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Manmade
global warming alarmism took a disgraceful turn for the worse this
weekend when Newsweek published a lengthy cover-story repeatedly
calling skeptics "deniers" that are funded by oil companies and other
industries with a vested interest in obfuscating the truth.
In
fact, the piece several times suggested that publishing articles
skeptical of man's role in climate change is akin to misleading
Americans about the dangers of smoking.
Despicably titled "Global-Warming Deniers: A Well-Funded Machine," the article
painted a picture of an evil cabal whose goal is to thwart science at
the detriment of the environment and the benefit of their wallets.
Worse
still, the piece's many authors painted every skeptical scientific
report they referred to as being part of this cabal while including
absolutely no historical temperature data to prove that today's global
temperatures are in any way abnormal.
Maybe most
disingenuous, there wasn't one word given to how much money
corporations and entities with a vested interest in advancing the
alarmism are spending, or who they are. Yet, in the very first
paragraph, one of the main participants in this evil cabal was
identified (emphasis added throughout):
As [Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-California)] left a meeting
with the head of the international climate panel, however, a staffer
had some news for her. A conservative think tank long funded by ExxonMobil, she told Boxer, had
offered scientists $10,000 to write articles undercutting the new
[IPCC] report and the computer-based climate models it is based on. "I realized," says Boxer, "there was a movement behind this that just wasn't giving up."
But that was just the beginning:
Since the late 1980s, this
well-coordinated, well-funded campaign by contrarian scientists,
free-market think tanks and industry has created a paralyzing fog of
doubt around climate change. Through advertisements, op-eds,
lobbying and media attention, greenhouse doubters (they hate being
called deniers) argued first that the world is not warming;
measurements indicating otherwise are flawed, they said. Then they
claimed that any warming is natural, not caused by human activities.
Now they contend that the looming warming will be minuscule and
harmless. "They patterned what they did after the tobacco industry,"
says former senator Tim Wirth, who spearheaded environmental issues as
an under secretary of State in the Clinton administration. "Both
figured, sow enough doubt, call the science uncertain and in dispute.
That's had a huge impact on both the public and Congress."
How
utterly disgraceful. So, scientists all around the world who have
devoted their lives and their careers to studying and writing about
climate and related issues who don't feel man can or is impacting such
are akin to folks who misled the public about the potential dangers of
cigarette smoking.
How disgusting. Frankly, these "journalists"
should be asked by every skeptical scientist on the planet for an
immediate apology.
Sadly, as one won't likely be forthcoming, these folks were just getting warmed up with their disgraceful accusations:
"As
soon as the scientific community began to come together on the science
of climate change, the pushback began," says historian Naomi Oreskes of
the University of California, San Diego. Individual companies and
industry associations-representing petroleum, steel, autos and
utilities, for instance-formed lobbying groups with names like the
Global Climate Coalition and the Information Council on the
Environment. ICE's game plan called for enlisting greenhouse doubters
to "reposition global warming as theory rather than fact," and to
sow doubt about climate research just as cigarette makers had about
smoking research.
Disgusting. But it gets worse as the authors then began to personally attack prominent skeptics:
In what would become a key tactic of the denial machine-think tanks linking up with like-minded, contrarian researchers-the report was endorsed in a letter to President George H.W. Bush by MIT meteorologist Richard Lindzen. Lindzen, whose parents had fled Hitler's Germany, is described by old friends as the kind of man who, if you're in the minority, opts to be with you.
"I thought it was important to make it clear that the science was at an
early and primitive stage and that there was little basis for consensus
and much reason for skepticism," he told Scientific American magazine.
"I did feel a moral obligation."
[...]
Groups
that opposed greenhouse curbs ramped up. They "settled on the 'science
isn't there' argument because they didn't believe they'd be able to
convince the public to do nothing if climate change were real," says
David Goldston, who served as Republican chief of staff for the House
of Representatives science committee until 2006. Industry found a friend in Patrick Michaels,
a climatologist at the University of Virginia who keeps a small farm
where he raises prize-winning pumpkins and whose favorite weather, he
once told a reporter, is "anything severe." Michaels had written
several popular articles on climate change, including an op-ed in The
Washington Post in 1989 warning of "apocalyptic environmentalism,"
which he called "the most popular new religion to come along since
Marxism." The coal industry's Western Fuels Association paid
Michaels to produce a newsletter called World Climate Report, which has
regularly trashed mainstream climate science. (At a 1995 hearing in
Minnesota on coal-fired power plants, Michaels admitted that he
received more than $165,000 from industry; he now declines to comment
on his industry funding, asking, "What is this, a hatchet job?")
As the article moved into the Kyoto period, a key issue was conveniently ignored:
Just before Kyoto, S. Fred Singer released the "Leipzig Declaration on Global Climate Change."
Singer, who fled Nazi-occupied Austria as a boy, had run the U.S.
weather-satellite program in the early 1960s. In the Leipzig petition,
just over 100 scientists and others, including TV weathermen, said they
"cannot subscribe to the politically inspired world view that envisages
climate catastrophes." Unfortunately, few of the Leipzig signers actually did climate research; they just kibitzed about other people's. Scientific
truth is not decided by majority vote, of course (ask Galileo), but the
number of researchers whose empirical studies find that the world is
warming and that human activity is partly responsible numbered in the
thousands even then. The IPCC report issued this year, for instance,
was written by more than 800 climate researchers and vetted by 2,500
scientists from 130 nations.
Although Clinton did not even try to get the Senate to ratify the Kyoto treaty (he knew a hopeless cause when he saw one), industry was taking no chances.
Notice
something conspicuously absent? How about the fact that on July 25,
1997, the Senate voted 95-0 on the Byrd-Hagel resolution strongly
advising President Clinton to not sign the treaty?
How could
such a lengthy article supposedly chronicling the history of this issue
totally ignore this key vote in the Senate? Did the authors not want
readers to know why America didn't ratify this treaty? How can these
authors, as they repeatedly avowed that every skeptical scientist is
obfuscating the truth about global warming, intentionally omit this
crucial vote?
Yet, that's not all they intentionally omitted:
The GOP control of Congress for six of Clinton's eight years in office meant the denial machine had a receptive audience.
Although Republicans such as Sens. John McCain, Jim Jeffords and
Lincoln Chafee spurned the denial camp, and Democrats such as
Congressman John Dingell adamantly oppose greenhouse curbs that might
hurt the auto and other industries, for the most part climate change
has been a bitterly partisan issue. Republicans have also received
significantly more campaign cash from the energy and other industries
that dispute climate science. Every proposed climate bill "ran into a
buzz saw of denialism," says Manik Roy of the Pew Center on Climate
Change, a research and advocacy group, who was a Senate staffer at the
time. "There was no rational debate in Congress on climate change."
Okay.
So, what happened with regard to climate change legislation during
Clinton's first two years when he had a Democrat Congress?
No mention.
And,
what climate change legislation was proposed by President Clinton from
1995 through 2000 that was defeated by the Republican Congress?
No mention.
And,
the article conveniently ignored that under Clinton, not only were
maximum highway speed limits raised, but fuel efficiency requirements,
known as CAFE standards, didn't go up one tenth of one mile per gallon
in Clinton's two terms.
That appears to be a truth too inconvenient for these authors to share:
The reason for the inaction was clear. "The
questioning of the science made it to the Hill through senators who
parroted reports funded by the American Petroleum Institute and other
advocacy groups whose entire purpose was to confuse people on the
science of global warming," says Sen. John Kerry. "There would
be ads challenging the science right around the time we were trying to
pass legislation. It was pure, raw pressure combined with false facts."
Nor were states stepping where Washington feared to tread. "I did a lot
of testifying before state legislatures-in Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
Alaska-that thought about taking action," says Singer. "I said that the
observed warming was and would be much, much less than climate models
calculated, and therefore nothing to worry about."
Yet,
no specific legislation was addressed by Newsweek, and no roll call
votes reported to inform the reader of who voted for and against such
legislation.
How disgraceful.
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