| The Climate-Change Deniers |
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| Written by Global Warming Politics | |||
| Friday, 20 June 2008 | |||
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There never has been, and there never will be, a ‘stable climate’. It is an oxymoron of stratospheric proportions, and I am unable to take seriously any commentator who glibly pens so bizarre a phrase. As my colleague, Dr. Robert Bradnock, wrote [see: ‘Guest Essay’, June 9] on this site recently:
And, as for that headline about “Saving the planet”, the least said, the better. The Manhattan Declaration Moreover, Mr. Stephens is worryingly wrong concerning the ‘consensus’. His article rabbits on about the “... determined few who see global warming as the invention of woolly-hatted do-gooders and of scientists who want to be soothsayers. The small band of sceptics seizes on the inevitable imprecision of the effort to predict the future relationship between greenhouse gases and changes in temperature as an excuse to ignore the overwhelming weight of scientific knowledge.” Has Mr. Stephens, I wonder, heard of the newly-established Manhattan Declaration [“‘Global warming’ is not a global crisis”; signed New York, March 4, 2008], for example? This affirms, among other things, that:
This Declaration has now been endorsed by over 1,100 serious folk, scientists, economists, and other specialists, including climate scientists. You may view for yourself those who have endorsed the Manhattan Declaration, as follows:
The Real Scandal Now, the real scandal might actually be the fact that Mr. Stephens may indeed not have heard of the Manhattan Declaration, which has been disgracefully and willfully ignored by the UK media. Can you imagine the coverage of such a declaration were it in support of the ‘global warming’ trope? The truth is that there is no ‘consensus’ on climate-change science, and, in any case, ‘consensus’ in science is a dangerous concept; there is even less of a ‘consensus’ on climate-change economics; and, very soon, any contrived pseudo-political ‘consensus’ will start to fall apart as the climate enters a possible cooling phase, as economic realities bite even deeper, as the political hypocrisies become apparent for all to see, and as the very idea that carbon emissions can be reduced quickly is deemed a mammoth hoax [picture above]. I am afraid, Mr. Stephens, it is you who are in denial about climate change. Unlike the climate realists, you appear to deny the inherent inexorability of climate change, and you seem to be in painful denial over the fact that the ‘global warming’ grand narrative is beginning to lose its paradigmatic power. As your own article states:
I fear, Mr. Stephens, that ordinary folk have too much down-to-earth commonsense, as I know from my many talks throughout the country with farmers’ groups, engineers, business folk, the WI, and schools. And finally, can I say that I am appalled by your resort to ageism (your gratuitous third paragraph - by the way, I am passionately anti-smoking), which should have no place in a liberal newspaper like the Financial Times? It really is time for the climate-change realists to speak up over the noisy clamour of the ‘global warming’ climate-change deniers. Source 3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved." |
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The true deniers of climate change are not the
thousands of scientists and economists, the climate realists, who are
critical of the ‘global warming’ grand narrative, but the ‘global
warming’ zealots who believe that we can either ‘stop’ or ‘stabilize’
climate change, two of the most ridiculous and hubristic concepts ever
to afflict human arrogance. It is especially concerning, however, when
you read such nonsense in supposedly serious newspapers like the