| on Apr 27, 2008, 11:47 AM E.S.T.
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The Real Climate Martians
Fred Singer, one of the world’s renowned scientists, believes in
Martians. I discovered this several weeks ago while reading his
biography on Wikipedia, the online encyclopedia. “Do you really believe
in Martians?” I asked him last week, at a chance meeting at a
Washington event. The answer was “No.”
Wikipedia’s error was neither
isolated nor inadvertent. The page that Wikipedia devotes to what is
ostensibly Fred Singer’s biography is designed to trivialize his long
and outstanding scientific career by painting him as a political
partisan and someone who “is best known as president and founder (in
1990) of the Science & Environmental Policy Project, which disputes
the prevailing scientific views of climate change, ozone depletion, and
second-hand smoke and is science advisor to the conservative journal NewsMax.”
Innocent
Wikipedia readers would be surprised to learn that Dr. Singer is no
conservative kook but the first director of the U.S. National Weather
Satellite Center; the recipient of a White House commendation for his
early design of space satellites; the recipient of a commendation from
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for research on
particle clouds; and the recipient of a U.S. Department of Commerce
Gold Medal Award for the development and management of weather
satellites.
He is, in short, a scientist of the highest calibre,
with a long list of major scientific achievements, including the first
measurements, with V-2 and Aerobee rockets, of primary cosmic radiation
in space, the design of the first instruments for measuring ozone, and
the authorship of the first publications predicting the existence of
trapped radiation in the earth’s magnetic field to explain the
magnetic-storm ring current.
Honest accounts of Fred Singer and his
accomplishments have been available on Wikipedia, and on hundreds of
occasions. Those occasions don’t last long, however — often just
minutes — before the honest accounts are discovered and reverted by
Wikipedians who troll the site. Such trolls continually monitor
Wikipedia’s 10 million pages to erase any hint that the science is not
settled on climate change. Dissenters by the dozens have been likewise
demeaned — to check for yourself, just look up Richard Lindzen, Paul
Reiter, or any of the other scientists or organizations that have
questioned the orthodoxy on climate change.
In contrast to the
high-handed treatment that greet global warming skeptics, those who
support the orthodoxy are puffed up and protected from criticism, their
errors erased and their controversies hushed.
This is the case with
Naomi Oreskes, a scientist with a PhD who had arrived at an absurd
finding: That no studies in a major scientific database questioned the
UN view of climate change. To bolster her standing, those who troll for
Wikipedia have done their best to dress up her CV — they note that she
won a National Science Foundation’s Young Investigator Award in 1994,
that she has been a consultant for various government agencies, and
that in July she will become provost of an as-yet unnamed college of
the University of California, San Diego. While these accomplishments
are nothing to sneeze at, she is no Fred Singer.
In any event, her
Wikipedia page is not really about her but her study, which has been
thoroughly discredited by credible journalists and scientists. To
suppress these critiques, the trollers apply Wikipedia’s bewildering
rules as to what can and can’t appear, and when the rules are
inadequate, the trollers make up new ones on the fly.
Several weeks
ago, as I described in an earlier column, I attempted to correct
passages on the Oreskes page that would lead readers to think her study
had been vindicated and also to think that U.K. scientist Benny Peiser,
one of her critics, had abjectly withdrawn his criticisms. Wikipedia’s
rules thwarted me, used to revert my corrections, again and again.
Those who came before me in attempting to make corrections, and, I
would find out, those who came after, were similarly thwarted.
Wikipedia
refused to accept Peiser’s critique, or his interpretation of his own
views, or an account of his views that he had provided to me, or an
account of his views published in a peer-reviewed journal, or an
account of his views published in The Wall Street Journal, or an account of his views published by the U.S. Senate committee on environment and public works.
Instead,
the Wikipedia trollers insisted that all of the above sources were
disqualified or irrelevant under Wikipedia rules, and that the
trollers’ own understanding of Peiser’s views trumped all others.
Just
as the trollers insist on characterizing Fred Singer as believing in
Martians. When it is the Wickipedian trollers who are from Mars. Source
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