| on May 6, 2008, 02:48 PM E.S.T.
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When heralded Canadian environmentalist Lawrence Solomon first set
out two years ago — on a bet, no less — to find credible dissenters to
the well-entrenched climate change dogma, he thought he might perhaps
unearth enough material for a few National Post columns. Instead, like
Alice passing through the looking glass, Mr. Solomon entered a world
wherein it soon became clear the much-ballyhooed idea of a "scientific
consensus" was as nonsensical as "Jabberwocky."
"I had picked
several of the most essential and/or most widely publicized 'building
blocks' of the case for catastrophic global warming," Mr. Solomon
writes. "In each case, not only was I able to find a truly eminent,
world-renowned leader in the field who disputed the point in question,
but in each case the denier had more authority, sometimes far more
authority, than those who put forward the building block in the first
place."
The debate over anthropogenic — that is, human
induced — climate change, is, in other words, just a bit more
complicated than Al Gore suggested on "Oprah." Few books have captured
this cognitive dissonance as well as "The Deniers," Mr. Solomon's
essential, engrossing travelogue through the world of climate-change
dissent.
In "The Deniers"' deniers are not the usual suspects
paraded out by a media eager for Scopes Monkey Trial II: Flat Earthers'
Revenge. They aren't blustery, ill-informed television pundits or
slash-and-burn polemicists.
Rather, Mr. Solomon introduces us
to legendary scientists with impeccable resumes and prestigious
appointments at major universities and mainstream research institutes;
thoughtful, serious professionals who, at their own professional peril,
looked at one or another of the shibboleths of global warming alarmism
— from the debunked "hockey stick" graphic and misread ice core samples
to the amateurish or incorrect computer models and fear-mongering — and
bravely refused to join the herd, profitable as that may be these days.
Likewise,
Mr. Solomon's own position as founder and executive director of the
well-regarded international environmental group Energy Probe makes it
considerably more difficult for opponents to shellac him as a
right-wing reactionary moonlighting as an oil company stooge — though,
of course, no slander has been proven entirely off limits for
demagogues who believe they are the Jack Bauers incarnate in a special
environmental doomsday season of 24. ("There's no time for debate,
Chloe, we've got to regulate now!") Witness "60 Minutes" reporter Scott
Pelly's answer when queried as to why his reports featured no global
warming skeptics: "If I do an interview with Elie Wiesel, am I required
as a journalist to find a Holocaust denier?"
So who, exactly,
has convened the conspiracy of silence Mr. Solomon is now attempting to
shatter with "The Deniers?" Well, it's ... complicated. As the author
would learn, many highly-qualified scientists who question even some
small aspect of the global warming orthodoxy "don't want to be found at
all and try very hard not to appear as dissenters. They have no wish to
be called names in the press, or to lose their jobs, or to have their
funding cut off as many deniers have."
Beyond the disturbing
issue of self-censorship, however, stand those for whom the sexy
business of saving the world is much too gratifying to bother with any
credible contrarianism. Who wants to just live on an ever-changing
planet when one could be a mini-Zeus lording over all the elements?
Thus, even a balanced scientific report can end up resembling a lost
quatrain from the Book of Revelation in the hands of regulation-happy
politicians and reporters with small paychecks and large hero complexes.
Never mind that, as Mr. Solomon demonstrates to great effect in the
closing pages of "The Deniers," the practical effect of popular climate
change regulation schemes will likely be old-growth forests in Third
World countries felled to make way for profitable "carbon intensive
plantations." ("Every time we buy carbon offsets to salve our
consciences at flying in a jet," Mr. Solomon writes, "we are helping to
dispossess someone, somewhere, by boosting the carbon credit value of
their land.") Forget that bio-fuel fads are pricing the world's poor
out of sustenance. Ignore the myriad other environmental problems that
could be addressed with the resources eaten up to solve a problem that
very well may not exist.
"The Deniers" is a timely, necessary
antidote to a political and scientific discussion poisoned by hubristic
groupthink and the kind of scorched earth (mis)behavior that inevitably
arises when a movement becomes so uncritically wedded to the
commandments of a pseudo-religion its adherents would rather destroy
their adversaries than risk debating them. Source
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