If The Atomic Clock
Strikes Twelve
Midnight Is Forever
By Douglas Mattern
Published by:
Scoop Independent News - New Zealand
But thoughts, the slaves of life, and life, time's fool,
And time, that takes survey of all the world,
Time must have a stop."
- Henry IV, Shakespeare
We cannot stop or slow the space/time/continuum
that permeates our world and the universe, but we must, if we
really care about the future and destiny of humanity, stop the
time of human folly that is leading toward a black abyss. This
was underscored this month when the time on the famous "Doomsday
Clock" of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (BAS) was
moved forward from seven to five minutes before midnight.
The reason is manifold, including, as reported
by BAS, a "renewed emphasis on the military utility of nuclear
weaponsand the failure to adequately secure nuclear materials."
An increasing danger is the proliferation of nuclear weapons
states, now numbering eight or nine, along with the prospect
of others joining this macabre club in the near future. The United
Nations reports that over 30 countries have the capability to
produce nuclear weapons.
In 1963, President Kennedy emphasized the
extreme danger of nuclear proliferation: "I ask you to stop
and think for a moment what it would mean to have nuclear weapons
in so many hands, in the hands of countries large and small,
stable and unstable, responsible and irresponsible, scattered
throughout the world. There would be no rest for anyone then,
no stability, no real security, and no chance of effective disarmament.
There would only be the increased chance of accidental war."
What is difficult to understand is that
after the severe danger of nuclear war during the long decades
of the Cold War, we are still only 30-minutes or less from nuclear
incineration. The reason is that included among the 27,000 nuclear
weapons stockpiled in the world, thousands of U.S. and Russian
strategic nuclear warheads are on hair-trigger alert. The RAND
Corporation reports these weapons could be launched in a few
minutes notice destroying both countries in an hour. Such a doomsday
scenario could result from an accidental missile launch, an early
warning system error, or miscalculation.
Why are these genocidal weapons on hair-trigger
with the daily treat they pose to civilization? It would surely
appear to any outside observer to be utter madness. This brings
to mind the famous statement by the Greek playwright, Euripides
(480-406 BC) after contemplating the senseless human slaughter
in the Trojan War: "Whom the gods would destroy, they first
make mad."
Perhaps ignoring a civilization ending
threat year-after-year for decades is a kind of madness. But
madness or just incredibly irresponsible, we must wake up and
reverse direction before it is forever too late. This danger
cannot be overstated. Shortly before leaving office, former United
Nations Secretary General, Kofi Annan, stated that among all
our serious global problems, nuclear weapons present the greatest
danger because they present a "unique existential threat
to all humanity."
In this first month of the seventh year
into the new millennium, the great scientist and fellow of the
Royal Society, Steven Hawking, stated: "As scientists, we
understand the dangers of nuclear weapons and their devastating
effectsas citizens of the world, we have a duty to alert the
public to the unnecessary risks that we live with every day,
and to the perils we foresee if governments and societies do
not take action to render nuclear weapons obsolete..."
Sir Martin Rees, president of the Royal
Society, professor of cosmology and astrophysics, and master
at Trinity College at the University of Cambridge, stated in
response to the advancing the nuclear clock: "Nuclear weapons
still pose the most catastrophic and immediate threat to humanity..."
Stephen Hawking and Sir Martin Rees both
agree that climate change could threaten our civilization, but
it is nuclear weapons that are the greatest and immediate threat.
It is, therefore, imperative that we join together with an unyielding
determination and with an iron will to ensure that nuclear weapons
are abolished from the face of the earth. Until then, humanity
will be remain, as President Kennedy stated: "Under a nuclear
sword of Damocles, hanging by the slenderest of threads, capable
of being cut at any moment by accident or miscalculation or madness."
*************
Douglas Mattern is President of the Association of World Citizens
(AWC) and author of "Looking for Square Two - Moving from
War and Violence to Global Community" available on Amazon.com
---- AWC email: worldcit@best.com
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