Doomsday clock moved closer to midnight

So it's not that there's "nothing to base their guesses off of", it's just that you disagree with their assessment? Good to see you acknowledge that you misspoke.
 
So it's not that there's "nothing to base their guesses off of", it's just that you disagree with their assessment? Good to see you acknowledge that you misspoke.
I stand by what I said: They have nothing to base their guesses off of. Sure, people have nukes, but how does that translate into "the world will end in a certain number of years"? You have to have something to measure it with.
 
I stand by what I said: They have nothing to base their guesses off of. Sure, people have nukes, but how does that translate into "the world will end in a certain number of years"? You have to have something to measure it with.

Thing with predictions is, is that you can't measure it. They base their predictions off of events and tension in the world, which can be interpreted rather broadly. I don't think they're claiming what they say is fact, but rather that they are trying to gauge how severe the situation is.
 
I stand by what I said: They have nothing to base their guesses off of. Sure, people have nukes, but how does that translate into "the world will end in a certain number of years"? You have to have something to measure it with.

So instead of admitting that what you said was off the mark, you decide to show that you don't even know how the Doomsday Clock works? Well done.
 
Thing with predictions is, is that you can't measure it. They base their predictions off of events and tension in the world, which can be interpreted rather broadly. I don't think they're claiming what they say is fact, but rather that they are trying to gauge how severe the situation is.
The thing is, they have no way of gauging it. How do they know many nukes it takes to advance the clock one minute? If we find new energy, how many minutes does the Doomsday clock advance?

So instead of admitting that what you said was off the mark, you decide to show that you don't even know how the Doomsday Clock works? Well done.
Or more likely, you read off the mark. Anyway, saying that we should say that the end is near because it is is hardly a good way of running a Doomsday clock.

My point is, you have to be able to have an accurate way of measuring how close we are to Doomsday. Sure we have nukes, tensions, and all that, but how do you translate that into being closer or further to Doomsday by a certain amount of time. Their guessing is at best a pathetic attempt at trying to raise awareness of what these times are like, and at worst, nothing more than fear-mongering.
 
The clock isn't intended to suggest that we're such-and-such amount of time from "doomsday", its supposed to indicate the risk of a global catastrophe in the near-to-mid future.. That's why it has, and is intended to, gone back and forth over time. Are you not as familiar with the concept as you assume, or do you just lack a capacity for understanding metaphors?
 
It went back one minute in 2010 and after the fall of the Berlin wall it was something like 17 minutes
 
My point is, you have to be able to have an accurate way of measuring how close we are to Doomsday.

That's not really what the clock is about.

We should have some sort of accurate way of measuring how asinine a thread can get before its closed.
 
It went back one minute in 2010 and after the fall of the Berlin wall it was something like 17 minutes

Which suggests a serious miscalculation of the degree of nuclear proliferation following the collapse of the Soviet bloc...
 
I doubt it does that, at least to a good degree.

It draws eyebrows for a little while I guess. It's not like people are checking it's status on a daily basis or anything. It usually takes some big event to move it so watching it would be a useless waste of time.
 
I wouldn't say we're living in the "end of times"... Probably, people from 14th century Europe thought the end was near with the outbreak of the Great Plague. Most of us who are old enough to remember the Cold War might have thought that nuclear war and therefore, the end was close many times...
 
I find this 'Doomsday Clock' to be rather useless. But hey, they got to be in the news!
 
404199_352276201468506_205344452828349_1316619_1151882568_n.jpg
 
the sinking cruise ship in Italy is the normal thing that happens when economy gets a downturn , just like the stoppage in the Chunnel that followed Berlusconi getting it on the face . What's even odder and moves the stuff out of the ordinary is the sinking of the South korean freighter that was immediately either followed or preceded by the sinking of a Turkish ship , both cases by explosions .

so , ı think , now that this was the Titanic 2012 , people will be hard pressed to accept a full world war will be in progress in 2014 .
 
Back
Top Bottom