbolic clock face, maintained since 1947 by the board of directors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists at the University of Chicago. The closer the clock is to midnight, the closer the world is estimated to be to global disaster. The most recent officially-announced setting — five minutes to midnight (11:55pm) — was made on 10 January 2012.[1] Reflecting international events dangerous to humankind, the clock's hands have been adjusted twenty times since its inception in 1947[2], when the clock was initially set to seven minutes to midnight (11:53pm).


Source

After reading the above excerpt there are a few things we can take from it. First, the Doomsday Clock is a symbolic representation. Second, the symbolism is determined by how close mankind is to causing a global disaster by way of the release of Nuclear weapons (note that disasters at Nuclear reactor's do not consitute a change in the clock's setting). Third, the clock is maintained by the board of Atomic Scientists. And finally, the clock is not a countdown as events surrounding the disarmament of Nuclear weapons, signing of treaties in relation to Nuclear weapons, etc; can and do cause the clock to be set farther from midnight.

For example:

In 1947, during the Cold War, the clock was started at seven minutes to midnight and was subsequently advanced or rewound per the state of the world and nuclear war prospects. The clock's setting is decided by the directors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and is an adjunct to the essays in the bulletin on global affairs. The clock has not always been set and reset as quickly as events occur; the closest nuclear war threat, the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, reached crisis, climax, and resolution before it could be set to reflect that possible doomsday.


Please note this usage above "advanced or rewound per the state of the world and nuclear war prospecs". It is also significant to note that in 1962 during the Cuban-missle crisis, which is arguably the closest mankind has gotten to all out Nuclear War, the clock was set at 7 minutes to midnight, the same setting it had been at since 1960. According to the excerpt above the events of the Cuban-missle crisis occurred so rapidly that the board of directors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists did not have time to acurrately reflect the impending doomsday. Some theorize that if the Doomsday Clock could have been set to accurately reflect those events that the clock would have been set at the closest position to midnight, mere seconds even. The actual closest the clock has been set to midnight is two minutes to midnight which was set in 1953 after both the US and Soviet Union tested nuclear devices within 9 months of each other.

-saige-
Pages:     ^^TOP^^



May 20/21, 2012: the true meaning.
  Posted 9 days ago with 25 member flags
Cool Eclipse pictures (Earth, Moon, Sun, Pleiades)
  Posted 9 days ago with 24 member flags
Why the 2012 Phenomenon is Real!
  Posted 12 days ago with 21 member flags
Nebula or Nibiru (May 28 2012)
  Posted 2 days ago with 19 member flags
World Message: Beginning May 26 thru Dec 21
  Posted 11 days ago with 14 member flags
newly discovered mayan calendars go beyond 2012
  Posted 19 days ago with 12 member flags
OMG: 2012 KP24 Incoming! Are we Doomed?
  Posted 4 days ago with 10 member flags
Secret rogue planet may be hiding behind Neptune
  Posted 15 days ago with 7 member flags