The Doomsday Clock keeps ticking, and other stories
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Welcome to Ramin’s Space, the newsletter from WIRED space writer Ramin Skibba. You can read more about the newsletter here. If you like it, please consider subscribing and sharing this post. 75 Years On, The Doomsday Clock Keeps Ticking Just two years after the US demolished the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with the first and only uses of nuclear bombs so far, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists designed their now-iconic Doomsday Clock. And it’s still relevant today. In this story for WIRED, I explore its history and legacy, as we’re now closer to the apocalypse than ever, thanks to nukes, climate change, and other global threats.
The Doomsday Clock keeps ticking, and other stories
The Doomsday Clock keeps ticking, and other…
The Doomsday Clock keeps ticking, and other stories
Welcome to Ramin’s Space, the newsletter from WIRED space writer Ramin Skibba. You can read more about the newsletter here. If you like it, please consider subscribing and sharing this post. 75 Years On, The Doomsday Clock Keeps Ticking Just two years after the US demolished the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with the first and only uses of nuclear bombs so far, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists designed their now-iconic Doomsday Clock. And it’s still relevant today. In this story for WIRED, I explore its history and legacy, as we’re now closer to the apocalypse than ever, thanks to nukes, climate change, and other global threats.