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The Skeptical Environmentalist

-cman- writes: "The issue of human impact on the global environment is one -- if not the most --important and divisive issues of our generation. There are two key questions involved; is human activity having a major impact on the climate of the Earth? What, if anything should be done to minimize that impact? It is within the lifetimes of most of Slashdot's readers that we begin to get answers to these questions. We will either begin to make policy and economic changes to protect the environment or we won't. And towards the middle and end of this century we will begin to see real-time data to validate some of the predictions being bandied about by environmental scientists. Amid all the uncertainty that the above two questions generate comes a new book, The Skeptical Environmentalist; Measuring the Real State of the World.." Read on for the rest of -cman-'s review. The Skeptical Environmentalist author Bjorn Lomborg pages 540 publisher Cambridge University Press rating 8 reviewer -cman- ISBN 0521010683 summary This book takes a careful look at existing environmental data, with some surprising conclusions and resulting controversy.

The book has caused quite a stir in the circles of environmental activism. Bjorn Lomborg, coming from a green background, has thoroughly reviewed much of the work in the field and raised some concerns about the quality of the consensus analysis and conclusions. Sample chapters and further defense of his work can be found at www.lomborg.com

Disclosure Statement: I am a small 'g' green. I am a member of the Viridian Design Movement if not of the Green Party USA. I hold as a matter of fact that dependence on hydrocarbons is unsustainable for both the developed world and as a path to long-term growth for the developing world. I strongly believe that it is a moral imperative for humanity to preserve as much of the planet's natural beauty and habitat as possible. My general impression with the state of climate studies is that human activity is probably having an effect on the global climate. To what extent is a matter still open for debate in my opinion. But hey, its OUR PLANET we're talking about, so why take chances? That said, I also consider myself to be just as rabid an empiricist. I detest being led about by phony data or false conclusions, and I will not support any cause that cannot bring itself to tell the truth to the public about its data and agenda. If the current data does not fit my model of how life should be, I know that I shouldn't blame the data or the messenger. So, I am trying to be as objective as possible here, but I am coming from the green end and analyzing this work in that light.

Lomborg is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Aarhaus in Denmark. His specialty, indeed his only other major academic paper, is in the field of game theory. Lomborg -- once upon a time a deep green himself -- set out in 1997 to debunk the claims of economist Julian Simon, a environmental degradation doubter. He found that much of the data had a tendency to support Simon. This lead him to a thorough review of much of the major scientific work in four major areas of "the environmental litany" (Lomborg's words).

  • We are depleting a finite supply of natural resources.
  • The human population continues to grow, threatening our ability to feed the teeming billions.
  • Species are becoming extinct at an alarming rate, deforestation is accelerating and fish stocks are collapsing.
  • The air and water are becoming ever more polluted.

The result was The Skeptical Environmentalist. In each of these areas, Lomborg looks at a broad swath of the scientific work done to date to support these claims and finds them wanting. He gets very specific and points out numerous errors of omission as well as slanting of the data and just plain making up results to fit the hypothesis. Lomborg accuses environmental scientists of behaving more like lobbyists trying to put the best possible spin on an issue by manipulating the facts. He also takes to task a credulous media for swallowing this tripe hook, line, and sinker, as it were. Sadly, in some key areas Lomborg has -- either through ignorance or purposefully -- committed errors of omission and selective data use to make some of the same mistakes in analysis, and this very much reduces his credibility.

The first thing that sets the book apart from almost all nonacademic works in the area is the completeness and openness of the research. The book is copiously footnoted. Because of this it is clear from some of the attacks on Lomborg that his critics have been unable to muster the stomach to give it a thorough read, as many make totally false claims about Lomborg's inclusion or reference to specific studies and specific cases. If for no other reason, this completeness makes The Skeptical Environmentalist a valuable resource for anyone interested in environmental science. It is a very complete bibliography of the current work in the field. There are over 2,900 end notes in this 500 page book.

The thing that makes the environment such a slippery public policy subject is its uncertainty. Although the state of our understanding of climate and ecological complexity grows each year, it is still unable to predict with any certainty future events. The only thing that will prove a particular set of data is the future. At which time, of course, it is impossible to take preventative action.

It is probably quite understandable that environmental scientists would take great umbrage at both Lomborg's cheek and his conclusions; seeing how they pose a threat to a consensus of opinion about the state of the global environment and the degree of risk human activity poses. These are people with years of interest vested in their research and in using that research to try and get through to public and politicians who show a lot of reluctance to take on the problems and potential threats of human impact on the environment.

Lomborg quite correctly points out in his chapter on pollution that the worst pollution effects are the results of the early and middle stages of industrial development. Here he states that things are getting better in the developed world and as technology advances, the environmental impact of human activity will be reduced. He acknowledges that something must be done to help the developing world find a different path of development than that already taken by the developed nations. Lomborg takes the green movement to task here for trying to do everything at once; forcing developing nations to spend on "clean" technologies while spending on health and economic development for the poor nations. After wading through what must have been a mind-numbing torrent of cost-benefit analysis data, Lomborg says that choices must be made, political and financial resources are finite and some levels of protection cost more than they are worth. However, one must deeply fault Lomborg's cost-benefit analysis for not making a good attempt to elucidate the cost of environmental degradation per se but instead focusing on pure human property and health costs. What price does one put on the stability of the Gulf Stream currents? What is the actual opportunity cost of one barrel of oil considering it comes from finite supply for which the actual amount is unknown and the burning of which causes environmental costs we can only approximate? These questions have vexed economists for decades, but the answers are surely not zero.

Lomborg's big picture of the general shape of the global climate and of biodiversity is one that debunks most of the more extreme forecasts. In this he has produced valuable analysis. But by his own admission he has skipped over local trends and impacts that have profound social and economic implications. For example, while stating that the actual rate of species extinction over the next 50 years is more likely to be 0.7% rather than the 20-50% numbers bandied about by the World Wildlife Fund et. al., he misses the threat of local species crashes such as that of Atlantic Cod that nearly ruined the fishing industry Eastern North America and Northern Europe in the 1980s and the resulting threat to previously unfished stocks as industrial fishing operations switched to roughy and so on.

The big picture and long-term focus also misses the boat on another key issue. Recent analysis of deep-ice core samples at the poles and in Greenland have shown that in the past, the climate has changed very sharply and very rapidly; on the order of several degrees of average temperature in a decade or less. These changes are probably due to snap changes in the ocean currents caused by salinity levels and minute temperature deviations that, when they go over a certain level "trigger" such events as the mini-Ice Age of the 1500s to mid-1800s. Lomborg completely bypasses addressing the fact that even the minimal human environmental impact he says the data supports could be enough to tip the balance in these areas. And should such evens occur, even Lomborg would admit they would be economically and politically devastating. Perhaps it is his rigid attention to what is measurable that prevented him from addressing this issue. There is too much uncertainty involved to begin to assess whether or not we even can prevent such "trigger" events and thus begin to make cost-benefit analysis of preventative measures.

The most shocking thing about The Skeptical Environmentalist is not its heretical views (in the eyes of greens) however, but the reception it has received among the environmental movement. Instead of praising its depth and using its own errors to show the way forward the community has -- in the grand tradition of the left eating its young -- gone after Dr. Lomborg with a furious anger. Recently, when Dr. Lomborg showed up at Oxford university, the author of an environmental study with a competing view shoved a pie in his face. In its January 2002 issue, Scientific American devoted 11 pages (electronic copies are US$5.00) to attacking the book, its author and his conclusions.

Not surprisingly, the free-market loving Economist has taken up the defense of Dr. Lomborg with both a lead opinion piece and a feature in the February 6th issue. In addition, the magazine had Lomborg pen a "by invitation" piece in August, 2001, a rare honor. The New York Times has also come to his defense with a "Scientist At Work" puff piece in November, 2001.

But by attacking the book and the author so shrilly, the environmental community risks its own hard-won credibility. It acts just as Lomborg accuses it, like lobbyists with an axe to grind, not cold-eyed, empirically-minded scientists. Lomborg's study has its flaws, as does any environmental study. But those flaws should be attacked on their merits alone. At its worst, The Skeptical Environmentalist merely muddies the waters of scientific and public consensus on global human environmental impact. At its best it provides a crucial reality check for those who seek profound social and economic changes in the name of preserving environmental sustainability.

You can purchase The Skeptical Environmentalist from Fatbrain. Want to see your own review here? Just read the book review guidelines, then use Slashdot's handy submission form.

664 comments

  1. I'd like to take this opportunity... by InfoSec · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...to say "Join the Church Of Euthanasia!!! Save the planet, Kill yourself!!"

    --

    Wherever you go, there I am...
  2. We've already failed. by sfled · · Score: 0

    Don't drink the water, don't breathe the air, don't eat the food.

    --
    I'm not really a web designer, I just play one on the Internet.
    1. Re:We've already failed. by mother+pussbucket · · Score: 1

      Failed?

      It's February. It's 60 degrees in NY. I'd say global warming has been a great success.

      --
      Yes, it's true. This man has no dick.
    2. Re:We've already failed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Perfect example of the type of pseudoscience the green movement uses.


      Hint:

      • What is the average temperature in NYC at this time of year over the last 200 years?
      • What is the upper range of `normal' temperatures in NYC at this time of year over the last 200 years?
      • What is the general pattern of temperatures this observation is part of?


      Do you know the answers to any of these questions? Do you have any evidence that this observation is unusual in the context of the historical record?


      Or are you just shooting your mouth off?

    3. Re:We've already failed. by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      I copied your post into Google and got this. It should give you anything you want to know.

    4. Re:We've already failed. by shokk · · Score: 1

      Does anyone actually think that anything we do to this planet in killing ourselves would not disappear after 100,000 years or so? The universe doesn't care what the hell we do here...this rock will continue to spin around the Sun and life will find a way around whatever it is that we do. The basic atoms and particles that this planet consisted of a few million years ago are all still here now and will be in a few million years, regardless of the resources spent on a paltry handful space probes that will escape this solar system.

      When we consider all this "green" business, they're *still* being humanocentric - the planet must be the way we remember it over the past hundred years or so. Who said so? Maybe we're still in part of a warming period between ice ages and it's going to get a lot hotter before some other geological system kicks in to cool things down again. By that time people will be moaning over global cooling because they're too short sighted to see that it's teh way things are, and little puny humans that think they are affecting the biosphere are a galactic joke.

      Our science over the past couple of hundred years or so is still so adolescent that you really can't consider the data to present a realistic statistic base compared to the reality over the past millions. Global warming is a theory, not known to be fact. There is evidence that points both ways, and we have just had eight years of liberalism that allowed the pendulum of public opinion to swing towards only showcasing an overabundance of green lunatics. We may be heading towards a period over overconservatism that will completely and blindly deny any existence of global warming. Whatever the case, we need to tread carefully with whatever ideas are put forth, since the overzealous are always pushing their agendas regardless of how wrong they are in the long run.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master."
    5. Re:We've already failed. by mother+pussbucket · · Score: 1

      Who rained on your parade? Lighten up.

      Hint:

      In 200 years it won't matter one way or the other.

      Or do you think future generations are going to give any more of a shit about us and what we did than we do about our great grandparents and what they did? Get some perspective.

      Remember the sixties? Probably not. It was 40 years ago. All the tree huggers from that generation are driving around in SUVs. I don't think the current generation will be any more diligent when it comes to dealing with problems that require more than a 10 minute attention span.

      --
      Yes, it's true. This man has no dick.
  3. Scientific American review shredded it. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 0, Redundant


    There was a review of this book in Scientific American a couple of issues back, and they trashed it pretty hard.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by FatRatBastard · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      "I posted first, therefor I didn't even read the review."

      Thanks for pointing out what was already in his review.

    2. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Skraig · · Score: 2

      Too bad they did. Evironmental science is really dificult stuff and it sounds like this author made a strong attempt at it. With subjects as complex as climate change, econmoics, and population planning, making a decent book with a valid conclusion is a dificult problem.

      "Limits to Growth" was a pretty important book on this subject and it got almost everything wrong. A very dry but funny read if you dig it up. The basic ideas from it are still ratling around even when they are clearly oversimplifications.

      --
      --->Life is like that sometimes...
    3. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, of course they did. They're advocates of a particular position, with which Mr. Lomborg dared to disagree.

    4. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Glytch · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Seeing people replying at score 2 pisses you off? Damn. I'll be sure to keep that in mind.

    5. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Juda_ben_Maci · · Score: 5, Interesting

      A recent review, by James Glassman, that was in essential agreement with this one about the merits of the book and the reaction of the green community addressed the Scientific American article (which I had read previously) in more detail. Of particular interest to me was background information he supplied on one of the four critics Scientific American selected for the review, Stephan Schneider.
      Kassman includes the following quote by professor Stephan Schneider, a bioligist from Standford.

      "[We] are not just scientists but human beings as well. And like most people we'd like to see the world a better place. . . . To do that we need to get some broad-based support, to capture the public's imagination. That, of course, entails getting loads of media cov-erage. So we have to offer up scary scenarios, make simplified, dra-matic statements, and make little mention of any doubts we might have. . . . Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest."

      When I read the Scientific American review I remember thinking that the tone of the artical was much more rhetorical and less substantive then I would have hoped/expected from the magazine. While I never doubted that there were individuals and groups who used 'science' to further political agendas it is very dissipointing that an institute whose focus is not even environmental science would publish such a questionable article.

    6. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Psion · · Score: 1

      Yep, and Lomborg, who was denied an opportunity to respond has addressed this hatchet job on one of his sites:
      Lomborg's Responses

    7. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by mesocyclone · · Score: 2

      Never forget that Scientific American has long had a strong left-wing bias. I have read both the Scheptical Environmentalist and the Scientific American attack on it. The only thing interesting about the attack in SA is that they devoted so much space to it.

      Scientific American, in addition to its environmental bias, also has very strong biases in the area of arms control. Thus they always publish the most pessimistic scenario about anti-missile defense and related issues.

      The fact that all articles they publish are either neutral or tilting towards the left/green establishes without doubt their bias.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    8. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by dgroskind · · Score: 2

      The fact that all articles they publish are either neutral or tilting towards the left/green establishes without doubt their bias.

      You say that the fact that some of the articles are neutral is evidence of bias. What sense does that make?

    9. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by mesocyclone · · Score: 2

      No, I show that since they are neutral or left establishes their bias. If they were ALL neutral it would not. If they were neutral and left and right it would not.

      I use the terms left and right very loosely here, btw.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    10. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      now that's crap. It is ridiculous of SA to review this book and not let the author respond. It seems to indicate that they're nervous their readers won't agree with the editor if we hear Lomborg's response... (of course I'm also pissed off that he had to edit his reply on his site so as not to infringe on SA's copyright) (I mean this is a *perfect* example of fair-use)

    11. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by tgibbs · · Score: 1
      I thought that the Scientific American attacks only increased the books credibility. It was bad enough that the reviewers (or an editor) chose to entitle the reviews "Science defends itself against The Skeptical Environmentalist ", thereby effectively characterizing Lomborg (a person with academic credentials who has written a carefully referenced book published by a respected scientific publishing house) as a nonscientist.

      The "reviews" themselves maintain this hysterical tone. Some criticize Lomborg's citations, while failing to provide any themselves. In many cases, it appeared to the reviewers either had not bothered to actually read the book, or perhaps were intentionally trying to mislead readers who had not read the book, in hopes of preventing them from doing so. Repeatedly, Lomborg is criticized for not considering issues that he in fact addresses explicitly. And the few actual errors that the reviewer's were able to document were essentially inconsequential. I was left with the impression that the book must be even stronger than I thought, if this was the best hatchet job that could be done by the people who were most motivated to trash the book (many of the "reviewers" were people whose views are directly criticized by Lomborg).

    12. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > No, I show that since they are neutral or left establishes their bias. If they were ALL neutral it would not. If they were neutral and left and right it would not.

      No. Bias would be if they always came down on the center or one side of an issue when there was substantial evidence supporting the other side as well. If the evidence happens to come down on the center or one side only, then authors/rags always coming down on the center and that side only would be evidence of honesty, not of bias.

      For instance, if the authors/editors always come down on the side of a "round" earth rather than a flat one, that's not bias, that's factual reporting. (Or perhaps "bias toward the truth".)

      BTW, I'm not saying I know that the evidence only ever supports one side in the current argument; I'm merely pointing out that your purported evidence for bias isn't evidence at all. It would be bias if their reporting were skewed w.r.t. the good science that is done on the topic, but you haven't shown that, or even tried to show that.

      > I use the terms left and right very loosely here, btw.

      Yes, you started with "left/green" and now you've reduced it to simply "left". The real question isn't "left vs. right", but rather, "What are the consequences of our lifestyle?". It's too bad that the issue has become politicized, but we need to try to see through the politics to the science.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    13. Re:Scientific American review shredded it. by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > [(?)Gl]assman includes the following quote by professor Stephan Schneider, a bioligist from Standford.

      I would very much like to read that review, if you could give a URL or print reference for it. A link to the source of Schneider's original statement would be useful as well; I can't find either with Google.

      Thanks.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  4. C'mon by zephc · · Score: 1

    Even if we AREN'T damaging things as badly as some say, it cant HURT us to be more eco-friendly. Do YOU pocket-mulch*? =]

    *simpson's reference

    --
    "I would say that 99 per cent of what my father has written about his own life is false." - L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
    1. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what if what you are doing to try to be more eco-friendly actually turns out to be much more damaging because of factors we don't know about yet?

    2. Re:C'mon by maxharris · · Score: 0, Troll

      Environmentalism is hurting us:

      Remember Taxol and the Yew tree?

      What about the Klamath Water War?

      How about the Firefighters killed by the Forest Service?

      Environmentalism is wrong because it holds nature, not man, as the standard of value.

    3. Re:C'mon by chewy_fruit_loop · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Environmentalism is wrong because it holds nature, not man, as the standard of value.

      The problem is, what the smeg do we do when there's arn't any more tree's producing oxygen for us, and everyone living under 10 meters above sea level neads a scuba gear to get into their house?

      If we realy want to screw the planet, won't we just endup being the borg?
    4. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A CO2 rich atmosphere encourages plant growth, so if we were to cut down all the trees, some other plant would take up the slack. As for what do do when the sea level rises... How about moving? If Canada and northern Asia gradually become fertile fields due to global warming, and Florida gets washed under the sea, I would call that a net gain. Come to think of it, there isn't really even a downside.

    5. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm aware of the Klamath thing, my dad lives close to that area. There are probably half a dozen solutions that would please both sides (none that I can think of at the moment... too sleepy) but beaurocrats are infinitely famous for not thinking well, and frankly, most hard-core environmentalists can't see past the end of their own nose with understanding about a balance between helping the environment and human reality (We "are a disease, a virus...").

      The misguided attempts of the US Forestry Service to stamp out all forest fire has of course led to a buildup of dead plant matter. Controlled burns, while on the right track, seem to be poorly managed.

      Legislating about the environment seems to be counterproductive regardless of what side you're on.

    6. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that's some pretty vague speculation about things that would take a long-ass time (in human terms) to happen. I'm happy with the global topology as it is, and I'd rather let the earth take its own damn course.

    7. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry if i didn't elaborate enough, but what i meant by eco-friendly isn't going out and bombing oil tankers with Green Peace, but just doing things locally, like composting (if you have the room to), recycling, maybe helping with cleanups at a beach or highway or something. Remember the bumper sticker "Think Globally, Act Locally"? Yeah.

    8. Re:C'mon by chewy_fruit_loop · · Score: 1

      theres talk of sea rise within 100 years, if it dosn't happen within my life time, then it will within my kids (when i have some).
      if bits of the coast start getting submerged then some of you may not mind, but when its your entire country thats underwater (.tv) and you have to find a new home in a new country then you'd be concerened about the rate the levels are rising. and as for co2 encouraging plant growth, well bugger me if i'd prefer to continue breathing, than wait an see if any other plants can take up the slack when there's no more rain forest.

    9. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Humans are one of the many organisms that make up the Earth's bioshpere. Anything we do to change the habitat is part of nature's cycle, just like when beavers knock trees down to block up rivers.

    10. Re:C'mon by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      it cant HURT us to be more eco-friendly.

      Yes, it can. Even if it was only $$ it would still have an impact on human suffering. Perhaps to an American or European a few percentage points of lost GDP is no big deal but to the developing world it can literally be the difference between life and death. Sometimes the cost in human suffering is even more direct. Malaria was essentially wiped out in southern Europe and America and there was initial progress in the third world due to the use of the pesticide DDT. The third world programs were curtailed (though some third world countries still use DDT) because of the environmental fears of people who had already benefited from it's use. The direct result is millions of deaths in Africa. Also many programs had already started but were stopped before wiping out infected mosquito populations, as with any "non-lethal" dose the result is a strain of mosquitos that have a higher resistance to DDT. Because of this the third world may now NEVER achieve the success combating malaria that America and Europe already enjoy. The environmental threat was quite real (though exagerated) but the human cost was also very real, indeed catastrophic.

    11. Re:C'mon by jazman_777 · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Even if we AREN'T damaging things as badly as some say, it cant HURT us to be more eco-friendly.


      Example: the health nuts (not the environmentalists) went crazy over asbestos. So asbestos was not able to be used in the WTC, and it melted down pretty quick...some people think asbestos, which is quite inert and harmless until you decide you need to rip it out (or you worked in an asbestos plant, R.I.P.), would have given the buildings more time, because the replacement stuff just doesn't work as well.

      You know, most of the stuff we do has a cost and a benefit. We do those things because of some benefit. You just can't _stop_ doing stuff that harms the environment, because everything we do effects it in some way. So you have to do cost + benefit. You can't focus on one to the exclusion of the other. Industrialists will fixate on the benefit, and the environmentalists will fixate on the cost. If either wins, we are screwed.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    12. Re:C'mon by iuyterw · · Score: 1

      That's beside the point.

      The ultimate goal of conservation isn't some hokey "maintain nature's balance" strawman.

      If we change the habitat to the point that human life becomes unsustainable or QOL drastically decreases, it will be cold comfort that it was all "part of nature's cycle."

    13. Re:C'mon by revscat · · Score: 2

      Environmentalism is wrong because it holds nature, not man, as the standard of value.

      Absoultely untrue. Environmentalism is fully compatible with humanism. Environmentalism is simply a recognition of the connectedness between man and nature. I believe the environment should be saved not only because it is the right thing to do, but primarily because I do not want to see mankind disappear due to his own greed and wastefulness.

      There are some who place more importance on the environment than on man. But to say that this is a core or necessary belief is just incorrect. Such a view is no more necessary than being a Christian requires one to oppose abortion. There may be a correlation, but it is not an absolute requirement.

    14. Re:C'mon by rana · · Score: 1

      I highly skeptical about the conclusions of the book and agree with many points of the reviewer. For further information and rebuttals from a surprisingly large number of world-renowned scientists, check out the article in www.gristmagazine.com aptly titled "Something Is Rotten in the State of Denmark: a skeptical look at the skeptical environmentalist." Here is a URL: http://www.gristmagazine.com/grist/books/lomborg12 1201.asp?source=daily
      For some reason the slash post engine is inserting extra spaces into the URL but I think you can figure it out.

    15. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it cant HURT us to be more eco-friendly

      Yes, it can. Not using oil-based fertilizer kills people. Not using DDT kills people. Raising fuel prices to pay for environmental regulations kills people.

      It's easy to ignore those costs because they're hidden, and because most of the deaths occur in the poor countries. Nevertheless, they're very real.

      I'm not necessarily advocating the use of DDT, but the decision not to use it does have a cost.

    16. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude, no amount of asbestos would have stopped the WTC from crumbling to the ground =P

    17. Re:C'mon by ElectricRook · · Score: 1

      Yes... But Environmentalism is used as a weapon to rally the mob behind (brave leader) aginst (bad enemy). That's how elections are won.

      Environmentalism is also used as an extortion tool aginst business, by same (brave leader). That's how campaign coffers are filled.

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
    18. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > a CO2 rich atmosphere encourages plant growth

      Only up to a certain point actually. There's a project going on (I believe by the US Forest Service) where trees actually get doused continually with CO2. As expected, there was accelerated growth but then it leveled out (# could be wrong, I think it was at ca. 30 percent compared to regular forests). So the concept of forests as dynamically adapting CO2 "sinks" doesn't exactly work. Especially not, when there aren't forests left and the very way to destroy the forests adds even more CO2 (slash & burn). I'd wonder, how many square kilometers of grass you'd need to replace the photosynthetical equivalent of a 200-year oak tree. And besides, it's not as if cut down forests are compensated by additional greenery somewhere else. It's cut down, and "developed" (i.e. asphaltized).
      As to who is right/wrong in the debate over environmental issues, frankly, it doesn't matter. Erring on the side of caution is definitely the best approach (without hysteria), since it is the very planet we live we're talking about. Who can make changes? Forget governments, corporations and anyone else besides *you*! Get compact-fluorescent lightbulbs, for example. It has lowered my electricity bill dramatically. My next processor will certainly be 0.13 micron based...less power consumption and faster. Perfect! If you look, there are many things one can do to tread lightly and not mess everything up just because it's convenient (for now).

    19. Re:C'mon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's no longer quite so clear what consititutes "ECO friendly". It's possible that implementing Kyoto will be found to be more environmentally damaging than doing nothing.

  5. Let me save you the suspense by pixelated77 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I hate to sound nihilistic, but in the end, we're just another species on this planet that will eventually go extinct. This is regardless of whether a global catastrophe will be directly caused by human activity, or whether it's caused by something completely out of our hands. We won't live forever, all we can do is make the best out of the time we are given in this pebble. Compulsive worrying about environmentalism is counterproductive, and environmentalism is only good as long as it enhances our quality of life without constrictively depriving us of our whatever creature comforts we deem to be necessary. So let me save you the suspsense, pack your shit folks, we're all going away.

    1. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      screw you! I plan to upload and leave this rock for somewhere prettier in a few decades!

    2. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      If you applied that thinking to an individual, you'd essentially be saying that there's not much point in fighting cancer if the treatments are uncomfortable, since you're gonna die anyway, and someday the universe will end.

    3. Re:Let me save you the suspense by pixelated77 · · Score: 2, Funny

      You make a good point, but all I'm saying is that it's going to be pretty funny for all the earthy-crunchy types when they lead expensive and prohibitive lifestyles trying to make the world a better place, and suddenly we get hit by an asteroid, a plague, or China gets frisky with nuclear weapons...

    4. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Wire+Tap · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I hate to sound nihilistic, but in the end, we're just another species on this planet that will eventually go extinct.



      EXCUSE ME???

      I fail to understand why any sentient being would take that perspective on life... are you complacent with the statement you made? Do you WANT to fade away? Do you wish that on your race? Your species? I certainly do not. Personally, I want to see us soar into space, settle on as many planets, planetoids, moons, asteroids, space stations, comets and suns as possible. While there are many who are skeptical about humans eventually migrating from the homeworld, I'm not one of them. I think we can do it. I believe we WILL do it. Wheter we conquer our problems on Earth first, is, of course, another story. Perhaps Earth will be damaged beyond repair, and it will be essential for all but a few humans to eventaully leave the planet, lest they be ravaged by disease, hunger, or any of a multitude other plights which may face our descendants.

      We won't live forever.

      While some transhumanists may disagree with you there - I see your point, but, you are wrong. We will continue to grow, change, adapt, evolve to the situations which the cold universe presents to us, but, I have strong reservations about the human race dying out. In thousands of years from now we will, to be sure, be an entirely different and perhaps unrecognizable species - or maybe even more than one species - but, we will still exist, in one form or the other. Even if it is simply the human spirit living inside a wholly different organism. We will live on.

      So let me save you the suspsense, pack your shit folks, we're all going away.

      No, I don't think so. Why don't you do us a favor and go away yourself, so you won't get in the way of those of us who truly aspire to peace and progress for humankind.

      --

      Man is born free; and everywhere he is in chains.

    5. Re:Let me save you the suspense by TrollBridge · · Score: 1, Insightful
      An excellent post sir.

      The problem with radical environmentalists is that they often have a financial agenda. These groups don't protest, bully, and lobby the government for the sake of reform that most likely wouldn't affect their lives.

      The fact is that there is alot of money to be harvested from government programs. Money that we really have no way of knowing is being spent on actual environmental improvement, let alone spent wisely. When the government proposes less environmental programs (subsidies), that means less money for these interest groups.

      Don't be fooled, most of these groups aren't about positive environmental change. They are about lining their own pockets by wresting government subsidies away from corporations into their own coffers.

      --
      There's a Mercedes gap too. I want one and can't afford one, but it's not government's job to do anything about it.
    6. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sorry pal but we're not just any other species on the planet. unlike every other organism on earth we have the ability to comprehend time and history. Do you really think we're just going to lay down and take it when our number's up? We'll be ready for it... possibly days in advance.

    7. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's all fine and dandy as long as we are the last generation of humans, or if you feel that you have no moral obligation to future generations to leave them something better than a trash dump.

      As a parent and a compassionate human, I don't think that I'll piss away the future with selfish, useless, filthy living.

      With that said, however, I'd like to reiterate an important point. Environmentalism is not a trade off between ecosystem or refrigeration. We can clean up our technologies or use alternatives and still live virtually the same life. I often wonder why people who just 'know' that missle defence will work and that technology will continue developing at outstanding velocities don't think that we can get away from trashing our world without returning from the stone age. Hmmm, I wonder who fed them that idea?

    8. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Do you really hate to sound nihilistic? Because it seems like you are really enjoying it.

      On the other hand... What have future generations done for me lately? They may inherit a dirty, smelly, swelteringly hot planet from us, but if the euphoreans at Wired are even half-right, they will also inherit disease-free lives that last 200 years while everybody has nanobots building free houses for them, and they each own their own spiffy jet car. On balance, it seems that they will make out okay. I mean, if plans to terraform Mars are just a moment away, geologically speaking, then how hard could it be to terraform Terra itself and undo all that pollution?

    9. Re:Let me save you the suspense by don_carnage · · Score: 2

      We're outta here as soon as the Vogons show up. ;^)

    10. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously you don't care about the world you leave your children dipshit. That's why most people actually care - they'd prefer not to leave a shitty, polluted wasteland for their kids.

    11. Re:Let me save you the suspense by goldspider · · Score: 1
      How is this a troll??? Just yesterday a group that portrayed itself as a defender of trees and claimed to use "tree-free" paper, and was raising funds to cover the costs of this alternative paper was found to be, in fact, using paper from trees.

      That money they raised had to have gone somewhere, no??

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    12. Re:Let me save you the suspense by wundabread · · Score: 1

      I'm not an earth-crunchy type, but when an asteroid or nuke hits, did you realize that the plant material it takes to grow one cow for food could feed hundreds of people?

      If you want to argue the economics, at least try to keep it honest. There is a middle ground here. Sure, humans are omnivores, but as a guy in medical school I can tell you that the west's shift to a meat-heavy diet hasn't done much for our rates of colon cancer.

    13. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Doppler00 · · Score: 1

      but in the end, we're just another species

      I suppose that if you're an atheist this would make sense, but surprisingly there are still many people who do believe in a God. As such, there are still people who have hope. I would only worry about the environment in this context: we are responsible to take care of this planet, but we should not believe that we have the capability to completely destroy it because we really don't.

    14. Re:Let me save you the suspense by gluteus · · Score: 0

      "ability to comprehend time and history."

      Prove it! Mankind has not learned from its past.
      Just look at recent history if you don't believe me.

    15. Re:Let me save you the suspense by goldspider · · Score: 1

      Here's the story.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    16. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh get real. I am an atheist, and I believe that we are 'just another species'. However, the logical sequence I develop from that is quite different from this guy's. I want humanity to soar to the stars. Of course, I don't want us to crap all over our birth planet either.

      As for how great you believers are, get real. You are willing to believe what Einstein figured out, and that airplanes actually can fly. We can make amazing structures and see to the end of the universe. Complex computers are also some of the things that science has provided. However, when science says that people evolved, well, science is obviously wrong. If science is so wrong, then don't listen to the scientists when we are able to predict a hurricane or something.

      And finally, as for destroying the planet, well, nuclear weapons could definitely render the planet inhospitable to anything more complex than algae.

    17. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does you being in medical school have anything to do with knowing the colon cancer rates? So people who don't attend pricey institutions which churn out pawns for the pharmaceutical industry are somehow deprived of this knowledge.

      Please. Most doctors know dick.

    18. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Whether or not one wants human life to go extinct, it's entirely possible that it will. I suspect that it's even likely. That doesn't have to be nihilistic (though I'm sure that some people find meaning in life only by believing that human civilization is undefeatable..)
      Also, I think you're giving too much credit to the idea that homo sapiens continues to evolve. Our species hasn't changed in any substantial biological way for ~100,000 years (I think that's the right number.. I just looked it up the other day). Any development from here will almost certainly have to be by our own hands, and our understanding of genetics is still not nearly up to the task. It's a possibility, though.
      Don't let that stop you from hoping for a human future. Just know what's really happening.

      Does anyone else think it's interesting how environmentalism frequently becomes a debate about the relative importance and duties of humanity? To convince people that they need to have less impact on the earth, you need to convince them that we're capable of destroying it (or some significant aspect of it). However, it's often opposed by the belief that we're allowed to do whatever we want, to our own benefit, which means that not only do environmentalists have to get us to accept that we're causing damage, but also that the state of the rest of the planet matters. So, we hear about how we're really hurting ourselves, which brings it back to doing things for our own benefit. Views that say that our actions aren't all that important in the grand scheme of things don't tend to be very popular...

      --Xia

    19. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I honestly don't understand how one must be an atheist to accept that we're just another species. Does belief in God rest on our own supremacy? Somehow, I thought that gods were the supreme beings...

      --Xia

    20. Re:Let me save you the suspense by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      Compulsive worrying about environmentalism is counterproductive


      It's part of American culture: we instinctively gravitate towards "save the world" causes, no matter how mindless the cause might get. An interesting study is Redeemer Nation which suggests our foreign policy ("save the world") is derived from 19th century Post-millenialism in American Christianity ("save the world").

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    21. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Ogerman · · Score: 2

      I hate to sound nihilistic, but in the end, we're just another species on this planet that will eventually go extinct.

      EXCUSE ME???

      I fail to understand why any sentient being would take that perspective on life.


      Actually, if you do not believe that there exists a supreme being greater than our universe itself (ie. God) and do not believe that humans have God-given individual eternal souls and do not believe that there is single standard of morality, then his statement makes perfect sense. There can be no meaning in our brief lives if eternity itself lacks meaning. Eventually, even if trillions of years from now, human life will in fact end, whether from the universe re-collapsing into a singularity or expanding infinitely into a state of zero order. Most likely, some other event would destroy us before that. Point being, our physical existance individually and as a species is temporary and you cannot in any way deny this. The question then, is whether there exists a spiritual realm that transcends our physical/mental existance--some way that our choices have eternal consequence and can be judged by an absolute standard of morality. If not, then there is nothing keeping us from living as destructively as we desire--killing, raping, plundering each other and the earth. However, this is not the state of existance as we know it. We live our daily lives as if there is meaning in our existance. I believe there is.

      What does this have to do with environmentalism? Because if God exists and he created us and this earth as our home, giving us a standard of moral behavior, then we should respect him, each other, and the earth for the beauty therein and with hope for an eternal meaning in our existance.

      'trolling for Jesus' since 1999. (-:

    22. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      I suppose that if you're an atheist this would make sense, but surprisingly there are still many people who do believe in a God.

      Yes, I believe in God and isn't it obvious that human beings are not the end-all, be-all of this universe? We are one of millions of species of life on this tiny planet--one of billions of planets in this galaxy -- one-of-billions of galaxies. In fact, there is no religious dogma that I know of that does NOT promise an end of the world!

      Our minds have given us a definite one-up on survival, thus we're overpopulating. What could be more simple?

      Since this universe is ALWAYS in balance, there's no way that 6 billion animals can hide the fact that they need to deal with 6 billion stinky turds per day. There's no way that these six billion humans can each own a car. There's no room, not enough raw materials, not enough ability to create the energy necessary to run six billion autos.

      What if there were only 2 billion humans? Wouldn't the world's quality of life be much better? Only 2 billion turds per day to get rid of! And wouldn't there be more of a chance that each one of those 2 billions could enjoy a better quality life? Isn't that what your God promises?

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    23. Re:Let me save you the suspense by wundabread · · Score: 1

      I had no intention of giving the impression that this was obscure information, only that I have enough background to take it seriously.

      I also take issue with your attack on medical schools. Many are not pricey institutions, and most of us that attend understand that pharmaceuticals are not the answer to every problem.

      Your statement that "most doctors know dick" is ironically indicative of your own ignorance. I encourage you to think about how your life would be different if you decided at this moment to never use any of the advances of modern medicine. I hope that you will never need the help of those of us who "know dick" but thankfully for you if you ever do, we know a good bit about keeping your ignorant ass alive.

      Well, that was totally off topic.

    24. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Jonny_Haircut · · Score: 1

      "We wrote the book on tree-free paper..."

      Thats pretty funny. Oh, it wasn't a joke?

    25. Re:Let me save you the suspense by iuyterw · · Score: 1

      ...possibly days in advance

      Kudos, Mr. Coward. That's a brilliant punchline.

    26. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Wire+Tap · · Score: 1

      Eventually, even if trillions of years from now, human life will in fact end, whether from the universe re-collapsing into a singularity or expanding infinitely into a state of zero order.

      Well, as much as the theory behind your statement leads much creedence to the possibility, it's not a for sure by any means. There have been a plethora of theories which are constantly refuted as new data becomes available about the "ultimate fate" of the universe. Personally, I place most of my faith in the idea that the universe will continue to expand until all matter as we know it is so far apart that there is no sufficient sources of energy left - but, that's not to say we, the human race, or what we make ourselves by that time, will not have discovered/invented a way to either enclose ourselves off from the expansion and contraction, or, as many string theorists believe, create a "lifeboat universe" and escape in that way.

      In short, what I am saying is that there is no "for sure" fate in store for us - as far as we know. The universe is open to us, let's not abandon all hope just yet.

      --

      Man is born free; and everywhere he is in chains.

    27. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Eccles · · Score: 1

      There can be no meaning in our brief lives if eternity itself lacks meaning.

      I disagree with this assertion, and thus the rest of your argument. (Just so you know.)

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    28. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Just yesterday a group that portrayed itself as a defender of trees and claimed to use "tree-free" paper, and was raising funds to cover the costs of this alternative paper was found to be, in fact, using paper from trees.

      Um, not "in fact", but claimed to be by a person (who makes his living as a Republican fund-raiser.) There is the possibility that he is lying, you know...

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    29. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy to say, but have you considered that at any given time in human history, people have lived longer and better than in all previous eras? Sounds like we learn a lot from history, actually...

    30. Re:Let me save you the suspense by sansoo · · Score: 1

      I am so sorry that you need to postulate an invisible superbeing to find meaning in life. I've enjoyed the heck out of the last 50-odd years, and I wouldn't mind a few thousand more. Regardless, I trust that some of my descendants will be among those spreading through the cosmos. Dophin-hybrids! Cyborgs! AIs! Groups minds! Yep, them's my kids...

      --
      We are the first generation of Morlocks. Eat the rich!
    31. Re:Let me save you the suspense by ahde · · Score: 2

      If you want to argue diet patterns, at least try to keep honest. Do you really think the "other white meat" and "it's what's for dinner" commercials have significantly increased the meat consumption. Most Americans don't hardly eat meat these days except from McDonalds.

    32. Re:Let me save you the suspense by ahde · · Score: 2

      then there would be more elephant turds and humpbacked whale turns and such.

    33. Re:Let me save you the suspense by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      If you don't have any kids though, its' great! Pollute all we want. Dump gasoline on lakes and set it on fire, just for fun! Poach grizzly bears! Leave a gray, smoking shell for the strangers that will come after us!
      I'm just kidding though. ;^) We need to protect the environment. Please, please, don't mod me down!

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    34. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Ogerman · · Score: 2

      I disagree with this assertion, and thus the rest of your argument. (Just so you know.)

      Hmm.. care to elaborate on where your philosophy goes with this? (That being, how our lives can have meaning if there is no eternal significance to our existance..) And what stops us from having a violent free-for-all?

    35. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >And what stops us from having a violent free-for-all?

      We do!!

    36. Re:Let me save you the suspense by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. care to elaborate on where your philosophy goes with this? (That being, how our lives can have meaning if there is no eternal significance to our existance..)

      Let me counter with a question: do you cheer when fellow churchgoers die? After all, they're off to Heaven, aren't they?

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  6. The Economist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I enjoyed the Lomborg-inspired article in the Economist. If you check this month's issue (Japan's sadness), most of the letters are sent by leading environmental authorities de-bunking Mr Lomborg.

    Regardless of Lomborg's credentials or whether he is sincere in his beliefs, writing an 'anti-Environmental' book will generate a massive amount of controversy. Hence, huge sales.

  7. Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by LetterRip · · Score: 2, Redundant

    Here is a link that has a thorough rebuttal of the work.
    http://www.gristmagazine.com/grist/books/lo mborg12 1201.asp

    Also see this article in the January 2002 edition of

    Scientific American

    Misleading Math about the Earth
    ESSAYS BY STEPHEN SCHNEIDER, JOHN P. HOLDREN, JOHN BONGAARTS AND THOMAS LOVEJOY

    The book The Skeptical Environmentalist uses statistics to dismiss warnings about peril for the planet. But the science suggests that it's the author who is out of touch with the facts.

    LetterRip

    1. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by LetterRip · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This is interesting... apparently The Skeptical Environmentalist was published in Danish four years ago, and had already been shredded.
      http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:6w MQiTS9HjQC: www.au.dk/~cesamat/debate.html+&hl=en

      Also here are other rebuttals,
      http://www.ucsusa.org/environment/lomb org.html

      I've read rebuttals from four different sources, and rebuttals for the same section focus on different, but equally devastating flaws.

      LetterRip

    2. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Phanatic1a · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The rebuttals posted at that site aren't really very good. The ones I read before I gave up in disgust were mostly arguments by assertion, with little concrete evidence given to support them, no footnotes or references to studies or data that I could see, and laced with a strong flavor of ad hominem, as in Devra Davis's "rebuttal," which she leads off by saying:

      "You know what they say about people who become statisticians? They lacked the personality to become accountants."

      That's not the dispassionate and unbiased practitioner of science speaking; that's someone with an axe to grind.

      I'm not defending Lomborg's research; indeed, I haven't read the book. But what's utterly disgusting is the means by which the established viewpoints have chosen to attack it. Scientific American even went so far as to claim it was "defending science" against Lomborg's claim.

      That's a repugnant attitude to take. Science is a method, a process of determining what is true, and if Lomborg's arguments are faulty, his analysis shoddy, and his conclusions flawed, than the proper application of science will demonstrate that and we will all be the better off for it.

      But if, as Scientific American seems to think, science is something that takes a position of advocacy on complex issues, then science is far less likely to be useful as a process for examining that issue, and everybody loses.

      Shame on SA. The Spectator has a nice piece on the controversy at:
      http://www.spectator.co.uk/article.php3?table =old& section=current&issue=2002-02-23&id=1602

    3. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by nagora · · Score: 2
      Science is a method, a process of determining what is true, and if Lomborg's arguments are faulty, his analysis shoddy, and his conclusions flawed,...

      and if he claims that his conclusions are "scientific" then surely a rebutter is defending science?

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    4. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and if he claims that his conclusions are "scientific" then surely a rebutter is defending science?

      Only if those rebuttles are using are using scientific methods.

    5. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by dhogaza · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Bullshit. SA *was* defending science because the book attacks scientific results through extremely shoddy tactics. It is no different than defending science by pointing out the blatant lies and factual errors trotted out as science by so-called "creation scientists".

      Lomberg takes a similar position towards science as creation scientists do - he's in essence claiming that scientists are misleading the world by making claims refuted by their own research. Scientists do need to defend themselves against such claims.

      Lomberg's not a scientist and his book contains no scientific work. "proper application of science" to refute his non-scientific work is an oxymoronic suggestion. The "proper application of science" would've involved Lomberg's subjecting his work to peer review by scientists who are experts in the various fields *before* publication.

      Of course, in this case his various claims would've been shredded in advance and the book not published at all if he were an intellectually honest man. It is easy to understand why he chose to publish his critique without giving experts the opportunity to explain why he's full of it.

    6. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the current issue of the spectator http://www.spectator.co.uk takes on the sciam article, and specifically shoots down Schneider:

      ``In the Scientific American critique, four leading environmental scientists lambasted Lomborg. The magazine refused Lomborg the right to reply in the same issue, refused to post his response on its website immediately, and threatened him for infringement of copyright when he tried to reproduce their articles, with his responses, on his own website.

      Yet the Scientific American articles are devastating not to Lomborg, but to his critics. Again and again, before insulting him, the critics concede, through gritted teeth, that he has got his facts right. In two cases, Stephen Schneider accuses Lomborg of misquoting sources and promptly does so himself. In the first case, Schneider's response 'completely misunderstands what we have done', according to Richard Lindzen, the original author of work on the 'iris effect' and upper-level cirrus clouds. In the second, Eigil Friis-Christensen says that Schneider 'makes three unsubstantiated statements regarding our studies on the effect of cosmic rays on global cloud cover'. Result: there are worse howlers in Schneider's short article than in Lomborg's whole book.''

    7. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by dhogaza · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually SA didn't indicate that "science is something that takes a position of advocacy on complex issues".

      They simply published a series of rebuttals by experts that pointed out factual and analytical errors in the book.

      It's not that science should take a position of advocacy, but rather that science shouldn't be misinterpreted in order to strengthen a position of advocacy.

      And that's exactly what Lomberg's done - he's misinterpreted science in order to push his own beliefs.

    8. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check out Lomborg's own replies to the
      rather superficial criticisms of SA here
      http://www.ps.au.dk/vip/lomborg/critique.htm

    9. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Ted+Cabeen · · Score: 1

      Lombord has taken the time to write detailed responses to those rebuttals.

    10. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Phanatic1a · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They simply published a series of rebuttals by experts that pointed out factual and analytical errors in the book.


      The rebuttals published by SA pretty uniformly acknowledged that Lomborg had his facts right; they attacked his person and questioned his conclusions.

      Then SA refused to publish Lomborg's answers to those criticisms. Then when Lomborg posted his answers to those criticisms on his web site, SA threatened to sue him for violating its copyrights because he reproduced the criticisms in his answers.

      Again: Shame on SA.

    11. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Commienst · · Score: 1

      Your google cache link does not work. This link does. The contributions to the debate are all in pdf format for some reason.

      --

      I am into the copy and paste.
    12. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by gowen · · Score: 1

      The SA rebuttals weren't good. The Grist Magazineones are much more substantial, dealing essentially with the scientific merits of his work.

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    13. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by jazman_777 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Scientific American even went so far as to claim it was "defending science" against Lomborg's claim.

      That's a repugnant attitude to take.


      Most maintainers of dogma do that kind of stuff. There's a lot at stake for them.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    14. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously, you have not read any of this.

      Maybe it would be more in character for to scream "Heretic!" and try to burn him at the stake.

      Environmentalism no longer has anything to do with science, it has entered the realm of religion. If you disagree with the environmental agenda, you are a blasphemer or a heretic.

      Pathetic.

      (BTW, for those of you without a clue, the book is actually very well written and hits the point right on the money. The rebuttals show how badly environmentalism has eroded the quality of academia.)

    15. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      While there are aspects of Lomborg's book that I don't agree with, I thought that it was the most balanced discussion that I've seen by anybody on any side of the environmenal debate. Even where he takes a particular position, he at least acknowledges the basis for opposing views. There is more discussion of uncertainties an inadquacies of the data than one normally encounters from writers in this field. And the book is refreshing free of ad hominem attacks or demonizing those who hold opposing views (which is more than one can say for a number of the reviews of the book that I've seen).

    16. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by tgibbs · · Score: 1
      Bullshit. SA *was* defending science because the book attacks scientific results through extremely shoddy tactics. It is no different than defending science by pointing out the blatant lies and factual errors trotted out as science by so-called "creation scientists".

      As a scientist, I have to take issue with this. Lomborg presents a logical, rational discussion, acknowledging opposing views, and I think that any genuine scientist, whether agreeing or disagreeing with him, will accept his work as within the legitimate realm of scientific discourse. I have seen no review anywhere that identifies even a single "blatant lie" in the book. And the most the SA reviewers could come up with were a few rather trivial mistakes and mistranslations. And every verifiable mistake that I have seen cited is acknowledged and corrected on Lomborg's web site.

      By the way, peer review does not mean "giving experts the opportunity to explain why he's full of it." Peer review is normally a private communication between a writer, a publisher, and the referees the publisher has chosen. Their critiques are not normally made public. Cambridge University Press is a respected academic publisher, and I don't doubt that they engage in some form of peer review. The fact that Lomborg's opponents have been able to identify so few factual errors in a work of this length suggests that the peer review was pretty good.

    17. Re:Lombord has been thoroughly rebuttaled by Snafoo · · Score: 2

      Shame on SA. SA completed its transformation from 'Science for Generalists' to '_Popular_Science_ for Grownups' a couple of years back, when they changed the layout of their cover. I pine for the days of a good ol' fashioned science rag that doesn't attempt to satisfy 'everyone with an interest' but merely those with an interest and a willingness to scratch up whatever bodies of knowledge are prerequisite. _Science_ is about the best a person can do these days. It's usually heavier-gauge than what I really need, but I can usually piece together enough to know what's going on.

      --
      - undoware.ca
  8. Air and water more polluted? by PowerTroll+5000 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I agree with of Lomborg completely.

    In the NYC area, the reverse is essentially true.

    Cormorant Population Boom

    The 1998 State of the Environment Report shows declines in pollution across the board.

    NY State spending billions for environment

    --

    I'm not afraid of falling, it's the sudden stop at the end that frightens me.

    1. Re:Air and water more polluted? by Arsewiper · · Score: 1

      You could also add the drop in population last September. Ouch.

  9. Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think the Bush administration and other global-warming naysayers should keep that old saying in mind. Yeah, perhaps there isn't sufficient proof that we're screwing up the climate. But the stakes are so high, even if there's only a 1 in 1000 chance that global warming is likely, then it's a risk that should not be taken.

    The real point, of course, is that those who oppose the global warming theory usually have economic interests that would be hurt by the development of alternative energy sources. As usual, follow the money!

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
    1. Re:Better safe than sorry... by FatRatBastard · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Lets use that "better safe than sorry" arguement for EVERYTHING.

      There's a billion to one chance that a asteroid will crash into the earth. Let's spend billions and billions of dollars on an asteroid defense system.

      There's a 1000 to 1 chance that the SDI/Star Wars defense system will work as advertised. Let's just give all the Gov't contractors all the money that they want anyway.

      ...

      Better safe than sorry works well when there's little or no cost involved. Its a big waste of cash otherwise.

    2. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would be like throwing money into the dark. If you worry about it soooo much, how about donating your funds to enviromental funds. I know I don't want them using my money for something that probably isn't are fault.

    3. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1, Troll

      But the stakes are so high, even if there's only a 1 in 1000 chance that global warming is likely, then it's a risk that should not be taken.

      And what about the next 1 in a 1000 "catastrophe" that gets predicted? And the next? And the next? And the next? You seem to think there is no impact to these doomsday stories. If you accept every theory that comes down the pike, you run your economies into the ground.

      The real point, of course, is that those who oppose the global warming theory usually have economic interests that would be hurt by the development of alternative energy sources. As usual, follow the money!

      Indeed. And if you follow the money in this case, guess where it leads? Back to the "scientists and "environmentalists" who make their money by predicting doomsday. Guess what happens if global warming was disproven? They are out of a job. They depend on fear and anxiety to raise grant money for study after study.

      That's the biggest reason I keep my doubts firmly in place, along with the fact that they manufacture their own evidence (also known as computer climate studies).

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    4. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Okay, then WHY ARE YOU using a computer? You are doing INCREDABLE damage to the eco-system by your use of power, and processes goods! If you TRUELY mean what you're saying, sell your computer, your car, EVERYTHING that uses electricity or fossil fuels.

      That includes processed food, clothing etc.

      Otherwise just shut up and stop being such a hypocrite. The truth is things are getting a LOT better. I grew up in the 60's in NYC, and trust me the improvements all over this country are gigantic. I'm all for cutting down pollution, but remember, the environmentalist movement wants your computer and your job.

    5. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I think the Bush administration and other global-warming naysayers...

      If you are in the habit of criticizing Bush without thinking, I can see how you would make this mistake, but the Bush administration's only report to date on the issue of global warming shows that they are in the believer camp. Do your homework next time.

    6. Re:Better safe than sorry... by coldtone · · Score: 1


      Yeah, perhaps there isn't sufficient proof that we're screwing up the climate. But the stakes are so high, even if there's only a 1 in 1000 chance that global warming is likely, then it's a risk that should not be taken


      Your comment reminds me of the stuff I heard back when I was forced to go to a very militant born again christian church. The end argument given for devoting your life to this religion was, 'Sure no one can really prove that what we say is right. But do you want to risk it and spend an eternity in hell?'

      This is nothing more then a shakedown. A scare tactic to gain power.

      The end of the world has been a day away since the beginning of history.

    7. Re:Better safe than sorry... by gowen · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Back to the "scientists and "environmentalists" who make their money by predicting doomsday.
      Thats an interesting " before "scientist". I wonder where it was supposed to be closed.
      Guess what happens if global warming was disproven?
      We'd be very pleased. We'd know the world wasn't endangered and we could go and do other, equally challenging, equally well paid, research into short and medium range weather forecasting.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    8. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

      Mmm...weak arguments.

      First of all, there's a lot more than a one in a billion chance of earth being hit by an asteroid (see this also)...some kind of defence mechanism will have to be implemented at some time, when it is technically feasible to do so. In any case, part of the NASA budget (as well as other space agencies around the world) is being used for NEO monitoring. The risk is taken seriously, even though we're pretty sure that it is not an immediate risk.

      As far as the SDI - or, as it is now know, the NMD - the analogy is even less accurate. First, I'll point out that we were talking about probabilities of a catastrophy occuring, while you talk about the probability of a defense system being effective. Already, this is a completely different argument, so you're way off-mark. But let's assumed you talked about the probability of a missile attack on the United States, against which National Missile Defence would be used. Again, note that the NMD is not designed to prevent against an environmental catastrophy (whether natural or man-made), but against a military threat, so you're talking about apples and oranges. The question is: how effective would the NMD be, and how real is the threat it addresses. Nobody in their right mind believes that North Korea or another so-called "rogue" state would try to attack the U.S. with nuclear arms (they'd be vaporized within the next half-hour, and good ol' Kim isn't that delirious!). At the same time, NMD wouldn't protect against fanatics hijacking commercial airplanes, or from terrorist bombs being planted on U.S. soil. Finally, most military threats are dealt with through diplomacy and foreign policy, things which - unlike asteroids - can be influenced. So your arguments don't hold...sorry.

      In other words, I think a asteroid defence mechanism is something we should look in the future, global warming is a risk we shouldn't take now and in the future, despite initial costs (which would appear small if global warming turned out to be as catastrophic as predicted) while NMD is just a colossal waste of money (or rather, a disguised subsidy of several key industries which are close to the current administration).

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    9. Re:Better safe than sorry... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      Back to the "scientists and "environmentalists" who make their money by predicting doomsday. Guess what happens if global warming was disproven? They are out of a job. They depend on fear and anxiety to raise grant money for study after study.


      Now THERE'S a brilliant scientific argument! A creful point-by-point refutation of the previous argument. I sense a Republican -- pretending to argue facts and coming up with character assasination instead.

    10. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

      And what about the next 1 in a 1000 "catastrophe" that gets predicted? And the next? And the next? And the next?

      Errr...such as? Give us some examples of catastrophes so dramatic and with such a degree of probability which are being touted by scientists, otherwise this argument won't go very far. And how are scientists making money by predicting doomsday? They won't be out of a job if it doesn't turn out to be true: they'll just do research on another subject! (It's not as if there was a lack of subjects to research in Environmental Sciences anyway). I'll tell you, for knowing someone in the field, they'll be a lot happier if they didn't think the Earth was endangered by our habits!

      Your arguments are weak, and your mistrust is misplaced. Follow the real money!

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    11. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

      The difference here, of course, is that there is a lot of scientific studies saying that global warming, though it cannot be proven outright, is a highly likely phenomenon. While you're just talking about an issue of faith which has NOTHING to do with science. But perhaps you do not know the difference between science (which is based on empirical thought) and religion (which is based of faith)?

      Come on, of all the lame arguments I've read on the issue, this has to be the weakest so far!!

      One thing I can tell you, is that we've had two very warm winters in a row up here in Canada. It's probably just a coincidence...but, as I said, the effects of global warming are too far-reaching (and recognized by most scientists except those paid by large energy corporations) to take risks with.

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    12. Re:Better safe than sorry... by FatRatBastard · · Score: 2

      My beef was the "better to be safe than sorry" attitude, which is applicable to anything.

      As for the odds, those were scientificly pulled from my ass, but the odds were not important. Again, you can use the "better safe than sorry" arguement to justify anything.

      Show me exactly why spending a certain amount of money on a problem is good for me in the long run, and you may have my support. Just saying "even though we cannot show conclusively that this is true, you should do it anyway because its better to be safe than sorry" and you get squat. And that's EXACTLY what you were implying at the end of your first post.

    13. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

      Except that, if you tally all the scientific studies on the subject, you'd probably find that global warming is probably true, rather than the contrary. In other words, it hasn't been proven beyond a doubt, but it's more likely to be true than not...so, you're free to gamble your descendents' future if you want...

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    14. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When dealing with environmental issues it's very difficult to arrive at conclusive proof. But I'll take the question from a different angle: at what percentage of probability will you be convinced that global warming is a real threat that requires a change in our energy-consumption habits? 1%? 10%? 50%? 100%?

      My point is that the effects of global warming are potentially so grave that even a small probability requires us not to take any chances and begin to change our habits right now. If it turns out to be wrong, well at least we'll still be using cleaner energy. But this is just not any question: the survival of humanity could be at stake in the long run. Even a 1 in 1000 percent is too much to risk that happening, IMHO...

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    15. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Given that Pres. Hussein tried to assassinate a former president of the United States, I doubt that he cares THAT much about the consequences.

      And if we go after him in the name of regime change, he might care even less.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    16. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      So what you suggest is that WE stop using computers so that you can pollute some more with your SUV and other useless shit?

    17. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Psion · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The problem is, if you don't know exactly whats going on, your best, well-intentioned efforts to correct a possible problem might cause worse problems. Suppose, for example, that the fears in the 70s that we were about to enter into a new Ice Age were accurate, but anthropogenic global warming (assuming there is such a thing) is preventing that from happening.

      Or suppose the cost of preventing global warming with efforts like the Kyoto Protocol (which is admitted to be only a first step) severely outweighs the cost of simply adapting?

      You're advocating an action for the simple sake of doing something, without an understanding of the costs or consequences of that action.

    18. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Mr.Intel · · Score: 1

      When dealing with environmental issues it's very difficult to arrive at conclusive proof.

      I don't need conclusive proof to agree with any given argument. What I need is convincing evidence that makes sense. So far, I have not seen any for global warming.

      at what percentage of probability will you be convinced that global warming is a real threat that requires a change in our energy-consumption habits?

      Personally, I try very hard to live my life in a responsible way. That goes for everything from how I raise my kids to where I put my trash. I despise waste and frivolity in any form. So naturally I would like to see everyone change their energy consumption habits. However, this is irregardless of the global warming theory.

      My point is that the effects of global warming are potentially so grave that even a small probability requires us not to take any chances and begin to change our habits right now.

      What FRB said was "My beef was the "better to be safe than sorry" attitude, which is applicable to anything.". It seems that you didn't understand what he meant. I think getting hit by an asteroid is much more devastating that global warming could ever be. It could potentially rip the earth into many pieces (see asteroid belt).

      If it turns out to be wrong, well at least we'll still be using cleaner energy.

      I agree, it can only be positive. The issue I have is with how we accomplish this goal. Do we continue to steamroll legislation through the world's governments, threaten economies and potentially damage other equally important programs (like AIDS/Cancer research, fighting world hunger, etc)? I wouldn't vote for that in a minute. My not so humble opinion.

      --
      ASCII tastes bad dude.
      Binary it is then.
    19. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. Lomborg was showing that those studies have flaws. "Highly likely" is what we're arguing about. It's a fact that the earth's climate changes. It's still just opinion and conjecture that humans are causing it. If you're so scared we are causing global warming, explain the fossilized palm trees they found in Antarctica. You sound like the rest of the scaremongers; first it was global cooling, then it was an impending population explosion (a la Paul Ehrlich). We've had two very cold winters down here in the southeast. Maybe global cooling IS going on!

    20. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Seraph · · Score: 1
    21. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

      If you're so scared we are causing global warming, explain the fossilized palm trees they found in Antarctica.

      Ok, first I'm not scared, I'm concerned! :-)

      Next, palm tree fossils in Antarctica have more to do with tectonic plate movement than global warming, i.e. they probably date back to the olden days of Pangea.

      About the global population explosion, well...we'll see about that in 2050, shall we?

      The point is, there has been no conclusive evidence to either support or disprove global warming theory. Until there is, I say that the careful approach is better than the carefree one, i.e. we should strive to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and gradually switch to renewable, environmentally-friendly energy sources. Then, even if global warming proves to be false, at least we'll have cleaner air (and a lot less trouble in the Persian Gulf!)

      I'd say that's a good implementation of the "better safe than sorry" principle. Or, in modern parlance, the "covering our ass" principle.

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    22. Re:Better safe than sorry... by nomadic · · Score: 3, Informative

      Indeed. And if you follow the money in this case, guess where it leads? Back to the "scientists and "environmentalists" who make their money by predicting doomsday.

      Oh that is just hilarious. We all know what BIG money is in environmental science and activism. Look at all those ecologists sailing around the world on their 40' yachts. Look at all those activists driving around in their Ferraris.

    23. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Mr.Intel · · Score: 1

      The difference here, of course, is that there is a lot of scientific studies saying that global warming, though it cannot be proven outright, is a highly likely phenomenon.

      Of course comparing religion to science is shaky at best so I will avoid that can of worms. More interesting to me is that I have seen a lot of people jump on various bandwagons of science (thanks Bill Nye) without really thinking too hard about it. You obviously have so don't take it personally. As for the scientific studies, here is a thought I have never had sufficiently answered. We have temperature data for about 100 years on the earth. The farther back you go, the fewer the recording stations and the less reliable the readings are. We also theorize that the global weather patterns run on several cycles (seasonal, annual, decadal, centurial and millennial...) So how do we know that any measured increase in temperature is not just a natural cycle? Who is to say with any authority that the earth would be just as warm without a single human on the planet?

      While I am at it, I would like to know something else. Why is it that those who support global warming always tout CO2 emissions as the biggest problem? Mt. Pinatubo sent out more CO2 than all the human activity to date yet the earth has seemed to deal with it just fine. See the research done by Mr. Gerlach for evidence. Here is a quote from one of his articles, "Thus, the minimum volatile emissions for the climactic eruption--from preeruption vapor phase and degassing of melt--were 17 Mt SO2, 42 Mt CO2, 3 Mt Cl, and 491 Mt H2O." That's 42 megatons of CO2 from one eruption!

      Here is another article that makes some interesting points. An excerpt, "The IPCC report indicates that GHG emissions due to human intervention have increased and that there are uncertainties involved in climate change impacts. An example of the effect on the global climate was experienced after the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in the Philippines which caused the lowering of global temperature. This shows that there are uncertainties in determining the exact causes of climate change because of non-anthropogenic causes such as this volcanic eruption. Hence, the need for caution. The IPCC findings are controversial, some scientists do not believe the rates of change and its impacts which add to the uncertainties. Any plan or statement should be grounded on scientific findings for credibility. The fact that data is only available for the last 200 years along with the use of computer models adds to the uncertainties of the findings. The IPCC works closely with the UNFCCC negotiating process while maintaining its scientific independence."

      There are uncertanties with the effects of human caused GHG emissions and Mt. Pinatubo actually global temp despite having dumped 42 megatons of CO2 in the atmosphere. Essentially, my issue is that there may be studies that support global warming but there is an equal amount against it or at least that casts a different light on the situation. We simply don't have enough information to make huge changes that may or may not affect a perceived problem.

      --
      ASCII tastes bad dude.
      Binary it is then.
    24. Re:Better safe than sorry... by jfobrien · · Score: 1

      It's not that simple. There is a good consensus that global warming is happening. Beyond that, there is no consensus. There are thought to be three general explanations for global warming: greenhouse gases, other effects of civilization (cutting trees, paving over land, etc.), and natural climate swings. We have no idea what portion of global warming each of these explanations is responsible for. If we don't know that, we don't know how much cutting greenhouse gases will help.

    25. Re:Better safe than sorry... by stand · · Score: 1

      I'm a little wary of the so-called "pre-cautionary principle" myself. It's all about the economics of being cautious. However, something I found interesting about the rebuttal essays in Scientific American was the argument from ignorance.

      The best science we have about climate change says that anything between A and Z could happen (well maybe A through M), but Lomborg interprets the data to say that A or B will happen. Since we can live with A or B, everything is fine. Scientists aren't taking the opposite conclusion, they just aren't as willing to accept such a narrow interpretation. Scientist take a classically conservative [I'm talking the dictionary definition, not the political definition] view of their subjects. The error bars are always wide to begin with. They are not easily swayed by people who want to narrow them. That is as it should be.

      In the face of our ignorance about our environment [biological, economic, social, whatever], a conservative approach is called for. It's called hedging your bets.

      --
      Four fifths of all our troubles in this life would disappear if we would just sit down and keep still. -C. Coolidge
    26. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I need is convincing evidence that makes sense. So far, I have not seen any for global warming.


      It's the middle of Febuary and it's 60 fuckin degrees in NYC.

      What more do you need?

    27. Re:Better safe than sorry... by DwySteve · · Score: 1

      The Bush administration actually came out and said earlier in his presidency that a warming of the earth was real and caused by humans, and that they were discussing what, if anything, to do about it. Please try not to stereotype too much in your posts.

      --
      http://angryee.blogspot.com
    28. Re:Better safe than sorry... by slam+smith · · Score: 1

      Wasn't the big scare 20-30 years ago, that we were going to be having a new Ice Age?

    29. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

      All right, I stand corrected. I misinterpreted Bush's stance against Kyoto (as well as his interests in the Oil industry) as a dismissal of global warming. It now appears that the Bush Administration does believe in global warming. So, in essence, they are saying that global warming is real, but they're not about to implement the necessary changes because it would hurt the economy. Even though the rest of the world are ready to make some sacrifices, it seems the U.S. - the world's biggest polluter - is not. To do something destructive unknowingly is bad, but can be forgiven. To do the same destructive thing knowingly, well - to use Dubya's own words - that's just evil.

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    30. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, OK. There also isn't sufficient proof that if you don't wear a tinfoil hat, the orbital mind control lasers will get you. But with the stakes so high, not wearing a tinfoil hat is clearly a risk that should not be taken.

      The real point, of course, is that those who oppose the tinfoil hat theory usually work for the saran wrap lobby. As usual, follow the logical fallacies!

    31. Re:Better safe than sorry... by DwySteve · · Score: 1

      It's interesting that you say that the rest of the world is ready to make changes because the kyoto treaty exempts one of the largest producers of global warming causing pollution: China. Furthermore, in no way does the Bush administration propose no change in the current attitude towards the environment. Simply acknowledging that a global warming exists does NOT make the Kyoto treaty the best method to remedy the situation, if indeed the situation needs remedy, which is infinitely arguable at this point. The logical process in this case looks like this:

      Prove existence of condition -> Prove condition is bad -> Create workable solution that has the best cost/benefit ratio.

      BEST estimates put us at step one. We ignore this process at our own risk.

      --
      http://angryee.blogspot.com
    32. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm, `if I tally all the scientific studies'. Did you tally all the scientific studies?

      Mr. Lomborg did. In fact, if you want to look at what people are claiming, I can think of no better place to start than the extremely comprehensive bibliography in Mr. Lomborg's book.

      Of course, once you did tally all of the research, and determined that it was wildly inconsistent, and largely came from people who just a few years back were proclaiming that the problem was global cooling, you might reach the same conclusion Mr. Lomborg has...

    33. Re:Better safe than sorry... by RealityCrutch · · Score: 1

      These probabilities being thrown around are only as good as the science behind them, which is the whole point of Lombards book.

      Indeed, without a clear understanding of the mechanisms involved, how can we justify any particular action?

      There are other climate models that show the chances of us being thrown into another ice age are greater than some of the models predictions of global warming. At what percentage of probability will we be convinced that global cooling is a real threat that requires a change in our energy-consumption habits? The risk is grave and less hypothetical than global warming assessments as we know the effects catastrophic effects of an ice age from fairly intimate experience!


      To argue that we can't afford to wait until we actually understand what's going on is a position bereft of efficacy. To act without an understanding of the consequences of your action or even if that action is required or helpful, is at it's base, irrational.

    34. Re:Better safe than sorry... by RealityCrutch · · Score: 1

      Hey...I'll fight, scap, & maybe lie, to protect my piddling little slice of the pie, so why shouldn't I think a scientist would?

    35. Re:Better safe than sorry... by RealityCrutch · · Score: 1

      Let me get this straight. We are now supposed to make vast sweeping changes to our economy, our society, and our lives, on the basis of the number of scientific papers?

      Wait, I'm printing some more up right now...It seems the greatest number of papers argue, there is no evolution, there can be no change in climate...cause God said so....and there is no global warming.

      Oh, I bet you want to add something about the efficacy of the papers we count, right? Well well, lucky us, We have Mr. Lombards book to use as a guideline.

    36. Re:Better safe than sorry... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

      Vast sweeping changes? For crying out loud! Listening to you guys, it's as if we were asking you to sacrifice your first-born. Listen, the U.S. is the number one polluter in the world, every other industrialized nation, France, Germany, Canada, etc., they have all agreed to make some sacrifices (which we probably won't even notice in daily life), and you're here tearing up your shirt because there might be a few flawed studies on global warming. Who cares if you're 5% less richer than the rest of the planet? Well, keep up burning those fossil fuels until there are none left.

      It's true what they say: America is addicted to oil. And like a junkie looking for its next fix, it doesn't care about anything else...

      --

      Reminder: find a new sig
    37. Re:Better safe than sorry... by zaphod123 · · Score: 1

      You can follow the money the other way also. A lot of the "pro global warming" scientists are getting money for their grants based on green special interests.

      It's better safe than sorry? What if we find out down the line that what we changed to was actually worse for the environment than what we changed from? IE it is more polluting to make the electricity for the electric cars than what petrol based automobiles put out?

      One of my favorites from my teenage years was the plastic bags at the super market. At first it was environmentally friendly to use these because they saved trees.... Then a few years later it was environmentally unfriendly because they don't degrade in landfills...
      I am not against the environment at all, it just seems that most environmentalists are a bit kooky....

      --
      :q!
    38. Re:Better safe than sorry... by ahde · · Score: 2

      Look at all those ecologists wining and dining on the politicians and celebrities 80' yachts. Look at all the activists leaving their Audis and Jettas in the garage to ride the Limosuine to a fund raiser.

    39. Re:Better safe than sorry... by ahde · · Score: 2

      so you favor cutting down all the forests and covering them with windmills and solar panels? That's what it'd take to equal a fraction of the energy produced by fossil fuels today. (Of course, since there wouldn't be as much CO2, we wouldn't need the forests either.)

    40. Re:Better safe than sorry... by ahde · · Score: 2

      The only interest Bush had in the Oil industry was debt from a couple of failed wells that were paid off by the Texas Rangers basesball team years ago.

    41. Re:Better safe than sorry... by RealityCrutch · · Score: 1

      First, a word about that "number one polluter" title. The US is a Nation of almost 300 million people. How come Euros & Europhiles never compare the US to the whole of the EU? Conversely, the US is a federation of fifty separate states, let's see the breakdown showing each separate US state vs the states of Europe. Of course this is not as convenient for rhetorical purposes.

      Second, "...every other industrialized nation, France, Germany, Canada, etc., they have all agreed to make some sacrifices..."...talk is cheap. When you have an actual reality to refer to, then you'll have the beginnings of an argument. But this one is vapor thin.

      Third, "Who cares if you're 5% less richer than the rest of the planet...". You're rather free with other peoples money aren't you? If being 5% poorer is no problem to you, then let's get all those wise, kind, & generous Euros to pay for it. It's just a "...sacrifices (which we probably won't even notice in daily life)" kind of thing, right?

      Fourth, "...you're here tearing up your shirt because there might be a few flawed studies on global warming". No, I'm tearing my shirt trying to find a global warming study that isn't flawed.

      Fifth, if you really think that radically changing the basis of our energy policy won't result in sweeping economic & societal changes, then I fear you know very little about economics.

      Finally, "It's true what they say: America is addicted to oil. And like a junkie looking for its next fix, it doesn't care about anything else..." Lame ad hominem attack. Truely beneath you.

  10. the truth about global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.john-daly.com/

    1. Re:the truth about global warming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is he still on the tour?

  11. Well... by tiltowait · · Score: 1

    it's too late to worry about whether you left the gas on now.

  12. What 'hard won' credibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The problem with environmentalism today is that most of the people in the movement know nothing about the environment or the science invovled in it. They're mostly ludities and communists just looking for another reason to attack capitalism and democracy.

    If you can show me hard data that something is bad (like water pollution, PCB's that stuff) then I'm all for regulating it. But when you start telling us how bad CO2 is, pulease! You're just trying to destroy business and society and don't give a damn about the enviroment. Look at ELF and ALF, these people have done far more harm then good.

    1. Re:What 'hard won' credibility? by snarfer · · Score: 1

      The problem with environmentalism today is that most of the people in the movement know nothing about the environment or the science invovled in it. They're mostly ludities and communists just looking for another reason to attack capitalism and democracy.


      Environmentalists are communists?

      COOL - a retro to the 50's! Calling people communists, like THAT's going to score points!

    2. Re:What 'hard won' credibility? by mapnjd · · Score: 0

      There seems to be a general confusion amongst the less educated /. audience between left-of-centre politics, communism, , anti-capitalism, libertarianism, authoritarianism, environmentalism, belief in the occult, and conspiracy theorists...

      Why? Presumably, because they're still teenagers. Or perhaps it's something to do with the US political system, where there is no "left wing" party. Whatever. Just read at +1 and they all disappear...

      --
      Bus error in your favour. Collect 200kB
    3. Re:What 'hard won' credibility? by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      If you look at the European Green parties, their issues tend to go WELL beyond environmentalism -- for instance, they tend to be pretty extreme about wealth distribution and relative salary caps, they lean towards pacifism and unilateral disarmament, and so forth. So there's a little bit o' truth to the statement, over there. It's less so in the States, AFAICT.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    4. Re:What 'hard won' credibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Environmentalists are communists?

      Most of them internationally are. Gorbachev and most of his staff, when kicked out of control of the former Soviet Union, started up or took control of several international "environmental" organizations. In Europe and the US, it is nearly impossible to find an environmentalist who isn't also a socialist by policy.

    5. Re:What 'hard won' credibility? by matrix29 · · Score: 1

      Look at ELF and ALF, these people have done far more harm then good.

      But... ALF keeps the stray cat population down.
      I've always had a soft spot for ELF with the ELFQUEST series.

      Gordon Shumway we miss you.
      (It had to be said.)

      --
      "Face it, a nation that maintains a 72% approval rating on George W. Bush is a nation with a very loose grip on reality.
  13. Why have I never seen anyone say... by gartogg · · Score: 1

    we don't have enough information to make an accurate assesment. When you listen to the weatherman on tv, he says 'there is a 50% chance of rain next monday.' When you hear an environmental theorist (pro or anti green) they say 'we are all going to die because the average temperature will definitely rise exactly 2.639 degrees centigrade over the next 10 years unless we switch to all solar power and stop using water for showers by a week from this thursday.'

    Does no-one else see this as much too political to try to view it through an objective scientific lens?

    I just want one person to say 'I have this new data, and it could mean 1 of these 5 things..."

    --
    I'm a concientious .sig objector.
    1. Re:Why have I never seen anyone say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No atmospheric scientist worth their weight would say anything of the kind, and in my experience they do not. Instead they say things such as "If you inject x amount of CO2 into an atmosphere then the global average temperature will probably rise between y and z degrees." Good science makes predicitons very carefully, and only upon soundly understood principles. It is impossible to make specific predictions like yours, but it is possible to predict broad trends. In other words, you can show that it'll get hotter, but you can't say what the temperature will be on 11/12/2032 in Tempe, Arizona.

    2. Re:Why have I never seen anyone say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you read the book in question at all? That's pretty much what Mr. Lomborg is saying in most of his book. It's this kind of specific selectivity[1] by many green lobbyists[2] that he's trying to expose.

      Ian.

      [1] as an extreme (fictitious) example, saying "today was 1 degree colder than yesterday, so this time next month the earths temprature will have dropped 30 degrees". Things almost as absurd as this are presented as rational scientific proof by many green lobbyists.

      [2] which is, in thend, what they are. Certainly <i>not<i> scientists.

  14. Do you really care? by F34nor · · Score: 1

    Many things come to mind. One being that the ozone layer is being detroyed at a higher rate by space launches then any other activity. Are we going to stop space launches? No.

    1. Re:Do you really care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? The space launches are all near the equator. The problem is definitively at the poles. No sunlight means no ozone refreshing. The equatorial regions have a huge creation/destruction rate of ozone.

    2. Re:Do you really care? by rudedog · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wow, my bullshit detector's meter got pegged in the red for a minute. This sounds like one of those "statistics" that Rush likes to parrot.

      In reality, the impact of other human activity is about 100 times more significant than the impact of space launches. See, for example, The Space Shuttle's Impact on the Stratosphere, MJ Prather, MM Garcia, AR Douglass, CH Jackman, M.K.W. Ko and N.D. Sze, Journal of Geophysical Research, 95, 18583-18590, 1990. It only took me 30 googleseconds to find it.

    3. Re:Do you really care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One being that the ozone layer is being detroyed at a higher rate by space launches then any other activity.

      Total bullshit. It's been demonstrated to be bullshit time and time again, but still continues to circulate.

      You might ask yourself why your source for this statement thought it useful to tell you a lie.

    4. Re:Do you really care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This sounds like one of those "statistics" that Rush likes to parrot."

      As opposed to "valid" junk presented WITHOUT A SINGLE CHALLENGE on such serious channels like CNN and NBC ?

    5. Re:Do you really care? by rudedog · · Score: 2

      Ya well, at least CNN prints actual transcripts of its shows for people just like yourself to challenge. Try finding a transcript of one of Rush's shows sometime.

  15. we ARE destroying the ecosystem by Jonny+Balls · · Score: 1

    there's no question about us polluting the environment, we put a nice huge hole in the o-zone layer. now, we just need to use it to our advantage... we melt the polar ice caps, and like stated in an earlier article, days will seem longer... its all part of my master plan to put another hour in every day to get all the things done that i need done.

    --
    --JonnyBlog
    1. Re:we ARE destroying the ecosystem by tubs · · Score: 1

      I wonder, if the earth slowed down enough to make the day 25 hrs long what that hour would be used for?

      Do you think employers would try to claim it as a working hour? Me, I want it for my leisure time!

      --

      try to make ends meet, you're a slave to money, then you die

    2. Re:we ARE destroying the ecosystem by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      Actualy, the ozone hole has been disappearing for the past couple of years. We have only been monitoring the ozone layer for a few decades. It's stupid to say that freon emissions, for sure, caused the hole. It is most likely just natural fluctuations. Just saying the ozone is dissapearing from our meager 40 years of studying it is like watching the ocean tide going out and concluding that the ocean is dissapearing.
      Which brings me to my next point: Global Warming.
      We are having global warming. There is no question of that. The question is what is it caused by. Little known fact, but volcanism emits much more greenhouse gas than industry. More than likely, we're just entering into another warm period. Warm and cool periods (not ice ages or hell ages, much more mild) run in cycles about every 500 years. We entered into the present cool period in the middle ages, so we should be due to come out of it right about now.
      Some environmentalists are well meaning. Others like "environmental lawyers", and the Sierra Club and Greenpeace head hanchos, are just in it for the money. A lot of things they do are counter-productive, like their opposition to nuclear power, even though it is cleaner and safer than coal.
      Some environmentalists just like to whine about some issue. They may not be well informed about the subject, but they have a strong opinion anyway.
      Take nuclear power: It is cheap and produces no pollution. A chernobly-scale meltdown (killing 31 according to the WHO) could not happen in our reactors. Nuclear waste does not last for 30,000 years. The highly radioactive fission byproducts decay in several decades. The rest of the waste is not highly radioactive. It decays to the level of Uranium ore in about 400 years. Also, it's not stored in thin metal drums. With Yucca Mountain, it will stored in thick lead, surrounded by thick steel, all inside a concrete-lined underground cavern. It's not going to contaminate the groundwater. If it somehow did contaminate the groundwater, no worries. Yucca mountain is in the middle of a restricted area where they have blown up hundreds of bombs anyway. Anyway, Plutonium Oxide like you have in nuke waste is not highly toxic. You can eat a few grams of it no problem. It passes right out of your system. Compare that to coal, mountains of arsenic and cyanide laced toxic ash that lasts forever not just 400 years. Also coal kills around 50000 each year in the US. That's like having hundreds of Chernobyls. Little known fact, but according the this Oak Ridge Nat'l Laboratory study here coal power realeases more radiation each year than dozens of reactor fuel loadings.
      That is just one example of environmentalists not putting their thinking-caps on.

      Another is genetic engineering:
      When food is genetically engineered, they put a specific gene in. They know what that gene does! Also, a gene codes for a protein, nothing more. You can't get a mutant killer pig from genetic engineering. This is in contrast to normal crossbreeding with different varieties. Crossbreeding mixes the whole genome. The output is random. Back in the 60's, crossbreeding produced a carrot that was slightly toxic. Genetic Engineering could never make such a mistake. It's not "frankenfood". Yes, BT corn with its nontoxic-to-humans BT insecticide, could kill monarch butterflies. But that's not as bad as spraying highly toxic instecticide from a plane. I'm sure sprayed insecticide kills many more butterflies. Another argument is that GM crops could "contaminate" local populations of plants. The danger is no greater than highly modified regular crops contaminating a wild genepool. Genetic engineering could go a long way toward solving food problems. Theyv

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  16. Point, Counterpoint by skatedork · · Score: 5, Informative
    1. Re:Point, Counterpoint by Alomex · · Score: 4, Interesting


      Most of the resources you point to are hatchet jobs much like the pie-in-the-face that proudly adorns one of them.

      I have not yet Lomborg's book, but have followed the debate in science journals (as well as the Economist). While some scientists have engaged him on intellectual terms, the majority of the opinions have been nothing of the sort, stoopoing down to the questioning of his credentials (which nobody would question if he had just published a pro-global warming article).

    2. Re:Point, Counterpoint by cDarwin · · Score: 1
      I just took a look at the wri material. It was very specific.


      Excerpt:


      3. In challenging a WWF analysis that found nearly 2/3 of the world's original forests, dating to the pre-agricultural period (defined as 6000 BC), had at one time been cut, Lomborg's text at p.16 counters that "most sources estimate about 20%." Here Lomborg has confused net loss of forest cover (his figure) with loss of original forest (WWF's figure). Even so, sources in Lomborg's footnote 103 do not support the proposition for which he cites them. The first, a 1993 college textbook by Andrew Goudie, indeed gives a figure of 20% net loss in forest cover since pre-agricultural times, although its author provides no reference or authority for this number. The second source, by Michael Williams, is stated in the footnote as giving the (amazingly) low figure of 7.5 percent loss, but a review of the source itself reveals that Lomborg has misread 7,449 thousand square kilometers as though it were a percent. And the last two sources, which give figures of 19% and 20%, are for recent 300 and 140 year periods only, and thus on their face do not purport to measure forest loss during the entire 8,000 year period for which Lomborg cites them. To the contrary, these two sources cover only tiny fractions (less than 4% and 2%, respectively) of the relevant time period, and even so each registers roughly 20% loss of forest.
      --

      --
      Socrates was asked where he was from. He replied not "Athens," but "The world."

    3. Re:Point, Counterpoint by mjul · · Score: 1
      Please: Read Lester Young and companions' "State of the World Reports" from the World Watch Institute. These reports are the market leaders in the "greenie segment". If you read them you will also notice that they are highly biased interventionist pieces and scientifically dubious.

      Lomborg, on the other hand, brings a refreshing, cool-headed perspective to this. By comparison, a big step forward.

      There has been some critique from domain experts arguing that statistics (Lomborgs field) cannot be used to prove domain result, only indicate correlation or causality. While this is correct there is a significant case to be made for statistics: if the numbers falsify the postulates of the World Watch Institute and friends the burden of proof is switched back to them.

      From that perspective, Bjørn Lomborg's work is a significant contribution that will hopefully help increase the scientific/factual level of the environmental debate.

      (Disclaimer: I have not read the English language version of Lomborg's book refered to in the review, only the original Danish version).

    4. Re:Point, Counterpoint by broken77 · · Score: 1
      Most of the resources you point to are hatchet jobs much like the pie-in-the-face that proudly adorns one of them.
      Pardon me? How many of these resources did you read? In contrast to what you're saying, I found that the majority of responses I read in the provided links pointed out specific problems with Lomborg's diagnoses. Did you really read any of the pages? Or articles written by prominent environmental scientists (which Lomborg is not, he is a statistician)? Or am I just arguing against a straw man attack here (which is what I'm starting to think)?
      --

      I modded the Troll Investigation and I got

    5. Re:Point, Counterpoint by Alomex · · Score: 2

      In contrast to what you're saying, I found that the majority of responses I read in the provided links pointed out specific problems with Lomborg's diagnoses.

      For starters many of them do not even point to the Lomborg's web site where he addresses many of the criticisms (some of them quite convincingly).

      Or articles written by prominent environmental scientists (which Lomborg is not, he is a statistician)?

      This is an example of a typical hatchet job. If he had written an article in favour of global warming nobody would bring up the fact that he is *gasp* an statistician.

      In fact, one could make the argument that, if anything, an statistician is particularly suited to reading trends in ecological data.

      As I said, I don't know if his research holds water or not, but pointing out that he is an assistant professor or an statistician only illustrates the dearth of arguments of some of his opponents (and I emphasize the word some).

    6. Re:Point, Counterpoint by ahde · · Score: 2
      From one of the links on anti-lomborg.com 10 Things Environmental Educators Should Know about The Skeptical Environmentalist):

      He [Bjorn Lomborg] has no professional training -- and has done no professional research -- in ecology, climate science, resource economics, environmental policy, or other fields covered by his new book.

      The same article mentions the 30,000 footnotes in his book.

  17. The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I subscribe to Mother Jones *and* the American Spectator, basically to see what the extremists at both ends are saying.

    Since I became a subscriber I know, based on my junk mail, that my name has been sold to donor solicitation lists of the left and the right.

    So, every month I get mail from Jerry Falwell, etc., about how the Homosexual/Abortion/Socialist lobbies are destroying the U.S. These compete with mail from NARAL, NOW, PFAW, etc., about how the Heterosexual/Anti-Abortion/Capitalist lobbies are destroying the U.S.

    (Aside: now that I think about it, I do get a lot more mail from the left than from the right. More religious fervour, I guess.)

    My point is that the only way these people can raise money is by scaring the bejesus out of those who can be scared.

    The environmental lobby is no different: it scares to raise money.

    What's great about this book is how it demonstrates the lies in the propaganda.

    Of course, he'll never be forgiven for that. And my guess is, from a survey of my junk mail, that there will be a lot more people out to trash him than to support him. Poor sod.

    --
    668: Neighbour of the Beast
  18. Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It is probably quite understandable that environmental scientists would take great umbrage at both Lomborg's cheek and his conclusions
    Scientist don't take umbrage at his cheek or (directly) his conclusions. They take umbrage at his science. Basically, he isn't very good at it. His research is full of errors, (sometimes very basic ones. At one point he quotes an absolute figure as a percentage because he is unfamiliar with the different conventions for decimal places between the US and Europe). He selectively quotes (and misquotes) source material to support his claims. Frankly, he's a self publicist, and if his pseudoscience reduces the amount of research into the very real possibility of irreversible, catastrophic, climate change, a very dangerous one.

    As an aside, lets just apply Occam's Razor. Here are the two possible alternatives:
    1. Lomborg is wrong
    2. There is a massive (indeed, worldwide) conspiracy of scientists, suppressing their real knowledge, intent only on scare mongering to preserve their funding

    (Full Disclosure: I am a Geophysical Fluid Dynamicist, so I could be part of the conspiracy [TINC] myself)
    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    1. Re:Cheek, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His research is full of errors, (sometimes very basic ones. At one point he quotes an absolute figure as a percentage because he is unfamiliar with the different conventions for decimal places between the US and Europe).

      Please give a page reference, I have a copy of his book handy, and I'd like to see that.

    2. Re:Cheek, etc. by Alomex · · Score: 4, Insightful

      His research is full of errors,

      This is an overstatement of the facts. Many rebuttals take shortcuts in what would otherwise be hard work: debating each of Lomborg points. Those rebuttals overemphasize minor gaffes that are bound to appear in a research piece encompasing such a large subject. (By that count The Evolution of the Species by Darwin has more errors per page than Lomborg).

      Reality is the majority of the basic facts are right, it is the interpretation of those basic indicators that needs to be discussed.

      Your average environmentalist assumes a priori that the environment is deteriorating. Lomborg accurately points out that prima facie the data is not there.

      Btw. this would not be the first time that environmentalists were wrong in something that they took for granted, as they were when they predicted humanity would run out of oil by the mid 90s.

      The interpretation of the facts requires further debate though.

    3. Re:Cheek, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There are more possibilites.

      3. The prevailing opinion among the scientific community is wrong.

      4. The view of the scientific community is being simplified by politicians trying to show us all how "green" they are, and in fact most scientists are not very sure at all about the scale man's environmental impact.

      5. Lomborg is wrong AND alarms about global pollution are overstated.

      Personally, I'm going with #5.

    4. Re:Cheek, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot choice 3: Environmental scientists are doing largely good work but many environmentalists are purposefully exaggerating and distorting the scientists' findings.

    5. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      Please give a page reference, I have a copy of his book handy, and I'd like to see that
      It's in footnote 103, that refers to Michael Williams' work on deforestation. Lomborg quotes 7.5%, Williams' figure is 7,449 square km. See footnote 3 in this reference.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    6. Re:Cheek, etc. by snarfer · · Score: 1

      Choice 4 - there's a lot of MONEY to be made from the oil & auto companies, if you say bad things about environmentalists.

    7. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      Your average environmentalist assumes a priori that the environment is deteriorating.
      Environmentalist (i.e. tree hugging hippy waster) maybe. For environmental scientists this is absolutely not the case. If anyone has allowed his preconceptions to colour his work, its Lomborg. (Funny, isn't it that Lomborg always "erred" in such a way such that his "facts" supported his thesis. Thats backwards science.)
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    8. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1

      That falls under choice 1 (and would seem to an excellent motive for Lomborg and CUP's publication of this book.)

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    9. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      Lomborg is wrong AND alarms about global pollution are overstated
      They're certainly overstated by some (notably environmental pressure groups and the mass media), but if you attend environmental science conferences what you'll hear is concern. Very few of the experts will claim they know with any certainty about what will happen merely what might happen.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    10. Re:Cheek, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      It is probably quite understandable that environmental scientists would take great umbrage at both Lomborg's cheek and his conclusions.

      Scientist don't take umbrage at his cheek or (directly) his conclusions. They take umbrage at his science.



      Horsehockey. Scientists are human, too, and they dislike being shown warts 'n all just like the next guy.

      Lomberg has made plenty of errors, it's true. But that doesn't explain the sheer viciousness of the attacks from the green scientists and other environmentalists. If he's got his facts wrong, then it's the environmentalists's job to give us the correct ones, and let the facts speak for themselves. Instead, the greens haven't been able to resist name-calling and personal attacks. This hardly helps their case, and it sure as heck doesn't help their credibility.

      BTW, I love how the Anti-Lomberg site (http://www.anti-lomborg.com/) says "We do not wish to personally attack Lomborg" but prominently displays a photo of him just after he had a pie thrown in his face becaus of his book.
    11. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      But that doesn't explain the sheer viciousness of the attacks from the green scientists and other environmentalists.
      No, it doesn't. His arguments should be appraised on their merits. I've posted many times to this thread, and the worst I've called Lomborg is a self-publicist.

      The viciousness can be understood (a little) because Lomborg has attributed far less noble motivations to his enemies (deliberately misleading the people to maintain their revenue streams is a very serious, and largely unsupportable, allegation)
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    12. Re:Cheek, etc. by ksheff · · Score: 1

      deliberately misleading the people to maintain their revenue streams is a very serious, and largely unsupportable, allegation

      Maintaining the revenue stream is very important. I worked at a federal lab in the late 80s/early 90s when the global warming/change issue first started to hit big with the public. The primary focus of the installation since the 70s was for archiving, processing and interpreting remotely sensed data, so there always were some people working on enviromental impact studies. However, at one point it seemed that the unwritten rule for the science branch was to try to tie in as much of their research as they could in some way with global change, since that's where the big bucks were. Especially after Clinton/Gore were elected. I respect these people very much and I don't think that any of them would stoop low enough to fudge data in order to get funding. Many projects were trying to improve quality of the data used in some climate models to reduce the wide variations that were observed depending on the land coverage data being used.

      However, given how tight some researchers' budgets are, there is certainly the temptation of fudging things to go along with the flow in order to secure funding. It's harder to get funding if the research goes against the status quo, politically and scientifically (more the former than the latter). No one wants to be ostracized from a group of their peers, especially if it means a practical end of your career. If the author has flaws in his publication, they should be calmly and rationally pointed out. IMHO, given the level of vitriol leveled at this guy, it seems to me that he's struck a nerve and may actually be right about a few things. The name calling and pie in the face is something I'd expect from a bunch of immature kids.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    13. Re:Cheek, etc. by Daniel+Quinlan · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Here are the two possible alternatives:
      1. Lomborg is wrong
      2. There is a massive (indeed, worldwide) conspiracy of scientists, suppressing their real knowledge, intent only on scare mongering to preserve their funding
      You claim to be a scientist, but the first thing you do is present an either-or fallacy? There are countless other possibilities. Just a few:
      1. Lomborg has made some minor mistakes which are exploited by his critics, but is generally correct. (I mean, I can't write several pages of code without making errors, why is statistics different, especially such a long and comprehensive work?)
      2. There is no conspiracy, but most environmental scientists are left-leaning so they all tend to be wrong in the same direction. After all, they generally are supported by the government, advocacy groups, etc. and not private enterprise.
    14. Re:Cheek, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's use occams razor.

      1.Lomborg is right.

      2.There is a massive (indeed, worldwide) conspiracy of scientists, suppressing their real knowledge,intent only on scare mongering to preserve their funding

    15. Re:Cheek, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On his website (www.lomborg.org) he agrees that he made an error; the actual figure of 7.5% does appear in the reference, but one page earlier.

      arjen_roos@hotmail.com

    16. Re:Cheek, etc. by spike+hay · · Score: 1


      As an aside, lets just apply Occam's Razor. Here are the two possible alternatives:

      Lomborg is wrong

      There is a massive (indeed, worldwide) conspiracy of scientists, suppressing their real knowledge, intent only on scare mongering to preserve their funding.


      Dont' overapply Occam's Razor. You could say the simplest explanation for you seeing the technological wonder of your computer is that you are hallucinating.

      Actually, most scientists, indeed, most people, would agree with Lomborg. The majority of scientists do not agree with Greenpeace.
      Also, many environmentalists do have stuff to gain from scare-tactics. Eco-lawyers make money off of enviromental settlements. Heads of Org's such as the Sierra Club and Greenpeace make tons of money with lawsuits and donations.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    17. Re:Cheek, etc. by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      Compare Lomborg's minor errors to glaring scientific errors or outright lies commited by the Sierra Club and Greenpeace publications, as well as studies by "Green" scientists.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
    18. Re:Cheek, etc. by Alomex · · Score: 2

      If anyone has allowed his preconceptions to colour his work, its Lomborg. (Funny, isn't it that Lomborg always "erred" in such a way such that his "facts" supported his thesis. Thats backwards science.)

      Now that is what I call a succint collection of lies.

      Lomborg started his work as an **environmentalist** trying to debunk some anti-environment statements from an economist. Out the window goes your claim that he was trying to support "his thesis". He sent his graduate students out to search for data that would debunk the economist's statements. They came back empty handed. Actually, worse, they came back with data supporting the economist's views.

      Only then --and in view of the facts-- did he change his mind.

      That is what science is, at its very best.

    19. Re:Cheek, etc. by brettper · · Score: 1

      "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?" -
      John Maynard Keynes

    20. Re:Cheek, etc. by leviramsey · · Score: 2
      2. There is no conspiracy, but most environmental scientists are left-leaning so they all tend to be wrong in the same direction. After all, they generally are supported by the government, advocacy groups, etc. and not private enterprise.

      You have hit the nail on the head. To believe that there is a left-wing bias in the major US media does not mean (as some seem to imply) that there is a massive conspiracy, where the editors of publications decide a party line and where deviations from that line will occur. No, it's a function of this: the more educated one is (by conventional standards), the more apt one is to be left-leaning. This does not necessarily mean that left-leaning is the educated position, however. Thus, populations that require higher levels of education will tend to have more left-leaning outlooks. Journalism requires a lot of education, as does science. Therefore, it is not surprising that most journalists are left-leaning.

    21. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      Actually, most scientists ... would agree with Lomborg.Name three scientists. And you'll need to provide data to suggest your other contention (about most people), isn't just an vapid assertion.

      The majority of scientists do not agree with Greenpeace.
      Strawman. Who mentioned Greenpeace?
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    22. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      Lomborg started his work as an **environmentalist** trying to debunk some anti-environment statements from an economist
      Says who? Lomborg. Why should I believe him?
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    23. Re:Cheek, etc. by Alomex · · Score: 2
      Says who? Lomborg. Why should I believe him?

      Why should we believe you? You claimed to know that Lomborg started with preconceived notions, and then turned out you were simply making that up. From your reply it seems you aren't the least bit ashamed for making up statements.

      Now we can see who and what you had in mind when you talked about backwards science.

    24. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      You claimed to know that Lomborg started with preconceived notions
      No I didn't. Where do you think I said that?
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    25. Re:Cheek, etc. by Alomex · · Score: 1


      Troll.

    26. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1

      Oh dearie. You've been caught in a lie. Must be time for the ad hominem "Troll" defence...

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    27. Re:Cheek, etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me: You claimed to know that Lomborg started with preconceived notions

      You: No I didn't. Where do you think I said that?

      You a couple of messages earlier: If anyone has allowed his preconceptions to colour his work, its Lomborg. (Funny, isn't it that Lomborg always "erred" in such a way such that his "facts" supported his thesis. Thats backwards science.)

      Hence either you are an idiot who doesn't know what preconceptions means, or you are a troll.

      I prefer to believe you are a troll, but if you want to insist that you are an idiot, hey, who am I to say otherwise?

    28. Re:Cheek, etc. by gowen · · Score: 1
      I wrote:
      If anyone has allowed his preconceptions
      [and mark that if well, because it is important]. You wrote:
      Hence either you are an idiot who doesn't know what preconceptions means, or you are a troll.
      Or you don't know what "If" means. President Clinton, is that you?
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  19. are you doing your part? by Em+Emalb · · Score: 2

    I am on the middle ground in this issue, however I do a few things to ensure that I am at least trying to make a small difference: (basic stuff of course)

    1) I try to car pool as often as I can. Living in Atlanta, our traffic here is so bad that the HOV (High Occupancy Vehicles) lane is a smart choice so I don't have to leave at 5AM to get to work at 7:30.

    2) I don't litter. I avoid throwing anything on the ground, and pick stuff up I see when I can.

    3) I try to recycle as much as I can reasonably do.

    The problem with #3 is that from what I have seen, the apartment complex I live in does a great job with the different containers for recycling, but when the garbage company comes along, they throw EVERYTHING in the back of the garbage truck and take off. So, all our local efforts aren't doing a damned thing. Anyone else seeing this problem?

    --
    Sent from your iPad.
    1. Re:are you doing your part? by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > 3) I try to recycle as much as I can reasonably do.

      > The problem with #3 is that from what I have seen, the apartment complex I live in does a great job with the different containers for recycling, but when the garbage company comes along, they throw EVERYTHING in the back of the garbage truck and take off. So, all our local efforts aren't doing a damned thing. Anyone else seeing this problem?

      Yep. Working geekish hours at a large institution, I have often seen the night janitorial staff come around and empty the paper recyc and the ordinary trash all into the same hopper.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:are you doing your part? by geekoid · · Score: 2

      In huntington beach all our trash is sorted at the plant. Many cities are moving in that directio because its cheaper then maintaining a second, or third fleet of trucks. Maybe your city started doing that.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  20. Scientific American review & thoughts by OxideBoy · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I disagree wholeheartedly with the insinuation that the Scientific American critique of this book was an "attack." Readers, please do not be swayed by this horribly biased statement. Several environmental scientists dissected Skeptical Environmentalist's methodology, statistics, and conclusions, and the reviewers found many, many weak points not only in the author's facts but also his logic. The tone varied from reviewer to reviewer, but all the reviewers seemed to take the book pretty seriously.

    The truth of the matter is, climatology, geology, etc. do not have the luxury that physics, molecular biology, and other "benchtop" sciences have in that, in the latter fields, it is mostly possible to construct the systems in question in the lab and probe them. However, testing most major hypotheses in climatology is simply not possible as they would require altering the climate in a deliberate manner which is neither possible nor desireable.

    Personally, I am of the opinion that we need to enforce much stricter emission, land development, and recycling standards not because I believe that these activities are damaging the environment, but because they indisputably might be damaging the environment.

    1. Re:Scientific American review & thoughts by FatRatBastard · · Score: 1

      but because they indisputably might be damaging the environment.

      Wonderful logic there. I could just as easily say "I am of the opinion that we do not need to enforce much stricter emission, land development, and recycling standards not because I believe that these activities are not damaging the environment, but because they indisputably might not be damaging the environment."

      "Doctor, am I pregnant?"

      "Its an idisputable fact that you might be."

    2. Re:Scientific American review & thoughts by gowen · · Score: 1
      but because they indisputably might be damaging the environment.
      Quite right OxideBoy. It should be added that reputable climate change research has a marked tendency to be extremely circumspect in its conclusions. Papers usually take the form: If assumption A, assumption B and assumption C then we believe something really bad will happen.

      Unfortunately, the media have a tendency to report this story as:

      SOMETHING REALLY BAD WILL HAPPEN : Say Boffins
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    3. Re:Scientific American review & thoughts by OxideBoy · · Score: 1
      Your pregnancy analogy is flawed and points to exactly what I'm getting at. You can definitely test to determine if, indisputably, a woman is pregnant. That's easy. Climate change is not testable along those lines. You can take data and speculate and whatever, but there are way too many natural variables to pin down causes of change with the same certainty you can determine if a woman is pregnant. And if she is pregnant, you can be pretty sure how she got that way.

      There is a moral component to my argument that I omitted -- that no one would seriously consider his/her wasteful, destructive materialistic lifestyle more important than protecting the habitat of other living things. It's not a self-contained argument but I would everyone would grasp the underlying concept.

    4. Re:Scientific American review & thoughts by FatRatBastard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nope... my beef was with the statement "indisputably might be" true, which is true in all cases except when the thing in question is definitely false. My point is that the phrase "indisputably might not be" true is equally correct in all cases except when the thing in question is definitely true.

      Thus, if you're going to argue "Personally, I am of the opinion that we need to enforce much stricter emission, land development, and recycling standards not because I believe that these activities are damaging the environment, but because they indisputably might be damaging the environment" then its just as valid to make the arguement "Personally, I am of the opinion that we need to throw out stricter emission, land development, and recycling standards not because I believe that these activities are not damaging the environment, but because they indisputably might not be damaging the environment."

      Basically, you're saying you'd do something because something else *might* be true (and throwing the "idisputably" in there to make something that is vague sound concrete). If that's the case, then its equally valid to say you'd do something becase something else *might not* be true.

      As for the pregnancy analagy, its not flawed. The point I was trying to make is that someone could go to a doctor, ask if they were pregnant, and the doctor could say "you indisputably might be," and be perfectly correct, logically. They would also be grossly incompetent. Which is what I'm implying about the "but because they indisputably might be damaging the environment" logic.

    5. Re:Scientific American review & thoughts by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      And it is indisputable that you MIGHT murder somebody twenty years from now if you aren't terminated. Try again.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    6. Re:Scientific American review & thoughts by Broccolist · · Score: 2
      I disagree wholeheartedly with the insinuation that the Scientific American critique of this book was an "attack."

      Ahem. The cover of SA claimed "Science defends itself against The Skeptical Environmentalist". Furthermore, several of the articles had a hostile and used ad hominem attacks. Now, those articles made some good points but "attack" is definitely the word we want here.

    7. Re:Scientific American review & thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      All of the Scientific American reviews point out fundamental factual and/or methological errors in Lomborg's work.

      One of the reviewers also made clear his disrespect for Lomborg as a scientist. That shouldn't be used to invalidate the critique anymore than it should be used alone to invalidate the subject being critiqued.

      Science does need to be defended just like any standard of quality. Particularly when a professor of Political Science claims what he is doing is more science than politics.

  21. Empiricist? by ticktickbonk · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure what the poster is getting at with this. The agenda of environmentalists is to protect the environment. I don't see how this is selfish, nor could be hiding behind it a darker motive.

    Many of the cornerstones of the environmental movement (composting, high fuel economy, energy efficiency, solar energy) are in fact better and cheaper alternatives to classical living. I suggest that due to this, demonization comes from many who believe that this makes for bad consumers. It does, and energy and other suppliers are fighting back. Example: Power companies now charge large distribution and 'grid-access' fees to compensate for energy-efficiency profit loss.

    And to those who don't know, Ken Lay had his own desk at the White House.

    1. Re:Empiricist? by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      And to those who don't know, Ken Lay had his own desk at the White House.

      Just curious, Are you talking about his lobbying and financial support of the Kyoto Accords during the Clinton Administration?

    2. Re:Empiricist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >"The agenda of environmentalists is to protect the environment"

      Sorry, I don't buy that. My experience is that many "environmentalists" have agendas that go beyond "protecting the environment." Such people tend to be anti-private property, anti-corporation, and pro-government control. "Protecting the environment" is just a means other ends.

    3. Re:Empiricist? by Bayan · · Score: 1

      The agenda of the "environmentalists" that are frothing at the mouth over this book is to force their world view on others and dictate behaviour. Pretty strong stuff when it's based on assertion and agenda driven speculation.

      I compost, recycle, use solar energy and have increased my personal energy efficiency. However, I have no use for these shrill social engineers.

  22. A Cato Scholar's opinion by Mr.+Eff · · Score: 2, Informative

    Who Let the Dogs Out at Scientific American? by Patrick J. Michaels.

    It's just another perspective.

    --
    What fun is it being cool if you can't wear a sombrero? - Hobbes
    1. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by coltrane99 · · Score: 1

      Indeed, it is an opinion. Actually a very slanted editorial. Right-wing muckraking is so very tedious. All the huge profits made by environmentalists, they are just as greedy as the corporates they oppose, yadda yadda.

    2. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by Greg151 · · Score: 1

      You know, I get really tired of people confusing "right wing" with libertarian. The Cato institute is liberatarian. It is not right wing. Get your labels straight before you start calling people names.

    3. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by snarfer · · Score: 1

      Let's see if you can guess where Cato gets its money from.

    4. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by coltrane99 · · Score: 1

      It's not confusion. I don't have to accept someone's positively spun self-labeling. Libertarianism, in its extremist positions regarding the liberty of the individual (and corporations) promotes a right-wing agenda.

    5. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by Mr.+Eff · · Score: 1

      Actually, Cato gets the majority of it's money from individuals who give under a thousand dollars. It's operating budget is actually the lowest of the three major think tanks in DC (Brookings and Heritage being the other two).


      --
      What fun is it being cool if you can't wear a sombrero? - Hobbes
    6. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarianism, in its extremist positions regarding the liberty of the individual promotes a right-wing agenda

      You don't have any clue about what the term "right wing" means, do you? So if you believe that which you stated above, does that also mean that you think "left wing" means an extremist position against the liberty of the individual, and that such is a Good Thing(tm)?

      Oh, wait; I guess you do...

    7. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by coltrane99 · · Score: 1
      No, that would be simplistic and stupid.

      If you look at the conclusions you are led to if you accept individual liberty as the paramount right, you wind up with a society in which corporations are completely unregulated. You wind up with individuals able to pursue their individual profit without any concern for the general welfare of society. You get individuals greedily grabbing shared resources for their own gain.

      That's extremist, and right-wing. Now, in the real world, we don't have binary choices. Just because I oppose a position that holds individual liberty to be the paramount right that trumps all others, does not mean I think liberty is of no value.

      You just wish I did, so you could ignore the merits of my position.

    8. Re:A Cato Scholar's opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      --"If you look at the conclusions you are led to if you accept individual liberty as the paramount right, you wind up with a society in which corporations are completely unregulated."

      You quite obviously do not understand the argument being made by libertarians. I would encourage you to do further research before you continue to label our positions as "right wing".
      Libertarians do believe in individual liberty as being paramount. The root tenent here is "non-initiation of force". Individuals "greedily grabbing shared resources" tends to involve initatior or threat of force, which are no-nos by libertarian rules. This is, in fact, what the only just function of government is, namely protecting individuals from (and punishing perpetrators of) initiation of force.

  23. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The environmental lobby is no different: it scares to raise money." ... except if they'r right (and they are), you (and everyone else) is dead.

    "What's great about this book is how it demonstrates the lies in the propaganda." this book *is* propaganda... by pretending right-wing opinion (bought and paid for by polluting corporations) trumps scientific evidence (of which there is plenty), you and your ilk show what a bunch of idiots you are. get bent!

  24. The beauty of green living by rhakka · · Score: 2, Interesting

    is that in most cases, there are benefits beyond "saving the planet" to living a more Green lifestyle. Most Green design not only provides environmental benefit but also benefits such as self-sufficiency, health benefits, or even just creature comfort (a good natural-lighting design in a building can immesurable enhance the space, for example).

    Even beyond Global warming, there are a slew of inarguable truths that indicate a stance that is green-er (not Green, but greener) is necessary. Ever taken a trip to a solid waste facility? All those guys can talk about is how they are running out of space because of all the unnecessary trash we generate. In areas such as that, greener developements (less packaging, for example) saves everyone money! yes, money! believe it or not, green lifestyle can actually be economically feasible.

    The only question on my mind is, when the oil starts getting low OR we no longer have a decent source (presumably because the oil producing nations have a "shortage"), is America going to retain its status against now-developing countries that are doing it right from the beginning? Are we larger enough to convert when necessary?

    If not, we need to start planning, because we have an achilles heel, and its name is oil, no matter how you slice it.

    1. Re:The beauty of green living by tps12 · · Score: 1
      (a good natural-lighting design in a building can immesurable enhance the space, for example)

      Maybe I should try this...I could use immesurably more space.

      --

      Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
  25. Call me a realist but.... by fzlgk · · Score: 1, Troll

    ***********

    But hey, its OUR PLANET we're talking about, so why take chances?

    ***********

    Money?

    1. Scientific American slams the book because it doesn't want to upset it's left leaning advertisers/readers?

    2. The Economost approves of the book because it doesn't want to upset it's right leaning advertisers/readers?

    Not only this... but people tend to forget that money and *Enviromental REGULATION* are directly opposed, but money and *CARE for the environment* don't have to be.

    I truly believe there is a greater chance of our nation regulating itself into oblivion rather than our nation using all of the world's resources. *grin*

    food for thought.

    think globaly, act locally.

    don't regulate things to death.

    less government is better.

    1. Re:Call me a realist but.... by humanasset · · Score: 1

      Suck it Trebek!

    2. Re:Call me a realist but.... by jslag · · Score: 1
      money and *Enviromental REGULATION* are directly opposed


      I haven't seen any economic analysis coming to this conclusion. Limits on pollution can alter the distribution of money a bit - for example, companies that provide pollution-limiting services and technologies do much better when legally required - but it's hardly a zero-sum game.

    3. Re:Call me a realist but.... by gowen · · Score: 1
      Scientific American slams the book because it doesn't want to upset it's left leaning advertisers/readers
      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH AHAHAHA
      Scientific American, perhaps the most reputable general science publication on the planet (sorry "Nature"), has left leaning readers. Thats really funny.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    4. Re:Call me a realist but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The bottom line is that human race will continue "polluting" and "consuming" the resources of the earth until it is no longer efficient or in our best interests to do so. This won't happen until the damage done to the planet is so severe and resources are so depleted that the human race as a whole is FORCED to do something about it. This is only the way of nature (something we humans cannot escape). It may lead us to extinction or to a new age of "green" living. Either way, there is absolutely nothing that can be done to avoid this fate (whatever it may be). No matter how many people are concerned with the earth's environment, overpopulation, etc., we will ALWAYS be overwhelmingly outnumbered by the combined force of BILLIONS of human beings with the need to consume, multiply, consume, multiply....

      The earth has been a life sustaining system for a very very long time - many orders of magnitude longer than humans have existed on the planet. I'm pretty sure that the earth will snuff us out before we have the chance to destroy it. Perhaps the salvation of the earth will come with the extinction of our race?

    5. Re:Call me a realist but.... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen any economic analysis coming to this conclusion. Limits on pollution can alter the distribution of money a bit - for example, companies that provide pollution-limiting services and technologies do much better when legally required - but it's hardly a zero-sum game.

      EXACTLY! The industries whose profits would be temporarily lowered by environmental regulations - oil and auto for example - are funding this anti-environmentalist movement. But OTHER companies like fuel cells, etc. will do WELL.

      In the 92 presidential campaign when we were in a bad recession, Jerry Brown suggested putting people to work retrofitting buildings to be more energy efficient. Think about that - if we had spent the money then to do that, today companies and individuals would be paying much lower bills to heat and cool the buildings, helping the economy, and the lower demand would bring lower fuel prices.

      Anyway, we didn't.

    6. Re:Call me a realist but.... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      less government is better.

      Let's think about that for a minute. In the United States government is the people. One of the purposes of our government is making sure that businesses act in the interest of the people - like not polluting our water and air for example.

      So when they say "less government" what they are really saying is "less of the public making sure businesses are not harming the interests of the public."

      Now WHO would want to spend a bunch of money asking for "less government"??? -- wait, let me think...

      Actually you can get an answer to that by looking into how much money Enron, for one, spent on spreading the "less government" message.

    7. Re:Call me a realist but.... by fzlgk · · Score: 1

      A nation has a problem when more than 10% of it's GNP is tied up in government. Sure government spends the money it gets. But it is economically more efficient to allow private industry to provide services to the people.


      A government providing social services is the devil. There are MANY situations where things need regulation. And it IS the business of governments to undertake such tasks. However, I believe that there needs to be a better balance of regulatory ridiculosness, and proper consumer protection.

    8. Re:Call me a realist but.... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      A nation has a problem when more than 10% of it's GNP is tied up in government. Sure government spends the money it gets. But it is economically more efficient to allow private industry to provide services to the people.

      Opps, you acidentally forgot to include anything at all to back up these Republican Party slogans.

    9. Re:Call me a realist but.... by Psion · · Score: 1

      Hey Snarfer, have you looked at Bush's latest budget proposals? It sure looks like our Republican president wants a bigger government to me! And the only difference with the Democrats is where they want to spend the money.

      Republican? Democrat? It makes no difference, they have no desire to see the size of government reduced and their power curtailed.

    10. Re:Call me a realist but.... by ivrcti · · Score: 1

      >>"The bottom line is that human race will continue "polluting" and "consuming" the resources of the earth until it is no longer efficient or in our best interests to do so" I believe we will do so until it impinges on those with enough resources to begin the change. That usually equates to large institutions and a few M$ types. So, when it's a serious inconvenience for Bill, et al, we'll act.

    11. Re:Call me a realist but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Odd. You're the first person I've seen who didn't realize that. Probably says something about the world you live in.

    12. Re:Call me a realist but.... by Turing+Machine · · Score: 1

      most reputable general science publication on the planet

      Scientific American is a popular magazine, not a scientific journal. It's about one step above "Mr. Wizard's Weird Science Experiments".

    13. Re:Call me a realist but.... by gowen · · Score: 1
      Scientific American is a popular magazine, not a scientific journal.
      I never said it was a journal. Its a publication, and a peer reviewed one as well, and it is highly reputable (look at its editorial board). Your characterisation of it is quite wrong.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  26. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


    > (Aside: now that I think about it, I do get a lot more mail from the left than from the right. More religious fervour, I guess.)

    Maybe just less respect for trees.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  27. contradiction by drink85cent · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't have problem if they made rational decision on hard data.

    Global Warming:
    30 years ago scientific evidence showed evidence of another ice age. New "scientific" evidence shows we are going to cook.

    Rising Oceans:
    Many predict oceans will rise several feet due to thawing glacier. But now new evidence shows antartic ice cap thickning.

    Ozone hole:
    20 years of data, indicates existent hole found is getting larger. We know the hole fluctuates between seasons, we also know it existed since we started taking data. 20 years 5 billion

    If there is conclusive evidence then yes id go along with extreme measures people want to do. If a real scientist wants to prove a real theory in the concrete sciences, it would take alot more than these loose "facts".

    1. Re:contradiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Global Warming models are hard to do, and their are still big uncertainties. Still, they give us an indication of the range of possibilities.

      Ozone Hole, here I am afraid you are just plain wrong. The british have taken continious data in antartica on ozone since 1955, and the hole didn't show up till the mid 70's. It does have seasonal variations, which are reasonably well understood (same variations show up in the models and model predictions are verified by samples taken from aircraft). It is not my direct area of research, but I believe the variations are due to both chlorine and bromine compounds being locked up in ice in the extreem cold of the winter. Spring thaw rereleases these. After this model was proposed, high flying aircraft took samples and verified predicted abundances
      from the computer models.

  28. What I keep in mind by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 0, Insightful

    There are two reasons why I remain firmly skeptical until I see some real evidence:

    1) Scientists and environmentalists make their money by predicting doomsday. No global warming == no grant money to fund study after study.

    2) Most of the evidence is manufactured by people with an interest in the outcome. This IMO worthless evidence is known as "computer climate studies". Trying to understand climates with our level of technology is like a caveman trying to understand nuclear physics.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    1. Re:What I keep in mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a bit off on these points - the scientists will get their money either way.

      It will take a generation to figure this mess out since no one will easily & conclusively show that global warming is or is not occuring. Until there is conclusive evidence government funding will be available to those on both sides of the debate, as long as their grant proposals can stand up to peer review. Do you think the Bush administration isn't interested in research that shows global warming is unimportant?

      For those not interested in government money & peer reviewed grants there is lots of private money available to scientists who show that burning hydrocarbons won't lead to global warming. The only problem is that getting your scientific grant money from oil companies tends to damage your credibility...

    2. Re:What I keep in mind by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2
      Trying to understand climates with our level of technology is like a caveman trying to understand nuclear physics.

      So you conclude that if we don't understand the climate, that there's nothing to worry about. Hey, why not put your caveman at the controls of a nuclear power plant and let him play with all of the buttons and knobs? He certainly doesn't understand nuclear physics, and the noises and lights make him happy, so everything will be fine!

    3. Re:What I keep in mind by snarfer · · Score: 1

      Scientists and environmentalists make their money by predicting doomsday.

      Oh yeah. Scientists and environmentalists make a LOT of moeny. TONs of money.

      Yep. If I want to make tons of moeny, I'd sure choose to become and ENVIRONMENTALIST all right! Doh!

      As contrasted with, say, OIL COMPANY executive, maybe?

    4. Re:What I keep in mind by blowg0ats · · Score: 1

      1) Scientists and environmentalists make their money by predicting doomsday. No global warming == no grant money to fund study after study if there were no reason to study environmental degredation, i'm sure these scientists would have plenty of other things to do research on. why manufacture a problem to be researched and solved when there are plenty of them around already? not only that, but its not as if being a research scientist is a lucrative financial career. if you want to make tons of cash being a scientist, you work for a company like Du Pont, and companies like Du Pont are the ones that are creating these problems in the first place.

    5. Re:What I keep in mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check out

      http://www.activistcash.com/

      You'd be surprised.

  29. Why is it so much hotter in the cities then by Commienst · · Score: 1

    For the most part, whenever you move from a rural area to a city during the summer, it feels alot hotter in the ciy because of increased humidity and a small increase in temperature.

    --

    I am into the copy and paste.
    1. Re:Why is it so much hotter in the cities then by Ghoser777 · · Score: 2

      These cities are what are called Urban Height Islands. Because of the black tar on roads and other hat absorbing characteristics of cities, cities retain more heat, and so are hotter.

      Measurements of increased average heat temperatre in cities should take into account that changing the structure of the city can change the temperature measurements... although they may not always do so.

      F-bacher

      --
      James Tiberius Kirk: "Spock, the women on your planet are logical. No other planet in the galaxy can make that claim."
    2. Re:Why is it so much hotter in the cities then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why is it hotter in the cities?

      One word: Pavement.

      One more word, just for you: Dumbass.

    3. Re:Why is it so much hotter in the cities then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is more than just pavement. Increased percentage hydrocarbons also connive to make cities hotter.

    4. Re:Why is it so much hotter in the cities then by nomadic · · Score: 2

      I think you mean urban heat islands. The asphalt has a lot to do with it, but so does the decreased evapotranspiration due to removal of vegetation, and anthropogenic heat sources (industry, cars, etc). The increase in temperature isn't that pronounced; at most it's a few degrees above the surrounding rural/suburban areas. And, some cities have the reverse effect, due to increased vegetation in desert cities, for example, or because of large amounts of water released by factories, etc.

  30. If you can't predict, you shouldn't prescribe by rlglende · · Score: 1


    These are chaotic systems: the future can't be predicted, not even probablistically.

    Therefore, there is no way for a policy to move the system from point A in the state space to point B.

    Therefore, we must stop all these organizations from making policy and thereby wasting our $.

    This does not prevent us from working to 'save the environment', whether that be species, water sources, ...

    But we have to be a lot smarter than environmentalists have been. E.g., if you want to save the the California Condor, show that it is amazingly good to eat, then make it part of our diet. Chickens and turkeys won't ever go extinct, not even wild versions.

    Saving species is best done by widening human diet: lots of new plant species for vegetarians, condor Thanksgiving dinners, ...

    Lew Glendenning

    --
    "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
    1. Re:If you can't predict, you shouldn't prescribe by uncadonna · · Score: 2
      These are chaotic systems: Granted. the future can't be predicted, not even probablilistically

      I predict Christmas will be at least 5 degrees colder than the Fourth of July this year in Madison, Wisconsin. Since you allege that I can make no predictions whatsover, you will take me up when I give you odds. Five will get you twenty.

      Weather prediction and climate prediction are different things. I made a climate prediction there, not a weather prediction.

      Take my bet or admit that your argument is nonsense.

      --
      mt
    2. Re:If you can't predict, you shouldn't prescribe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Food Species don't go extinct?

      Ever here of the Passenger Pigeon? Good to eat and a little too easy to kill.

    3. Re:If you can't predict, you shouldn't prescribe by rlglende · · Score: 1


      Right: the last ones died in a zoo, not on a farm.

      --
      "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
  31. first, do no harm... by supernova87a · · Score: 5, Insightful

    OK, fine. As a scientist and reasonable person, I must admit the possibility that our activities are having absolutely no effect on the environment, and the measurements of climate change are just part of the small natural oscillations in our system. I must admit this possibility, because we don't have enough evidence yet, and to dogmatically cling to a belief without evidence does us no credit, and is the mark of a different ideology.

    But on the other hand, look at the problem from a practical perspective. Suppose that global warming is "false" (ie. we're not causing it). Then our actions now have no effect and by reducing emissions, curbing pollution, we do nothing (except improve our own cities, etc. a little bit). But if the phenomenon is real, and our actions now make it better or worse, then by continuing on our present course, we are making the problem worse.

    Given these choices, in the absence of information, isn't it more logical to bet on the second? Isn't it safer to assume the worst case scenario? I.e. let's stop doing the things that people suggest may be harming the environment, because if they actually do, we'll be screwed in 50 years? And if they're not harming the environment, we did no harm anyway?

    Do some people not understand this logic??

    1. Re:first, do no harm... by Alomex · · Score: 2

      Given these choices, in the absence of information, isn't it more logical to bet on the second? Isn't it safer to assume the worst case scenario?

      Yes it is and we should definitely err on the side of caution as you suggest. Just don't go around saying that the sky is falling if it ain't.

    2. Re:first, do no harm... by darkmagus · · Score: 1

      Problem with that is that it misses the idea that there are costs associated with both actions ...

      1) potential cost of not taking action if global warming, for example, is real: we get global warming

      2) cost of taking action, whether or not global warming is real: slowed economic growth, or perhaps contraction.

      It is CRUCIAL to remember that things like the Kyoto treaty are in NO WAY costless, but instead will definitely have penalties to economic growth. Also, given that pollution (to stick with the global warming example) lessens as economies mature and technological developments occur, penalizing economic growth could have a 'double-whammy' effect of slowing economic growth causing slowing rate of improvement in greenhouse gas emissions, for example.

      So, even in the 'absence of information', it does not necessarily follow that we should try to enforce drastic emissions cuts "to be on the safe side". Because if we are wrong about global warming (which you yourself admit that we may well be), we will do nothing but screw ourselves economically for decades to come.

      An interesting side point: Matt Ridley (very well known evolutionary biologist) noted something in a recent Spectator article which I believe came from Lomborg --

      "It is well known that meeting the Kyoto treaty on carbon-dioxide reduction will delay global warming by six years at most by 2100. Yet the annual cost of that treaty, in each year of the century, will be the same as the cost -- once -- of installing clean drinking water and sanitation for every human being on the planet. Priorities, anyone? "

      I have to agree -- the so-called Green movement does very little to think about these trade-offs, and seems content to raise scare after scare. And eventually, this creates a situation where we no longer know where to spend our money. Listening to them, we may find in 50 years that we wasted so much time, money, and effort trying to fight off 30 imagined 'doomsday' problems along with the handful of real ones that we can't actually address the real problems in a meaningful way!

      --
      darkmagus
    3. Re:first, do no harm... by cje · · Score: 2

      I must admit the possibility that our activities are having absolutely no effect on the environment ..

      Demonstrably false. Check out the skylines of Los Angeles and Houston. The smog that hangs over these cities and causes the National Weather Service to issue routine air quality alerts are most definitely not caused by small, natural oscillations in our system. Now, granted, this does not immediately extrapolate into evidence that human activities are affecting the climate on a global scale, but at the very least, it shows that those who claim that human activities do nothing to affect the environment are clearly out to lunch.

      --
      We're going down, in a spiral to the ground
    4. Re:first, do no harm... by kroymen · · Score: 1

      supernova87a commented:
      Given these choices, in the absence of information, isn't it more logical to bet on the second? Isn't it safer to assume the worst case scenario? I.e. let's stop doing the things that people suggest may be harming the environment, because if they actually do, we'll be screwed in 50 years? And if they're not harming the environment, we did no harm anyway?

      Do some people not understand this logic??


      I understand the logic, but I think your assumptions ignore a significant point: making emissions lowering changes is not a neutral proposition as you assume. It costs money and diverts productivity away from other things. It increases the cost of energy which has a net depressive effect on all sectors of every economy.

      It's like saving money for an imagined eventuality when you have actual bills to pay. If the eventuality never materializes, you could reassure yourself that it doesn't matter since you've managed to save some money and maybe earn some interest. However, it ignores the fact that in the meantime you've accrued late fees on your bills, shot your credit rating to hell and had your utilities shut off.

    5. Re:first, do no harm... by supernova87a · · Score: 2

      You are right that there is a cost to taking action. I will probably be slower growth, economic contraction even, perhaps. But at the risk of taking a superior attitude about the US economy -- I think we could stand to contract a little bit and maybe not keep our place as the biggest proportional consumer of everthing on the planet.

      I'm sure that's a controversial statement, but here's my reasoning. The US is certainly a leader in many industries, but for the most part my opinion is that we sure waste a whole lot for that which we produce. In essence, a bulk portion of the population is a leisure/service society. Do we really need so much productivity going into things like marketing, sales, junk?

      I think we might benefit from a contraction. It might reorganize our priorities...

    6. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, Lomborg does not argue that we should not try to protect the environment. Indeed he explicitly points out that the environment is doing as well as it is precisely because of environmental policies and regulation. What he is trying to show is that the environmental movement is hurting its credibility by making wildly exaggerated claims without basis in published research. This simple point seems to elude many of his critics -- presumably because the critics feel slighted (rightly or not).

    7. Re:first, do no harm... by devnullkac · · Score: 2

      The same logic underlies Pascal's assertion that one should believe in God in the absence of direct evidence to the contrary because the cost of disbelieving is so high if you're wrong. I didn't buy that argument and I don't buy this one either.

      The reasons for curbing environmental impacts must be based on believable evidence. The only question is where to set the "believable" threshold. I would put myself in the still-waiting-but-worried-enough-to-buy-a-Prius camp.

      Unfortunately, the book's author seems to believe not only that the evidence to date fails to support the conclusion that the impacts are real, but that they in fact already support the opposite conclusion.

      --
      What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
    8. Re:first, do no harm... by PineHall · · Score: 1

      Amen! The current state of climate models makes any predictions by the models as suspect, but it is worth considering what happens if these predictions are true. Is it good to be adding more and more CO2 to the atmosphere? The results of added CO2 may not be known for certain, but it is not purdent to avoid the possible dire consequences. Let us not sweep it under the rug, rather let us recognize our selfish motives of not wanting to be inconvenienced. We should think about future generations.

    9. Re:first, do no harm... by supernova87a · · Score: 2

      You are right that there is a cost to taking action. It will probably be slower growth, economic contraction even, perhaps. But at the risk of taking a superior attitude about the US economy -- I think we could stand to contract a little bit and maybe not keep our place as the biggest proportional consumer of everthing on the planet. I know that everyone likes growth, but it was never guaranteed, was it? It seems to me we're driving ourselves crazy right now, with businesses (and therefore our people) trying to make a profit wherever there's any to be had, regardless of how worthwhile that particular endeavor may be.

      I'm sure that's a controversial statement, but here's my reasoning. The US is certainly a leader in many industries, but for the most part my opinion is that we sure waste a whole lot for that which we produce. In essence, a bulk portion of the population is a leisure/service society. Do we really need so much productivity going into things like marketing, sales, junk?

      Cycles of contraction and growth are necessary to keep people grounded with a sense of proportion. Just look at spending habits and the dot com busts -- when Silicon valley was awash with money, it drove the whole place into an unsustainable cycle of inflation and surprisingly, poverty. The contraction now has restored some sanity to that area. I think we (the US) might benefit from a contraction. It might reorganize our priorities...

    10. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with this is that by reducing emmissions, etc. we may have a very negative imapct on the standard of living of many people now living in extreme poverty. So the question is, first do no harm to whom? Those of us wealthy enough to absorb the imacts of reduced economic growth rates or those who cannot?

      There is a lot of evidence that as economies grow, people demand more environmental goods. So by slowing global growth, you may be slowing the very process that will eventually lead to a better environment. Admittedly this may be something of a crapshoot. Can we grow fast enough to create a high enough demand for environmental goods to reverse the damage that growth will cause before we have destroyed the planet? I dunno. But saying that we should put things into check has many serious repercussions.

    11. Re:first, do no harm... by dchaos · · Score: 1

      Isn't this akin to saying "If god does exist, and you don't believe you'll go to hell - so isn't it better to err on the side of caution?"
      I don't buy this arguement any more than I might buy the arguement that since miscrosoft has more money and better marketing, it's safer to assume the worst case scenario and just adopt .net now.
      As a reasonable person, I'm sure you would agree that much more data needs to be collected on the subject before any conclusive analysis can be made. - just my $.02

    12. Re:first, do no harm... by farnham · · Score: 1

      There is absolutley no evidence that reducing emissions will slow or otherwise harm the economy. This is FUD,FUD,FUD.

      I stongly believe that given natural constraints an economy can thrive, the problem we have is an externalization of true costs of some forms of industry.

      There Aint No Such Thing As A Free Lunch. We keep giving polluters a free lunch on the back of biodiversity, clean water, clean air, and the Health of Human beings living near these industries.

      When appropriate regulations are in place to ensure that people and industry pay the true costs for thier impacts there will be a truly working economy .
      It is very sad that the President of the United States and many other leaders of the world have so little faith in the innovative ability of thier people that they must prop up industry through destruction of the biosphere.

      Tell someone in Miami or Bangladesh or the Netherlands that the costs to possibly prevent their innundation are impossible.

      Don't make the arrogant mistake to think that Greens haven't put quite a bit of thought into the positions they take. But I guess it's just a symptom of the general arrogance that some people have to damage or destroy the environmental commons in the name of personal profit while shreiking that they;re doing it for the benfefit of "The Economy"

      --
      pending committee review
    13. Re:first, do no harm... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      cost of taking action, whether or not global warming is real: slowed economic growth, or perhaps contraction.


      This is just silly. Oil companies might sell less oil, and they are throwing a ton of cash into our country's political debate - Enron for example - trying to convince people it will hurt the economy when really it only hurts THEM.

      It shouldn't take a lot of deep thinking to realize that if we retrofit buildings and build more efficient cars it HELPS the economy. That's called ENERGY EFFICIENCY. That means things COST LESS TO PRODUCE. It's called INCREASED PRODUCTIVITY.

      And since we buy so much oil from other countries, it HELPS our balance of trade.

      I could go on. This idea that helping the environment hurts the economy - how much money have the oil companies put into spreading that idea?

    14. Re:first, do no harm... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      How does increased energy efficiency harm the economy?

      How does a car that gets more miles per gallon hurt the economy?

      How does a building that uses less energy for heating and cooling harm the economy?

      How does using a neon lighbulb, using half as much electricity, harm the economy?

      And especially how do these things have "a negative impact on the standard of living of many people now living in extreme poverty?"

      Does your statement even make any sense at all?

    15. Re:first, do no harm... by ice_sk · · Score: 1

      How can you be so selfish? We are talking about OUR planet and you're talking about YOUR economy. Don't you know that there is also people outside of the US? I've been once in the US and I can tell you, you are wasting a lot of energy. Your statement about the cost of Kyoto treaty compared to the drinkable water problem suprised me, and maybe you are right. But I remember you that the US refuse to sign it, so now, tell me what do you think will come first in Afghanistan? Water or Petrol pipeline?

    16. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're talking about *global* climatic effects, not local ones.

    17. Re:first, do no harm... by Golias · · Score: 2
      I can see where you are coming from, except the US, while being a big consumer, is not really a big polluter. Many of the so-called "developping world" nations are still generating most of their electricity by burning coal, the worst fuel you can possibly burn, from an environmental standpoint.

      Clearly the answer is to do what it takes to make sure that every nation in the world gets filthy rich... as rich as the US. Rich people live longer, grow taller, produce more, pollute less, and offer much stiffer resistance to tyrants and despots. The best way to make a country rich, as the British discovered when they were managing Hong Kong, is to mostly leave them the hell alone. Government can, and must do many things, but too much government is a hinderance to getting rich, and if you want a cleaner environment, you need nations to get rich, therefore less global planning and less enforcement world-wide will probably lead to solving the pollution problem a lot sooner than telling people in dirt-poor equatorial countries that they can't preserve their food in refrigerators that contain CFC's.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    18. Re:first, do no harm... by ipfwadm · · Score: 1

      I don't buy into Pascal's wager either, but there's a fundamental difference between its application to religion and its application here. With religion, you have to take into consideration WHICH supreme being you're supposed to believe in. If I believe in the christian god and the Hindus are right, I'll come back as an ant. Since there's so many religions, picking one to believe in doesn't really do much to improve your chances. And there's still the possibility that a supreme being exists, but none of the world's religions have it right.

      However, with the environment, you're either screwed or you're not. And with acid rain there is TANGIBLE evidence that our actions are adversely affecting the environment (if you don't believe me, try catching a fish in many of the lakes in the Adirondacks). To me that's more compelling than the environmental version of Pascal's wager, but even without any evidence at all, the environment is still a better bet than religion.

    19. Re:first, do no harm... by clink · · Score: 1
      There is absolutley no evidence that reducing emissions will slow or otherwise harm the economy. This is FUD,FUD,FUD.


      There Aint No Such Thing As A Free Lunch.



      How can you possibly reconcile these two positions?

    20. Re:first, do no harm... by jolhoeft · · Score: 1

      Actually, the better safe then sorry approach has a serious drawback - there are only finite resources. Money is the obvious, but perhaps just as important, there are only so may enviromental scientists. If we focus too tightly on something that might be a problem, and it isn't one, we will certainly miss a real problem. Operations research has something to say on this subject, i.e. when you know enough to take action, and when you need to focus on gathering more information.

    21. Re:first, do no harm... by mjh · · Score: 2
      Economic growth is a measure of the productivity of our society. Basically, the idea is this: If I have a cow and you don't. Between us we have 1 cow's worth of value. If, on the other hand, you do some work and acquire a tree, you and I might agree to swap the tree for the cow. Now, between us we have two cow's worth of value (or two tree's worth of value). In our tiny little system, we've experienced economic growth.

      Failure to grow economically means that some people go without. Some people go without as it is, but failure to grow economically means many more people go without. And by "without" I mean, without food, without shelter, etc. Economic growth is a measure of the fight against poverty. Failure to grow economically, or contraction, is a measure of the increase in poverty.

      You seem to think that we could cut back on leisure/service. I don't know. But cutting back on those parts of the economy will impoverish the people working in them, which will have a ripple effect and eventually impact you and me. The economy is a significantly more fragile thing than most ecosystems. And the impact of failures of the US economy would impoverish huge portions of the world.

      I don't mean to imply that we can't cut back on some unnecessary things. But it's not a simple thing to do and there can be huge consequences to doing it.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    22. Re:first, do no harm... by Score+Whore · · Score: 1
      But on the other hand, look at the problem from a practical perspective. Suppose that global warming is "false" (ie. we're not causing it).


      Suppose that there is in actuality an unknown process that tends toward ice. Lots and lots of ice. Our emissions, etc. are preventing the eventual complete and total freezing of the globe.

      It's as possible as global warming and for all we know about the processes in motion, it can be fully reality.

      Just to be devils advocate.
    23. Re:first, do no harm... by supernova87a · · Score: 2

      This is some of what I never understood, even after I took economics. Let's say we swap the tree and cow back and forth 10,000 times. (simplifying what happens in our economy, basically). We still have only one tree and one cow, and yet we say we've acquired 10,000 times their value by exchanging money that many times more. Isn't this a little strange?

      It seems to me this is a lot of what the US economy is about, just swapping things back and forth between people, as they compete and jostle for higher positions in our society. What's the point? And worse, each time the cow and tree get swapped, the cow takes a crap and you've got to clean it up, and the tree loses a few leaves...

      Maybe the innovative capitalist would say, let's use the crap to fertilize the tree -- problem solved!

    24. Re:first, do no harm... by mesocyclone · · Score: 5, Insightful
      supernova87a states: "Given these choices, in the absence of information, isn't it more logical to bet on the second? Isn't it safer to assume the worst case scenario? I.e. let's stop doing the things that people suggest may be harming the environment, because if they actually do, we'll be screwed in 50 years? And if they're not harming the environment, we did no harm anyway?"

      In fact, this principle is starting to be used by environmentalist to justify all sorts of policies that they otherwise cannot support with evidence.


      The problem with this principal is that in an uncertain, complex system, your actions to mitigate harm may themselves cause harm. Environmentalists have a narrow definition of harm - for example they rarely recognize that their actions may harm or even result in the death of those people who are at the edge of existence economically. The banning of DDT is one example - with the death rate from maliaria around a million a year now, when it was much lower before. Did anybody do a "least harm" analysis there?

      Furthermore, it is unscientific in the sense that it is really saying "We don't have proof of X, but we are going to act as if X is true, and take actions that force people to change their behavior as a result."

      For example, if in fact the costs of CO2 mitigation are high, they may lead to significant damage to third world economies. This would lead to increased environmental damage in the third world areas as those people are more desperate and less able to import what they need... so they strip more forests, overfish more fish, etc. They also have more kids - the greater the uncertainty of survival of kids, the more kids people have. The result: population growth.

      The correct thing to do is do a cost benefit analysis (a phrase detested by environmentalists), and to account for these uncertainties.

      The other important thing to realize is that we have greatly reduced the amount of most pollutants (with the exception of CO2 if one buys the anthropogenic global warming hypothesis). But environmentalists are pushing for zero pollution (which means zero technology which means zero population).

      The biggest problem with the environmental movement is that it is not satisfied with success. You don't need to go to "The Skeptical Environmentalist" to find out that pollution in many areas is vastly decreased from previous levels. Another problem is that the environmental movement invariable sees progress and capitalism as the villain. As a result it is blind to the fact that increased prosperity leads to decreased birth rate (one of the main goals of environmentlaists), and that it leaves society with the option of considering environmental choices without killing people in the process

      Another problem with the environmentalist movement is that much of it has been hijacked by extremists who use it as a weapon against capitalism. Thus we have every project obstructed by these "environmentalists." For example, here in Arizona there was a project to build a toxic waste incinerator (a *good* thing for the environment since it would destroy most of the toxicity). Greenpeace sent agitators down to block the project, and it was ultimately shelved. That incinerator would have been out in the middle of the Sonoran Desert ( a *good* place - far from people).

      Finally, I would comment that most environmentalists in this day and age cannot do a good job of answering the question of "why preserve the environment?" Or more directly, "why preserve this particular aspect of the environment?" One tends to get answers that imply that it is an absolute good (essentially in a religious sense) to preserve the environment. But that sort of reasoning gives no guidance as to how to do that (other than the mass elimination of the human race - also advocated by some environmentalists). Also, the *good* that can come from environmental change is always discounted. I have friends who research the beneficial effects of increased CO2 on plants. They have trouble getting funding due to the politicization of the global warming issue. Nobody wants to find good outcomes!

      Nor can they define what a desirable environment is. Some want us to go back to the hunter gatherer days (ignoring the fact that those hunter gatherers caused major species extinctions and major environmental change). Some simply want us to freeze and preserve the current environment in whatever state it is (ignoring Darwin essentially). Others want man to have no impact on the environment. A few want to preserve the environment for the future (I would call the more reasonable of these "conservationists" as opposed to environmentalists).

      Almost none recognize that man *is* part of the environment and the actions of *man* are by definition "natural." Recognizing that allows more rational choices to be considered. It leads us to force a definition of goals for the environment, and that can allow us to do benefit/harm analysis (called cost-benefit analysis technically but that term is hated by many environmentalists, probably because of both their anti-capitalist feelings and their absolutism).

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    25. Re:first, do no harm... by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Of course, the problem with economic growth is that it has only a weak correlation with quality of life.

      Failure to grow economically doesn't mean people do without..it means people do without more.

      After all, if a family lives out on a hobby farm, growing their own food and are basically self-sufficient - they add basically nothing to economic growth.

      However, if one day dad slips in the field and lands on his head and they have to go to a doctor to get him fixed, then we see some growth in the GDP.

      What if the injury turns out to be more serious than was originally thought? Dad won't be able to get back to the farm for a while. Mom has to get a job as a secretary to support the family. The GDP goes up again.

      With mom at work and dad laid up, the family needs someone to look after the kids during the day. Daycare costs boost the GDP again.

      The bills for dads medical costs start coming in and the insurance company is balking on payment. Now the family is forced to sell a chunk of their land to the neighboring commercial pig-farm to keep up with the bills and hire a lawyer. The GDP gets yet another boost.

      Complications happen, dad's concussion turns into a coma. The court case is dragging on with documents being requested and shuttled all over the place. Mom is forced to sell the remainder of the farm and move to a rented apartment. The farm land is converted to an industrial factory. The GDP gets a boost every month as she pays her rent.

      Dad dies. Now we have funeral expenses and a single low-skilled income earner trying to support herself and her kid. The economy loves it.. but what good has it done?

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    26. Re:first, do no harm... by oni · · Score: 2

      If I believe in the christian god and the Hindus are right, I'll come back as an ant.

      That's not what hindus believe - although your point is taken.

      Most religions actually support the belief that good people, even if they live in a time or location where that particular religion isn't available to them, are rewarded in the afterlife. This is true even though it seems to be common practice for the idiot practitioners of a religion tell you that you are doomed unless you do exactly as they do.

    27. Re:first, do no harm... by lth · · Score: 1

      What do you mean "no harm"?

      In the country I live in - Denmark - we pay fairly hefty "green" taxes on heat, electricity and fossil fuels. There are large taxes on cars that polute more. There are lots of regulations that force businesses to implement green initiatives in order to polute less. A fixed part of our electricity is produced by green sources, such as windpower, at approximately double the price.

      This does "no harm"?

      I agree that we need to take environmental precautions - I certainly support all measures that reduce air and water polution - but the Global Warming initiatives I'm alot more sceptical about. We know far too little about how the ecosystem works.

      Reducing CO2 emission costs a LOT of money - and I'm certainly not paying for it, if it serves no purpose.

      Just my 0.2 euro.

    28. Re:first, do no harm... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Another replier made the very important point that local environmental damage is a different thing than global environmental damage. If you fart you destroy the environment in your pants and possibly that in the room, but you don't destroy the environment of the whole town.

      it shows that those who claim that human activities do nothing to affect the environment are clearly out to lunch.

      Nobody is claiming this. All life as an effect on the environment. But that's no excuse to jump to the conclusion that the sky is falling.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    29. Re:first, do no harm... by mjh · · Score: 2

      It's not the swapping of the tree and the cow that grows us economically. It's the work that gets done (measured by the presence of the tree) that grows us economically. If the cow is relatively rare, and trees are relatively prevalant. Then the amount of work that gets done in collecting a tree is not much, and I'm not likely to swap my cow for it. The cow represents a lot more work to acquire, and if I really need a tree it'd be less work to just go and get one myself. But if the cow and the tree represent more or less equal amounts of work, then you and I might agree to the exchange based on our needs at the time.

      The point is that economic growth does not come from the cow and the tree themselves. It comes from what those things represent: work. So we can't keep on swapping the tree back and forth in order to grow economically. No additional work is getting done. In order to grow econmically, work must be done. In the larger national economy that's what happens. Work gets done in order to facilitate all of the swapping that you see. In the larger economy, we've develeped a system of representing universally interchangeable work. We call it money. Money, in and of itself, is basically worthless. But since money can only be legally acquired through legitmate work, money allows me to offer some of my already completed work to you, in exchange for something you have, even though you might not need the work that I do.

      So we're not just incessantly swapping stuff back and forth. WE had to work to acquire money which allows us to participate in the swapping.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    30. Re:first, do no harm... by infodragon · · Score: 1

      You bring up a good point, but everything I've read so far is missing, IMHO, a big point. We as humans are very proud, our technology allows us to live a very lavish life compared to the rest of the animal kingdom, some may argue the other way but I digress. The fact that our lavish lives produce waste is a natural byproduct of living in such a way. The only thing we can do is reduce the amount of waste we produce. So the question is, are we so proud as to think that our waste is hurting the environment? Is our puny race so big as to change the "health" of our planet?

      Our planet can throw up a volcanic erruption that produces more pollution than humans have in known history, except for nuclear detonations, which again I digress. Below you will find some links supporting my claim. Now over the past 200 years how many volcanoes have errupted? I cannot find any links for cronology but just from memory, which mine is very bad for names and dates, we got Mt. St. Hellens, Mt. Penetubio, constant volcanic activity in Hawaii, and quite a few others. What impact have they been having on our environment. Each one of the "major" eruptions produces more than humans have ever produced. Yes humans produce differnt types, but in such small quantities comparitivly speaking, how can we measure their impact when the overwealming amount volcanic polution would most definatly interfere with our research.

      So I agree that we should err on the side of caution. I agree we should produce less waiste. But are we bringing about the end of the world? I don't think so, not while volcanos have been doing much more "damage" than we every possibly could concieve of doing.

      So my final point is, the ppl that are screaming that we are destroying the planet are just overly proud.

      volcanoes.usgs.gov
      geopubs.wr.usgs.gov
      hvo.wr.usgs.gov
      solcomhouse.com

      --
      If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.
    31. Re:first, do no harm... by ksheff · · Score: 1

      Limiting oil imports also reduces the need to be dependant on potentially unstable regions of the world and sticking our noses into their politics. Admit it. If Iraq and Kuwait didn't have any natural resources that were strategic to our economy, would the US and the rest of the West fought a war and kept troops in that region? Probably not.

      I do like being effcient as I can since it saves me money. If something pollutes, even if it's cheap, it will cost more money down the road to clean it up. That's money that could be spent for more worthwhile projects. It's odd that most of the drive for clean & efficient power is primarily being hyped from the environmental standpoint. Sure many people care, but probably a lot more don't care or are indifferent -- it doesn't impact them directly, so it's ignored (some probably buy big fat inefficient vehicles just to piss off the tree hugger types). I'd say that a lot more are concerned with the amount of funds in their bank accounts.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    32. Re:first, do no harm... by PD · · Score: 2

      Pascal's wager is also not phrased properly. Suppose that I decide to believe. That does it, right? Not really. Depending on the religion, there's differing criteria. I might FAIL to believe, even though I chose to believe. Therefore, the outcome for taking the believing path can be either 1) go to heaven or 2) not go to heaven.

      And, on the other side, suppose I take the path to not believe. I might fail at that too. A nice liberal god might let me in anyway. Therefore, the outcome for taking the nonbelieving path is either 1) go to heaven or 2) not go to heaven.

      This shows quite clearly that Pascal's wager is completely useless if you try to figure out how to maximize your gain by either believing or not believing.

    33. Re:first, do no harm... by DuckDuckBOOM! · · Score: 1
      I understand the logic. That's not the issue. If the facts are in error, the logic operating on those facts will lead you to a perfectly reasonable conclusion that happens to be dead wrong; i.e. "garbage in, garbage out."
      Example: There exists a credible body of evidence to the effect that the next Ice Age has already started, and it may well be that all the particulates and greenhouse gases we're dumping into the atmosphere are what's holding back the glaciers. Can everyone living north of about 37 degrees N. latitude agree that this is a Good Thing? If it's true, that is. It's also possible that we really are flirting with a runaway greenhouse effect, and those who don't drown in the coastal cities will shrivel up as the groundwater vanishes. We simply don't know enough about the Earth's ecological dynamics to make predictions that are more than semi-educated guesses, and therefore there is no "safe" assumption because anything we do or don't do could land us in the soup in 50 years, be it boiling or frozen.

      Same logic, different conclusion. It's all in the facts.

      [sigh] All that being said, I'm to the point of despair over finding credible, unbiased environmental information. It seems as though everyone researching or (especially) reporting ecological issues has an agenda, and they rarely hesitate to cook and/or twist and/or ignore data as necessary to support their POV. SciAm has always been a rare exception to the rule. I found their articles on Lomborg's book to be reasonably balanced, but did anyone else get the impression that the authors would've been delighted if they'd been able to tear it apart?

      DDB (42d 29m N, 83d 2m W)

      --
      Life is like surrealism: if you have to have it explained to you, you can't afford it.
    34. Re:first, do no harm... by swillden · · Score: 2
      To all of the above: It hurts the economy by forcing expenditures to replace something that already works. And in many cases it hurts the economy by making even new things more costly *now* even if they're cheaper in the long run (and short-term cost for long-term savings is actually a bad idea in many cases).

      A trivial example of the latter: I have begun replacing the burned out incandescent light bulbs in my home with energy-efficient flourescent bulbs. These new bulbs use 1/4 of the electricity to produce the same amount of light. Great, right? Well, maybe. I can get a pack of four 75-watt incandescent bulbs for a little over a dollar, but the flourescent bulbs are about $6 each. That means I can buy roughly 20 incandescent bulbs for the price of each fluorescent bulb. The energy-efficient bulbs also have the advantage that they last a lot longer (they claim seven years), whereas I figure I get about a year out of an incandescent bulb. Taking that into account, the fluorescents are only three times as expensive as incandescents. So, does the cost savings in electricity make up the difference? Yes it does, and in only about three years.

      Based on what I've said so far, fluorescent bulbs are a flat out, hands down winner,right? Well, I was't so sure when I started to actually change over. The first time I bought fluorescents I had about seven bulbs in the house that were out. I worked out the per-bulb cost/benefit analysis in my head, decided it was good and grabbed a dozen fluorescent bulbs at Home Depot. I never bothered to consider the instantaneous cost. When I got to the cash register I had almost $90 worth of *light bulbs*. A small pile, too, one that would have been about $4 normally. I paid up and consoled myself that they would be cheaper in the long run.

      A few weeks later, as I purchased another $100 worth of light bulbs I started questioning whether or not I could afford to save money. I'm about to make a third purchase of about $100 worth of bulbs and my consolation now is that I'm just about done with the changeover. Altogether it will cost me a little over $300 (as compared to $15 for the same number of incandescents).

      If the only benefit to the fluorescents was long-term cost, I very well may not have bought them. My real motivation was that I get tired of changing burned out light bulbs and, frankly, I can afford the spike in light bulb spending. I'm a Rich American and buying expensive light bulbs just means I can't buy a new graphics card for a few months.

      But when you scale this up to the level of government and big business, and when you apply it to the third world as well as to the Rich Americans, the time value of money can get to be really, really important, and all of this presumes that the green way is actually more efficient. Many pollution-reducing technologies decrease efficiency, which is why they have to be mandated.

      Ever looked at buying an electric car?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    35. Re:first, do no harm... by ksheff · · Score: 1

      From what I've read, the major flaw with the Kyoto treaty is that it doesn't apply equal standards to the industrialized and developing countries. To me, this seems like a big loophole that will just ecourage industries that generate a lot of pollution to move to the developing countries instead of trying to improve their processes and become more efficient. The industrialized nations have (pretty much) learned their lessons on pollution. Why allow the developing countries to make the same mistakes? Forcing all nations to stick to the same standard seems like it would be best way to go.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    36. Re:first, do no harm... by mjh · · Score: 2

      True enough. But I would suggest that the problem there stems from the original isolation of the family. They built for themselves a private economy the depended entirely upon the work of the father. When the father could no longer work, the private economy failed. It should not be surprising that it would take some time/effort/adjustment for a completely private economy's work to be translated into something that represents work in a larger, and different economy.

      In particular, the output of a single family farm, while actually being a lot of work, does not represent a lot of work in an economy that has produced hugely efficient farms. So you're example, while true represents things on an unfair scale. It takes work which is highly valuable in one economy and tries to assess its value in another economy.

      The GDP of the larger economy goes up, while the GDP of the smaller economy gets eliminated. And the GDP of the larger economy increases less than the GDP of the smaller economy. But that's only because the larger economy doesn't see the work that's being done as valuable, and can get the same output somewhere else for cheaper.

      Economics produces efficiency. If you refuse to partake in that economy, then you should not be surprised if the work that you do is not as valuable in that economy.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    37. Re:first, do no harm... by darthtuttle · · Score: 1

      So, by this logic, I should go to church and worship God and Jesus, because it doesn't hurt?

      Can we "not pollute"? No, pollution happens, it's a byproduct of physical existance (we shit, we die and decompose, etc). We also have a strong tendency to progress. Progression has risks. Should we be mindfull of the risks? Yes, but we are going to do harm no matter what. The question is what do we get in return? Nash showed that action with respect to self interest in not as good as action with respect to the interest of the whole, and that is how we should act (I think.) Is the world a better place for me doing something? If so, let's do it.

      --
      Darthtuttle
      Thought Architect
    38. Re:first, do no harm... by Arandir · · Score: 2

      You're making some very wrong assumptions in your pseudo calculations. First, you assume that the potential cost of doing nothing is infinite. Second, you ignore the probabilities.

      Let's say the actual cost global environmental damage is 10 billion, not infinite. Then let's assume that the actual benefit for doing nothing is ten. If those are the only variables, then of course we have to shoot SUV owners and abolish democracy in case people might not vote green! But it's not a balanced equation. If the probability of global environmental damage is 1 in ten billion, then the odds say to do nothing.

      Look at it another way. You could be hit and killed by a car on the way to work tomorrow. Cost to you is extremely high. The benefit to you is whatever pay you receive from work. Is it worth risking total destruction just to get $10 an hour? Of course not! But you ride to work anyway. Ponder it a bit and you'll realize that the cost of you dying is not infinite, but less than your wages times the probability of being hit and killed by a car.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    39. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, by this logic, I should go to church and worship God and Jesus, because it doesn't hurt?

      That's what Pascal said, and he was smarter than you.

    40. Re:first, do no harm... by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      the other problem with economics, especially in relation to the environment, is the fact that so many things aren't factored into the real cost of things. For a perfect discussion of that read Natural Capital by Hawken and Lovins.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    41. Re:first, do no harm... by Kwil · · Score: 1

      Which exactly corresponds to what I mentioned about quality of life only having a weak correlation to economy.

      The truth is, most of us do not operate on the economies of the scale which national economists judge worthy of consideration. Considering that the large scale economies grow at the expense of smaller ones, it suggests that the correlation may actually be negative when you look at the aggregate quality of life on a global scale.

      Or in short, our "large-scale" economic growth is at the expense of quality of life, which is typically measured in "small-scale" economics.

      I'm not arguing whether economics produce efficiency, I'm arguing whether it really produces a good quality of life for everyone.

      --

      That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze

    42. Re:first, do no harm... by mjh · · Score: 2
      I'm arguing whether it really produces a good quality of life for everyone.

      Yes, but you're arguing it by using an example that is exceedingly rare: a family that is entirely outside of the economy suddenly and unexpectedly trying to get into it. Ok. So the increase in the GDP does not impact that family. But they're outside of the thing that the GDP measures. Why would you expect it to impact them?

      What's more interesting is an example of a family which participates in the economy and the reactions to their lives that the economy has. Of course, you're always going to find at least one family for which an increase in the GDP does not have positive impact. And you're always going to find at least one family for which a decrease in the GDP does not have a negative impact. That doesn't mean that you get to say that an increase in the GDP negatively impacts everyone (or vice versa).

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    43. Re:first, do no harm... by Noel · · Score: 1
      Yes, but you're arguing it by using an example that is exceedingly rare: a family that is entirely outside of the economy suddenly and unexpectedly trying to get into it. Ok. So the increase in the GDP does not impact that family. But they're outside of the thing that the GDP measures. Why would you expect it to impact them?

      Isn't this the exact situation of people in third-world countries when they join a larger economy (whether voluntarily or not)? Before the development, the families/tribes/whatever have very small, but successful, economies, but do not participate in the larger economy. Merging them into a national or global economy obviously benefits that economy, but often at the people's expense.

      Of course, there are some tangible benefits to being part of a larger economy, such as the availability of health care, but is the net effect for these people truly positive?

    44. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

    45. Re:first, do no harm... by darthtuttle · · Score: 1

      If God does exist the way the church would have had him belive then God would have known the difference between someone who belived in God and someone who went to church because it could not hurt. Pascal only thought he was smarter then God, and that's quite an ego.

      --
      Darthtuttle
      Thought Architect
    46. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Like most political discussions, this one would be a lot easier if people remembered a simple fact:
      Things Have Costs
      If, indeed, it would cost us nothing to be greener, of course we would do so. If, as seems more likely, radical changes in energy policy and lifestyle with have lasting economic and cultural effects, well, you'll have to make a better case before people sign on...
    47. Re:first, do no harm... by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

      Damn Watermelons.

    48. Re:first, do no harm... by mesocyclone · · Score: 2

      Right on. I wonder if they know what the term means!

      Power to the.. err... capitalists! That's me!

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    49. Re:first, do no harm... by raldanash · · Score: 1

      Good point. Taking the gravity of the downside into account-it make be prudent to make a decision based on worst-case scenarion. On the other hand...

      In the 1970s people were worrying about the "cooling" of the planet, and the coming Ice Age. It turns out they were wrong. What if we had taken drastic measures to preserve humanity and pumped Greenhouse gases into the atmosphere?

      The problem with deep greenery is that it often marginalizes the importance of humanity be declaring that we are a part of nature. On the other hand-it also presumes we have an almost omniscient knowledge of the depth of the processes around us.

      --
      NO gods, NO governments, NO [OPTION]....
    50. Re:first, do no harm... by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      Given these choices, in the absence of information, isn't it more logical to bet on the second? Isn't it safer to assume the worst case scenario? I.e. let's stop doing the things that people suggest may be harming the environment, because if they actually do, we'll be screwed in 50 years? And if they're not harming the environment, we did no harm anyway? One of the things that people suggest might be harming the environment is breathing (CO2, you know). Do you want to be the first to hold your breath. This is not entirely facetious. There are costs associated with actions, and a finite amount of money. Money that is spent reducing CO2 is money that is not available for other worthy causes, like providing more clean water. So how many people do you think that it is reasonable to allow to die from water-born disease for the sake of having more money to spend on reducing CO2? Unfortunately, it simply is not possible to escape these cost benefit questions. Ultimately, "assuming the worst" boils down to harming some people now in return for (just possibly) protecting other people in the future.

    51. Re:first, do no harm... by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

      "let's stop doing the things that people suggest may be harming the environment, because if they actually do, we'll be screwed in 50 years? And if they're not harming the environment, we did no harm anyway?"

      To my knowledge nobody is debating that something needs to be done (or at least those that say nothing needs to be done are loonies). The question is a matter of degrees. This is not a black-and-white matter.

      Some things that could be done are simpler to implement and have a greater impact than others. Making cars more fuel-efficient not only cuts down on carbon monoxide but also makes economic sense. On the other hand, putting spark arresters on the rear ends of cattle in order to cut down on their methane emissions is more expensive than the solution is worth (and just plain silly). But "doing everything we can to save the environment" would require us to do both.

    52. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Care to back up your slander?

      Or are you just shooting your mouth off?

    53. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, friend. Care to tell me why none of the other countries in the world ratified Kyoto either? (with the sole exception of Romania)

      You can't have it both ways...

    54. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does increased energy efficiency harm the economy?

      How does making people replace all of their furnaces, air conditioners, and other equipment affect the economy? Gee, I wonder.

      How does a car that gets more miles per gallon hurt the economy?

      How does making cars more expensive affect the economy, especially the poor? Gee, I wonder.

      How does a building that uses less energy for heating and cooling harm the economy?

      What effect does forcing massive retooling of existing buildings have on rents? Gee, I wonder.

      How does using a neon lighbulb, using half as much electricity, harm the economy?

      How does taking away the jobs of people who make incandescent bulbs harm the economy? Gee, I wonder.

      And especially how do these things have "a negative impact on the standard of living of many people now living in extreme poverty?"

      How does making most consumer goods more expensive impact on the standard of living of many people now living in extreme poverty? Gee, I wonder.

      Does your statement even make any sense at all?

      Has your post even considered the fact that Things Have Costs at all?

    55. Re:first, do no harm... by ErikTheRed · · Score: 2
      But at the risk of taking a superior attitude about the US economy -- I think we could stand to contract a little bit and maybe not keep our place as the biggest proportional consumer of everthing on the planet.

      Tell you what - you start going without first. The rest of us will be right behind you (not). Ever notice how much cleaner countries with poorer economies are? I didn't think so. A clean environment is, in the strictest survival sense, a luxury good. I know it doesn't always sound that way to us (I regularly travel to Los Angeles, where just breathing the air is like smoking two packs a day - that's hyperbole, before you flame me to a crisp), but people worried about little things like, say, starvation and disease don't really give a rat's ass if they have to burn firewood to boil water or clear out sections of rainforest for farmland (despite how poor that farmland may be) or whatever. We'd be far better off assisting other countries in coming up to our level than we would be lowering ourselves to theirs.
      --

      Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
    56. Re:first, do no harm... by Starcub · · Score: 1
      The problem with this principal is that in an uncertain, complex system, your actions to mitigate harm may themselves cause harm... ...For example, if in fact the costs of CO2 mitigation are high, they may lead to significant damage to third world economies... ...The correct thing to do is do a cost benefit analysis (a phrase detested by environmentalists), and to account for these uncertainties.
      As other posters have pointed out, an accurate and thus useful cost benefit analysis on such a complex system as our environment would be exceedingly difficult to arrive at. I think there is a point where over reliance on analysis can blind one to common sense. We already know that CO2 is harmful to the environment due to it's role in creating acid rain, air pollution, global warming, etc... Do we need to actually put numbers on the problem before we take steps to mitigate it? I'm not advocating the elimination of technology, I'm saying that we need to recognize that technology has a big impact on our environment; therefore, we need to seriously evaluate and promote alternative technologies in order to keep our environment from further deterioration.
    57. Re:first, do no harm... by mesocyclone · · Score: 2

      Woah! CO2 does not create acid rain or air pollution! So obviously you will have a problem applying "common sense" to this problem. It's role in global warming is in dispute.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    58. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about Canada and Austrailia.

      If i was a developing country i would sign it, hurt the developed countries with no harm to us.

    59. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then you wouldn't have all these developing countries signing it, and it would have no prestige. And with the exception of the US, who stand up for what they believe, prestige is all that forign relations is all about these days.

    60. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might find a introduction to economics class quite interesting. I'm sure you local university or even community college offers a evening class.

      If you don't want to spend the money, stoping and thinking before your speak is an excellent idea. Its as easy as thinking "what might be the downside of this".

    61. Re:first, do no harm... by Turing+Machine · · Score: 1

      So, how far along is your country in implementing the Kyoto treaty?

      What's that? They haven't implemented it? They haven't even started?

      Hmm... perhaps you should start aiming your criticism a bit closer to home.

    62. Re:first, do no harm... by CactusCritter · · Score: 1
      '... For example, here in Arizona there was a project to build a toxic waste incinerator (a *good* thing for the environment since it would destroy most of the toxicity). Greenpeace sent agitators down to block the project, and it was ultimately shelved. That incinerator would have been out in the middle of the Sonoran Desert ( a *good* place - far from people).'

      Despite saying that he is from Arizona, the fact is that the project in question was to be built near the town of Mobile which would NOT site it "far from people". There was also the fact that considerable arrogance was displayed at public meetings by the project proponents. I am not a Greenpeacer, but I was not sorry to see the project shelved. It had a real stench to it.

    63. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are interested party here ....
      Get fucking lost and try to earn honest living for once.

    64. Re:first, do no harm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get lost fucker ....
      You can come back after your own country signeed and IMPLEMENTED Kyoto guidlines.

    65. Re:first, do no harm... by mesocyclone · · Score: 2

      If the previous poster had ever been to the "town" of Mobile, he would realize it had an extremely small population and was out in the middle of nowhere.

      Specifically, Mobile is about halfway between the tiny town of Maricopa and the small town of Gila Bend. The location was chosen because it was out in the middle of nowhere, on the railroad line.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    66. Re:first, do no harm... by Starcub · · Score: 1
      ...CO2 does not create acid rain or air pollution...
      OK, as pollutants go, it appears CO2 itself does not cause acid rain or many other significant problems. However, CO2 is just one of several industrial pollutants. Many of these pollutants have been shown to cause acid rain, and air quality problems.
    67. Re:first, do no harm... by leviramsey · · Score: 2

      The other criticism that can be raised about the Kyoto Treaty is that it ignores an approach which would be just about to guaranteed to reduce the global warming problem.

      This approach is: punish nations based on net greenhouse gases emitted while rewarding based on net greenhouse gases removed from air (through such things as trees). However, this is not acceptable to the drafters of the Kyoto Treaty. Why? Because of who gets punished and who gets rewarded.

      For the most part, Europe has few forests but lots of industry and pollution. North America, has lots of forests (especially in Canada, but also in the US). By this approach, Europe almost certainly accounts for more per capita greenhouse gas emission than anywhere else on the planet (with the possible exceptions of largely desert nations).

      The Kyoto Treaty should have been formulated so that if a nation removes n tons of greenhouse gases, it should be able to produce (0

      With a huge economic advantage going to those nations that can absorb greenhouse gases, research will be done into technological solutions. And governments would take very seriously forest policy and encourage the creation of replacement forests.

      Under current technology, industry (and thus economic activity) implies some level of greenhouse emissions. So by allowing more economic activity (which any believer in a free market considers a good thing) and thus more money to come to those who clean up the air, the air will get cleaner. Why? Because people are whores. A corporation's whore factor is an order of magnitude higher than the sum of its shareholders. A whore wants money. Ergo, corporations and people will work to clean up the air if there is a demonstrable economic advantage to do so.

      It's a commonly held idea in psychology, especially in educational psychology, that positive reinforcement is sort of effective, negative reinforcement is slightly more effective, and that combining the two is extremely effective.

      For a demonstration of the above, I refer you to the MENACE (Matchbox Educable Naughts and Crosses Engine), an early implementation of reinforcement learning in AI. Consider how good a MENACE is if you only add beads after it wins. Consider how good a MENACE is (relative to the previous example) if you only remove beads (as a useful modification, refuse to allow a given move to lose all of its beads). Consider how effective a MENACE is if addition and subtraction are performed.

      Whew! That was a long post...

    68. Re:first, do no harm... by sdowney · · Score: 1

      Zeus demands the sacrifice of a goat once a month. Now, the evidence for Olympian Gods is highly disputed, I will admit. But isn't it a good idea to go ahead and sacrifice the goat, just in case? After all, if Zeus is real, we want to be on his good side, and if he isn't, it's only cost us a few goats.

  32. Just my 2 cents... by gordguide · · Score: 2

    I would consider myself an envornmental skeptic... not that I don't believe pollution, etc is a problem. It clearly is.

    My skepticism lies with this: I see a lot of "solutions" that only make the problem worse, and I see these being endorsed by those who should know better. (I haven't read the book, but I probably will; I want to hear what he says).

    Recycle, Reuse and Reduce.

    By far the most important of these are Reuse and Reduce. Recycling is a band aid to fix things when people don't, or won't, do the other two.

    It begs a lot of questions: is it better to use a 20-year old vehicle sparingly, or should I buy a new, high-milage vehicle and feel good about my "contribution" to the envornment?

    Certainly Industry wants me to buy a new product when a perfectly good one already exists. But is this a good solution? The question is hardly ever asked (and I'm not saying I know the answer; I am saying why is the default answer always seem to be: make more stuff, because it's "better" than the old stuff?).

    Recycle aluminum cans? Why is this the "green" solution, when it costs as much in energy (electicity, at least some of which is coal-fired) to make aluminum as it does to recycle it? Why not use less aluminum?

    I hope he asks and attempts to answer some of these questions; I would be interested in his conclusions.

    Thanks for reading my post; now I have to go back to surfing with my own [personal heavy-metal laden, coal-burning, disposable] enviormental nightmare (a computer)...

    1. Re:Just my 2 cents... by axlrosen · · Score: 1

      You're not an environmental skeptic, you're an environmentalist. The phrase is actually "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle," in that order. You first started hearing it when recycling became a big issue in the 80's (remember the Long Island garbage barge?) AFAIK it was an environmental slogan to remind people that, yes recycling is good, but it's only a Plan C, for those things that can't reduced or reused. So, the environmentalist movement would very much agree with you.

      Unfortunately, in the US there's currently no incentive for people to reduce or reuse other than guilt, and that doesn't often work. I routinely use paper towels instead of a sponge, because it's easier. In Europe isn't there some kind of "waste tax" that manufacturers pay to cover the waste disposal costs of their products? To encourage them to reduce the amount of packaging, and to make disposable things more costly. How is that working, anyone know?

    2. Re:Just my 2 cents... by dhogaza · · Score: 2

      It actually takes much, much less energy to recycle aluminum than to make it. It makes economic sense to recycle aluminum for this very reason.

      Glass, on the other hand, is an entirely different story. Melt sand, or melt glass - both roughly comparible. Glass is heavy, hauling it requires energy. Of course it is important to remember that the energy cost of hauling it is the same whether it is recycled or disposed of at the end point, so there's really no getting around that cost.

      If your point is that reducing consumption is better than recycling, well, sure. The same folks who push for recycling push for reducing uneccessary packaging.

      Both recycling and reduction of consumption can work to lower the stream of crap being disposed by landfill. Cities don't push in this direction for simple knee-jerk fuzzy-wuzzy environmental reasons. My city (Portland, OR), for instance, ran out of real estate for landfills about a decade ago and now sends its garbage to a landfill 90 miles away. This is relatively expensive. Diverting material from landfills not only reduces that expense but equally important it extends the lifetime of our current landfill facility.

      Most of the anti-recycling analyses I've seen ignore these benefits. If recycling had been in place throughout the postwar years here in Portland we'd still be trucking our garbage five miles to the landfill, rather than 90.

    3. Re:Just my 2 cents... by gordguide · · Score: 2

      I stand corrected on the Aluminum thing; various sites say things like 90% less energy than creating aluminum from ore. An Aluminum Industry site noted 87% of the energy used to create new aluminum comes from electicity.

      The same sites (I checked out more than one) claim glass recycling uses about 35% less energy than new glass, in case you're interested.

      I think that we probably don't disagree on the merits of recycling. But it annoys me that companies can paint themselves with a "green" brush while promoting ever-increasing consumption of goods just because they are "recyclable".

      I wonder what would happen if we weighted the goods going into a house vs the remnants coming out; and people paid a collection fee based on:
      A) how much stuff you bring in, and:
      B) the ratio of stuff in vs stuff out.

      Recycle would take a back seat to reduce and reuse pretty fast, I think.

      Of course, nobody would stand for it right now. But the day may well come (stranger things have happened).

    4. Re:Just my 2 cents... by gordguide · · Score: 2

      AFAIK (I'm not in Europe) it works pretty well.

      My understanding is that Europe requires manufacturers to be responsible for the recycling of their own products; for example Apple must take old computers and monitors back at no charge and dispose/recycle them in a proper manner.

      It's why you see companies like BMW touting the near 100% recycleablity of their cars, and the like. Since ultimately they have to pay to clean up the remnants of their manufacturing, it makes economic sense to create a product that can be easily separated into compatible piles of junk.

  33. Proposed environmental monetization by symplegades · · Score: 1
    one must deeply fault Lomborg's cost-benefit analysis for not making a good attempt to elucidate the cost of environmental degradation per se but instead focusing on pure human property and health costs.

    Instability of the Gulf Stream: $10,000.

    10 million gallons of water melting from the North Pole Ice Shelf: $500,000

    60 deg. F February average temperature in Boston: priceless.

    --

    See you on the playa.

    1. Re:Proposed environmental monetization by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > Instability of the Gulf Stream: $10,000.
      >
      > 10 million gallons of water melting from the North Pole Ice Shelf: $500,000
      >
      >60 deg. F February average temperature in Boston: priceless.

      Actually, judging from housing prices in Silicon Valley, people are willing to pay about $800,000 for 60F February temperatures ;-)

  34. This isn't the right book by uncadonna · · Score: 5, Informative
    It would be a good idea if someone were to write a book on the excesses and gullibility of the environmental "movement" but this isn't it. Rather this book actually tends to attack legitimate environmental science.

    In the area where I have the most background, climate change, it takes the usual corporate apologists' position, that the outcome will be at the (IPCC = Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) consensus level or more benign, and then piles up evidence on the more benign side.

    Well, the thing about the consensus opinion is that it is based on the entire pile of evidence, not just half of it. By the definition of best estimate, for each piece of evidence showing a more benign outcome there is a less benign outcome.

    Now here's the sticky part - the consensus is the median estimate of physical changes due to human alterations of the environment. It's not an average and it's certainly not a cost-weighted average. As I used to try to argue endlessly on sci.environment, the right policy is based on the economic risk, which is weighted toward worst-case scenarios. Cost increases nonlinearly with perturbation, and small perturbations may have negligible costs. This means that the sound and economically valid response should be weighted more heavily toward more pessimistic scenarios. It's simple cost/benefit risk analysis.

    When I make this argument, "environmentalists" don't buy it because risk analysis often doesn't match their preconceptions. They have come to the point where they distrust basing any decisions on statistical analysis of evidence, which of course is a completely idiotic position. On the other hand the "wisdom of the free market" forces don't buy a risk analysis of climate change because, well, it inconveniently argues to interventionist policies, and they have a preconception (equally idiotic) that no rational analysis can ever point to government intervention in the marketplace, so there has to be something wrong with the rational argument since it reaches the wrong conclusion.

    The point here isn't that there is no book to be written about political correctness, sheepish credulity and factual wrongheadedness among environmentalists. There is one, just as there is another to be written about their opponents. Politics is not science, though, and apparently political books sell better than science books that threaten preconceptions on all sides.

    The problem is that this book appears to be just one more piece of trash on the vast heap of conclusion-first polemics, not a cure for it.

    --
    mt
    1. Re:This isn't the right book by cluge · · Score: 2

      Just curious: Have you read the book?

      --
      "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    2. Re:This isn't the right book by Freedom+Bug · · Score: 2

      A much better rebuttal than the one in Scientific American, if I may say so, and the climate change rebuttal was much better than the other three.

      Do you have links to your work or similar analysis?

      Bryan

    3. Re:This isn't the right book by mesocyclone · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The general principal which you advocate is valid, and I wish environmental advocates would use it (but they won't, because it conflicts with their real agenda).

      However...

      The problem with the IPCC data as fuel to your approach is that the weighted average itself is biased. For one thing, the field has been largely led by climate modelers, even though the validity of the models is highly questionable. Climate models, like weather models, have a lot of "tweak factors" which are used to adjust for factors that the model cannot incorporate. This means that models are tweaked to produce a match to history, and then their forecast is used.

      But the historic timeline is too short for statistical valid matching, and as some paleoclimatologist friends of mine have shown, full of very dubious data. On top of that, this approach is based on the same fallacy as that of a successful mutual fund manager: chance predicts that some models will have good historical track records (as it does for mutual fund managers). Selection (publication selection) leads those models to be included as the best forecasters (fund managers are given more money if they have good track records). And yet the underlying physical model (trading theories for the fund managers) are unlikely to be very accurate, and the outcome may be strictly a result of the operations of chance (See Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in the Markets and in Life by Nassim Nicholas Taleb for an odd but insightful look at this).

      This is one reason that the IPCC consensus estimate changes significantly (and not in a convergent direction) from one report to the next.

      When we add to this the politicization of the field, and the resulting funding and publication bias, the situation gets even worse.

      Thus, the weighting factors are very hard to get right.

      In addition, a cost/benefit analysis requires a good analysis of the cost of remediation. In the environmental area, most analysis goes towards the "benefit" (degrees of avoided warming per century, or in your case, avoided economic losses from pessimistic outcomes). But little focus is given to the cost (economic impact with trickle-down costs). Since the economic system seems to be as hard to predict as the climate, this means that we need to take the most pessimistic views of the economic cost of remediation into our cost benefit analysis also!

      BTW... most of the better arguments I have seen against CO2 reductions are not by free market extremists, and I think you mischaracterize those of us who end up siding with the corporations. All but a very few free market advocates understand that there are externalities - costs which are passed outside the market system with no corresponding cost inside the system, and that the market does not deal well with externalities (unless they can be internalized). Thus we know that invoking the wisdom of the market to solve some economic goals is just as silly as invoking the wisdom of environmental absolutism.

      BTW... it might surprise you to know that there is a lot of big corporate support for CO2 remediation. For example, Enron tried to get the bush administration to *support* the Kyoto Protocol (fortunately they got nothing for their money). Other companies have done the same. The reason is simple self interest - they see an advantage for themselves in the post-Kyoto environment. In the case of Enron, they wanted to trade in emissions credits, which Kyoto would greatly increase. They also had lower carbon fuels in their inventory than many competitors, which gave them a competitive advantage.

      An acquaintance of mine, who stopped researcher and started business as a Global Warming consultant to business, recently was lamenting that nobody wanted to hear his anti-Kyoto message any more becaus they had figured out how to profit from Kyoto. So those who imagine that big business is killing Kyoto in the US are not well informed.

      There are ways in which the market can help, however. For example, privately owned forest land is definitely treated better than public forest land, because the owner has a long term investment in it. This is a market "solution" to some environmental issues (not including biodiversity on that land). Likewise, both sides have recognized that tradeable emission rights are a good way to reduce emissions if reducing emissions is really worth the cost of the program.

      On a side note, most environmentalists do not get up in arms against farming unless it is "corporate farming" or uses "nasty chemicals." And yet, farming has transformed the landscape of the northern hemisphere more than any other act of man, and smaller farms requires more land per amount of crop produced than the more-efficient larger (often corporate) farms! Framing has destroyed (transformed?) huge swaths of environment. This bias shows the marxist viewpoint of much of the environmental movement.

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

    4. Re:This isn't the right book by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a very perceptive comment, but it neglects two key aspects which make the economic analysis tricky. First, when doing a proper cost-benefit analysis of a process which stretches over centuries, the choice of a discount rate can swing the decision either way (i.e. if I choose to make a dollar today at the cost of ten dollars in a hundred years, even slight changes in the projected interest rates over the next century can completely change whether it's a wise choice or not) Second, even if you agree on a discount rate and manage to get some kind of economically realistic cost-weighted estimate of the damage from global warming, you can't just plug in the numbers and go merrily on your way, because you also have to consider the relative uncertainties of the two costs. The situation is exactly analogous to a farmer selling futures on his grain harvest. A rational farmer will sell futures at a price which is slightly less than the time-discounted price he expects to receive for his grain. The reason for this is that by doing so, he is gaining a tangible benefit -- he is insured against a poor harvest. The mathematics quickly get out of hand, but suffice it to say that given a choice between two outcomes, one of which has a small uncertainty in the outcome and the other of which has a large uncertainty, it's rational to choose the first, even if its expected value is slightly smaller than the second (the tradeoff between reducing uncertainty and reducing expected value is the level of risk aversion). The application this has to global warming is that a risk averse policymaker will actually choose to pollute more than the break-even point between economic/environmental harms, because the economic harms are 1)more immediate and 2)have a lower uncertainty given the current state of the science. I've always had a sneaking suspicion that if you wanted to change decision makers' minds, it would be more effective to decrease the uncertainty in the effects of global warming than to inflate people's expectations of harms. If we can ever predict global warming to something like a quarter of a degree, the decision would be a no-brainer. With the current 2 degree spread in the consensus view, a foot-dragger can always say "Yeah, but we might get lucky."

    5. Re:This isn't the right book by uncadonna · · Score: 2
      Aw shucks.

      No, and I should have pushed this point harder when I was actually in the climate change business. You have encouraged me to reconsider how to elaborate and defend the argument. Many thanks.

      --
      mt
    6. Re:This isn't the right book by uncadonna · · Score: 2
      An AC wrote: This is a very perceptive comment, but it neglects two key aspects which make the economic analysis tricky.

      Oh, it's very hard. That doesn't justify not trying! This stuff is important!

      First, when doing a proper cost-benefit analysis of a process which stretches over centuries, the choice of a discount rate can swing the decision either way (i.e. if I choose to make a dollar today at the cost of ten dollars in a hundred years, even slight changes in the projected interest rates over the next century can completely change whether it's a wise choice or not)

      Yes, unfortunately however sound the discount rate is for individual decisions, it is invariably destructive and immoral for collective decisions that involve items that are fundamntally irreplaceable. Once you get to quibbling about the discount rate, you are quibbling about the rate at which society sacrifices those resources which deliver value on a longer time scale. One of the moral responsibilities of the collective component of the society is to identify such irreplaceable resources and place them out of the reach of decision processes affected by the discount rate.

      A stable climate is such a resource. Many other resources are currently valued based on the presumption of a reasonably stable climate. Hint: it's February 24 and the current temperature in Madison WI is 58 F. What's the valuation of nearby winter resorts? What about my old wooden house, which was not designed for a climate where termites are viable?

      Second, even if you agree on a discount rate and manage to get some kind of economically realistic cost-weighted estimate of the damage from global warming, you can't just plug in the numbers and go merrily on your way, because you also have to consider the relative uncertainties of the two costs. The situation is exactly analogous to a farmer selling futures on his grain harvest. A rational farmer will sell futures at a price which is slightly less than the time-discounted price he expects to receive for his grain. The reason for this is that by doing so, he is gaining a tangible benefit -- he is insured against a poor harvest. The mathematics quickly get out of hand, but suffice it to say that given a choice between two outcomes, one of which has a small uncertainty in the outcome and the other of which has a large uncertainty, it's rational to choose the first, even if its expected value is slightly smaller than the second (the tradeoff between reducing uncertainty and reducing expected value is the level of risk aversion). The application this has to global warming is that a risk averse policymaker will actually choose to pollute more than the break-even point between economic/environmental harms, because the economic harms are 1)more immediate and 2)have a lower uncertainty given the current state of the science. I've always had a sneaking suspicion that if you wanted to change decision makers' minds, it would be more effective to decrease the uncertainty in the effects of global warming than to inflate people's expectations of harms. If we can ever predict global warming to something like a quarter of a degree, the decision would be a no-brainer. With the current 2 degree spread in the consensus view, a foot-dragger can always say "Yeah, but we might get lucky."

      An excellent point, though I think it's closely related. The political career of a politician has a discount rate for the future much as does money. The planet's climate system has a range of time constants ramging from a decade to hundred million years and is being subjected to a hundred-year transient. All we are arguing about from a physics point of view is the size of the impulse. A little grasp of systems theory is enough to show that once the impulse is let loose there is no reversing it. Thinking in terms of a 5 or 10 percent discount rate is ludicrously out of proportion.

      --
      mt
    7. Re:This isn't the right book by uncadonna · · Score: 2
      The problem with the IPCC data as fuel to your approach is that the weighted average itself is biased. For one thing, the field has been largely led by climate modelers, even though the validity of the models is highly questionable.

      *sigh* That again. Look, science is exactly identical to the construction and testing of models. I presume you mean high-order fluid-dynamics based models in particular. These are much more highly constrained than some would have you believe.

      It just isn't possible to build a fluid dynamical model that reproduces the contemporary climate well that gives you whatever arbitrary future prediction you want. Unfortunately, you'll have to try it for yourself before you can do other than take my word for it. Anyway, I'll presume you are taliking about that class of model below.

      Climate models, like weather models, have a lot of "tweak factors" which are used to adjust for factors that the model cannot incorporate. This means that models are tweaked to produce a match to history, and then their forecast is used.

      Assuming that were true (it isn't exactly true of any significant models I know of) that would not constitute a bias in a statistical sense. It would not systematically cause the overestimate or underestimate of any quantity.

      Selection (publication selection) leads those models to be included as the best forecasters (fund managers are given more money if they have good track records).

      An interesting analogy, but as Tom Peters points out, selection works on available diversity. It's actually much easier to build a mututal fund than a (3D fluid-dynamical atmosphere-ocean) climate model. The behaviors of these funds is much less constrained than the models'. So the analogy doesn't really hold.

      This is one reason that the IPCC consensus estimate changes significantly (and not in a convergent direction) from one report to the next.

      "Not in a consistent direction" is what one would hope for in converging on a complex truth, isn't it?

      In addition, a cost/benefit analysis requires a good analysis of the cost of remediation. In the environmental area, most analysis goes towards the "benefit" (degrees of avoided warming per century, or in your case, avoided economic losses from pessimistic outcomes). But little focus is given to the cost (economic impact with trickle-down costs). Since the economic system seems to be as hard to predict as the climate, this means that we need to take the most pessimistic views of the economic cost of remediation into our cost benefit analysis also!

      Absolutely, it's a multidimensional integration across all the uncertainties weighted by the probability distribution. You can ask any competent electrical engineer how to do this if there aren't any economists who can actually contemplate such a thing.

      --
      mt
    8. Re:This isn't the right book by mesocyclone · · Score: 2

      "*sigh* That again. Look, science is exactly identical to the construction and testing of models. I presume you mean high-order fluid-dynamics based models in particular. These are much more highly constrained than some would have you believe.

      It just isn't possible to build a fluid dynamical model that reproduces the contemporary climate well that gives you whatever arbitrary future prediction you want. Unfortunately, you'll have to try it for yourself before you can do other than take my word for it. Anyway, I'll presume you are taliking about that class of model below."


      What you say is correct but misleading. Science is constructing hypotheses and then attempting to falsify them. Computer models were of course what I was referring to, and science is not just the constructing of computer models.

      It is true, however, that you cannot arbitrarily create a fluid dynamics model to get the outcome you would desire, and it is true that the fluid dynamics models accurately reflect the physics within the limits of the programming - large grid sizes, for example.

      However, the fluid dynamics models in use today are not perfect. For one thing, computational limitations cause all sorts of compromises... for example grid size, time resolution, calculation accuracy, equation simplification (throwing out nth order terms), representation of surface topography and other characteristics, cloud physics, input parameter set, etc. Unfortunately, some of these things can have dramatic effects - especially cloud characteristics. Also note that the models changed their prediction radically when the effects of aerosols were added. What else has been left out?

      Weather has been shown to be chaotic. Climate may also be chaotic even if the models are not! We don't have the data set to be certain every way. Paleoclimatic data is spotty and uses a lot of assumptions to infer climate conditions from subtle indicators like isotope ratios or tree rings. There are known problems with these inferences, and there may be other problems we are unaware of. For example, tree ring sizes are affected by all sorts of factors - trying to convert them to temperature or precipitation is fraught with potential errors.

      For all of these reasons, plus tweak factors (see below), it is quite possible to have models that accurately reflect the "current climate" (to our best estimate) that are wrong in the future. For one thing, they are modelling an atmosphere with CO2 concentrations from about 250-375 ppm up until now, but predicting for higher concentrations. Who is to say that n-th order effects don't become significant at higher levels? I give a trivial example, but there are other more significant issues, such as time scale. The time scale for which we have somewhat accurate climate data is very short, so a high order model can match that climate data and yet be very far off outside of that time range. In fact, the higher order models you use, the more likely this is, because the easier it is to find a match. It is like curve fitting... a trend extrapolated from an average will be a lot less surprising than one derived from an Nth order fit. The latter is much more sensitive to shorter term variations when projected into the future. Or, as a standard statistical rule... don't arbitrarily take a curve fit and extrapolate it outside the sample set and apply meaning to it. Fluid dynamical models are of course vastly more complex, and they have a reason to their projections other than a simple statistical model of the past (i.e. they are based on physical laws, not just statistics), but they are still prone to significant error simply because they do not have enough resolution and historical data to accurate;y grind 100 years into the future!

      Assuming that were true [tweak factors](it isn't exactly true of any significant models I know of) that would not constitute a bias in a statistical sense. It would not systematically cause the overestimate or underestimate of any quantity.

      Oh please! Of course there are tweak factors although they may have different names.

      For example, how do you account for the influence of the Rocky Mountains or the Andes? Do you model every centimeter of them or do you have a factor that allows you to treat them at lower resolution? I am sure you have a factor of some sort - an averaging method, a hard constant altering certain parameters in certain grids, or something!

      And of course these factors can systematically cause overestimates or underestimates of specific quantities. If they didn't have any effect, then the model would be insensitive to changes in them, in which case there wouldn't be any point in having them. If they do have an effect, it may be systematically wrong in one direction.

      "Not in a consistent direction" is what one would hope for in converging on a complex truth, isn't it?

      A field that is converging on accuracy usually converges (dError/dT < 0). A field which is seeking truth but is thrashing around because it is still rapidly changing exhibits less convergence. In other words, from watching the outputs, one can have a lot less confidence in the results.

      A lot of faith is being put into complex models, and a lot of effort and brainpower is employed to improve those models. But that doesn't mean the models are right. It doesn't even mean that in theory the phenomenon can be accurately modeled!

      An equivalent amount of effort has been put into weather models, which are also highly complex hydrodynamic models which attempt to predict the future. And the state of the art produces models which are useful out to about 5 days, and rapidly deteriorate after that. Climate is the time integral of weather, so for climate models to work, one has to assume that the short term weather effects average out, and do so in such a way that the hydrodynamic equations properly process those averages. That is a pretty strong assumption of mathematical properties of the atmosphere and related systems!
      And yet we know that there are extremely nonlinear systems at work. Ocean currents may very rapidly (in climate scales) and change patterns in ways that radically alter heat transport and hence climate. They don't do this in any linear sense... they cruise along until some complex set of conditions is met, and then they hit a positive feedback and simply flip state very quickly. There are other factors that affect climate that are equally non-linear. One that is very hard to forecast is the response of life to these changes, and how that response affects the energy budget and the carbon sequestration cycle (which is very poorly understood now). I could go on, but my point is that the system is way too complex for me to feel at all comfortable with the accuracy or even direction of the models... especially when dealing with major effects from the change of a trace gas in the atmosphere (CO2).

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

  35. Mod this up by Crypthanatopsis · · Score: 2, Informative
    Anybody remember this story at K5? It's a compilation of all the sources saying how wrong Lomborg is.

    P.S. K5 reviewed this book back in August.

    --

    -Crypthanatopsis

  36. Correction on "greens" comment by greenguy · · Score: 1

    I need to take issue with one of -cman-'s passing comments, and with the Related Links box. The Green Party that is recognized by the vast majority of capital-G Greens, as well the FEC, is the Green Party of the United States, and not the GPUSA. The differences between them are off-topic (and flame-bait in the right crowd), but it is important to distinguish between the two organizations.

    --
    What if I do the same thing, and I do get different results?
    1. Re:Correction on "greens" comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Splitter!

  37. Population isn't the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The human population continues to grow, threatening our ability to feed the teeming billions.

    The fact that earth's population is growing is not what's primarily contributing to hunger. It's greed, selfishness, and poor infrastructure. Producers throw away more than enough food to feed starving nations (consumers waste even more food than that). If we used the food that is kept rotting in silos to raise grain prices for feeding starving nations, we'd have no problems.

    There is really only one roadblock to solving world hunger: human nature. If we spent less time trying to convince ourselves that God doesn't exist and more time listening to what he has to say, the world would be a far, far better place for everyone.

  38. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The left hates trees! You heard it from Black Parrot first!

    And he would know, damn pinko that he is.

  39. Primitive Scientists by ch-chuck · · Score: 2

    Gee, the scientific priesthood had declared that the weather gods are angry and want some sacrifices made to atone for the sins of humanity and set things right again. You can be sure the anti-business enviro's are going to claim the benefit of every doubt. We've already been thru the Freon/Ozone hole thing, which is mainly a 'screw the US' ploy while Mexico and other 3rd world dumps still pump out tons of the stuff. But, whoever they choose to sacrifice, someone's going to make bundles off it, they always do.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    1. Re:Primitive Scientists by snarfer · · Score: 1

      You can be sure the anti-business enviro's are going to claim the benefit of every doubt.

      Which "enviro's" are anti-fuel cell? Fuel cells are a business. Which ones are anti-solar? Solar is a business. Which ones are anti-buidling retrofitting? Building retrofitting is a business.

      Maybe the "enviro's" are anti-certain kinds of business practices that are bringing in a ton of money to certain campaign contributors. Maybe the "enviro's" are anti-dump crap in our water and air because it's cheaper than safely disposing of it.

      But the waste disposal companies that safely dispose of the toxins are also BUSINESSES.

      What you seem to be complaining about is WHICH businesses are getting the busines. And unless you actually own an oil company you might want to think about where YOUR interests lie, instead of the interests of whoever has been feeding you these slogans.

    2. Re:Primitive Scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, how do you know that some of these "scientist" don't own stocks in fuel-cell industry ?
      Do you trust them that much ?

  40. Science is what scientist do by sys49152 · · Score: 1

    I belive that argument was made by a U.S. judge when trying to decide whether Creationism was a science. It isn't.

    It should be noted that the author is also not a scientist, he's a statistician. And we all know what you can do with statistics. Further, one must remember that 90% of scientist (working without incentive from industry or government) have concluded that human activities are changing Earth's climate and that this climate change will be rapid and destructive. In fact, the only scientists that hold opposing views have been found to be on the payroll of Big Oil or other vested interest groups. Claiming that all of these scientist have reached the wrong conclusion is little different than saying that evolution may be wrong as it's still a 'theory'.

    It seems that someone needs to explain not that the Earth is not at risk, but how carbon emissions could possibly have a benign effect on the environment. Or more simply, why, sitting here in Massachusetts in the middle of February, I have the heat off and my window open.

    And as an aside it should be pointed out that even as the Economist praises Mr. Lomborg's work it rails against President Bush and his deceptive and ineffectual emissions reduction plan. Which is it?

    1. Re:Science is what scientist do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>90% of scientist

      Where do you get your statistics? Everything I read shows significant disagreement, and as much bad science coming from the environmentalists as from industry groups.

      >>In fact, the only scientists that hold opposing views have been found to be on the payroll of Big Oil or other vested interest groups.

      This statement is so blantly false that its not even funny. I personally know several people working in environmental positions and for the most part they have more issues with the reports coming environmental groups than from other sources. (Remember the planting Lynx fur earlier this year or global warming studies of the 70's that measured air temp but not water temp and we now know were significantly flawed, but still quoted by many new studies).

      >> Claiming that all of these scientist have reached the wrong conclusion is little different than saying that evolution may be wrong as it's still a 'theory'.

      Wrong again, Evolution is still theory. Its a generally accepted theory and it appears to be correct but we cannot prove it 100% of the time so its still theory. A better theory than Creationism IMHO, but still a theory.

      As for the recent high tempatures, review a little geologic science. Remember reading about ice ages in high school, that's right at a time in the past it was much colder than now. And guess what, there's a cycle to Ice Ages and do you know where we are in the cycle? Right near the peak of one of the warm periods. IT SHOULD BE WARMER NOW THAN ANY TIME IN THE LAST 10,000 YEARS. And sometime in the next 1,000 years the cycle will reverse and it will start getting colder.

      Now the question is, has man made an impact on the environment to make it warm/colder than it should be? If he has made an impact, how large? 1/10 of a degree, 1 degree? We don't know, and we won't know for a while.

    2. Re:Science is what scientist do by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      Actually, 15,000 scientists signed the Petition Project, which disputes human-caused global warming. Most good scientists think that global warming is not human caused.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  41. Damn it, Cloud! by Glowing+Fish · · Score: 2

    THE SHIN-RA are poisoning the earth and we got to do something about it!

    --
    Hopefully I didn't put any [] around my words.
  42. Hope he's wrong by bubbaD · · Score: 0

    I pray everyday that, no matter how many species we wipe out, that along the way, we extinguish ourselves. The "environment" dies, or thrives: who cares? As long as the planetary cancer we call humanity is wiped out. I was very dissappointed when the Cold War ended, but I think the possibility of nuking ourselves out is still good. c'mon American, let's start by bringing real piece to Tibet, by wiping it off the face of the Earth!
    Until then, embrace Slack!

  43. The Planet's Fine, We're At Risk. by Genus+Marmota · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Picture humanity as a group of monkeys sitting on a high tree branch, with a hungry lion waiting paitiently below. A small group of monkeys is sawing furiously away at the branch they all sit on. "We need more lumber!" they shout. Another other group is in a state of panic, shouting "Save the tree! Save the tree!" But most of the monkeys are doing what monkeys generally do: scratching, having sex and looking around for food, completely uninterested in the other two groups.

    Sigh.

    On my office cube I have a graph of the ice core data from Vostok, Antarctica. The graph of mean planetary temperature change looks like a roller coaster. Goddess sure does like to mix it up. What's striking about it is that for the last 12,000 years or so, we've had an anomalously stable and warm trend. Just about the time humans figured out how to grow wheat and live in villages.

    Did humans cause global warming? Well, I don't think there were that many campfires back in the paleolithic. How bout the other way round? Maybe the stable, warmer temperatures made possiblee the "stupid human trick" of huge cities based on domesticated crops?

    My unscientific take on it is that the climate is a big 'ol complicated chaotic system. If you're betting your civilization on linear trends persisting very long in any direction, then you're lookin to get spanked. And you haven't looked very hard at the data. I'm as green as the next bumper-sticker-sporting, recycling vegetarian. But I think we're just clever monkeys in the end.

    1. Re:The Planet's Fine, We're At Risk. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Picture humanity as a group of monkeys sitting on a high tree branch, with a hungry lion waiting paitiently below. A small group of monkeys is sawing furiously away at the branch they all sit on. "We need more lumber!" they shout

      Maybe they're going to use the limb to make a bow with which to slay the lion? In the same way, it is very likely that, regardless of human interaction, the climate of the Earth is going to go through some dramatic changes, as it has always done in the past. Technology, including industrialization, may very well be the "bow" which slays the lion.

      The problem with environmentalists is that they wish to use the strong hand of government to impose their will upon others. The simple fact is that most people don't believe their doomsday prophesies; and that fact alone suggests that their opinions have little merit.

    2. Re:The Planet's Fine, We're At Risk. by ivrcti · · Score: 1

      I haven't been reading long enough to mod, but I like your reasoning and your sense of humor.

      A rather humble +1

  44. No such animal by bsd-mon · · Score: 1


    But global warming doesn't exist...
    Big business is good...
    1.6 mpg SUV's are an inalienable right...
    dubya is great...
    It's all a conspiracy from those long-haired tree-huggers to drive down the price of Birkenstocks
    </corporate-drone>

    --
    To read makes our speaking English good. - X. Harris
    1. Re:No such animal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Global warming is going to destroy us all...
      Humans are bad...
      government handouts are an inalienable right...
      gore is great...
      It's all a conspiracy from those corporate types to kill their customers.

  45. Why are people so hostile by bluewater7 · · Score: 1

    People seem to think that environmentalists want to steal all your money and spend it on saving a little bug that nobody has heard about. What they don't seem to realize is that many people just want sound management and planning for the future that will have real positive effects on the environment. There are 6 billion people on earth, 5 billion of those appeared the the last 100-120 years. That is insane. There will most certainly be effects on the environment, many of which we probably cannot stop. We could do things to help like using solar energy though. Have the government front the money to put high efficiency solar panels on everyone's roof, then have people just pay the government back with a monthly fee just like a power bill that will pay for the solar cells. Scientists are working on a new form of black silicon solar cells that will have ~60% efficiency. That is great. It is an easy, cost effective solution. I just wish our political leadership in this country could look more than 4 years in the future to see that this is a good idea. I don't know about you, but I would like to be able to go snorkling with my kids in twenty years and be able to show them all of the cool stuff in the coral reefs of the indo-pacific. Its sad when people put interests of money and power over the fate of not only species but communities that are landmarks of this planet.

    1. Re:Why are people so hostile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I expect that of the 6 billion people on earth, many more than 5 billion appeared within the last 100 years. Probably all but a few of the very oldest.

    2. Re:Why are people so hostile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People seem to think that environmentalists want to steal all your money and spend it on saving a little bug that nobody has heard about. What they don't seem to realize is that many people just want sound management and planning for the future that will have real positive effects on the environment

      Those people aren't environmentalists; they're conservationists. The two are not even remotely the same, although they do share some (very few) common goals.

  46. The right questions... by Paul+Neubauer · · Score: 1

    I don't see Lomberg as saying we are having no effect at all and therefore have no need to anything ever. What I see is someone questioning commonly said, if not understood, things.

    The questions I have would be:

    Is human activity having a measurable effect on [X]?

    If so, is this effect possibly harmful?

    If so, what actions can be taken about it?

    Can the actions be done in a scaled way?

    Such as, what are the easy things that can be done right now, what are the not so easy things that might have to be done next, and what are the hard things that might be needed?

    Can these actions be verified as actually doing what is claimed for them?

    Not that these are all the right questions, but I keep seeing and hearing the conclusions saying we must do [whatever] and fast without much evidence supporting them. Anyone asking people to change their behavoir or way of life should be able to explain, with supporting and verifiable evidence, why the change is needed.

    --
    I don't subscribe to RMS's GNUtopian vision.
  47. A frightening thought... by rcs1000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no doubt that the Skeptical Environmentalist contains many errors. But it contains a lot that is useful, and it does not pretend to be a book about science. It is a book about the statistics used by certain people to support certain arguments.

    Sometimes the stastics used are dubious: the Economist themselves ran a story on how the world's figures on fish production were flawed because of massive misrepesentation from China. (http://www.economist.com/displayStory.cfm?Story_I D=885936) As a result of this, one whole chapter of the book is glaringly wrong.

    *BUT*

    The reaction to the book does the environmentalists great disservice. Rather than rationally approaching it from the point of view of the statistics, and admitting that - in a few cases - statistics used to back up a points were wrong, the environmental movement has reacted hysterically. Normally sensible people have attacked Lomberg as an agent of big business, the oil companies, etc.

    This is wrong. Attack Lomberg for his errors, do not get caught up in some hysterical conspiracy theory.

    And talk about statistics. The book is about statistics, not about global warming. It may well be that global warming is worse than expected, but attacking him for having a different point of view (and that alone) is wrong.

    Just my $0.05...

    *r

    --
    --- My dad's political betting
  48. The developed world vs the undeveloped. by nesneros · · Score: 2

    There are a whole slew of different environmental problems between developed economies and non-developed and developing ones. Remember the problem with the Great Lakes 30 years ago? I belive the worst was Lake Superior, which was polluted so bad it was considered unsafe to swim in. Now its full of pleasure boaters and fishermen on the weekends, thanks to a massive enviormental clean up of the factories along its shores. This is part of the transition from a middle-industrialized to a modern industrialized economy.

    Now, however, the Great Lakes are facing more subtle problems, like rising temperatures from suburban sprawl runoff, causing certain species of fish to move deeper in the lake, cutting off food supplies for other fish, etc. etc. This is mroe of a modernized economics problem, extremely difficult to find a solution, but also not as outright dangerous (at least in the short term) as the problem of old.

    As the world becomes more developed (and I'm an optimist, I firmly belive that eventually Africa, South America, and parts of Asia will finally begin to advance to our current standards of 1st world coutnries), we will probably face less of these outright dangerous problems, and more of the "long-term potentially dangerous but we dont know what the effect will be and we don't even know how bad it really is sort".

    The question then becomes are we going to be honest about the dangers, and what we know about them. Do we have the courage to say "We really don't know if global warming is occuring, and if it is, we really don't know what that means. Given the best of our information, here's what we can say...". Kudos to the Skeptical Environmentalist for being brave enough to face down the status quo and introduce some much-needed uncertainty and honesty.

    --
    Some men spend their entire lives trying to kill themselves for having been born. --Ross MacDonald
    1. Re:The developed world vs the undeveloped. by michael_cain · · Score: 2
      As the world becomes more developed (and I'm an optimist, I firmly belive that eventually Africa, South America, and parts of Asia will finally begin to advance to our current standards of 1st world coutnries)
      I would like to believe this, but wonder where the energy to make this possible will come from. While the United States is far and away the most prolifigate consumer of energy in the world, all developed countries use much more energy per capita than the undeveloped nations. Most of the things that we find attractive about the modern developed nations -- farming productivity, population mobility, climate-controlled housing, communications, sanitation, advanced health care -- depend on cheap energy and the infrastructure to deliver it. At this point in time, the only energy source available that could be applied soon and on a wide scale to advance an undeveloped nation appears to be... burning hydrocarbons.

      Of course, doing that has its own set of problems, doesn't it?

  49. Interesting Article by diorio · · Score: 1

    Here is a frightning little piece. I love hearing heavy industry tell us that we just don't have enough data to support global warming.....what are they waiting for.....their beach houses to be underwater?

    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=58 5&u=/nm/20020221/sc_nm/environment_weather_dc_1

    --
    Ignored Since 1973
    1. Re:Interesting Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      funny back in the 70s and 80s they were talking about global COOLING and we must do something NOW!!!

      hey listen up... there has been global cooling... otherwise we would still be in the ICE AGE!!!!!

  50. This book is junk science by docwhat · · Score: 2
    ...according to the magazine Scientific American.

    The magazine offers several reviews (each by a scientist reviewing the part of the book that covers the science they know best) plus an overview of the book.

    The long and short of the criticisms are that the book ignores lots of works, cherry-picks results from works he does sites (ie, he only mentions the results that back his claims), and that he fails to understand most of the statistics he uses to argue with.

    --
    The Doctor What (KF6VNC)
    1. Re:This book is junk science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sci Am has become a worthless PC (and I don't mean Personal Computer) rag.

    2. Re:This book is junk science by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

      'Junk science' according to the the US edition only. The Italian edition praised it! If give have a fig for some semblance of clarity on the issue, read the rebutals by Lomberg on his site, along with clearly-stated support from some other Fine Fellows. Take it up with them. Otherwise, if you already Know It All, go ahead and smoke some pot and hand out leaflets in Harvard Sq... ; )

      --
      **>>BELCH
    3. Re:This book is junk science by crsm · · Score: 2, Informative
      ...according to the magazine Scientific American.



      I wouldn't regard Sci.Am as a neutral observer of these matters. The man behind Sci.Am's review of The Skeptical Environmentalist is a certain Mr. Scheider who is widely quoted for the following statement on the role of environmentalist scientists:

      [We] are not just scientists but human beings as well. And like
      most people we'd like to see the world a better place...To do
      that we need to get some broad-based support, to capture the
      public's imagination. That, of course, entails getting loads of
      media coverage. So we have to offer up scary scenarios, make
      simplified, dramatic statements, and make little mention of any
      doubts we might have...Each of us has to decide what the right
      balance is between being effective and being honest.

      Pretty damaging to the credibility of Mr Schneider in my book

    4. Re:This book is junk science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scientific American

      Scientific American has zero credibility these days, and hasn't had any since the late eighties (some would say the seventies).

      Scientific American -- two lies in one title.

  51. TANSTAAFL (was: Re:C'mon by billtom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yes it can "hurt" in the sense that almost all environmental protection activities have some money cost associated with them.

    For example, one figure I've seen thrown about (which may or may not be true, but it illustrates my point) is that the cost of implementing the Kyoto Agreement (on controlling carbon emissions) would be about the same as the cost of providing a source of clean drinking water to every person on earth that doesn't have one (which is, shamefully, a lot of people).

    That's not to say that if we scrap Kyoto we would spend the money saved usefully elsewhere, but the point is that environmentalism does cost.

    So it's fair to do cost/benefit analysis of all proposals (but very hard to get agreement on those costs and benefits...)

    1. Re:TANSTAAFL (was: Re:C'mon by revscat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      TANSTAFFL applies equally to energy use: We don't get to spit out carbon emissions 24 hours/day for ~70 years without an associated cost. The question is which costs more: cutting emissions now, or cleaning up later. (Or, for some, whether anything needs to be done whatsoever; I personally reject this viewpoint as being Pollyanna-ish.)

    2. Re:TANSTAAFL (was: Re:C'mon by ElectricRook · · Score: 1

      Volcanic activity is 95% of atmospheric carbon. And here we sit Carping about 5% of 5%.

      Ever notice that the source of environmental activism is from urban areas? In my view... political reactionaries are stirring up people affected by a lack of exposure to nature. Seems that people who only see nature through glass are more concerned about "goings on" in the sticks than the people who live in the sticks. Unfortunately 51% of the voters can can be stirred up into voting to piss in the cornflakes of the other 49%.
      That's how Hitler did his best work... Stirring up the masses aginst "enemy de-jour". I heard on NPR (National Peoples Radio?) yesterday, liberal people wanting to take away the free speech rights of Nazi's in America. Makes me wonder who is worse. The tyrants who back Hitler, or the Facist opposition.

      Time for a reality check.

      --
      - High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
  52. yes, please follow the money by jslag · · Score: 1
    1) Scientists and environmentalists make their money by predicting doomsday.


    Whereas high-ranking officers of oil and auto companies can make their money only by denying doomsday. If you were the sort of person who is primarily motivated by making money, would you choose to work in industry, or be climate scientist? What if you were primarily motivated by curiosity about how the world works?



    1. Re:yes, please follow the money by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Which one of them probably has tenure, and thus a nigh-guaranteed gravy chain if they continue to please the grant-masters? Which of them is instead at the mercy of consumers and ruthless competition? Which is subject to objective reality, such as having to produce things that ARE readily verifiable, DO perform -- or flop, and otherwise more subject to challenge?

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:yes, please follow the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Whereas high-ranking officers of oil and auto companies can make their money only by denying doomsday.

      That's not true at all. The oil companies already own most of the reliable alternative sources of power, and the auto makers are raking in huge bucks on electric and hybrid cars, thanks to government grants. If you are an oil baron, environmentalist panic is very, very good for business.

    3. Re:yes, please follow the money by joss · · Score: 2

      > If you are an oil baron, environmentalist panic is very, very good for business.

      No, it's not. What a pile of crap. The large energy companies spend millions funding dubious research to rebutt the findings of all the scientists who are not funded by energy companies.
      Read "Green Backlash".

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
  53. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1, Troll

    The left has less money. The right doesn't need to hit up folks for cash as much, they've got the Exxons, Monsantos, and Fords of the world keeping them flush.

  54. Do humans really matter? by RyanP · · Score: 1

    If you look back to the fossil record, there were many fewer species around a couple of million years ago. There were regular mass extinctions, and that was that. So I must ask that even if humans kill off a species, does it "matter"? Granted, I don't believe it is a good thing to wipe out spotted owls or whatnot, but if there is only a few hundred of a species left, do they have that much impact on the environment? As someone else said, it is very egotistical to think that humans can have such an effect on the whole planet as to destroy it. If we wipe ourselves out, the Earth will probably just pick up with what species are left. The old joke about cockroaches ruling the planet in a couple million years comes to mind...

    -Ryan

  55. Cato misrepresents Scientific American by Rommel · · Score: 1

    As a person who's read the reviews in Scientific American, I feel strongly that this Cato piece misrepresents the original article.

    Of course, I could have been tipped by the personal attacks and name calling.

  56. oh really? by _avs_007 · · Score: 1

    I remember on the discovery channel, as well as mr. wizard, that, when Mt. Pinatubo erupted, more green house gasses and "ozone depleting" gasses were spewed into the atmosphere then man has produced in all of man-kind. How many volcanos erupted in earth history? The earth seems to be dealing with that just fine, so I doubt anything we do will affect this planet. There is such a thing as cycles you know. Back in the 70's people thought we were headed back into an ice-age. But wasn't most of the pollution of the industrial age from before the 70's? So what the hell happened?

    Anyways, sure, there is no harm in cutting pollution right? Or is there? Hmmm, let me count the ways.... We can cut down on fossil fuel productions by making electric cars... Except most of the electricity in this country is produced by burning fossil fuels, so scratch that. We can put up wind mills to generate electricity. But then, oh no, the bald eagle or spotted owl might fly into it and die, so we must save our endangered specied, so scratch that. We can use dams to generate hydo power, but then the chinook salmon will swim into the turbines or might not make it up the ladder, so scratch that. We can use solar to generate electricity, but then we would need to erect so many solar panels, we would have to cut down the oldgrowth forests to make room for em'. Either that, or we would fill up the deserts, and put some other species in danger, so scratch that. Besides, that would only work during the day. So that means you have to store the electricity for night-time. But what material are most batteries made? Hmmm, really scratch that...
    We could erect a generator in the ocean to be powered by the tides (forget the name), but then some poor whale or dolphin might swim into it and die. So scratch that. Meanwhile, while not cutting timber, to try and save a bunch of birds, tons' o people are getting put out of work, and are trying to figure out what to do with their lives in this time of suffering. Most all of them will do whatever it takes to make ends meet. Wonder what that means. Prolly means in the end, more harm will get done then good... Lets rip out all the dams to save the fish. So now us folk up here will have to depend on the utility companies to buy power else where, *cough cough*. Wonder where it will come from, or how THAT power gets generated. Lets save the water for the ecosystem. Who cares about the farmers right? Let all their crops die, nobody got hurt right? RIGHT? Lets use organic food too, so we dont poison the animals. Except this "natural" stuff doesn't yield as many crops, so we'll have to have MUCH bigger farms to get the same yield. So that means MORE land will be necessary. No harm in expanding your farms RIGHT? Well maybe we can just use geneticly engineered foods, to up the yield, then use "natural" stuff to grow it... Hmmm, so worried about "natural", and yet they speak of genetic engineering? If people start dropping dead of cancer many years from now, maybe they will change their mind. Anyways, the list can go on and on and on....

    1. Re:oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People like you make me sick. If anything we need to LOWER the standards of living in the industrial countries and REDUCE the energy consumption

      Human-induced global warming is a myth. The real goal of the pseudo-environmentalists is revealed by your quote. You don't care about the environment; you just want to "LOWER the standards of living" and increase misery.

    2. Re:oh really? by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      So what the hell happened?


      There's a direct correlation between "pollution reduction" and "global warming is coming". See, used to pollute like crazy, and the ice age was coming. So we cut down and cleaned up. Things started warming up. So all we need it to block the sun's rays with a thick fog of pollution. Yeah!

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    3. Re:oh really? by peripherals.guide · · Score: 1

      "I remember on the discovery channel, as well as mr. wizard, that, when Mt. Pinatubo erupted, more green house gasses and "ozone depleting" gasses were spewed into the atmosphere then man has produced in all of man-kind."

      Then Mr. Wizard would be wrong. Chlorofluorocarbons, the chief ozone depleters, are man-made compounds that do not occur in nature, and certainly not in volcanoes. Because CFCs are nearly inert, they are able to persist in the atmosphere for weeks at a time -- long enough to be carried into the stratosphere, where hard ultraviolet light disassembles the molecules so that free atomic chlorine can interact directly with the ozone. One chlorine atom can destroy many, many ozone molecules (converting to regular molecular oxygen) before it finally bumps into something other than oxygen, reacts and gets taken out of the cycle.

      Volcanoes do emit large amounts of molecular and atomic chlorine and related compounds, but those compounds are highly reactive. They readily interact with water, dust, and other atmospheric components in the troposphere until they are neturalized and bound up in mostly harmless compounds. They cannot persist the weeks and months required to be carried into the stratosphere.

      As for greenhouse gasses, I couldn't really say how Mt. Pinatubo's carbon dioxide emissions compare to industrial emissions. But I can tell you that the slight global cooling caused by large emissions of dust and sulfur dioxide into the upper atmosphere caused _less_ CO2 to be emitted into the atmosphere that year overall, due to suppression of biomass decomposition, particularly in the northern hemisphere.

      But I imagine Mr. Wizard didn't mention that.

      http://gaw.kishou.go.jp/wdcgg/gas.html

    4. Re:oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So why don't we splurge on fossile fuels and create a paradise of insane consumption then?

      So it's `consumption' (i.e. quality of life) that bothers you so much? Well, at least you're honest...

  57. Are seasonal predictions climatic predictions? by rlglende · · Score: 1


    Is that a climate prediction, or a seasonal weather prediction? Climate is long-term.

    As a seasonal weather prediction, you are indeed correct, at least for 199 out of 200 years. (There was a year when all the crops failed, early 1800s, I believe. Snowed in July in New England, due to Krakatoa or some such large volcano.)

    Climate what is being argued in the environmental debate, as that affects species. Seasons limit what species can live where (tho the oppossums have been moving North for a long time), but climate changes wipe out species.

    If seasons are climate, then you have entirely changed the debate and its import.

    Lew

    --
    "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
    1. Re:Are seasonal predictions climatic predictions? by uncadonna · · Score: 2
      Is that a climate prediction, or a seasonal weather prediction? Climate is long-term.

      When the north pole faces the sun, I predict it will be warmer in the north than when the south pole faces the sun, all else being relatively equal. This is a climate prediction. It predicts the physical properties of the atmosphere in response to a shift in the earth's axis relative to the sun. It is no different in principle from predicting shifts in properties of the atmosphere due to changes in atmospheric composition.

      The details are harder to work out because we have less historical evidence to work with. (Whether or not this is good news is left as an exercise for the reader.) However, the chaotic trajectory of the system is not especially relevant.

      For those familiar with the pop literature, we aren't discussing where on the butterfly the system is going to be at a particular moment. We are discussing how we are changing the underlying system, and hence the overall shape of the butterfly, much as it changes naturally every season.

      --
      mt
  58. Scientific opinion by cluge · · Score: 2

    Over the years the following has been the consensus of the scientific community at one time.

    1. We are on the verge of a man made ice age because of the amount of pollutants we are putting into the air (circa 1970)

    2. The earth is flat

    3. The earth is the center of the Universe

    4. People with mental handicaps should be sterilized to prevent more mentally retarded children from being born

    5. The age of the earth is (insert favorite number here)

    Look at who and how environmental scientists are funded. They are for the most part funded by governments. The same governments that would only fund research into why certain illicit drugs were bad for you and cut funding to any study that found a use for said illicit drug. This is not about objective science it is about getting funding, it is about ego and it is about power. Look at my sig, I said that because I have personally watched people in the scientific community ignore data that does not agree with THEIR OPINIONS. Some try everything in their power to suppress data that suggests their hypothesis is wrong. They have to because their ego's are too big and their funding depends on them being PERCIEVED as correct.

    Science should be about objective analysis of the data. That is often not the case, it's about cliques and popularity and grants. Newton is turning in his grave.

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    1. Re:Scientific opinion by gowen · · Score: 1
      Over the years the following has been the consensus of the scientific community at one time.

      1. We are on the verge of a man made ice age because of the amount of pollutants we are putting into the air (circa 1970)
      It is absolutely untrue to suggest this was the consensus of the scientific community.
      2. The earth is flat
      3. The earth is the center of the Universe
      At such a time that these were widely held, there were no such concepts of a scientific community (or the scientific method) as we understand them, merely the assertions of various religious groups. Besides, 2000 years earlier a genuine empirical scientist (Eratosthenes) had not only known that the earth was round, but roughly how round.

      4. People with mental handicaps should be sterilized to prevent more mentally retarded children from being born
      I don't even know where you're coming from with this. Excluding Nazi Germany, when was any scientific consensus pro-eugenics?

      5. The age of the earth is (insert favorite number here)
      True. There have been some very bad guesses accepted about this. Notice, however, how the scientific community has accepted counter-evidence and revised their opinion. Exactly the behavious that Lomborg's supporters say never happens (vested interests, and all that crap).
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:Scientific opinion by cluge · · Score: 2

      >how the scientific community has accepted >counter-evidence and revised their opinion

      Not before they villified, or even killed people that had different opinions (depending on what time we are talking about). Even today "peer" review can mean 2 things. It can mean that your work is looked over and seriously reviewed. It can also mean it's thrown in the can because you threaten someone's funding (or ego). It may be rare that this happens, but I would bet that it happens more often than you may think.

      In the 1960s/70s (refer to new scientist from 1960 to 1975) there was a lot of work suggesting that we (The planet) were heading for another ice age because of the volume of pollutants we were putting in the atmosphere. I don't have the exact papers but this school of thought was pointed out to me when I had to do a report while studying in Finland. Most of the authors of the reports were american and the reports were usually funded by various american government agencies.

      --
      "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    3. Re:Scientific opinion by dhogaza · · Score: 2

      There was no scientific consensus in the 1970s that we were on the verge of an ice age due to pollutants. That's a lie made up by those on the right who wish to discredit the current scientific consensus in regard to global warming.

      Scientists, by any modern definition, have never argued that the earth is flat. In fact the earth has been known to be round for thousands of years, and in fact attempts were made to measure its diameter.

      Scientists proved that the earth isn't the center of the Universe. It certainly wasn't the Pope who discovered this.

      You are right that some scientists were active in the eugenics movement. Far more weren't.

      The fact that the estimate of the age of the earth has varied over time is evidence of science at work. Do you have a problem with this?

    4. Re:Scientific opinion by gowen · · Score: 1
      Not before they villified, or even killed people that had different opinions
      You're mistaking them for the church again
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    5. Re:Scientific opinion by cluge · · Score: 2

      No I am not.

      Please review ancient greek and roman history. (they were famous for killing people that disagreed with established thought of all sorts)While you at it, look at some of the early "scientific" rebuttles to Eistein or Darwin. If that isn't villification I don't know what is. I'm not talking about the regular press or religous institutions taking aim at someone's scientific findings.

      While I agee that sometimes a person's personal faith may have entered into their "scientific opinions" (re darwin). I'm not referring to that. I'm reffering to generaly accepted scientific opinion at the time. The only way for me to judge that is by reading the papers written and published at that time.

      --
      "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
    6. Re:Scientific opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it is like this nothing matters after all we are all and everyhing else in the univers is made of Atoms and they are mede of elektrons nad Neutrons and Protons, the Electron is fundamental so is the quarks that make upp the Proton and Neutron. So everyting is made of electrons and quarks, this is matter is and since it is the same shit everyvhere then nohing matters in the end bacuse the hole universe is made of the same fundamental shit.

    7. Re:Scientific opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Newton is turning in his grave.

      Hah. The same guy who named indigo (which no one can distinguish from violet btw) for indigo manufacturers ?

      Newton was a very great man, undoubtedly. But dont think science in the "good old days" was any better.

    8. Re:Scientific opinion by gowen · · Score: 1
      While you at it, look at some of the early "scientific" rebuttles to Eistein or Darwin.
      But now you're talking about individuals, whereas you originally attempted to claim this was the consensus.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  59. To all those who say "We can't take a chance..." by ericlj · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I would say "Everything is a weighting of cost/benefits. Do you stay at home, not moving, not eating, never doing anything -- because of the possible danger of any action? No, we go about our lives having weighed the risks versus the costs of avoiding them. Do you really believe that we have the power to destroy the environment? That is ridiculous. We have the power to change it a little. Also remember that many studies have shown that for every place that is damaged by a measurable increase in global temperatures (if it occurs and is not a statistical blip) there are just as many that will be improved. Some places may get drier, but others will bloom."

    Try actually studying some of the research (and analysis by both sides and neutral, if you can find them, observers) instead of sticking to the USA Today headlines. The comments I have read have mostly demonstrated that the shrill cries of the big-business, big-money environmental lobby have managed to overpower all calls for an objective study of these issues.

  60. You're an ideologue, not a realist by coltrane99 · · Score: 1
    'less government is better'. Why? Or is this just a religious belief?

    Personally I don't want some pal of the governor to be able to put a copper mine in the state park. I don't want my perfectly-fine publicly operated water supply 'deregulated' and put into the hands of Enron to allow the magic of the market to fuck me. In other words, your views are simplistic and wrong.

    1. Re:You're an ideologue, not a realist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only way the some pal of the governor will be able to put anything in the state park is if said governor has too much power to begin with.
      This is precisely the kind of stuff the original poster was talking about ...

  61. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes. Clearly Kennedy and Turner need our help. Send what you can.

  62. Are there 6 billion people on the earth? by Rommel · · Score: 2, Funny

    There are 6 billion people on earth, 5 billion of those appeared the the last 100-120 years

    If so, I think *all* them appeared in the last 1-120 years.

  63. Damning with faint praise... by WinPimp2K · · Score: 1
    Lomborg is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Aarhaus in Denmark. His specialty, indeed his only other major academic paper, is in the field of game theory, The reviewer seems to have fallen into that same trap of attacking the person rather than his ideas.


    With those same credentials, he was a completely credible "scientist" to the Greens, the NRDF, GreenPeace, or the Union of Concerned Scientists. Indeed as his stated reason for beginning his research was to debunk one of those heretical lackeys of the Corporate Powers of Poluution he was undoubtably thinking he had an easy job of "making his bones" with the treehuggers and then just sit back and wait for the royalties and invitations to speaking enagements to roll in. Shucks maybe he just wanted to score with the chicks - look at all the hot models and movie stars that espouse Green causes


    But something happened. He actually did have some of that near mythical "academic integrity". Since he did not produce a book in line with accepted religious beliefs (and it ain't just Greens that have "religion" - lots of folks have similar blind faith in "the marketplace", "capitalism", or "socialism" - I must admit a certain amount of faith in "scientific method"), the true believers did of course treat him as a traitor. Of course, the same intellectual honesty that lead him to give up his chance to bed a supermodel also lead him to document his work so other people could try to disprove his claims. And that is the real atrocity he committed in the eyes of his former friends. They need for people to take their claims on faith - and he dared suggest that statements should be verifiable.

    --

    You either believe in rational thought or you don't
  64. no, no, no. by mikeee · · Score: 2

    Given these choices, in the absence of information, isn't it more logical to bet on the second?

    If it's free, sure. It isn't. As the greens are fond of pointing out, we have limited resources. It follows we should spend them where it's most likely to help - I suspect 3rd world debt relief is a better buy for humanity than radical emmisions reductions of the same cost.

  65. One libertarian's perspective by dada21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My views on the environment are fairly anti-libertarian in many ways, but I believe 100% that the libertarian solution carries the only solution to it.

    When land is owned publicly, it is treated badly. When you want to find the worst perpetrators of the environment, you'll find commercial businesses polluting on public land that they lease.

    By taking the libertarian road, and privatizing all land, you're now give businesses and people a vested interest in keeping the value of the land high, not low. Just like a renter of an apartment takes generally worse care of the place than a condo owner, the same is true of a company or an individual who may one day want to sell the land for its value.

    If everyone owns their land rather than leasing it from a public entity, you now have civil protection against someone polluting your land. Some big industry pumps poisons into their river that end up in your groundwater? Now you can sue. Currently, when a business pollutes on leased government land, who do you sue? The government? These are the same guys that leave loopholes in the law so that their buddies CAN pollute.

    The people who think that there is no way that pro-environmental scientists aren't harboring a conspiracy are nuts. Every science I've had the ability to witness has some "global" conspiracies that are used in order to keep people "needed" that business. The environment is no different.

    The worst polluters in the world are socialist governments. That's a fact. The most pristine forests in the world are on private land. That's a fact. Some of the forest preserves in Central American that are privately owned are so much cleaner than the public land residing next door to them that its scary that people really want our government running the forest preserve system.

    If you want to protect or preserve some land, find others who agree with you, and set up a private land trust. Its happening more and more around the world, AND IT WORKS.

    If you want the air cleaner, then get government out of the air regulation. End the EPA. If a business is pumping chemicals into the air, its up to the third party watchdog groups to monitor it, and let people know. When there is legal evidence that a company is harming land or individuals off of their property, then a civil lawsuit can entail. End of story.

    Sure, there are flaws in my "world," but the flaws in today's world are obvious: environmental protection laws hurt small individual landowners, as the large business either lease their land from government, or get such amazing loopholes granting to them in the laws, that they actually can pollute more, not less.

    1. Re:One libertarian's perspective by paulbd · · Score: 3, Interesting

      when land is owned publicly, it is treated badly there is no evidence for this claim as a general one about human society. you have perhaps heard of the book "the tragedy of the commons", which was one of the first to expound this idea, and suggest that private ownership of land resulted in better caretaking. unfortunately, the book was wrong, and even the author now acknowledges that he did not do enough cross-cultural or a deep enough historical review before writing the book. there are hundreds of examples from human cultures throughout history where public ownership of land has resulted in better treatment of the land and its resources. what typically goes wrong is when there is a breakdown in the cultural traditions that ensure proper stewardship, and nothing to replace them. a google search for "tragedy of the commons" will provide many links to the anthropological and historical research to support what i have said here.

    2. Re:One libertarian's perspective by wundabread · · Score: 1

      If you end the EPA and environmental regulation, how do you sue someone for polluting their land?

      I agree with some of what you say, but the shortsightedness of business never ceases to amaze me. It will almost never be in the best interests of the bottom line to keep pollution down.

      I read your argument and I just don't buy it. I knew too many business majors in college to put any faith in them.

      I'm all for capitalism, but there is a middle ground here.

    3. Re:One libertarian's perspective by snarfer · · Score: 1

      When land is owned publicly, it is treated badly. When you want to find the worst perpetrators of the environment, you'll find commercial businesses polluting on public land that they lease.

      If this is your premise, give it up. The worst pollution is on land that the oil and chemical companies OWN.

    4. Re:One libertarian's perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When land is owned publicly, it is treated badly. When you want to find the worst perpetrators of the environment, you'll find commercial businesses polluting on public land that they lease

      Close, but not quite. When you want to find the worst damage to the environment, take a look at government itself. And authoritarian government is even worse (if you want to see the worse ecological disasters, just take a look at the messes in Communist-controlled Eastern Europe).

    5. Re:One libertarian's perspective by e_lehman · · Score: 2

      The worst polluters in the world are socialist governments. That's a fact.

      No it isn't. The world's largest producer of CO2 is the United States, and our emissions are steadily increasing. In contrast, for example, Russia and China have both been decreasing greenhouse gas emissions from already much lower absolute and per-capita rates.

    6. Re:One libertarian's perspective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CO2 is not a pollutant, it's an essential trace gas. We couldn't survive without it in the atmosphere. Sure, too much of it can kill you, but hey, you can drown in water (even water vapor). Doesn't make water a pollutant.

      And hey, what do you know, but CO2 isn't even the primary greenhouse gas. Water vapor is. Most of (if not all) the greenhouse gas emssions are non-anthropogenic in the first place.

      And keep in mind that he was talking specifically about governments. Not about countries. There is a difference.

    7. Re:One libertarian's perspective by mozmozmoz · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, the normal practice of the worse polluters is to use the abandonemnt legislation to their advantage in dealing with their property. They typically either build a shell company that owns the worst probelm, then declare it bankrupt; or develop some similar scheme that results in the problem reverting to public ownership. Look at the nuclear waste issue - how many of the nuke companies have maintained sufficient assets to dispose of their waste or plants at market prices?

      That industry is IMO the best example of why liberharians are wrong. Sure, it happened in a non-perfect free market, and depends on a corrupt government for its existance, but it's as close to free market as it could be and still exist. And it doesn't work.

    8. Re:One libertarian's perspective by kels · · Score: 1

      When land is owned publicly, it is treated badly.

      Absolutely false when applied to the United States. The most pristine land in the US is owned by the federal government, and protected by the Wilderness Act of 1964. Over 100 million acres are protected ("untrammeled by man"), over half of it in Alaska.

      In recent decades, in developed countries, protection of the environment has come by the direct action of government, not despite it as your philosophy holds.

      --
      "I believe that the cult of the particular brings only death - for it bases order on likeness." St.-Exupery
    9. Re:One libertarian's perspective by Untimely+Ripp'd · · Score: 1

      By taking the libertarian road, and privatizing all land,

      By privatizing all the land, you've stripped 90 - 99% of the population of the right to enjoy that land -- a funny way to define liberty.

      you're now give businesses and people a vested interest in keeping the value of the land high, not low.

      No, you are giving businesses and people a vested interest in extracting the maximum possible number of dollars out of that land. If the way they can do this is by destroying the land, that's what they will do. Most libertarians and neocon or neolib economists just say "Bully for them," the theory being that the market has decided that the land is worth less than whatever we get from destroying the land.

      I think this is silly, but it would take a book to debunk it. However, it's worth noting that the god of American libertarians, Thomas Jefferson, explicitly stated that the national interest in having a food supply superceded the property rights of individuals, and that property owners did not have the right to destroy the property's food-producing capacity.

      --

      And let the angel whom thou still hast serv'd tell thee ...

    10. Re:One libertarian's perspective by Digital+Eco+Freak · · Score: 1

      The reason that Socialist countries have the worst pollution is that the government is too involved in the polluting industries, and thus faces a conflict of interest when citizens are harmed by the pollution they emit.

      It is true that some of the most pristine forests are in private hands, but what about all the pristine forest that was in private hands, and was decimated? It is also true that our government manages our forests in a horribly irresponsible way, effectively paying companies to log them, but that would seem to be a good argument for better regulation and governmental reform.

      You seem very happy to end the EPA, but what happens when the power companies down the road decide to end their pollution controls and we have another incident like what happened in Donora, Pennsylvanis in 1948, where, over the course of a week, over 20 people were killed, and over 7000 hospitalized by air pollution? This incident was one of the early influences on the first Clean Air Act, and without government regulation of polluting industries, it could easily happen again.

      I strongly support private land trusts and other individual efforts to protect the environment, but everyone is hurt by environmental destruction, and we need broad public action to keep the public safe.

    11. Re:One libertarian's perspective by dada21 · · Score: 2

      A reply to my own post, for history's sake :)

      The replies to my post were very intriguing and possibly eye-opening. I definitely will do more research in this area. A lot of my views on the environment come from groups such as PERC.ORG, which are environmentalists who realize that private land trusts work better than public ones.

      I have seen, read, and personally experienced at least 4 different government "preserves" of land, and if anyone really thinks that government land is the cleanest, then they haven't gone there themselves. Enough of our public lands have been polluted just by the visitors who have come to see the pristine nature...ugh.

      My primary response to a lot of these responses in the one that gets me into hot water with pretty much everyone: a true libertarian does not see any constitutional legality in the definition of a corporation today. It is my firm belief that all corporations are consisted of men, and these men should be held liable for what the corporation have done or will do. This includes polluting other people's lands 100 years from now.

      I know a lot of libertarians agree with me that the first step to save our nation is to end Congress' unconstitutional powers, and secondly to end or severely limit the limited liability that corporations have. If man does bad, then man should suffer for his sins against others. Corporations can go bankrupt, but its much harder for individuals to head down that path.

    12. Re:One libertarian's perspective by Untimely+Ripp'd · · Score: 1

      a true libertarian does not see any constitutional legality in the definition of a corporation today. It is my firm belief that all corporations are consisted of men, and these men should be held liable for what the corporation have done or will do.

      Wow! This is the first time I've seen a libertarian take this stance. Starting from here, you and I could have an intelligent discussion about rights, ethics, and the future of humanity. We'd still disagree on most things, but at least we'd agree on the starting point. Lacking this understanding, most people who call themselves libertarians are really just apologists for the wealthy and powerful.

      --

      And let the angel whom thou still hast serv'd tell thee ...

    13. Re:One libertarian's perspective by Sloppy · · Score: 2

      Get rid of limited liability, and then there aren't any more "shell companies" and there is always someone held accountable. Perfectly compatable with Libertarianism.

      You don't need corporations to have capitalism.

      Look at the nuclear waste issue - how many of the nuke companies have maintained sufficient assets to dispose of their waste or plants at market prices?

      Would a person running a nuke company decide to do such things, if they thought they might lose their house?

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  66. Lomborg charged with "scientific dishonesty" by Kraft · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... yesterday (in Danish).

    According to the article, Lomborg was charged with (directly translated) "scientific dishonesty*", which means "acts or ommissions whereby there in the research happens forgery or alteration of the scientific message or gross deception of a person's contribution in the research".

    The charges fell the same day Lomborg is applying for the position of director of the newly founded Institute for Environmental evaluation in Denmark, by the council concerning scientific dishonesty.

    *dishonesty is not really the correct word in English. It's more "dis-HONOUR" than "dis-sincerety".

    --

    -Kraft
    Live and let live
  67. Heathy criticism of the environmental movement by iiii · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Excellent review and critique. And it sounds like a very thought provoking book.

    We really don't have enough critical thinking going on in the environmental sector. It's a whole lot of bandwagon, dogma, and emotional fervor.

    I think of myself as environmentally responsible, but I really don't buy in to most of the propaganda that is out there. I mean, I agree that we should clean up, stop polluting the air, water, ground, and space, and help developing nations get to where we are in a cleaner way than we did.

    But many environmental activists, especially the global warming nuts, just refuse to recognize some basics of science. The global environment is a chaos system. You cannot predict its behavior, and therefore you cannot predict how it will respond to particular stimuli. It changes all the time, always has, even before mankind infested all corners of the planet.

    These measurements of half degree changes in the average global temperature quoted by panic-inducing lobbyists as proof that we are destroying the world are an example of the logical fallacy post hoc ergo propter hoc, or "after this therefore because of this".

    I really believe that many of them think the ends justifies the means, and they will say anything and scare anyone just to accomplish their goals. And mostly I agree with those goals. But that kind of tactic is arrogant, non-democratic and dangerous. Responsible people go about creating change by educating and convincing. Those who think they know what's best for everyone and are willing to force their solution without convincing everyone of its validity should be feared, watched, and held to the standards of our open society.

    --
    Light cup, beer drink, thin so chain, neck turtle fat, man I won't say it again
    1. Re:Heathy criticism of the environmental movement by dhogaza · · Score: 3, Informative
      The global environment is a chaos system. You cannot predict its behavior, and therefore you cannot predict how it will respond to particular stimuli.

      This may come as a surprise to you, but this is exactly the point of view held by those "global warming nuts" (err ... climatologists) who suggest we err on the side of caution if we err at all.

      Global warming is a fact. The degree to which we contribute to it is arguable, but non-zero.

      Most importantly, we can't be certain what the effect will be for the very reasons you state. The reasonable response? Slow down pace at which we execute this particular experiment in atmospheric chemistry.

    2. Re:Heathy criticism of the environmental movement by iiii · · Score: 1
      By agreeing that the global environment is a chaos system and saying global warming is a fact you contradict yourself.

      Hopefully we are agreeing on terms here. I would define the currently held concept of Global Warming as the belief that: "the earth has been warming and will continue to warm, partly as a result of human activity."

      The future behavior of a chaos system cannot be predicted accurately. So we don't know if the earth will continue to warm. It might, it might not, it might suddenly go into an ice age. Chaos system often undergo sudden radical changes.

      A corrolary to this, which makes sense, is that since the chaos system is unpredictable, it is also unpredictable with slightly different starting conditions or influences. So, we can't know what effect our pollution is having on the system. Might be making things warmer, might be making things cooler. You are right, our effect is non-zero, but that does not imply that we are causing warming. There is no way to know.

      However, as I said in the previous post, I don't think this should be used as a cover to keep from cleaning up. There are many, many good arguments in favor of cleaning up our act, including the hope of decreasing any possible effects on the global climate.

      --
      Light cup, beer drink, thin so chain, neck turtle fat, man I won't say it again
    3. Re:Heathy criticism of the environmental movement by shani · · Score: 1

      By agreeing that the global environment is a chaos system and saying global warming is a fact you contradict yourself.

      I think you overstate the unpredictability of chaotic systems. After all, any 3-body system is provably unpredictable (as in: earth, moon, sun). This doesn't mean that the behavior is totally unbounded and that anything can happen.

      Additionally, the previous poster seemed to be noting that we are currently experiencing global warming. There's no prediction involved, hence even by your interpretation of chaos, no contradiction is involved.

  68. glass half full / half empty by Freedom+Bug · · Score: 2

    Myself I find Lomborg's work makes environmental action more fruitful. I much prefer positive outlooks. "Hey. things are getting better: lets keep doing things to make them keep getting better" instead of "Things are terrible. We're all going to die. Let's go trash our local MacDonald's so that we postpone the date of the world ending by a couple of minutes."

    Works like this are important because they attempt to help people make choices.

    For instance: on page 80 he references estimates that 2 million people die and 0.5 billion people get sick every year because of lack of access to clean water and sanitation.

    How about global warming? Page 291. "Even a small decrease in winter deaths would greatly outweigh a small heat death increase."

    Obviously a contrived example. But the book is great for being able to looks things like this up. 1/3 of the book is reference!

    Lomborg would be the first to admit that there's lots of room for improvement: he would agree that 2 million deaths is unacceptable. He comes to the conclusion that we should take action on global warming.

    Bryan

  69. Warm soda & global warming by redelm · · Score: 2

    One thing surprises me: Bjorn Lomborg seems to accept that Carbon
    dioxide emissions cause 2-3C warming. I'm not there yet.


    The uncontrolled, ex-post atmospheric models hardly convince me, but
    the correlation of temperature with CO2 over millenia is intriguing.
    But have you ever opened a warm soda can?


    The 8C air temperature swing would affect rain and the oceans about
    the same amount. Atmospheric Carbon dioxide swings from 200 to 300 ppm
    which is coincidentally just about the decreased solubility at
    increasing temperature.


    So which is the chicken, and which the egg? If the Earth heated up
    from some exogenous cause (solar, geothermal, geomagnetic), then CO2
    would rise as an effect not a cause.


    A statistics professor would say "Correlation does not prove
    causality". Why doesn't Bjorn?

  70. environment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If my income is produced from studying salmon runs in the PacNW, what happens if I prove everything is OK, or that whatever we are doing can't correlate to perserving salmon?

    If my job is to make sure we are not displacing 'protected' species with new development or logging, is it ok for me to place
    phony fur around so I can feed my family?

    If my job is to provide a scientific opinion regarding the survival of sucker fish in a lake to the people that don't want to release any water to downstream farms, will they come back to me for another paid opinion if I say we couldn't kill these fscking fish if drained the lake bone fscking dry?

    Can some tell the truth for a change, that they have a vested interest in the outcome and should not offer anything?

    Here in the NW the soluions offered are:
    no logging
    no access to gov't lands, stay out of forest period. (I guess this doesn't mean when it is on fire!?)
    no fishing
    no hunting
    stay 100 yds from all streams
    no new roads
    mass transit serving 1% of population at any cost
    move downtown, sell you car, get smaller house, don't drive SUV, don't drive period, must have more gov't, more taxes, we are all bad people since just being on this planet is hurting mother earth, our god
    dress poorly, don't work during the day so you can make all the 'protests', grow beard, suspect anyone that doesn't think like you do, pray to mother earth for return to dark ages....

  71. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by rho · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Hatred is the most accessible and comprehensive of all unifying agents... Mass movements can rise and spread without belief in a God, but never without a belief in a devil."

    -- Eric Hoffer, The True Believer

    --
    Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
  72. *cough cough* by PhilosopherKing · · Score: 1

    *cough cough* AC Motors
    *cough cough* Helio centric solar system
    *cough cough* Evolution
    *cough cough* Rockets in vacuum
    *cough cough* Cryptozology
    *cough cough* Jet Stream
    *cough cough* Plate Tectonics

    And a lot more. And there are serveral that went the other way; cold fusion and Ginger(IT) come to mind ;)

    Occum's Razor has all but been discredited in my view as it has a tollerance of zero for incomplete data sets.

    --

    USA-Democracy is 270 million YESes and NOes a day, not one every four years.
  73. Interesting disparity by streetlawyer · · Score: 4, Interesting
    But by attacking the book and the author so shrilly, the environmental community risks its own hard-won credibility. It acts just as Lomborg accuses it, like lobbyists with an axe to grind, not cold-eyed, empirically-minded scientists.

    But ... but ... why doesn't Lomborg risk his credibility for attacking the environmentalists so shrilly? Could it be that there's one rule of debate if you're saying things that appeal to the people who own the media which decide who has "credibility" and one rule if you're saying things they don't like?

    You certainly can't tell me that Lomborg is unfailingly polite in his attacks on environmentalists because he's not.

    That's why he got a pie in the face by the way; not for authoring a "rival study", but because he had basically accused this guy of saying things he knew to be untrue in order to get government grants. If you accuse people of what amounts to fraud in public, you have to expect some comebacks, and you shouldn't pretend that people are only attacking you back because they can't handle your message.

    In any case, this article is mis-sectioned. What kind of a "book review" spends about two thirds of its length ranting on unrelated political issues related to other peoples' views about the book and half that much tlaking about the book itself?

    1. Re:Interesting disparity by gdr · · Score: 1
      You certainly can't tell me that Lomborg is unfailingly polite in his attacks on environmentalists because he's not.
      I don't remember him being rude to any environmentalists in his book. He criticised them, he disagreed with them, he pointed out what he thought were errors in their arguments and representation of data, but he didn't launch personal attacks.

      Were you were refering to something outside this book, an interview perhaps? A reference would be useful.

    2. Re:Interesting disparity by crush · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately it's not on line, but you can check out a pretty damning set of reviews of "The Skeptical Environmentalist" in Scientific American, January 2002. Those reviews not only back up what you say but also make very strong claims that he has extensively mis-interpreted the evidence and displays a wide-ranging lack of expertise.
      I concur completely with your suspicions about the rules of debate.

    3. Re:Interesting disparity by tgibbs · · Score: 1
      But ... but ... why doesn't Lomborg risk his credibility for attacking the environmentalists so shrilly? Could it be that there's one rule of debate if you're saying things that appeal to the people who own the media which decide who has "credibility" and one rule if you're saying things they don't like?

      You certainly can't tell me that Lomborg is unfailingly polite in his attacks on environmentalists because he's not.

      I can't think of any instance in the entire book where he deviated from the fundamental rule of civilized debate: you may attack the argument, but never the individual. That's more than you can say for virtually all of his critics, who have not hesitated to impugn Lomborg's credentials, honesty, and motives.

    4. Re:Interesting disparity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As you may have noted elsewhere in this thread, the SciAm `review' has been pretty thoroughly refuted.

      A sign of how little confidence they had in their own arguments is the fact that they didn't have even the elementary courtesy to allow Lomborg a paragraph or two in rebuttal.

      See Lomborg's site (linked elsewhere in this thread) for an a analysis of some of the claims made in SciAm's piece.

  74. Corrections.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    gone after Dr. Lomborg with a furious anger"

    As opposed to a non-furious anger? Big fan of Tarantino films, eh?

    The modifier isn't needed. You're in proximity, not close proximity. Close proximity means something like far proximity is possible.

    Same with furious anger. Happy anger? Sad anger? "have ferociously attacked" or "have angrily gone after"

    ....

  75. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  76. Well meaning but deadly by SysKoll · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Even if we AREN'T damaging things as badly as some say, it cant HURT us to be more eco-friendly.

    Oh yes, it can. C'mon yourself. Don't you remember at least some of the recent debacles?

    • Benzene-based gasoline additives as a lead substiture, only (a) the lead in environment comes mostly from incinerators, not gas, and (b) the new additives are carcinogenic, but hey, (c)
    • Replacement of freon with untested, unstable, toxic compounds, but hey, the substitutes are patented and so much more profitable!

    Greenies are certainly well-meaning, if sometimes undiscerning. Unfortunately, their irrational attitude and lack of scientific training often make them easy to manipulate. As a result, large corporations have been using the legitimate concerns of misinformed green activists to push their own agendas. Said agendas are generally meant for profitability, not environment preservation. The two only meet accidentally.

    In short: Emotional action without fact checking or a reality feedback loop almost invariably produces either a random disaster, or the exact opposite of the intended action. Environmentalism is no exception.

    -- SysKoll
    --

    --
    Mad science! Robots! Underwear! Cute girls! Full comic online! http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/

    1. Re:Well meaning but deadly by w3woody · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, and how many recycling plants first brought on-line in the 70's and 80's are now on the EPA's superfund list?

      In theory recycling is a good thing, but until more companies start buying unbleached post-consumer recycled cardboard boxes and shipping product in them, we're going to continue bleaching the recycled paper with toxic bleeching products. And all that toxic waste has to go *somewhere*...

      Do recycle aluminum, however; the same process used to refine aluminum ore is used to recycle aluminum cans--it just take a lot less energy, which reduces the cost of producing aluminum, and less power means less emissions from electric power plants.

      (I once told the story about bleaching recycled paper to a green, who actually had the gall to reply that the toxic waste wasn't important; what was important was that we were doing *something*...)

    2. Re:Well meaning but deadly by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Greenies are certainly well-meaning, if sometimes undiscerning. Unfortunately, their irrational attitude and lack of scientific training often make them easy to manipulate.

      The anti-"greenies"(what a condescending label) have even less scientific training, which is why the corporate propaganda mills have so much trouble finding reputable scientists to spread their FUD.

      This is the typical anti-environmental strawman tactic: set up your opponents as a bunch of granola-eating, scientifically illiterate activists, then knock them down as being ignorant. Of course, you forget to mention that the VAST majority of environmental scientists believe they have found plenty of evidence of humanity's degradation of the environment on a global scale.

      Now, how are you going to dismiss them? Can't be as scientifically illiterate, they're the people who are actually doing the science.

    3. Re:Well meaning but deadly by infinite9 · · Score: 2

      This reminds me of a survey I heard about around 10 years ago. The people taking the survey asked people if they would support a law to ban the use of this horrible solvent. It's found in all our lakes and rivers! It causes some metals to oxidize! In sufficient quantities, it can kill people! What was the solvent? Dihydrogen Oxide. An overwhelming number of people favored the ban.

      --
      Disconnect your television. Do your own research. Draw your own conclusions. They're probably lying. Don't be a sheep.
    4. Re:Well meaning but deadly by chartreuse · · Score: 1

      Think about this the next time you hear the results of some political poll.

  77. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by dhogaza · · Score: 1, Troll

    Actually the book itself is a pack of lies. Learn to think and read critically.

  78. What if we are doing something, and it's good! by Ghoser777 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There's multiply reasons why global warming could be great

    #1. It's keeping us out of an ice age. I believe the historical record indicates that we're past due for the next ice age.

    #2. Back in mideval times, it was much warmer. In fact, there was actually green plants on greenland! That's where it originally got the name. Has anyone know how hot it is in the Jungle? If it's so hot, why is there so much biodiversity? See next point.

    #3. Increased heat leads to increased percipitation and more rain. That's why jungles have so much life - it's the rain. Increased circulation of rain could help increase vegitation (think crops too)

    #4. Reglaciation. You know how warming is suppose to melt the ice caps? Well, if there's more rain, it's postulated that there will be more percipitation over the ice caps. Hence, more glaciation, to combat the minimal loss due to heat increase (which makes a small difference when it is already so cold)

    #5. Most warming is at night. This is great for crops, as it protects against early frosts.

    There are lots of other reasons why it's goo, these are just some of them.

    F-bacher

    --
    James Tiberius Kirk: "Spock, the women on your planet are logical. No other planet in the galaxy can make that claim."
    1. Re:What if we are doing something, and it's good! by CokeBear · · Score: 2

      Another great side effect:


      Most of Florida will be under water, and the world would be a whole lot better without Florida.

      --
      Reality has a liberal bias
  79. Data and modeling by Crispy+Critters · · Score: 2
    I have not read the book, but I have read some of the criticisms, so I will discuss some issues which are relevent without claiming anything about the book.

    As a scientist, I can tell you that analysis and presentation of data is treacherous. The best scientists will sometimes find their preconceived results regradless of the actual data. All scientists must try to present their results in the best light in order to keep working. In a small subfield, researchers are often personally acquainted and are intimately familiar with the analysis techniques, so they are capable of seeing what valid results lie underneath the veneer.

    This is my most difficult problem with climate change. I do not work in that field, and I can't personally analyze the validity and importance of various claims. This makes it very hard for me to have an opinion. I can point out two problems, though.

    Numerical models of things such as weather or resource consumption are complicated. At best, the model can be shown to be consistent with past trends. But any model is only valid over a range of parameters. Outside of this range, the believability of the results drops to nothing. Furthermore, the ability to reproduce short-term variations is no indication that the model will be a valid predictor of long-term trends. We must constantly skeptically re-evaluate these results.

    (Dont't misread me; I think that a huge and dangerous climate change is on the way unless we drastically change how we live in the environment.)

    Enough for now...

  80. to sell or to spoil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    one of the most fundamental aspects of any cause is the motivation and drive behind that cause. If many who are either unsold (or even on 'the other side') see the activists as illogical, inconsistent, unstable, hateful, arrogant, presumptious and short sighted, then it is not hard to see how and why that cause will stay so small. If however, the people that care about [issue] decide that the issue is best served with rational and logical conclussions instead of emotionally based ones that most often turn out to be degrading more than innaction would have been... if they understand the importance of self policing to avoid hypocracy, if they adopt and ethical method of going about their work, and if they will apply the same empathy, understanding and caring they to others, that they claim to have for [issue] and that they claim is never given to them... well then my friends, you will see a VERY successful program.

    Resorting to lies, deceit, willfull ommmision and selective fact dissemination and consideration will only hurt your cause. Rely on the truth and INFORM and EDUCATE people, instead of forcing them to submit to your will. Put down the swastica and the hammer-n-sickle. It is amazing to see how so many people are interested in environmentalism. It is sad though to see them being actively turned away because of small minded hypocrites that in reality care nothing about their stated cause but everything about their own agendas and hateful attempts to control and manipulate others in a sort of 'how you like it now?!' type of attitude. Just like with drug 'education' in the 80's... it became obvious to many young people that 2 things where certain: the authorities are hypocrites and the authorities are lying so that it was impossible to know what the truth about drugs really was. Smart parents now teach by example and by explanation, not by manipulation and extortion. That has had a much higher success rate than any DARE or other such program. If someone who claims to represent a certain cause lies to you, you WILL NOT trust them. And if it happens enough, you will begin to see the cause as nothing but a dishonorable attempt at control and subversion. THAT is why policing of your self is so important, because you don't want to cure the disease by killing any potential victims... well, dead people dont catch diseases I guess... problem solved &lt/sarasm&gt

  81. Well meaning but deadly (missing part c) by SysKoll · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In the previous comment, I meant to add: (c) MTBE was profitable to sell, and now it's profitable to remove

    Sorry for the incomplete post.

    -- SysKoll
    --

    --
    Mad science! Robots! Underwear! Cute girls! Full comic online! http://www.girlgeniusonline.com/

  82. The question is much more simple(no, really) by dangermen · · Score: 0

    You have two choices each with appox. two outcomes each.
    1. Do nothing, odds are the evironment will get worse and people will suffer.
    a. If this is the right thing to do: then we aren't any worse for the wear
    b. If this is the wrong thing to do: then we're screwed when the environment collapses

    2. Start cutting back on resource usage and save the environment
    a. If this is the right thing to do: then we saved our behinds from having famine, disease, etc.
    b. If whkis is the wrong thing to do: then we end up with a better environment with a better quality of life for our children

    Now ask yourself, you want to gamble by taking #1's stance, or do you want to play it safe? Because if the environment takes a digger, science isn't going to do squat for us. Look at how we can hardly predict the weather past 24 hours! Do you trust your life with that? I sure as hell don't.

  83. How do you measure opportunity costs? by rlglende · · Score: 1


    Regulations have costs. Lower economic growth translates into less science, medicine, culture, opportunity for the less fortunate of the world.

    Higher death rates among children world-wide, more AIDS cases and less chance of a cure, ...

    Even if I buy the 'risk analysis' approach, I don't see how to measure the costs of any intervention in the same scales: would we trade $100,000T in world-wide economic costs due to ignoring a high-risk climatic problem and the $100T costs vs continuing the economic growth and curing cancer, AIDS, providing clean water world-wide, etc.

    The point is, this is not mere $ we are talking about, but rather the many long-term advantages that mere $ and associated economic growth bring us as both individuals and as a species.

    Lew

    --
    "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
    1. Re:How do you measure opportunity costs? by snarfer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Regulations have costs. Lower economic growth translates into less science, medicine, culture, opportunity for the less fortunate of the world.

      Instead of mindlessly repeating Republican Party slogans, how about explaining how regulations lead to lower economic growth?

      Regulations lead to lower profits for some campaign contributors, like Enron.

      But please explain how having more energy efficiency LOWERS economic growth? Sure, it brings in less money to oil companies. But if we are spending less on gas, and less to heat and cool buildings, and less to power our industry, and less to purchase oil from the Middle East, how does that LOWER economic growth???

    2. Re:How do you measure opportunity costs? by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2
      Regulations lead to lower profits for some campaign contributors, like Enron.

      Ahh, the ad hominem/guilt by association bogey man of the moment. Just to clear things up - Enron SUPPORTS environmental regulations, specifically the Kyoto Accords. It gave 1.5 million to environmental groups and lobbied the Clinton administration hard for Kyoto. (does guilt by association work both ways?) To quote the Washington Post:

      The Clinton administration's interest in an international agreement to combat global warming also dovetailed with Enron's business plans. Enron officials envisioned the company at the center of a new trading system, in which industries worldwide could buy and sell credits to emit carbon dioxide as part of a strategy to reduce greenhouse gases. Such a system would curtail the use of inefficient coal-fired power plants that emitted large amounts of carbon dioxide, while encouraging new investments in gas-fired plants and pipelines -- precisely Enron's line of business...

      On Aug. 4, 1997, Lay and seven other energy executives met with Clinton, Gore, Rubin and other top officials at the White House to discuss the U.S. position at the upcoming conference on global warming in Kyoto, Japan. Lay, in a memo to Enron employees, said there was broad consensus in favor of an emissions-trading system.

      Enron officials later expressed elation at the results of the Kyoto conference. An internal memo said the Kyoto agreement, if implemented, would "do more to promote Enron's business than almost any other regulatory initiative outside of restructuring the energy and natural gas industries in Europe and the United States."

      But please explain how having more energy efficiency LOWERS economic growth?

      Umm... It usually costs more. This is most likely in those cases where it must be imposed by government regulation. If it made sense financially (energy cost savings made up for higher initial costs) then businesses and individuals would transition over without government coercion. And it's not just efficient consumption of energy but clean production, which also costs more. There are also issues that have nothing to do with energy production or consumption. CFC emmission controls mean that refridgeration equipement is more expensive. Refridgeration is a seriously life-enhancing technology that most people in the third-world already suffer by not being able to afford. Making it much more exensive not only has significant negative impact on the economy but a significant negative impact on health and life-span. Which in turn can ironically have a negative impact on the environment.

      This is not to say that many environmental regulations aren't beneficial - just that there is almost always a cost and in some cases that cost in some cases can be quite high. If government doesn't attempt to evaluate these costs and weigh them in the balance with the projected benefit we are likely to make some very poor choices. It is probable that we may even do more environmental harm than good. Wealthier nations have far lest environmental impact than poor nations. If overzealous regulations trap developing nations below a certain threshold their net impact would be negative.
    3. Re:How do you measure opportunity costs? by TRACK-YOUR-POSITION · · Score: 1
      It's at least possible, though, that more regulation could result in lower costs. Because of network effects, we might be caught in a sort-of local-minima. For example, there might exist a better type of automobile engine that runs on something cheaper than gas, consumers could not adopt it for lack of gas stations converted to the new fuel, while stations would not convert because consumers will still drive their old cars.

      If the government steps into this hypothetical world and simply orders everyone to use the new style engine, it would reduce economic costs.

    4. Re:How do you measure opportunity costs? by uncadonna · · Score: 2
      How to do economic measurement is much more to the point than how to do climate modeling, where at least the fundamental principles (classical physics mostly, with a sprinkling of chemistry here and there) are at least agreed upon.

      A nice book called "The Hidden Order" by somebody Friedman but not Milton, explains the market libertarian argument clearly, rigorously and succinctly, not to mention smugly. It is worth reading and utterly wrong.

      The easiest way to disprove a hypothesis containing the word "always" is to find a single counterexample. In this case I find it easy enough. Requiring and funding universal public education removes the freedom of the individual to decide whether it is to their own advantage to attend school. Which societies, then, are better off in the aggregate? Those with universal mandated public education, or those where poor people are allowed the free choice of sending their children to work at an early age?

      The fundamental error of the Friedmanesque argument (I think he is related to Milton, IIRC) is the presumption without demonstration that the net change in well-being is the sum of the aggregate individual changes in well being, and that the well-being of the surrounding context is not affected in any way except by direct effects on individuals.

      While my children may be worse off by a few pennies by not stitching together sneakers for rich people, in other words, they are better off for being more likely to live in a world with better opportunities.

      This is the fundamental intention behind all regulations, whether they are well-designed or horribly botched. Of course, every regulation reduces the universe of choices and hence has an immediate negative impact. Stopping the analysis there is pretty silly, though.

      --
      mt
  84. Try or die doesn't work in this case by Ghoser777 · · Score: 2

    Okay, so there's a 1 in 1000 chance that global waming may happen, and then's there some chance that it's bad (there's good evidence that it could be good as well). So it's a try or maybe have some bad stuff... that may kill us all, but we're all guessing. But there's a pretty good chance that making any systematic changes that would stop the "impending doom" would take years to implement in an economically sound way. The more draconian approaches would definetly hurt economic growth and industries, as many renewable technologies are still being refined. And we all know that global economic down turn can be bad (hint: look at WWII, but add some nuxes).

    Oh, and guess what. The environmental lobbies and scientists have financial interests too. They get paid for studying stuff that matters. If there's no problem, they get no funding. Remember the Ozone-hole threat back in '92? NASA blew that one way out of proportion. It actually shrank! But they did get some good money to do research.

    I'm not saying scientists are evil capitalists; many of them are good people with good intentions, but the only way they get funding is by making a threat out of a situation that may not be a threat at all.

    F-bacher

    --
    James Tiberius Kirk: "Spock, the women on your planet are logical. No other planet in the galaxy can make that claim."
  85. About time by letxa2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    It's about time we see more work like this published.

    Environmentalists have been spewing whatever "facts" they want for years and, as mentioned in the intro, the media has bought it hook, line, and sinker.

    There are two guilty parties here:

    1. The environmental "scientists." They claim to be scientists--and many even are, by title. But I also feel a scientist has a responsibility to the truth of what he reports. When scientists start using their title as "scientist" to pass off unsubstantiated theories and hypothesis as verified results, they've lost all credibility as scientists and really ought not to be able to call themselves "scientists" anymore. They are liberal environmentalists with an adgenda and already know the results they want before they perform the "experiments."

    2. The Media. We all know the media is biased. Nothing new. But when it comes to the environmentalist movement it's incredible how much latitude they are given by the media. An environmentalist can release a press report "Study shows that farting may contribute to the ozone hole." The news reports it as fact. You read the story and the report a little more closely and you find out that a study has shown that farting has increased 20% in the last decade and the ozone hole has increased 19%... so it MIGHT be possible the farting caused the ozone hold expansion. There's no distinction made by the media between cause and effect and just random correlations of data.

    In all, the whole environmentalist movement is tainted by bad scientists who report what they want to beleive, not what the data proves, and by the media that blindly reports whatever these people spew without due diligence in reporting the validity of the claims.

    Is it a good idea to reduce pollution? Sure, the days look nicer when there's a nice blue sky above us. Is it a good idea to conserve energy? Sure, saves on the construction of new plants and saves us money. Should our cars be more efficient? Sure, it'll let us stop at the gas station less frequently, save us money at the pump, and reduce our dependence on foreign oil.

    Do I think that the ice caps will melt and flood New York City and Los Angeles if I drive my car too much? No.

    Do I think it's the end of the world if some unknown bug species in Brazil goes extinct? No, many species have come and gone over time, this is nothing new.

    Do I think huge and powerful hurricanes are going to become common because of global warming? No.

    Do I believe environmental models that, every time more and more factors are taken into account show less and less environmental change? No.

    Do I believe environmental models that don't even take into account the affect of CLOUDS??? Come on.

    Get the facts straight and then let's talk about what can or should be done. In the meantime, the environmentalists can do their part by trashing their old polluting VW Buses and getting a more efficient, cleaner car that's been produced in, say, the last 10 or 15 years!

    1. Re:About time by metachimp · · Score: 1
      The environmental "scientists." They claim to be scientists--and many even are, by title. But I also feel a scientist has a responsibility to the truth of what he reports. When scientists start using their title as "scientist" to pass off unsubstantiated theories and hypothesis as verified results, they've lost all credibility as scientists and really ought not to be able to call themselves "scientists" anymore. They are liberal environmentalists with an adgenda and already know the results they want before they perform the "experiments."


      I'm guessing you never took any environmental science classes in college. If you had, you'd see that your blanket statement about environmental science just simply isn't true. My environmental science prof was not some "liberal political agenda" type. There is, in fact, hard science to be learned here. Do you know what a rain shadow is? Do you know what the term "carrying capacity" means? Do you know what a microclimate is? Do you know what riparian zones are? These are not wishy-washy liberal political views, but observable, quantifiable scientific realities. Environmental science is a real discipline, with real research. Going out to the field station to observe and collect data about how these natural systems function is not a political agenda, but rather something that can be observed, hypotheses can be tested, and conclusions can be drawn.


      It's true that some people with a political agenda pick and choose from environmental science data to try and prove their points, but that does not mean that the entire field of study is bogus.

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
    2. Re:About time by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      There is, in fact, hard science to be learned here. Do you know what a rain shadow is? Do you know what the term "carrying capacity" means? Do you know what a microclimate is? Do you know what riparian zones are? These are not wishy-washy liberal political views, but observable, quantifiable scientific realities. Environmental science is a real discipline, with real research.

      I did not say that environmental science is not a real discipline. At least it's a real area of study.

      My comments apply to what I called environmental "scientists." By quoting the word "scientist" I mean those people--or even scientists--who use the title "scientist" to spew information that is not based on fact nor which has beeen proven but, by using the word "scientist," cause people to assume that they can trust the information provided.

      In other words, if I am a scientist and have an unsubstantiated opinion regarding global warming, it is irrelevant that I am a scientist. If I haven't studied it then my opinion is no more important than any other educated person's opinion. That being the case, I should not flaunt "scientist" when someone quotes me.

      Further, even if I were an ENVIRONMENTAL scientist and was espousing some opinion regarding global warming I would do so with the greatest of care when presenting both my opinions and my work-in-progress. We simply know too little to call anything regarding global warming a "conclusion" or a "fact"--and I would go out of my way to make that disclaimer with any announcement I made regarding my research.

      The problem I have with these environmentalIST "scientists" is that lately the vast majority have a political adgenda and look for data to give them ammunition. They then hope to affect some political change based on what they KNOW (or should know) is incomplete data. That is not science, that's politics.

  86. Excellent Review by SimonK · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Thank you. I've been wanting to write one for ages, and now you've done it for me, and written pretty much exactly what I would have done. Now, if you'd just post it to kuro5hin, that would be even better :)

    A couple of random points: Are you sure that Lomborg's cost-benefit analyses ignore costs to the extent you imply ? My understanding is that he's included all effects that could impact humans, but ignored those that only impact the natural world. Of course, such analysese are tricky, and arguable completely worthless, so there's no guarantee he has got it right. However, in principle, if the lesser-spotted fenge cricket of outer mongolia has no known impact on human wellbeing, it seems quite defensible not to consider its loss a cost.

    I agree that catastrophic changes, such as switching ocean currents, or positive feedbacks, are very serious possibilities. These kinds of things, where the probability is low or unknown, but the potential consequences are catastrophic, are the hardest issues to deal with. I cannot buy into the "precautionary principle", that we must avoid possible problems, even if there is no evidence that there really is a problem, because it seems to undermine out standards of evidence.

    I agree absolutely about the treatment Lomborg has received. It is a disgrace. The number of scientists who have butted in merely in order to dismiss his credentials, or complain at even having to respond, and then obviously failed to even read the book is appalling. It is equally appalling how many people on the "other side" have picked up Lomborg and equally misrepresented him as being completely opposed to all environmental controls. Unfortunately all these misrepresentations, which oddly enough turn out to be very similar, show up in the comments here. On that note:

    Lomborg does not claim everything is fine. Nor does he claim all environmental research is fraudulent. Indeed, he cites lots of it. Although many of his critics have accused him of abusing statistics, very few such claims appear to be supported (one or two are). Its just easier to snicker "lies, damned lies, and statistics" than it is to engage in a serious argument. A few serious errors in the book have been spotted by various people, but these do not, in fact, damage the book as a whole.

    To see that, you have to understand the skeleton of the argument being made. This breaks up into bits. The first "big picture" claim is that most people believe things that are just plain wrong about the state of the world: that population is growing out of control, or that disease is more prevelant now than ever before. Lomborg refers to this broadly eroneous picture of doom as "the litany". Environmentalists tend to play on this, even though they often know it to be incorrect, because it helps their cause. Lomborg takes them to task for this.

    However, Lomborg also makes a series of other, largely unconnected, claims about the scientific consensus in different fields. For instance, he disagrees with many biologists about species extinction rates, and with the IPCC about the Kyoto treaty, but agrees with the UN about population growth. These various claims stand or fall alone, and although they reinforce the overall case that most people have an exaggerated idea of how bad environmental problems are, attacking one does not destroy the whole thesis of the book. In different fields, Lomborg is either with the consesus, but that consensus has failed to penetrate the media and acitivist organisations (population), differs only slightly from the consensus, but believes the political action being taken is wrong (global warming), or opposes the consensus because he believes it to lie on statistically shaky foundations (species extinction).

  87. Greens taking over the world? Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Read this for a more intense idea of how Greens are thinking these days. Every time I read this I like the idea better.

  88. No by SimonK · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Lomborgs claims are well within the remit of science. It behooves anyone who believes him to be wrong to reply as a scientist, not as a high priest trying to cast the impostor out of the temple. Its not like he's claiming the invisible sky pixie is going to save us or something.

  89. Um, no. by Watts+Martin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Greenland got its name as a joke from its discoverer (Erik the Red, IIRC). He found both Iceland and Greenland and reversed their logical names deliberately, to steer others away from the one that was actually green.

    And, no, global warming would not be good for us. The ocean currents on the planet would shift radically, and weather patterns would follow. This would Really, Truly Suck. And we haven't gotten to coastlines receding, but as someone who lives in a coastal Florida city, I can assure you it'd bother me.

    There's an old joke abut George Bernard Shaw being bothered by a female fan at a party, until he asked her, "Madam, would you sleep with me for a million dollars?" She repliced, "Of course." "Then," he asked, "would you sleep with me for ten?" She was offended, saying, "What kind of woman do you think I am, Mr. Shaw?" He replied, "We've already established that, madam--we're just haggling over the price."

    I think of this a lot when I listen to the debate on global climate change. The majority of the scientific community recognizes that there is a trend to global warming and that human activity does affect climate. The debates now are--or should be--establishing just what the correlation is between the two.

    The problem is that at least in some models--which seem to be supported by empirical evidence--ecosystems absorb a lot of abuse until they're overloaded and collapse abruptly. This means that dire warnings can always be put off--look, things obviously aren't that bad, the sky hasn't fallen, you Chicken Little!--until the catastrophe the Chicken Littles were warning about happens. And, like the Y2K problem, public health and airport security, spending on preventive measures definitionally appears to have no effect: success means things continue as they are without catastrophe. You only see failures.

    1. Re:Um, no. by nathanm · · Score: 2
      Greenland got its name as a joke from its discoverer (Erik the Red, IIRC). He found both Iceland and Greenland and reversed their logical names deliberately, to steer others away from the one that was actually green.
      No, it really was green. There've been archaelogical excavations of agricultural settlements (~1000 AD) currently under ice. The mini ice age (~1500-1800 AD) made agriculture impossible there.
    2. Re:Um, no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problems:
      Most of the "scientific community" which so strongly beleives in the strong correlation between humans and the environment, have no real expertise in the area, and from personal experince are mostly biologists, and gained their belief without using any scientific methods.

      What bothers me is that so much effort is put into the pseudo-science of climate change, while people ignore the far more important pollution issues, which have a solid basis.

  90. cato funding by coltrane99 · · Score: 1
    This may be true, but there are some very interesting articles to be found at this google search:

    Right Here

    Rupert Murdoch is on the board of directors, as is the CEO of TCI. Major media companies are in a position to promote a think tank in ways that cannot be measure in dollar amounts...

    1. Re:cato funding by Psion · · Score: 1

      Gee, isn't it possible that some of these people are interested in CATO because the conclusions it supports are ideologically attractive to large corporations? That is, you seem to assume that because CATO receives money and attention from Big Business, that Big Business is responsible for the content of CATO's messages. It is also possible that Big Business supports CATO because CATO says things it agress with. Correlation does not equal causation.

    2. Re:cato funding by coltrane99 · · Score: 1

      This isn't science, it's policy. Correlation is very close to causation when you are talking about public policy. If someone is pulling your side of a tug-o-war, they're on your damn side.

    3. Re:cato funding by freecat · · Score: 1

      Rupert Murdoch recently left Cato's board, because he never attended any board meetings. Beyond that, all the arguments about Cato's corporate support are nearly meaningless, because, as was already mentioned, the majority of Cato revenues (80+ percent according to its annual report) comes from individuals' annual donations, with thousands of sponsors giving anywhere from $50-$500, and several hundred above that range. Compared to other think tanks, it's corporate support is very small (8% or so according to their annual report), and in fact most large corporations HATE Cato's work, which is highly critical of corporate welfare in all its forms.

  91. Total gov burden is inversely related to growth by rlglende · · Score: 1


    There have been thousands of studies on this: taxes + regulation = total gov burden.

    The higher the total gov burden, the lower the economic growth.

    This is clearly predictable: Regulation and non-uniform taxes are attempts to program for an open economic/social environment, generally with no testing. Impossible/insane on the face of it: if we carefully close off our (relatively very simple) computer systems from change, follow a process religously, and test like hell, we can produce (relatively very simple) computer programs that don't crash the system too often.

    Lew

    --
    "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
    1. Re:Total gov burden is inversely related to growth by snarfer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There have been thousands of studies on this: taxes + regulation = total gov burden. The higher the total gov burden, the lower the economic growth.

      Those are slogans, not "studies".

      Here's a simple study for you to try. Go look up the periods if highest taxes on the rich and corporations and place that over a chart of economic growth rates. You are in for a big surprise.

      After you see the results of that simple study - ask youself WHO benefits from feeding the public slogans saying less public oversight of businesses is good for them.

    2. Re:Total gov burden is inversely related to growth by tevita · · Score: 1

      You may well have a point here, but can you show me where you get this data so I may look at this objectively. I am not being sarcastic here, I am truely curious about this data ...

    3. Re:Total gov burden is inversely related to growth by tempest303 · · Score: 1

      As am I! Please provide some links, if available - I'd be very interested in seeing something like this.

    4. Re:Total gov burden is inversely related to growth by cryptical · · Score: 1

      Here's a simple study for you to try. Go look up the periods if highest taxes on the rich and corporations and place that over a chart of economic growth rates. You are in for a big surprise.

      That the post-WWII era had high growth and high taxes? (I'm just guessing). Maybe we should tax everything at 100%, then we'll have infinite growth? Were there any other factors involved in
      the growth during the period?

      After you see the results of that simple study - ask youself WHO benefits from feeding the public slogans saying less public oversight of businesses is good for them.

      It's good for the customers of the business, because they ultimately pay the cost of regulation
      through higher prices for goods and services.

      To extend that idea a bit further, corporations don't actually pay corporate taxes, consumers do.
      The tax is just obscured in the price the customer pays.

    5. Re:Total gov burden is inversely related to growth by dachshund · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This is not a zero-sum game, of course. Regulation can be beneficial to many industries, allowing them to avoid tragedy-of-the-commons scenarios, and to access certain resources that they might not otherwise be allowed to.

      In the most basic case, simple law and contract enforcement is an example of government regulation at work. I don't know too many libertarians who argue that we'd be better off without these things. Instead we look to strike a balance between necessary, helpful regulation, and unnecessary, damaging regulation. That balance can be hard to strike sometime, but blanket anti-regulation sentiment often goes too far, and forgets about the need for an intelligent balance of regulation... in favor of "throw the baby out with the bathwater" scenarios.

    6. Re:Total gov burden is inversely related to growth by rlglende · · Score: 0


      Simple law, yes. Contract enforcement need not be a gov service.

      As for the rest, you continue to assume a Newtonian clock-work universe, predictable into the infinite future.

      This kind of thinking produced the FDA (just to select one of many insanities), which continues to kill far more people than it saves, both via direct effects of regultions and by the opportunity costs of lowered economic growth. We consequently have both a regulated system and one based on legal liability.

      So sorry, the world isn't a Newtonian system, but a chotic system with a very close prediction horizon.

      The gut-level understanding/assumptions of our entire society are completely wrong. The genius of our Constitution, no longer followed, was that it prevented gov from acting on these stupid assumptions.

      Lew

      --
      "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
  92. Greenpeace elves versus Foresight gollums - fun! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    This reminds me of something slashdot censored:

    Now that the con artists on Wall Street are getting into what they call 'nanotech' and leading governments are starting to restrict basic science for fear of "terrorists", it's not surprising that the Foresight gollums and Greenpeace elves are starting a wary catfight. Each seems unsure about what the hell the other is talking about, but seems to see the other as a rival to take over the world and control "The Precious" AI and nanotech. It's hilarious.

    Most highly recommended for amusement value are this rant from LSMcGill who claims among other things that "Ethical and moral debate is worthless" (which someone should tell Josh Storrs Hall) and that it's a choice between Foresight and bin Laden(this stuff must be easy if you can do it in a cave in the boonies while being carpet bombed!) and this unofficial stupid Al-Gore-like plan to take over the world by 'safely building a nice Bible type gardener God'. I nearly fell off my chair! Clearly these people are all on some kind of crack.

    Also amusing are these heated exchanges between Dr. Frankenstein and Unabomber wannabes on kurzweilai.net and the thousands of amazing 'Also By Anonymous' posts at Greenpeace - takes a looong time to load (from Amsterdam) but well worth it!!!

    Just read the anonymous post titles and you will feel exactly like you spent a week in a 'coffee house' over there! Better than a vacation in a crackhouse. Reality ranges from +0.95 to -3 on their own weird scale. Why not wade in wherever? Like slashdot anonymous folks are welcome but unlike slashdot they don't fall out of the list due to such silly stuff as scoring.

    Enjoy!

  93. Wrong by SimonK · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Go and read the book. Now. Or at least look at it. Creation scientists are basically at odds with the whole edefice of scientific naturalism. Lomborg is just saying that some of the claims often made about the environment are wrong. In most fields he is not contradicting the scientific consensus at all, just pointing out how it has been misrepresented. On some occasions, he does point out that claims made by scientists (biologists get a hard time) are not supported by empirical evidence, but you do not need to be a specialist to make such a judgement. Indeed, as a statistician, he has the qualifications required.

    He is also eminently reasonable. If you go and read his website, you'll see several admissioms to errors in SE (seen Henry Morris do that ? thought not), and several serious efforts to answer his critics.

    Now stop propogating slanders and go an learn what you're talking about.

    1. Re:Wrong by RealityCrutch · · Score: 1

      It is sad how many 'Technically Inclined' people cannot make a distinction between rhetoric and scientific debate. SA has been promoting hack science for some time now. So sad.

  94. I think I'll read the book by Honeydipper+Dan · · Score: 1

    cman's review appears to be balanced and was very informative, so I think I'll read the book. I am tired of the same old gloom and doom story, anyway.

    Things are slowly getting better. Here on Lake Erie it is like night and day compared to thirty years ago. In developed countries, I suspect most people would say they value the environment (but would they give up their SUVs?). I think there is a middle ground, but it is not easy to see where that may be since you are either a true believer or not.

    I appreciate the comments linking to additional information on both sides. I think this is an appropriate topic for /. since it raises ethical issues related to technology.

  95. thousands killed by CAFE by mikeee · · Score: 2

    It shouldn't take a lot of deep thinking to realize that if we retrofit buildings and build more efficient cars it HELPS the economy.

    Fair enough. But does it help more than it hurts? If the increased productivity by itself is enough to justify it, people will do it without regulation.

    Mostly, though the regulations requiring more efficient cars have caused the SUV boom and gotten thousands killed driving tiny subcompacts that crumple like tinfoil in a serious crash.

    1. Re:thousands killed by CAFE by snarfer · · Score: 1

      regulations requiring more efficient cars have caused the SUV boom

      Did you actually think this made sense when you wrote it? WHo feed you these slogans?

      Mostly, though the regulations requiring more efficient cars have caused the SUV boom and gotten thousands killed driving tiny subcompacts that crumple like tinfoil in a serious crash.

      I guess you missed Frontline last night, about how many people are dying in SUV rollovers.

      The auto companies could buld safer cars. But let's not start another topic. They fought seat belts, they fought air bags... called it "government regulation" and spent lots of money contributing to politicians who fed slogans to YOU.

    2. Re:thousands killed by CAFE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Show me how they fought seatbelts (considering that my grandfather never drove a car without one). Yes, they opposed airbags, for exactly the same reason that (30 years later) the government (finally) figured out that an airbag can KILL YOU. Especially if you are small (like children). Now we have all these warning messages, but it only took your wonderful government a few decades to do serious research and figure it out.

  96. it depends... by Quazion · · Score: 2

    It is within the lifetimes of most of Slashdot's readers that we begin to get answers to these questions.

    It depends on how long slashdot will stay alive not ? Will the OSDN survive that long...will the internet...

    Quazion.

  97. If it's political, then you must do politics dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it's political, then you must do politics, dude! No choice. It's like software only without a working OS. Check out GlobalGreens.org for instance - some very cool stuff written there!

  98. Yes, but by SimonK · · Score: 3, Informative

    The book published in Denmark was less complete than that published in the UK and USA. It also contained several errors that have been corrected, as well as some that have not.

    I seriously recommend that you read the book as well as the rebuttals. Many of them badly misrepresent Lomborg's case.

  99. I'm rather hoping for it by maxpublic · · Score: 2

    I rather hope that global warming is real. Imagine - natural changes generally take place over thousands or tens of thousands of years. If global warming is real and extreme, I might be able to witness widespread planetary alterations in my lifetime! How exciting!

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  100. No by SimonK · · Score: 2

    No conspiracy is required. Lomborg is exactly with the scientific consensus in most of what he says. His criticisms are mostly of the interpretations that have been made of the scientific data.

  101. It's the poor who suffer by iangoldby · · Score: 1

    Well, that's good news for NYC cormorants.

    Unfortunately, not everyone is so lucky. Environmental disasters inevitably hit the world's poorest the hardest, in countries with underdeveloped infrastructure and emergency relief services. I've summarised the following from the most recent edition of "Tear Times", the magazine of the charity Tearfund.

    The 1990s saw 87 natural disasters, compared to 20 in the 1950s. The world's poor often have to live in the most dangerous places: river banks, flood plains and cyclone areas. They have no access to modern construction methods that protect against severe weather.

    Nur Mohammed used to live with his family on the beach at Hatiya Island in the Bay of Bengal. He survived on fishing and could not afford to move elsewhere. Three months later, the place where his shack used to be is another kilometer out to sea.

    65 Bangladeshi families live in a certain village on the banks of the Brahmaputra River. Each year the village floods to six feet and the water remains for 6 months. Many die from malaria. 'If I had the chance to go somewhere else I would', says Anwar Islaam. 'This is worse than before.'

    It's the West that produces most of the CO2 emissions. The West can probably cope with more storms and sealevel rise. The innocent poor cannot.

  102. Real Green Parties are those in the GlobalGreens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GlobalGreens seems to run the only world conference of Greens, who are in most democratic countries as a full party. They recognize the Green Party of the US (Association of State Green Parties), Nader's org, and run those press releases on their web site. So that's the Greens' idea of who the US Greens are. The old party is leftists.

  103. Absolutely by SimonK · · Score: 2

    Lomborg is largely in agreement with other environmental scientists in this. However, their concern tends to come through to the general public as a conviction of impending doom. This is the problem SE was written to counteract.

  104. stability of Gulf Stream currents *is* global war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Europe's climate drops an average five degrees or gets chaotic around the Med, you are talking four hundred million high-tech people who both have the capacity to produce bioweapons and AI, *and* who kill each other over ** S O C C E R ** already! So this is the end of the world clearly.

    I wouldn't piss them off!

  105. Not willing to submit by bbaskin · · Score: 1

    Even if the environmentalists, et al. are right, I don't want their medicine. The end goal of the most fervent wings of the movement is to have humanity returned to a pre-industrial condition in scattered pockets amidst the untamed wilderness. Get ye to Google and look on "Wildlands Project map" or "Man and Biosphere" for indications where the U.N. and it's green wings want to take us.

    Keep in mind that to enforce environmental regulations will require greater and greater government control. Also remember the governments have been the single most destructive force in the 20th century, killing nearly 200 million of their own citizens, and scads more in times of war. We do not want the enforced depopulation of humanity.

    Go research the end-game of the environmental movements most fervent believers and decide which is the greater threat, higher water or slavery.

    I choose to live free, even if it kills me. And I mean that.

    Bryan Baskin

    1. Re:Not willing to submit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The end goal of the most fervent wings of the movement is to have humanity returned to a pre-industrial condition in scattered pockets amidst the untamed wilderness."

      You've just exposed the fallacy of your argument; by taking the outliers from a particular population and presenting them as indicative of the views and goals of the population as a whole, you're committing the fallacy of reducto ad absurdum.

      Likewise, I could look at the population of those who mistrust internationalization and call them all neo-fascist racists who live in fear of black UN helicopters and believe the world is controlled by Zionists.

      -Baka!

    2. Re:Not willing to submit by bbaskin · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'd agree completely except that demographics != influence. Just because the "fringe" are few in number do not mean that they unduly influence policy. That's supposedly one of the concerns of campaign finance reformers. In this case, I think that the WWF and UNESCO hold these views and really aren't "fringe" groups. And they do have lots of sway. More mainstream groups like the Sierra Club also profess support for the Wildlands Project, although perhaps they really don't know what it's goals are.

  106. URGENT - support Daschle's (US) energy bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you care about this, don't waste time typing here, go to this campaign at Greenpeace to support Senator Tom Daschle's alternative energy plan - the Senate votes on it on only a week, in late February!

    1. Re:URGENT - support Daschle's (US) energy bill by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you guys accuse Lomborg of being out only for politics, not scientific truth.

      Ha!

  107. Some are, not all by SimonK · · Score: 2

    Come to that, some of the SA rebuttals are OK too. However, it is Lester Brown, not Lomborg, who is fighting the scientific consensus on population, and EO Wilson spends most of his bit bemoaning being disturbed from his majesterial slumbers, and attacking Lomborg's credentials. Like Wilson is great respecter of intellectual turf. Not.

  108. Scientific American shredded it for good reason by chaucerwells · · Score: 2, Informative

    The very lengthy article in Scientific American pointed out that the reason Bjorn Lomborg's book has been so strenuously criticized by environmental scientists is that the book goes to great lengths to misconstrue, misquote, and otherwise misuse the studies that he so liberally references in his text. The authors of the studies he (mis)references are some of his loudest critics. The SA article backs this criticism up with detailed critiques from several scientists from different fields of specialty. Each critique provides numerous specific examples of how wildly off the mark Lomborg's use of the source data is, and how it difficult to understand how he could arrive at some of his conclusions if he had in fact actually read and understood the source data that he quotes so liberally. This entire debate is regrettably yet another example of how most people will believe whatever is the most convenient regardless of what facts are staring them in the face.

    1. Re:Scientific American shredded it for good reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. thank you!!! anybody who criticized the SA article, you're an ass.

    2. Re:Scientific American shredded it for good reason by Akoman · · Score: 1

      I think some of the best critique's coming out of the Scientific American article is that of Lomborg's use of statistics. He is supposed to be a statistician, yet he never gives any thought to explaining the probabilities behind today's current theories beyond how his assumptions rule them out, or to the broad range of options that today's environmental scientists consider. There are several groups working on different global predicitions based on certain assumptions and Lomborg only really cares about the 'best-case scenario' group.

    3. Re:Scientific American shredded it for good reason by HarderDeeperFaster · · Score: 1

      You are the one who is part of the problem. Scientific American has a history of running crap. Take at look at their late 70's article that claimed that cocaine is not addicting.

      The response in SA was not very strong on statistics or facts. What is clearly staring us straight in the face is that the enviromentalist are liars and not particularly prone to getting their facts straight.

      Someone finally had the guts to call "Bull shit"

    4. Re:Scientific American shredded it for good reason by tgibbs · · Score: 1
      There are several groups working on different global predicitions based on certain assumptions and Lomborg only really cares about the 'best-case scenario' group

      Huh? Did we read the same book? Lomborg discusses the range of global predictions and the assumptions they are based in some detail, as well as many of the statistical uncertainties. He even presents some graphs showing the divergent predictions of different models.

  109. Who owns the atmosphere, or the oceans, then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Who owns the atmosphere, or the oceans, or the gene pool, or the rivers, in your model, dude?


    You have simplified the universe to fit your arbitrary philosophy. That isn't an answer. You still need good means of collective decision-making for things too big for one person even to comprehend, let alone manage.

  110. Hold on now!!!! by Art_XIV · · Score: 2

    Let me get this straight... somebody wrote a book that had opinions in it? I have never heard of such a thing.

    And he favored facts and statistics that helped validate his hypothesis? I am absolutely floored. I cannot picture people doing this.

    Am I understand this correctly? It seems that people who agree with him are happy with his book, and people who don't agree him are upset. Once again, I am stunned if this is the case.

    Francis Bacon sort of summed it up -

    The human understanding is no dry light, but receives infusion from the will and affections; which proceed sciences which may be called "sciences as one would." For what a man had rather were true he more readily believes. Therefore he rejects difficult things from impatience of research; sober things, because they narrow hope; the deeper things of nature, from superstition; the light of experience, from arrogance and pride; things not commonly believed, out of deference to the opinion of the vulgar. Numberless in short are the ways, and sometimes imperceptible, in which the affections color and infect the understanding.
    --
    The only thing that we learn from history is that nobody learns anything from history.
  111. It's so bad here that Mars is warming up, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean it's getting so we're starting a solar system warm up.

  112. To lay your examples at the feet of "greenies"-- by schmaltz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    isn't very honest. My recollection about HCFCs (the replacement for CFCs used in compressed aerosol cans) was it was presented by industry.

    Bezene? Environmentalists' choice? Another example of industry's reaction to the environmentalists. Even if, but the correlation between leaded gas use and childhood lead-related disease complex is strong and proven. In countries where leaded gas is still used (most of the rest of the world), urban urchins have higher lead blood serum levels -South American cities are an excellent example.

    "irrational attitude" -ad hominem attacks are certainly a sign of rational thinking!

    "Emotional action without fact checking or a reality feedback loop almost invariably produces either a random disaster, or the exact opposite of the intended action. Environmentalism is no exception."

    As a "reality feedback loop", try living in countries where environmental controls don't exist: again, Latin America, where beaches are so polluted with raw sewerage that you can't go there for risk of typhoid and other feces-transmitted diseases. Try living on the shores of the Rio Pinheiros or Rio Tamanduates in Sao Paulo, Brasil, which are essentially open sewerage canals!

    --
    Big Daddy, Johnny, Burp, Aunt Zelda, Scott, Slurp, Big Momma ... where's Siggy?
  113. Be Careful John by nickynicky9doors · · Score: 1

    You're wilderness hiking along a saddle in the high alpine. The trail's degraded and is crumbling away toward a cliff. You've checked out the cliff face, it's fairly sheer and you know if you fall your dead or critically injured. The trail is a deep narrow rut cutting past the rootwork of the plants holding the soil in place. Is the trail safe today? Will the recent rains bring on a mud slide and sweep you over the edge? No amount of feasible analysis will tell you if the trail is safe. When the larger conclusions fail over a small segment of the (data) trail and you sketter over the edge failed analysis won't be the *greatest* impact.

    Analysis in these matters cannot be conclusive but when we're dealing with our habitat we had better error on the side of caution. I was raised hiking, hunting and fishing. I no longer hunt or fish and I now rarely hike. But the wealth of wilderness experience I have informs me with certainty that if the parameters of the environment shift inimically then most certainly there'll be hell to pay. Try surviving a couple of chill nights wet from the rain with little food and water. Be careful John. The gun might really only have blanks in it but you never know.

    --

    heuristic algorithm seeks stochastic relationship
  114. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by oni · · Score: 2

    Now, which of the following responses to your post is most appropriate? Select only one.

    a. Thank you for your thoughtful and poignant reply. Your insightfulness has moved me to accept your learned viewpoint.

    b. Wow, that guy really set you off. Huh? Considering the juvenile nature of your response I have decided to give further deference to your opponent's views.

    or

    c. I will not feed the trolls. I will not feed the trolls. I will not feed the trolls.

  115. We will only help the environment when forced to by w3woody · · Score: 2

    Lomborg quite correctly points out in his chapter on pollution that the worst pollution effects are the results of the early and middle stages of industrial development. Here he states that things are getting better in the developed world and as technology advances, the environmental impact of human activity will be reduced.

    To clarify, I'm not a "doomsday" environmentalist, meaning I do not believe that all those cans of hairspray used to maintain beehive hairdoos in the 60's will cause the Earth to spiral into the sun.

    However, while it is true evidence suggests that the developed world is better at manufacturing things than the developing world when it comes to pollution output verses productivity, that's not an inevitable result of technological advance. That's because of politics.

    Politically the constant push of the environmentalists have forced manufacturers and power generation plants and car makers to reduce emissions in the United States. We have decided, in a sense, that the environment is worth the increased monitary and R&D expense that it cost to create smoke stack scrubbers and reduced emissions fuels and higher-efficiency cars. The current push for electric vehicles is not because the technology inevitably leads to putting a bunch of batteries into a high-performance golf cart and calling it a car; it's because environmentalists in California have dictated by law that a certan percentage of cars must be electric in the near future.

    Take a look at Texas, where certain environmental controls have been negated or loosened. Some of the worse pollution in the United States occurs along the Tex/Mex border, in large part because no-one cares, the laws aren't in place, and if given a choice between polluting or spending a huge amount of money on pollution controls, factory owners in Texas have demonstrated they'd rather keep the money. The only thing that prevents them from polluting even more than they do is the potential cost of litigation.

    Look; I believe a lot of environmental research is bogus. I was there at JPL when they first noticed the hole in the ozone--I saw the first pictures--and I remember a researcher telling me that the good part about this is that, if phrased as an environmental disaster, it would assure his research group continued funding for years. And I also used to work for a company who made "short runs" of printed circuit boards (about a hundred or so a month), who used to clean the toxic flux off the boards in a dishwasher hooked up to the main sewar line. (That shit's toxic waste, yet they didn't care they were flushing this stuff down the city sewar line. After all, it was just a hundred printed circuit boards worth--not that much, right?)

    So I know that while a lot of this big-picture stuff may be bogus, if people aren't checked, by and large their apathy will cause more damage to our immediate environment. (After all, how can Mankind's CO2 be doing such damage to the global weather patterns when a volcanic eruption can put out more CO2 in an afternoon than all of Man's pollution in a year? Yet take those hundred printed circuit boards and multiply by all the printed circuits produced in the LA basin, and think of all that flux working it's way into the drinking water supply.)

    I like to think of it as "think locally, act globally." I don't think we can accidently destroy the entire earth's ecosystem. But we sure as hell can mess up the air and water and greenery around a city--making our lives quite miserable in the process.

    And I'm happy for the greens--not because in some unforseeable future we've reduced the chances of the sea level rising up and washing half of Los Angeles away. I'm happy because environmental laws have decreased the number of "unhealthful" air quality alerts that have been issued here since the 80's. I can now run along the Highway 5 corridor without feeling that my lungs are about to melt from the toxic waste in the air.

  116. SUV boom caused by CAFE by mikeee · · Score: 2

    If you sell cars in the USA, and their average fuel economy is below X (about 25mpg, I think?), you have to pay a huge fine.

    As a result, the automakers stopped development and manufacturing of the big station wagons people used to buy. (Wagons which, by the way, didn't easily roll over).

    SUVs, however, are *trucks*, and thus exempt from CAFE. Thus these are pushed to anybody who wants a big car, even though they're worse for the environment and user than a big-old Caprice wagon would have been.

    Certainly, you can build safer cars. But the most obvious way to make a fuel effecient car (make it tiny) makes it more dangerous, and CAFE, pervesely, encourages trucks with poor, dangerous handling.

    1. Re:SUV boom caused by CAFE by geekoid · · Score: 2

      that is interesting because nearly all SUV are now built on cars frames, not truck frames.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:SUV boom caused by CAFE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give an example or two.

  117. you dumb people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    make me sad

    1. Re:you dumb people by WinPimp2K · · Score: 1

      You are correct sir! I am dumb. That is why I posted a text based reply rather than a .WAV or (to be Slashdotically Correct) a .ogg file so you could hear my voice.

      If you wish to cast aspersions upon my intellect, well then I did indeed spell "pollution" wrongly.

      If you meant something else by your remark, I suggest:
      1> you explain your reasoning.(in academic terms, "show your work")
      2> you apologize for your obvious error
      3> we continue this discussion through our seconds.

      ... umm wait.
      I'm replying to an Anonymous Coward. I am dumb!

      --

      You either believe in rational thought or you don't
  118. Remember the Bell Curve? by m.o · · Score: 1

    This book and its rebuttals remind me of a book called "The Bell Curve" published several years ago. A scientist (or two) publishes a book in which he expresses certain views, and suddenly becomes a target of ignorant media whose arguments are "he is a racists pig" or "he is a soulless statistician". Interesting how scientific debates suddenly become personal and pointless... I hope this guy reacts as professionally as the Bell Curve authors.

    1. Re:Remember the Bell Curve? by metachimp · · Score: 1
      The Bell Curve was such an odious piece of work. The author of The Bell Curve had an agenda, that agenda was attempting to indicate that racial and ethnic background had some sort of bearing on intelligence. He used some statistics on standard IQ tests to indicate that Asians and Ashkenazi Jews were the smartest, whites were somewhere in the middle, and blacks were the least intelligent. His research was just plain faulty for too many reasons.


      The case with this guy is that he is trying to inject some kind of middle ground into the argument. I haven't seen much made of the the fact the he considers himself a Viridian green. Viridians take the position that we can have modern industry and be ecologically responsible at the same time, which I happen to agree with. I think that many people who don't like the (unworkable, utopian) idea that we can all go back to a pastoral existence where we all have a minimal impact on the environment can get behind the Viridian idea, which looks to the future as providing the technology and sensibility that we don't have to give up everything to stop having such adverse effects on our world.

      --
      The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
    2. Re:Remember the Bell Curve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Murray reacted professionally? Obviously, you haven't been reading the AEI reports he's been writing! It's a tragedy, because I still own and profit by Murray's earlier work; it's just when he fell in with his co-author that his work started to fall apart.

      TBC is a shoddy, horrid piece of hackwork that masquerades as science. Amongst its sins: it uses a single measurement of intelligence, applies a single multifactorial analysis, and engages in selective use and discussion of primary research.

      More damning is the simple fact that Murray and Hernstein don't understand the science they pretend to adhere to. Genetics, to them, is a giant black box that organic chemicals go into, and fully formed humans emerge from. In all of that giant cube of a book, they spend no time discussing such disciplines as genetic analysis, molecular genetics, or population genetics -- the field that they are writing about! They can't even be bothered to eulicidate the distinction between genotype and phenotype, since admission of strong environmental factors in phenotype would undermine their thesis.

      To make matters worse, the only heredity researcher they discuss in any detail is Francis Galton, the long-discredited eugenicist who espoused an Aristotelean (rather than Mendelian) form of inheritance. Not a good start.

      "The Bell Curve" is a terrible piece of work, but it snowed most lay reviewers because of the amount of statistical data. Geneticists of every political persuasion have condemned the work, and found its conclusions in the worst vein of scientism.

      -Baka!

    3. Re:Remember the Bell Curve? by Untimely+Ripp'd · · Score: 1

      The funniest thing about the Bell Curve is that the authors draw the wrong conclusions from their own data. Assuming that all of their analysis of the data were valid (it probably isn't, but don't get hung up on that) here are the primary claims and conclusions of the work:

      a. Genetics accounts for 50 - 80% of the variability in intelligence.

      b. People with IQs below 95 are much more likely to be criminals, to have accidents, to do second-rate work at whatever jobs they do, etc.

      c. The genetic IQ bell curve for blacks is shifted to the left with respect to that for whites.

      Therefore:

      It is misguided to try to create equal opportunity on a racial basis -- blacks are just on average dumber, and on average, they're going to do less well. In fact, almost all policies to alleviate poverty are doomed to fail, because the poor are just too genetically inferior to profit from stuff like government preschools, prenatal health care, or whatever else.

      HOWEVER: The huge leap in illogic happens when they fail to take into account the relationship of claims a and b. In fact, if 20% to 50% of the variability of IQ is environmental, then with appropriate intervention we can almost certainly shift almost the entire curve below 95 IQ up above that cutoff. Their own data strongly suggest that this would dramatically improve productivity while reducing crime, teen motherhood, health care costs & miscellaneous other social ills that derive from stupid people behaving stupidly.

      Remember, I don't necessarily accept all of their analyses; I'm just pointing out that if their analyses are correct, their conclusions are ridiculous.

      P.S.
      Yes, I know that it's a bit strange to talk about shifting a norm-referenced curve. There will always be approximately the same proportion of people below 95 IQ, but the meaning of 95 will change over the decades. Blah blah blah.

      --

      And let the angel whom thou still hast serv'd tell thee ...

  119. Responses by SimonK · · Score: 4, Informative

    That error is covered on Lomborg's website at www.lomborg.com in the "corrections" section. There is also a complete rebuttal of the WRI/WWF critique under "criticism/responses". To summarise: they are selective, and they misrepresent.

    1. Re:Responses by cDarwin · · Score: 1
      Hmmm. Thanks for the pointer. Looks like I'll have to do a little reading :)


      By the time I have done enough reading to post an informed reply, this story will no doubt be archived. Great topic, though!

      --

      --
      Socrates was asked where he was from. He replied not "Athens," but "The world."

  120. geeks and the environment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that, until now, I naively thought that 'geeks', whatever that means, would naturally tend to environment-loving.

    but, the tenor, and sheer ignorance and suspension of disbelief of so many of these postings, just makes me sad.

    1. Re:geeks and the environment? by TheAwfulTruth · · Score: 2

      Geeks are plainly anti-environment. At least computer geeks are. Computers and techno gadgetry as a whole are extremely environment unfriendly. Geeks (as a whole) don't really care at about that at all. I.e. leaving the computer on 24/7 to get more RC5 numbers for thier team is far more important to any geek than realizing that leaving the computer on causes air pollution. Not to mention what went into making that new whizbang video card or where the old card it replaces will go. Geeks by nature are generally self serving and not open to other peoples opinions or views as well. This also leads to anti-environmentalist actions. Not by thought mind you. I think all geeks would SAY that they are all for the environment. But very very few of them actually DO anything about it...

      --
      Contrary to popular belief, coding is not all free blow-jobs and beer. Those things cost MONEY!
    2. Re:geeks and the environment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ISTM that geeks are above all pro-honesty. You can't track down a bug in your program if you are unwilling to look at what your program is actually doing. Likewise, you can't reach a rational decision about what the best way to save the planet is if your only data are false claims made for political (and financial!) purposes.

      Of course, it's just like the greens to accuse anyone who doesn't take their claims as 100% gospel Truth of being anti-environment.

  121. I"m confused. by Xiver · · Score: 1

    >> But by attacking the book and the author so shrilly, the environmental community risks its own hard-won credibility.

    The environmental community has credibility?

    --
    10: PRINT "Everything old is new again."
    20: GOTO 10
  122. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Thank you for being yet another content free critic of Mr Lomborg. But you need to work on your polemics before you can write for Scientic American

    Thanks,
    the editor

  123. Facts and figures in The Skeptical Environmentalis by gdr · · Score: 1
    The best thing about Lomborg's book is the tables and graphs. He gives you the raw data, with references, and then interprets it. You can argue with his interpretation, but you can't argue with the data.

    Most of the criticisms that I have read of this book (including links from comments on this article) don't contest the data represented.

    There are many interesting facts and figures in this book which you would not believe if Lomborg didn't supply references.

    Examples:

    The relative cancer risk (HERG) of the average daily intake of alcohol 3.6, ETU 0.002 (highest pesticide figure). [Figure 127]

    Acid rain has no noticable effect on tree growth [Figure 98]

    Smoke, lead, SO2, ozone, NO2, CO concentrations in the air (US and UK) decreased steadily over the last 25 years [Figures 88, 90, 92, 93, 94, 95]

    There are many more. Look at the data he represents (ignore the interpretation if you like) and this book will give you something to think about. Also with all the references you can check his figures yourself. When was the last time you read anything from an environmental lobby group that you could say all this about?

  124. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good analysis. Definetly worth reading at +5 (even if you disagree).

  125. Re: Errr, thats easy... by NullPointer · · Score: 5, Informative

    OK, I'll bite, how about Sagan's prediction after the Gulf war:

    Shortly after the first oil wells began to burn, Carl Sagan appeared on ABC's Nightline and predicted that " the net effects would be similar to the explosion of the Indonesian volcano Tambora in 1815, which resulted in the year 1816 being known as the year without a summer" (p. 37,
    1992).


    Or, how about the great frozen earth from 1975:

    Climatologists are pessimistic that political leaders will take any positive action to compensate for the climatic change, or even to allay its effects

    Or, what about the great earthquakes that were predicted in The Jupiter Effect:

    Such was the forecast of a scholarly and well-documented book entitied The Jupiter Effect, coauthored in 1974 by Cambridge astrophysicists John Gribbin and Stephen Plagemann. The book targeted 1982 as a time when meteorological and geological activity would build up and become intensely magnified thanks to a variety, of physical mechanisms operating simultaneously. Highlighting the forecast was a massive and disastrous earthquake on the southern section of the San Andreas Fault near Los Angeles.

    Should I go on...

    --
    NULL
  126. Do your own homework and you avoided the point by rlglende · · Score: 1


    Following is a series of replies both asking for links and avoiding the 'programming for an open environemnt' issue.

    I read the London 'Economist' for years: they referenced them in an annual economic review.

    Searching Google for "taxes regulation 'economic growth'" produces 85K results, many of which look good.

    As a data point, Wanniski recently quoted a source to the effect that 1880 - 1896 had 30% wholsale price reduction and 40% (I am not positive about that number) increase in wages. This at a time of high immigration, no income tax, ... We don't see growth like that any more.

    I believe there are few doubters among economists about the effects of regulations and taxes on growth rates: the most regulated economies routinely have the highest unemployment and lowest growth rates and greatest poverty, although there are time- and geographic-local exceptions: Scandanavia got away with socialism for a few years, Germany for a few more, ...

    I have lived long enough to see many different countries hailed as the socialist model for the US to follow. All have had serious economic (and consequent social) problems, all are trying to back out of their socialism, with limited success.

    The social/economic system is far beyond human comprehension in its complexity. Clearly, we cannot predict with any precision (if you can, go to Wall Street). If we can't predict, how can we prescribe via taxes and regulation?

    Our goal must be the minimal set of laws that produce a stable political-economic-social system. The US Constitution came close.

    Lew

    --
    "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
  127. A few obvious things commonly missed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) The title is misleading. Skeptical, yes, but the author is apparently not an environmental scientist. The title then, misrepresents the book as a criticism from with the environmental field. Valid (arguable in the case of the book) criticisms from any source are useful; It's the misreprestation that is a problem.

    2) Everybody is clear on the fact that the environment is complex and very incompletely understood. Some people seem to think that this is justifies not doing anything. This is obviously wrong for many clear reasons. If you don't understand something and you don't want to break it, you take care not to mess with it. Additionally, as illustrated by many, many situations like the mess at the DOE Hanford, WA site, it is much easier and cheaper to not mess things up in the first place than it is to clean it up later. Not being careful in the first place is not usually justified by not understanding what the consequences are.

    3) The carrying capacity of the environment is not infinite. Humans have been fairly adept at extending this capacity

    1) The title is misleading. Skeptical, yes, but the author is apparently not an environmental scientist. The title then, misrepresents the book as a criticism from within the environmental field. Valid (arguable in the case of the book) criticisms from any source are useful; It's the misrepresentation that is a problem (and yes, the misrepresentation is deliberate).

    2) Yes, environmentalists that scream the "sky is falling" have an interest (e.g. staying employed) in promoting environmental issues even when the issues are wrong. This basic argument can be leveled at almost everybody, including Lomborg (who, one would guess, is getting some value in having his book published). It is extremely rare that someone does not have an interest in something even when they are correct!

    3) Everybody is clear on the fact that the environment is complex and very incompletely understood. Some people seem to think that this is justifies not doing anything. This is obviously wrong for many clear reasons. If you don't understand something and you don't want to break it, you take care not to mess with it. Additionally, as illustrated by many, many situations like the mess at the DOE Hanford, WA site, it is much easier and cheaper to not mess things up in the first place than it is to clean it up later. Not being careful in the first place is not usually justified by not understanding what the consequences are.

    4) Relatedly, one should never wait until "everything is understood" about something before one worries about not messing it up. A lack of understanding of something obligates caution. (The argument that we really should determine if "global warming is true" before we stop spewing crap into the amosphere is just plain stupid. There are enough arguments for reducing pollution even if global warming is false or if the earth gets clobbered by a meteor.)

    5) The carrying capacity of the environment is not infinite. Humans have been fairly adept at extending this capacity but that is not an argument that we should not be more careful about trashing the environment.

    6) A vast number of people like things like trees, eagles, mountains. Once gone, these things are hard to get back. A vast number of people don't like things like polluted air, radioactive contamination, toxic food. Once there, these things are very hard to get rid of.

    These points are pretty-much irrefutable even if you are not a "tree hugging" environmentalist! They represent basic, widely applicable principles. If you disagree, substitute something you like that is rare, expensive (your car, your house, your computer, your significant other), for the word "environment".

    1. Re:A few obvious things commonly missed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) The title is misleading. Skeptical, yes, but the author is apparently not an environmental scientist. The title then, misrepresents the book as a criticism from with the environmental field. Valid (arguable in the case of the book) criticisms from any source are useful; It's the misreprestation that is a problem.

      Funny how when Lomborg worked for Greenpeace, the greenies had no problem considering him a scientist, but now that he dares to question their religious idea of Truth, they change their mind...

      As for your other points, you clearly have not read Mr. Lomborg's book. If you had, you would know that he believes very much in preserving the environment, and understands what many greens do not -- that an indispensable first step in doing so is to know the truth about what is and is not happening.

  128. Re: Errr, thats easy... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

    You may have bitten, but I think it was more that you can chew...

    None of these theories can be seriously compared to that of global warming due to the greenhouse effect. For the most part, they are the work of a few publicity-craving scientists...in the case of global warming, we're talking about something that has been studied extensively over the past two decades, by dozens (if not hundreds) of scientists. Comparing those fringe theories to global warming is a little bit like comparing the current black hole theory (which may indeed turn out not to be true) to something like Edmund Halley's Hollow Earth theory.

    What I really meant is, what other contemporary serious threats are there, i.e. ones that have as much impact as global warming and with as much body of research about it?

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  129. Statisticians are hip cats - no lie by chipotle_pickle · · Score: 1

    This is a bad quote. "You know what they say about people who become statisticians? They lacked the personality to become accountants." People say that about actuaries, not statisticians. I wont say if I agree or not. About statisticians people say that we play fast and loose with the truth. Unfair, but its what they say. If Devra Davis can't keep geek zoology straight ...

  130. My bad... by Archie+Steel · · Score: 1

    Hmm, actually, Cyrus Reed Teed was the "Hollow Earth" nutcase I was thinking of...though Edmund Halley did seem to believe in it.

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
  131. Save me from your comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I hate to sound nihilistic, but in the end, we're just another species on this planet that will eventually go extinct.

    Even if this were a given, do we have to hasten our way to this fate? Why is defeatism often painted as realism?

  132. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by dgroskind · · Score: 2

    Hatred is the most accessible and comprehensive of all unifying agents...

    The environmental movement may be based on misinformation, unfounded fear or outright deception but it is not based on hatred.

    The World Resources Institute's stated purposes is: WRI is an environmental think tank that goes beyond research to find practical ways to protect the earth and improve people's lives.

    In so far as there is a "unifying agent" it is an appeal to people's concern for others, not their hatred.

  133. Naess by kritikal · · Score: 1
    Naess has made 8 major points about man in the environment and how to resolve it:

    • the well-being of humans and non-humans have value
    • the richness/diversity of things contribute to the value of the well-being of all things
    • humans have no right to reduce diversity of any species (plant or animal) directly or indirectly except for vital needs
    • the flourishing of human life and culture necessitates a decrease in human population which leads to smaller communities and would tend to lead to a better ecology
    • there is already too much human interference within the non-human world
    • policies therefore must be changed
    • the ideological change is to appreciate life quality over standard of living
    • if you agree to the above, you are obligated to implement the necessary changes


    although i haven't read this book, if he doesn't cover these 8 things, it may be considered incomplete by all followers of Naess.
    1. Re:Naess by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      the well-being of humans and non-humans have value

      True. The trick is assigning values to both. Regardless, I would put more value on the well-being of humans.

      the richness/diversity of things contribute to the value of the well-being of all things

      While I'm not against diversity by any means, I certainly don't use it as a measuring stick to determine my well-being or the well-being of a culture.

      The value of any particular given diverse element is a matter of opinion. I personally am not bothered by the fact that there are far less Nazis now than there were 60 years ago. A Nazi might not agree with me.

      humans have no right to reduce diversity of any species (plant or animal) directly or indirectly except for vital needs

      Says who? That's hogwash.

      Humans are the dominant species on this planet. That position has given us the right to do whatever we want. The environment and evolution aren't governments that are exist, in great part, to protect the weakest elements. In fact, environment and evolution prefers the strongest element. In this case the strongest element is man.

      You can argue whether there is justification for humans to reduce diversity in any given situation, but to say we don't have the right to do so flies in the face of the most natural of laws: survival of the fitest!

      the flourishing of human life and culture necessitates a decrease in human population which leads to smaller communities and would tend to lead to a better ecology

      Where did he come up with that crap? How does he know or conclude that for human life to flourish requires a decrease in human population?

      The fact that there are 6 billion people on this planet and that many are starving doesn't mean we need to reduce the population to 4 billion. It means we need to get better and more efficient at taking advantage of the resources this planet has to offer. Our planet can easily support many more than 6 billion inhabitants.

      This idiot is suggesting a return to tribal culture. That is 1) Naive, it's not going to happen. 2) Probably not what 99.99999% of the world wants, which means it's not an improvement in quality of life or standard of living to that majority.

      Besides, evidence exists that shows that just because there is a small tribe doesn't mean that they will have better ecology. Just check out what happened at Easter Island (Rapa Nui). A small population effectively destroyed their island.

      there is already too much human interference within the non-human world

      So?? I find there to be too much non-human interference in my human world. Those pesky mosquitos that bite me. Cockroaches that dirty things up. Alligators that take bites out of people that, as part of nature, have as much right to be in a swap as they do.

      The difference is evolution has caused us to become the dominant species and can do something about it; and that the other species just have to live (or die) with it. Tough luck, better luck next time.

      policies therefore must be changed As if any of the previous points had actually formed any basis on which to determine that something is wrong and what should be done.

      All of the previous points are matters of opinion. You can't (or shouldn't) base policy on opinions.

      the ideological change is to appreciate life quality over standard of living

      In other words we need to be satisifed to have a lower standard of living in order to have a higher quality of life?

      This guy is a liberal looking for a way to justify redistributing wealth. Which is what environmentalists really are about. It's not a secret, ugly conspiracy. It's just a fact which is obvious to anyone who really looks at what these people espouse.

      Environmentalists and their policies make no sense from an environmental standpoint. By jumping through hoops to protect species they presume to know more than evolution and survival of the fittest. 30 years they argued that we were going to enter another ice age, now we're into global warming. It is obvious the environmentalists know zip about the environment and science. Just investigating their claims and contradictions proves that. So what's left? A political adgenda.

      They are looking to transfer wealth from first world countries to third, foruth and fifth world countries. It's that simple. Rather than trying to improve conditions in developing countries they'd rather subsidize them with handouts from successful nations.

      This is not that hard to stand, nor is it a conspiracy theory. It's obvious. As someone else mentioned, just look at the proposed "end solution" of these people. Right here they are saying that to have a higher quality of life we must have a lower standard of living (i.e., less money, less property, etc.). And we must do this in the name of the environment.

      Please, if you have a communist political adgenda just say it. To hide it and wrap it up in an environmental babble...

  134. Misquotes: verifiable and annoying, so go research by geekotourist · · Score: 3, Insightful
    In general, if complaints about a study/ article / book include "misquoting," you can verify if the complaints are true. Good authors don't misquote, instead they give an accurate quote and then demonstrate why the quote is wrong.

    I haven't read the book, and only a few of the reviews in Scientific American / other mags, but now I'll have to find the time. Of all the accusations, the one of misquoting is the worse one. Anyone can be bad at science or statistics and write about it- peer review will reveal the weaknesses and a good scientist will admit their mistake and go on. But misquotes makes someone else look bad- you've tied them to a strawman and they have to prove they aren't the strawman's maker while simultaneously demolishing it. You're forcing them to look defensive, even though, in fact, they have no reason to be defensive, because the misquote isn't their real argument.

    A good review of quotations and misquotations used in arguments is in the proposed talk.origins (creation evolution) Misquotations FAQ.

  135. More information about Bjorn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For more information on Lomborg be sure to check out these articles:

    Lomborg Lands in DC to Demolish Eco-Terror Myths by Duane Freese

    Green with Rage by James K. Glassman

    Bjorn's Long March by James Pinkerton

    Bjorn Again! Fundamentalist Greens Launch Smear Campaign by Ronald Bailey

  136. completely wrong - being eco-friendly can KILL by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Yes, it absolutely CAN hurt us to be eco-friendly. In some cases it can literally kill us.

    Consider malaria. Malaria infects 300-500 million people annually and kills around 2 million of them. (source) The single most effective way to kill mosquitos and to reduce the incidence of malaria is DDT. Unfortunately, DDT has potent negative effects on the environment, so your naive "it can't hurt us" position would argue that we should totally ban DDT. Unfortunately, that's literally a death sentence for thousands if not millions of people living in tropical nations.

    This is a somewhat dramatic example, but my point is that eco-friendliness DOES have very real consequences in some cases, and we need to be careful about weighing those consequences against the benefits. If we're talking about recycling paper and plastic in a developed country, well, yeah, the benefits are reasonably large and the consequences are probably trivial. But don't assume that's true for every environmental problem the world faces.

    More information here.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
    1. Re:completely wrong - being eco-friendly can KILL by bugrogers · · Score: 1

      ...The single most effective way to kill mosquitos and to reduce the incidence of malaria is DDT....
      Although it's recently become popular to say so, the truth is not so simple. DDT IS an inexpensive way to control mosquitoes, and so is seen as an attractive way to deal with a problem that tends to be found in poor countries. It is effective, largely because it and its relatives (the chlorinated hydrocarbons, such as endrin and dieldrin) has not been used much in the last quarter century, so resistance to DDT in mosquito populations has dropped off. Employ it on a large scale and mosquitoes would soon become resistant...just as they and many other insects did the first time around.
      "Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it."- George Santayana

    2. Re:completely wrong - being eco-friendly can KILL by real+gumby · · Score: 1

      This is a false dichotomy.

      I agree that malaria is worse than DDT for humans (though the other damage it does to the ecosystem is also clear, if harder to determine the impact of).

      But the consistent use of bed nets for a couple of years would wipe malaria out (since the parasite requires a human host for part of its life cycle). Unfortunately short-sighted (as bad as US and EU) textile trade protection in many thirld-world countries prevents the importation of bed nets by aid organizations even if the country doesn't produce them.

      Of course both of us are in agreement that people typically look for black/white characterisations of complex problems, and come up with short-sighted "solutions" as a result. But your example doesn't hold up.

  137. Reality strikes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As humans we are changing our environment. Damaging it, possibly to the point of irreparable harm. Somewhat like rolling a rock to the crest of a hill. At one point the rock takes over and rolls out of control.

    But, we also as a species will do whatever necessary for our individual survival. Where is the greatest destruction of forest taking place? In the industrial forest in British Columbia, or the rain forests where poor peasants clear land to farm for a few years then move on. The choice is starve or farm. This brings me to my main point.

    Environmentalists may be able to motivate, lobby, coerce to get some area or animal protected. They may be able to rouse the populace to do 'the right thing'. But as soon as the economy suffers as a result, any gains they have made will be reversed. This has happened with startling clarity in British Columbia. Before the last provincial election, the NDP saw that they needed to court the environmental vote, which is substantial. So they closed vast areas to logging, and did a whole number of things such as banning grizzly hunting, maintaining the moratorium on fish farming, etc. They brought in a Forest Practice Code which added huge costs to the forestry industry. The problem was that the economy has been gradually going down hill. Not all the fault of these things, but they are easy to blame. So they lose very badly in the election. The current government has lifted the grizzly hunting ban, seriously considering lifting the fish farm moratorium, possibly lifting the ban on oil development off the west coast, going to 'streamline' the forestry regulations. All with the goal of getting the economy going.

    So who wins? Frankly nobody. But here is a question for you all. Which province, British Columbia or Alberta has the most stringently enforced CFC regulations? If you are at all familiar with the politics in the two provinces, you would think BC. But you are wrong. Alberta has. By far. If you live in BC, phone the CFC emergency hotline to see who you get.

    Why is that the case? Because the regulations were put together in Alberta by the local industry. In BC by the environmentalists.

    Frankly, I don't have much hope for this world to get it's act together. Everybody is to blame.

    Derek

  138. thank you by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2

    You took the words out of my mouth. I'm keeping an open mind about Lomberg's claims and trying to examine more evidence, but I was infuriated by the rebuttals that claim Lomberg is wrong but provide no concrete evidence to back up their assertions. The SA article in particular really angered me.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
  139. Re:Real Green Parties are those in the GlobalGreen by greenguy · · Score: 1

    Please note that greenpartyus.org and gpus.org are the same thing. The "old party" is "old leftists," but there are many leftists in the GPUS as well. They're just non-traditional leftists.

    --
    What if I do the same thing, and I do get different results?
  140. Remember global cooling? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back in the 1970s, talk was all about global cooling. The latest fad will pass too...

  141. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Detritus · · Score: 2

    The Left gets most of the heirs to family fortunes who feel guilty about their wealth.

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  142. The 'religious' nature of the science by anvilmark · · Score: 1

    This entire argument reveals the religious aspects of our current scientific estabishment.
    1) It has 'priests' who dispense esoteric knowledge and the accepted understanding of reality to the masses.
    2) All the facts are not known and in some cases, are unknowable at the current time. This forces people to choose what they want to believe as an act of faith.
    3) Those that are not 'priests' cannot question the pronouncements of the hierarchy.
    4) 'Priests' and 'acolytes' must be very careful how they question the 'dogma'.
    5) Those that challenge the 'dogma' are attacked, labeled 'heretic' and ostracized from the 'body' (Perhaps even 'killed' as far as their career goes).

    There are many other organizations that function this way (cults, governments, etc), I'm not singling out science as the only one. The scientific establishment, however, makes claims to be 'objective'. This claim should make them MORE willing to be questioned not less willing.

    And the reality that the scientific establishment allows itself to be eventually convinced of a truth ('continental drift',etc)does not invalidate it's current 'religious' structure. The Catholic church eventually admitted that the earth orbited the sun, but only when the evidence was overwhelming.

    Truth defends itself, character assasination is the refuge of those who, without firm foundation, are 'married to their ideas'.

  143. uh, sorry by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2
    inarguable truths that indicate a stance that is green-er (not Green, but greener) is necessary. Ever taken a trip to a solid waste facility? All those guys can talk about is how they are running out of space because of all the unnecessary trash we generate.

    Remember The Princess Bride? "Inconceivable!" "I do not think that word means what you think it means."

    I'd have to say the same about your "inarguable", because I'm now going to argue agsint it. You're saying that we generate too much trash, and the proof is that solid-waste facilities are running out of space. Fine, so existing facilities are running out of space. But there is plenty of space for trash on the planet. Ever been to, say, Montana?

    Yes, there are downsides to generating too much trash, and we don't want to have to truck it all around, and we don't want the world to become a big dump, and we shouldn't use virgin resources when we can easily recycle. I agree with all those things. But your conclusion that it's "inarguable" that we're running out of space for solid waste is just stupid.

    As for your oil argument, I'm curious to know which countries are "doing it right". Modern life requires energy. How do you propose to generate said energy? Gas has the same potential supply problems as oil (though it's cleaner), nuclear generates nasty waste, dams destroy river ecosystems, windmills and solar only work in some places and in any case are only suitable as complementary sources of power (you can't store energy for use when the sun is down or the wind isn't blowing), etc. Personally I hope fuel cells work out for cars, but to the best of my knowledge nobody has successfully mass-produced those yet.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
    1. Re:uh, sorry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, there is plenty of space for trash on the planet. We are still running out of it, are we not?

    2. Re:uh, sorry by rhakka · · Score: 1

      the countries that are "doing it right" are the third world nations that are slowly moving ahead with energy plans, i'm sorry, I can't recall specific countries.

      the premise was, however, that building a conventional energy infrastructure in these countries would be prohibitively expensive, whereas a decentralized energy plan utilizing non-point source energy like solar and wind power generation actually made more economic sense, given their lack of a standing infrastructure to utilize. Later, if they grow, these decentralized networks can be tied together if necessary.

      the end result is that they would have a large, decentralized, and self-sufficient energy network; stable energy costs, and minimal reoccuring expenses related to energy.

      as for not being able to store solar or wind power, that's patentedly untrue. Ignoring batteries, a simple pump and tank of water can store energy quite simply; power the pump to push water up hill, release it and run it back down to turn a generator when you need the power. simple. if you have a water supply (and if you don't, you're not living there..) and any kind of incline handy, you're all set.

  144. Malaria, DDT, and parachuting cats by loose_change · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The concerns about DDT use aren't from environmental "fears", but from demonstrated environmental catastrophe.

    In the 1950s (iirc), the World Health Organization wanted to wipe out malaria in Borneo. They sprayed liberally with DDT to kill the mosquitoes. The DDT also killed a parasitic wasp that laid its eggs in the caterpillar that ate the thatch used for roofing. Without a predator, the caterpillar population grew, they ate their natural food, and the people's roofs fell. The WHO replaced the thatch with tin roofs, and so all seemed well until the locals began to get typhoid and sylvatic plague.

    It happened like this:

    • Lizards ate the bugs laced with DDT.
    • Cats ate the lizards and were killed by the pesticide.
    • Without a predator, the rat population grew, and the diseases spread.

    That's right, the plague, brought to you by the World Health Organization.

    In order to get the rat population back in check, cartons of stray cats were dropped into Borneo by parachute.

    1. Re:Malaria, DDT, and parachuting cats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think about it for a second, the plague can be treated and cured, if, a big IF, if it occurs (btw, it didn't in the Malayasian example you provide, only an increased risk), whereas malaria can not, and in these little shitholes it is a given that you will be infected.

      So it comes down to a choice, constant malaria you have for the rest of your life or the plague which can be cured.

    2. Re:Malaria, DDT, and parachuting cats by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      The concerns about DDT use aren't from environmental "fears", but from demonstrated environmental catastrophe.

      I did not say the fears weren't legitimate. I acknowledged the real environmental damage in the conclusion of my post. My point was that even in that case where there is a real and known environmental danger there is a real cost, in the case of DDT it is a cost measured in human lives. As a counter-example to the disaster in Borneo look at at the case of Sri-Lanka which used DDT in an anti-malaria campaign that brought the death rate due to malaria to as low as 17 deaths in 1963 when they stopped using DDT. By 1968-69 malaria deaths were back up to 600,000 in 1968.

  145. Sanity Check by Catamount · · Score: 1

    The Green movement is not scientific by the very definition. It's just a mass movement which is an exact opposite of science. So, there's not too much doubt that it promotes many theories that can't stand any sound scientific critique.
    One of such theories is "Global Warming Theory" (GWT). While I absolutely accept that using hydrocarbons as a fuel is at least sub- optimal, the claims of the coming GW doom sound to me funny at best and mostly paranoid.
    Everyone who had ever seen the infrared spectra of carbon dioxide and water would understand what I mean. Cartbon dioxide is IR- transparent except one sharp peak at about 1700 reciprocal centimeters. Water (vapor included) absorbs every IR photon in the huge range between 500 and 3600 reciprocal centimeters (almost all of IR spectrum). Given the concentration of water vapor in the atmosphere and the fact that 3/4 of all the terrestrial surface is ocean which captures 100% of IR radiation and converts into heat, the effect of man- made carbon dioxide is *infinitesimal*. All the rest, including the looming disaster is pure fiction, well on par with Perpetuum Mobile home- made. The thing happening really, is just Earth's slow return from the Ice Age to the long- time "default configuration".
    The second thing is that thoughout its history, the Earth tended to be much warmer than now, and it effectively never recovered completely from the Ice Age. It was global cooling and not warming that was main killer of all times. Lets's see. The dinosaurs extinction was caused by a meteore impact that caused global cooling. Even greater but less known Permian/Triassic extinction was also caused by the same scenario- first meteore impact, than Winter Olympics for every lifeform. Maybe the most spectacular and interesting one was the Pleistocene disaster (the Ice Age, not over yet) that devastated all the megafauna then in existence and created landscapes that we currently call deserts, tundra and icecaps.
    You've surprised that deserts are also created by cooling? Well, look at the map. There are no deserts in the equatorial area which is the hottest on the Earth. Australia used to be covered by rainforest when the climate was warmer. Cooling reduces the precipitation, thus aridifying the whole continents.
    The same is true for another Green hoax. I mean so- called ozone layer depletion. This theory is simply too stupid to talk about it seriously. (In the first place, ozone layer plays no role in the UV protection of Earth). The worst thing is that Greens were effectively used by some companies who wanted to gain extra $$ by outlawing Freons. They were used like a ram by the corporations they claim to detest, and it's quite an indicator of their IQ.
    I think that Mr. Lomborg wrote a very good book. It's just the time to expose the environmentalists' real face- one of ignorance, paranoia and compensatory agenda. It's time to understand that there's no wisdom in the Green Movement other than "If I'm afraid to drive I must invent the reason why cars are bad". It's time to switch to real problems, especially ones of brainwashing, manipulation and mental health.

    1. Re:Sanity Check by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      Thank you, Catamount, for your post. You really hit it right on the head.

      We haven't seen any changes in global temperature that can be attributed to humans with certainty. Nor have we seen any changes in global temperature that are out of line with temperature changes over earth's geologic history.

      And even if the temperature were to rise (or had risen), we don't know enough about how the earth works to be able to know whether that is a good or bad thing.

      If the temperature rises perhaps the ice caps will melt and people in Los Angeles will have to relocate to higher lands... but perhaps the increased temperature will cause increased humidity and rain and cause the Sahara desert to bloom into a tropical forest capable of feeding the millions of starving people in that area of the world. Would that not be a good thing?

      The environmental movement is based on 1) Funny science that doesn't have any convincing evidence to support their theories. 2) The assumption that even if their theories are right that the end result would be bad. 3) A socialistic adgenda.

      In all, scientists should present theories, test them, and publish their results. If they want to institute policy they should get into government. Then again, communists haven't had very good luck which is probably why they try to institute their policies under the guise of science.

  146. Shape of the earth by KjetilK · · Score: 2

    2. The earth is flat

    No. I wrote a long essay about this once, but rather than post it: Here's the thing: It is possible that Thales of Milet, generally regarded as the first scientist held that the earth wasn't round. This is controversial because his pupils certainly did say that Thales held the earth to be a sphere. After that, no scientist has seriously held the earth to be flat. Aristotles made several proofs for the spherical shape of the earth. The circumference of the earth was measured by very high accuracy by Erastotenes long before the birth of christ.

    However, some "learned christians" held that the earth was flat in the early 4th century, before Augustine came around to reconcile Platos teachings with christianity. That was the end of flat earth among any "learned" men.

    The claim that Colombus had to argue that the earth was spherical is absurd. The argument was on the distance to Japan, scholars argued that it was much too far to be travelled by ship. And guess what: They were right.

    --
    Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  147. Great! Now privatize the atmosphere. by hey! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Given a certain discount rate (that is to say assumptions about the time value of money), it is often economically rational to liquidate the land, for example in many kinds of mining operations. Likewise, farming or fishing practices that may not be sustainable over a twenty year or longer horizon may be economically rational based on their increased immediate productivity to the individuals making the decisions about how to exploit a resource.

    In theory, as land is degraded, the marginal value of the remaining undespoiled land goes up, providing a disincentive from despoilation. Except that there may not be any mechanism for a land owner to recoup this value. The land owner rationally bases his exploitation decisions based on excludable benefits and costs -- that is how he will benefit as an individual and pay as an individual -- no matter how affected he his by the costs of exploitation and benefits of preservation on a global scale.

    The tragedy of the commons shows that, in absence of an effective means of rational cooperation between people, private ownership and exploitation is more productive and sustainable. However, in many respects the commons is inescapable: we live on one planet, in one biosphere, dependent on one hydrosphere, drawing all our our biological wealth from a common pools of biota and environmental systems. So, duly considered and democratically adopted limitations on the exploitation of these common resources would be good thing.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  148. A little problem with the enviromental movement... by evilpaul13 · · Score: 2

    Suppose we know very accurately what happened over the last quarter million years. Does anyone else think that the other 15999/16000 of the picture might be important?

    Earth has changed a lot in its history, and life is stil here. I'd suggest it isn't naive, so much as stupid to attribute a worldwide change to human activity. Then of course, there is a possibility that on a 4 billion year old planet your "disturbing and destructive trend" is only a part of some bigger natural cycle than the two hundred years people have been looking.

    Though this will undoubtedly be modded down for suggesting that perhaps nature itself is heartless and can be enormously destructive.

    Wave to some dinosaurs on your way home from work.

  149. Re:Environmental FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I can't belive that Slashdot allowed such a glowing review of a book that is obvious FUD."

    What, you mean Slashdot's normally high editorial standards allowed an article to be posted without being put through a peer review process?

    Shockers!

    -Baka!

  150. Ozone Hole != Greenhouse Effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The hole in the ozone causes increased reception of ultraviolet light by the Earth's surface, damaging cellular DNA and leading to cancer. The greenhouse effect is a theory that increased levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will trap more heat.

    These are entirely different problems, with different levels of proof, threat-levels, causes and effects. The ozone hole should heal itself in a century, and in the meantime people can wear SPF 30.

    Increased CO2 levels are a fact, but global warming is extremely hard to prove, given the inherent variability of weather and the lack of good historic measurement (back in the 50s, some scientists thought the Earth was cooling). And the effects of global warming are extremely difficult to predict, given the complexity of the system. Some have predicted that increased evaporation of water to the poles might lead to a new ice age; the most credible concerns I've read relate to disruptions in oceanic currents.

    It's probably better to be safe than sorry, but we can't ignore the costs either.

  151. A useful ruler for critcal thought by el_rocinante · · Score: 1

    Public policy is fraught with competing interests and goals. I believe that Lomborg has introduced a useful alternative point of view into the dialogue.

    I think public policy discussions by lay people, including myself, suffer from a number of critical short comings.

    1. Sole source of information

    It is very tempting to read some information that is agreeable to one's point of view and simply adopt it wholesale. I don't care what the source is, Greenpeace to the Cato Institute to the UN, any single point of view is insufficient if one is truly committed to being informed and understanding the issues.

    2. Shortage of critical thought

    Related to sole sourcing one's information, is the tendency to avoid serious thought on the issues. Nothing in these areas is simple. Take for example the debate over the relative polluting effects of diesel and petrol. If one simply examines the vehicular emissions it's easy - burn petrol. If on the other hand you look at the whole system, from refining to consumption, the answer is much murkier. And if you really want to get a head ache add in engine lifetimes and raw materials usage in the construction of diesel and petrol burning engines.

    3. Criteria for judgment

    Once you have gathered information and thought it over. How do you judge the best solution. The answer is highly subjective - environmental quality, economic growth, quality of life or some complex calculus combining all of the above. One thing that Lomborg brought to my attention was the concept of 'The Cost of Saving One Year of One Persons Life'. By the way, it seems to have been a concept originate in the journal Risk Analysis. Regardless of the source, it is a very interesting guide in assisting in making choices about environmental policy. In fact, it makes a very compelling case for potable water being the best use of public funds, which was certainly contrary to my 'conventional wisdom' on the matter.

    On a related note, much of the criticism of the Lomborg opinions are insulting. There is an implied message that we are too stupid to be able to process information, apply critical thought and arrive at a sound point of view.

    If we are to be effective grass roots voices on public policy we must do our homework and think seriously about the issues rather than simply repeat a point of view espoused by some organization or person on a particular mission.

    Final thought: if you care about an issue, get educated on all points of view and then make up you own mind.

    Hopefully this point of view stirs at least one synapse to fire.

    el_rocinante

  152. Congratulations on an excellent review. by Ominous+Armed+Cow · · Score: 1

    While it is obvious that the reviewer holds "green" beliefs and prejudices, he really tried to be objective and fair-handed in his critique of the book, and perhaps more interestingly, in his critique of the shrill character assassination of the enviro-priesthood.

    The reviewer may still believe in the crusade, but he no longer appears to believe in the crusaders. It sounds like Lomborg's book has brought him to the edge of "heresy", and it is oonly a matter of time before he will jump too.

  153. The REAL Truth About "Global Warming" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    VIDEO: Facts about "Global Warming"

    Streaming 28k
    Streaming 56k
    Streaming 128k

  154. Another Excellent Rebuttal by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2
    --
    **>>BELCH
  155. The guy has already been thoroughly discredited by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The author uses a lot of smoke and mirrors to basically troll he scientific community. His arguements have been discredited by many. An article in Scientific American picks his points apart one by one. You can probably find it at SA's web site.

  156. Just give up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Thermal run-off is inevitable. We'll need to artifically cool the planet down anyway within 100 years, or see our planet turn into Venus. Let's hope we have some real terraforming equipment by then, instead of such crude methods like nuclear winter...

  157. I'd just like to point out one fact by njdj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A fact which may not be apparent to people aged under 55: the cleanliness of the environment in developed countries has improved enormously in the last 50 years. I grew up near an industrial city. The rivers were filthy, the air was filthy (you blew your nose, and what came out was black - sorry to be disgusting, but it's true). The word "smog" originally referred, I believe, to London fogs which were so thick that visibility was about one meter (cause was smoke from burning coal). Using the same word for the thin haze from automobile exhausts is a bit of a joke.

    It was worth cleaning the place up, and it is worthwhile to continue to clean it up. But the trend over the last 50 years has been one of vast improvement. People who claim otherwise sound either dishonest or unobservant to me.

    1. Re:I'd just like to point out one fact by Catbeller · · Score: 2

      Been to Mexico City lately? It's what our cities would be like if the air couldn't move the pollution away.

      Yes, the air is relatively clearer. That's because environmental activists, and real scientists, fought for decades against the Lomborgs of the right, and won... sometimes.

      So give those "dishonest" people the acclamation they deserve. They fought the fight no one else cared about, and won the day with sanity.

      No insanity is rolling back in, slick with media smarts and tons of cash. Here we go again...

    2. Re:I'd just like to point out one fact by Catbeller · · Score: 2

      "Now" insanity; not "no" insanity. Sigh.

    3. Re:I'd just like to point out one fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoa .. so real scientists are only found on the left side of the argument.
      How interesting...

      Gee ... you people are so predictable it is not even funny anymore.

  158. SA "review" was a hash by Merovign · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've found that recently, SA has taken the same dark, dingy, stupid path that Discover took a few years ago... down, down, down into the depths of politically correct balderdash.

    The fact that they denied him the right to respond to his critics, then harassed him when he tried to respond on his own website (which is now 404'ing, unfortunately), is a red flag.

    No, I haven't read the whole book, and yes, I did read the SA articles. They were sour grapes and it showed to anyone who didn't reflexively agree with the prejudices of the authors. Data and quotes were few, accusations and anger was high. The cover of the magazine should have read "How Dare You Question Us!?!"

    Unfortunately, there are many areas of "debate and discussion" in the modern world where the BS Index is so high that anyone who tries to find out what's actually going on either gets burned out trying or marginalized if they think they did find something interesting that doesn't fit into anyone's agenda.

    This is one of those areas. I doubt the situation will improve. It is glaringly clear that major environmental shifts have occurred throughout history and prehistory, and it is also glaringly clear that we have only a sliver of an idea how we interact with that system.

    Are tugboat cars going to cause global warming? Or will they delay global cooling (we are, after all, in an unusually long interglacial period - how much longer do we have)?

    But the serious attempt to get a grip on what the likely future is and how we might productively interact with it is hamstrung by all these agendas.

    And to all those worshippers who think people become magically objective when they put on lab coats: I wish you were right, but you are dramatically wrong.

    There are a few people committed to the truth, but not enough to form a lobby, and there's no money in it. Yuppies don't get hot and bothered and send donations when a politician or academic lies on TV, you don't have a magazine or research center. And if you expect government grants to find the truth, well, you know the rest...

    Without the truth, you never know what to do next. And the truth is a difficult thing to get hold of even when people aren't lying to you.

    I leave you with this thought: How much would the political document called Kyoto cost if it were implemented by everyone, with its silly concentration of banning plant food (CO2) and less emphasis on possibly more dangerous "system inputs"?

    And how much would it cost to bring irrigation and potable water systems to every region on the face of the planet that currently lacks it?

    I hate to sound politically correct, and I really hate race-baiting, but could it be because pale europeans are worried about sunburns and swarthily-complected children are dying because they don't have sanitation (or pest-killers)?

  159. Sloppy and biased by phred · · Score: 2

    Scientists should be precise and fair in their assessments of real world and experimental data.

    Lonborg is sloppy and biased. It's evident throughout his book. It's not even a close call.

    The difference between science and this whatever-it-is should be obvious.

    --------

    --
    Bill Gates Is My Evil Twin.
    1. Re:Sloppy and biased by ErikTheRed · · Score: 2
      The difference between science and this whatever-it-is should be obvious.

      Sorry for being so terribly dense, but it's not obvious to me. Could you provide specific examples backed with hard data, and references to that data.

      Thank you.
      --

      Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
  160. Aluminum chemistry and energy of recycling by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 2
    Do recycle aluminum, however; the same process used to refine aluminum ore is used to recycle aluminum cans--it just take a lot less energy, which reduces the cost of producing aluminum, and less power means less emissions from electric power plants.
    False. The production of aluminum from bauxite requires dissolving it in molten cryolite and electrolytic reduction to aluminum metal. The recycling of metallic aluminum requires only melting and forming it, which has nothing to do with the process of aluminum production, and almost never occurs in the same plant.
  161. This translation is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Please do not use the words "charged with", when you should have said "accused of .." or "reported for ..".

    And remember to mention that the guy accusing him, was one of the 18 guys that wrote a book back in 1999 responding to lomborgs book.

    Oddly enough they didn't feel the need to report him, before he applied for a position, at an institute, that has influence on funding in this area ...

  162. Scientific illiteracy on both sides by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 2
    Greenies are certainly well-meaning, if sometimes undiscerning. Unfortunately, their irrational attitude and lack of scientific training often make them easy to manipulate.
    The anti-"greenies"(what a condescending label) have even less scientific training, which is why the corporate propaganda mills have so much trouble finding reputable scientists to spread their FUD.
    Which is why it is incumbent upon people who want a sane outcome, regardless of what side they're on, to correct the errors and condemn the lies (and liars) regardless of where they are found. And educate, educate, educate! There's a reason I spend lots of time correcting erroneous postings about e.g. nuclear power, and that's because I don't want to see important decisions made based on someone's reading of a polemic designed to get them all fired up while keeping them ignorant. This serves no one except the ideologues, who have nobody's interests in mind except their own parochial agendas.
    1. Re:Scientific illiteracy on both sides by ahde · · Score: 2
      education is believing what you are told. What we need is for people to think, think, think

      The reason so many "scientists" come up with false data is because they don't apply common sense, impartial observation, or healthy skepticism.

    2. Re:Scientific illiteracy on both sides by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 2
      education is believing what you are told. What we need is for people to think, think, think
      Think about what? To understand even the basics of many of these issues, people need to be grounded in:
      • Physics
      • Chemistry
      • Thermodynamics (why you can't get something for nothing)
      Instead, a lot of people's "thinking" involves conspiracy theories about what interests are behind some nefarious plot or other. There is a huge amount of nonsense from the left about hydrogen power (from people who barely know that hydrogen is part of water, don't know that hydrogen is 11% of water by mass, and couldn't tell you where the energy for their hydrogen economy would come from if their lives depended on it) and an equal amount from the right about greenhouse gases and ozone depletion (from people who have no clue about the difference between atomic chlorine and chloride ion, and why the chemistry or atmospheric lifetime would be different). Reason requires knowledge of the facts beneath the conclusion, and learning those facts (education) is mandatory, not optional. You can't think if you have nothing to think with.

      This is the strongest argument I know for demanding that all 4-year college degrees require basic science, chemistry and mathematics. Too much basic citizenship has come to rely on it, and the point of college isn't supposed to be to turn out drones (or ideological infantry) but well-rounded citizens.

      The reason so many "scientists" come up with false data is because they don't apply common sense, impartial observation, or healthy skepticism.
      Scientists aren't always practicing science. What else is new?
  163. Environmentalism can come at a profit by Spamalamadingdong · · Score: 2
    it cant HURT us to be more eco-friendly.
    Yes, it can. Even if it was only $$ it would still have an impact on human suffering.
    Oh, you mean like the impact from using fluorescent lights instead of incandescents? (Pays for itself many times over.) Or you could give up paying a huge premium for a fashionable SUV, and save a bunch of fuel in the bargain. Build your house with good insulation, overhangs to shield the windows from summer sun, and other features which cost a few bucks, then enjoy radically reduced energy costs for the life of the building (possibly a century).

    A lot of "greenie" measures make a huge amount of sense if you use basic economic analysis. The problem is that lots of people don't bother because they apply one set of measures to "normal" expenses like a house, but demand a much greater payback from environmental improvements. People will often demand that an environmental measure pay its cost in a year or less, which is insane when the lifespan of the improvement can be 20 years or more. Such things should be evaluated on the basis of long-term capital expenditures, standard mortgage rates, and other cornerstones of economic payback analysis. (The problem is that most people have no idea how to do even the most basic analysis, so they will stick money in a savings account earning a taxable 2% a year when they could buy some CF bulbs and be earning 25% per year tax-free on the same money.)

    1. Re:Environmentalism can come at a profit by ahde · · Score: 2

      the difference between using incandescent bulbs and no light at all runs maybe $100 (current rate) in your life time.

    2. Re:Environmentalism can come at a profit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WHA?! Just how did you figure that one?!

      If a person uses just one 100W bulb for 10 hours a day, that's 1 kilowatthour per day. A kwh costs between 10 and 15 cents (during peak hours) in most markets... that equals roughly $35-55 per year. And that's just for ONE bulb! In ONE year! In a lifetime, that's _several thousand_ dollars, not "maybe $100"

      (How exactly does a one line post with no numbers to back up it's rather ridiculous claim get modded up 2 points??)

    3. Re:Environmentalism can come at a profit by overunderunderdone · · Score: 2

      Oh, you mean like the impact from using fluorescent lights instead of incandescents?...

      There are individual "greenie" measures (as you put it) that may even be postive economically. But it is not even controversial to state that the economic impact of enacting the sum total of the environmentalist agenda would be negative. Saving a little bit of energy through more efficient cars, light bulbs and houses helps and often doesn't even cost more to implement than what it saves due to greater efficiency (win, win, yipee!!). But in terms of environmental or economic impact these conservation measures are NOT where the impact is. The REAL impact on both comes on the energy production side - emmissions regulations, the Kyoto accords. "alternative" energy sources. Sadly, energy sources that pollute are simply much cheaper than those that don't. The decisions before us are about the benefits and costs of cleaner energy - How clean and at what cost? Where is the line? If we are dishonest about this equation, if we disragard or deny the reality of the cost, we will make bad decisions.

      This gets back to my point and what I meant by the word "impact". "Economic cost" is an abstract term for a concrete reality of lost jobs, unemployment, and poverty and the human suffering associated with the same. This is the reality of the cost we are measuring the benefits against. In many cases the cost is worth it - Avoiding pollution on an East European scale is certainly worth a pretty high economic cost. If global warming is as bad as the worst scenarios then the cost that is worth paying is quite high.

      But if we draw the line at too extreme a point the "economic cost" could even produce a negative environmental impact that could counter or even overwhelm the postive impact of the initial regulations. Poverty striken nations may impact the environment in different ways but loss of topsoil, clear cutting, wood smoke and conflicts caused by economic instablity have arguably had a greater impact on the environment than many (not all, but many) of the environmental issues we are concerned about in the developed world.

  164. Down with psuedo science by tbuskey · · Score: 1

    I call myself a conservationist. I enjoy the outdoors. I go to audobon society preserves with my wife who enjoys bird watching. When we vacation in Florida, we always visit various parks & nature areas, not Disney. I grew up with 20 acres of my parent property in NH as my backyard. I often explored this property (and further) for the 1st 25 years of my life.

    I also ride motorcycles off road. I started when I was 9 years old. I created trails in those 20 acres and maintained them for 10 years.

    I knew these woods very well as I rode and walked the 4 miles of trails I had once a week during the riding season.

    If you know anything about off road riding, you know how wide the trail is. If a tree/sapling was over 3" in diameter, I went around it. I prefered to leave logs lying in the trail to add to the challenge. My trails were 2-3 feet wide (hey, the handlebars were 34" wide).

    When I went to college, I stopped riding the trails. 4 years later, I went to find them. I could barely find them.

    But the environmental movement tells me riding my motorcycle off road causes irreperable harm?> Bullshit! I know that's not true from personal, intimate experience.

    I used to ride alot in MA in the state parks. They used to be open. Now, they're closed because of opinion & I have to go up to NH to ride.

    One of the few areas is going to be closed down. It seems a land swap was made. 300 acres to an industrial park in return for 1200 (?) acres for a preserve that I, as a tax payer, cannot use. The 300 acres will be paved over, mostly. Certainly there won't be anymore wildlife there. How is that better then the 3' wide trails that used to be there?

    1. Re:Down with psuedo science by Catbeller · · Score: 2

      It isn't what you are doing now that is the problem. It is the precedent you set when that trail is widened and the asphalt laid down.

      What happens in 10, 20, 30, 50 years to that trail?

      By starting the encroachment, you start a landslide of destruction -- someday.

      The world of our roads is large enough. The idea is to draw a line, and say "no more". Leave some of it in peace.

      The problem is that a little damage today results in the rationalizations that turn your trails into highways and subdivisions in a few decades. Population pressure is infinite.

      We have so much developed land. At some point you have to say stop.

    2. Re:Down with psuedo science by tbuskey · · Score: 1

      The point is that my 3' wide trail, after 4 years of non use, doesn't exist anymore.

      Again, I mention that this is off road use.

      Developing the land destroys the trail. Many of us who ride motorcycles off road hate it when ATVs go on the trail because they widen it.

      If you're a long time skier, you'll remember how the mogul runs chang with heavy snowboard use. It's no longer the same terrain.

      If you hike in New England, you should know that many (most?) of the trails you hike on were probably created by motorcyclists.

      All of the older trails in Bear Brook (NH) state park (except some logging roads) were created by motorcyclists. Now, they're only allowed in for 1 event a year (MVTR raised $75,000 for Cystic Fibrosis this year).

      I guess the answer is that motorcyclists get banned from the trails.

  165. Baloney by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This has long since been completely debunked by most of the leading Scientists.

    See here:

    http://www.gristmagazine.com/grist/books/lomborg 12 1201.asp

    1. Re:Baloney by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grist meets your definition of the `Leading Scientists'? Hah!

      If grist is a scientific magazine, what would it take for you to recognize something as a tendentious policy rag?

  166. Come On Yourself by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

    > theres talk of sea rise within 100 years, if it dosn't happen within my life time, then it will within my kids (when i have some). if bits of the coast start getting submerged then some of you may not mind, but when its your entire country thats underwater (.tv) and you have to find a new home in a new country then you'd be concerened about the rate the levels are rising.

    Okay, how high will the oceans rise in 100 years? How high is Tuvalu? And most importantly, who's doing the talking about sea rise being enough over the next century to swamp the bottom half of the world?

    > and as for co2 encouraging plant growth, well bugger me if i'd prefer to continue breathing, than wait an see if any other plants can take up the slack when there's no more rain forest.

    I'd consider this funny if I didn't think you were serious. If I could snap my fingers and vaporize the entire Amazon rain forest now, other plants would take up the slack before we were all in danger of CO2 poisoning. Don't forget, trees aren't the only plants out there, and algae and moss grows fast.

    I'm very much concerned about deforestation, especially in South America, but let's try to keep things rational.

    Virg

  167. Moderation on Moderation by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

    I'm sorry, but you just got a (-1, Too Sensible for Slashdot).

    Virg

  168. Lomborg is a splicer of words, and a biased one. by Catbeller · · Score: 2

    To say the least.

    He is basically saying that almost every ecologist in the world is a part of a Green Anti-Corporate Conspiracy, and that it is his sad but necessary duty to correct the record.

    Please.

    This hack has been thoroughly discredited long ago. The reason he is alive is the same reason Velikovsky's "World's in Flight" is still alive, Christian fundamentalist creation dogma is considered "science", the American majority believes the guvmint is hiding aliens, and that trees cause most of the world's pollution.

    I'm not going to cover the science. I'll leave that to the scientists, poor bastards.

    Americans believe science to be a democratic body of knowledge. It isn't. It is a method AND a body of accepted theory and knowledge. The opinion of of the majority of non-scientists is not admissible as evidence. Popularity wih libertarian corporate theory has no bearing on the science.

    It isn't a "religion" with "high priests", either. People who claim such usually have a clerical collar hidden under theor clothes, somewhere, and are using the "accuse the enemy of that which you are doing" method of attack which is working so well for right-wing zealots.

    Lomborg is not arguing science. He is playing rhetorical games to please anti-science, a large segment of the American population, and to shore up the position of corporations and business, who are pursuing a long-term populist project to eliminate science from political decision and replace it with industry-friendly pseudo science. It's about money, money, money. In America, they will win. Everywhere else, they look on aghast as we embrace superstition and business to the exclusion of sanity.

    Lomborg pinpoints flaws in arguments on the small scale in order to rhetorically destroy the larger arguments. Problem is, his NEED TO BELIEVE OTHERWISE aside, we are performing a worldwide uncontrolled atmospheric experiment. It's in the beginning stages now, but as the population doubles every thirty years or so, and the other nations follow our industrial example, the factors involved in the experiment will grow exponentially. The trick is to stop the disasters now, while they are small, before they chaotically grow into something we can't even imagine.

    I notice a lot of the argument pro-Lomborg (I do hope I am spelling the name right) is based on a, there is no word better to describe it, hatred of a made-up enemy called the Greens. No doubt communistic, liberal, and out to destroy our money.

    Problem is, the Greens are a political party with their own agenda. Ecologists without political axes to grind are in vast agreement that we are changing the ecosphere. How could we not be? It's just a matter of how.

    Also, ecologists, meteorologists, and other scientists who blow the danger horn are not going to get rich bucking the power base and right-wing fringes who are indeed running things now. They are taking chances and not getting rich, just to do the right thing. Their opponents, who are trying to defuse them by using any number of dirty intellectual tricks, ARE on the side of people who will give them much money. I tend to believe the people doing it for the good of all mankind rather than people who are representing themselves and their rich patrons.

    As for "keeping an open mind". Scientists do this professionally. They know how. What they don't do is refute every opposing opinion. They did a lot of the argument before, when the evidence for the theories were collected. If someone comes forward to dispute it, they have an extraordinary claim, and it is their job to provide extraordinary proof. Lomborg does not do this; his exposition is directed toward non-scientists who are pre-disposed to believe for political reasons, and for people who simply don't understand the issues involved and can be swayed through rhetoric alone.

    Even Jerry Pournelle, as conservative a scientist who ever was whelped, and a proponent of the Bell Curve book, was convinced a few years ago, after reading the accumulated science, that we are conducting a massive uncontrolled experiment on the Earth's atmosphere. If HE, after all those years of asking for evidence, was convinced it is happening, I am frightened.

    As for "Greens" not having "evidence", I can only say that after fifty years of study, and all the accumulated evidence presented, if a Slashdot reader says such a thing, that reader is in no mood to ever be convinced. It is hopeless. They accuse others of ideological bias, but they are convinced that no evidence can prove the other side's case. Right-wing corporate mindset is the only thing I can call it; there is no real term for this ideology. No evidence will ever work, no study will ever be complete, and the end result is that in the face of a half century of science and the consensus of the world's scientists, the laws governing pollution will be overturned. The rest of the world will slowly change their laws as well, in a rolling ideological tidal wave, resulting a REAL pollution experiment that will change the world.

  169. anti-ideological "deep green" references to read by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "1. Scientific American slams the book because it doesn't want to upset it's left leaning advertisers/readers?

    2. The Economist approves of the book because it doesn't want to upset it's right leaning advertisers/readers?"

    Implication: Science and Economics are religions. Ignore them both. They're each eating the Earth - and our bodies as part of it.

    For non-ideological argument regarding ecology and energy and body impact on human health etc.:

    'natural capitalism' especially energy incentives
    'global climate institute' especially 'value of life' stuff
    Rocky Mountain Institute especially service economics
    Hubley versus groupthink
    Hook versus amoral purchasing
    Milani on green micro-economics
    Moore on secession
    Mattioli listing books on what happens if you ignore the above

    Anti-ideological "deep green" references are not concerned with "left versus right" industrial bargaining tactics or absurd moral code swapping (all morality is aesthetic anyway, ethics is the sharable stuff). It's all, only, about energy and process and creativity. Just and only that.

  170. No one is gonna like my POV but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on guys I mean environmentalism is about as much pyscho bable as the idea that riddlin is not over prescribed.
    Recent evidence has shown that over the past deacde the ice caps have GROWN
    and the hole in the OZONe is Shrinking
    I know we all have the kind of egos that allow us to believe we weild enough power to change climate but if that is true
    go terriform mars

  171. The left. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    in the grand tradition of the left eating its young

    What kind of know-nothing thinks the "greens"
    are of the left?


    Those mystical rants about nature are pure fascism, the left has always been for a good smokestack.

  172. Zero Pollution? by DivideByZero · · Score: 1
    But environmentalists are pushing for zero pollution (which means zero technology which means zero population).

    I think that anyone advocating for 'zero polution' is more than counterbalanced by the companies/lobbists who would like to have 'zero' controls.

    As a side point, if technology/population without pollution is as impossible as you seem to think, then we're probably going to have a really, really hard time with space travel much beyond the orbit of the moon.

    I like Bucky Fuller. I like him so much, I'm willing to quote him:

    Pollution is simply energy - In the form of unfamiliar matter - Which the timing of the omniregenerative cosmic system cannot immediately use but must use later. - Critical Path - Chapter 9 (p277?)

    As for the rest of your 'points', do you have to use such obvious straw-man attacks? I know a lot of enviromentally active people. Very few think the way you present them.

    1. Re:Zero Pollution? by mesocyclone · · Score: 2

      I think that anyone advocating for 'zero polution' is more than counterbalanced by the companies/lobbists who would like to have 'zero' controls.

      Nonsense. Nobody would pay attention to companies/lobbies with such dumb ideas. But people pay a lot of attention to environmentalists whose real goal is zero pollution or even zero technology, but who hide it behind nice platitudes and the very distortions revealed in the book.

      "As a side point, if technology/population without pollution is as impossible as you seem to think, then we're probably going to have a really, really hard time with space travel much beyond the orbit of the moon."

      It depends on how you define pollution, and what kind of space travel you plan to have. Does the space ship have to be able to produce itself? Does it have to be able to make semiconductors (which you are obviously using in order to have this conversation)?

      And of course, there is a huge difference between zero and acceptible. Do you really believe that zero pollution is necessary for space travel? Do you really believe that zero pollution is even possible in any human activity? Do you believe that nature itself doesn't pollute?

      Here's a few clues:

      Dioxins are produced by lightning induced natural forest fires.

      Chlorinated hydrocarbons are produced by some life forms.

      CO2 is produced by all animals.

      Pesticides are produced by many plants.

      Sulfur oxides are produced by volcanoes in huge amounts.

      Get it? Zero pollution is not only a silly goal... it is impossible and unnatural!

      --

      The only good weather is bad weather.

  173. A refreshing change of pace... by nexex · · Score: 2

    While everyone is certainly entitled to a belief and an opinion, I am glad to see something in support of an idea besides the notion of humans are a plague on the earth. I am glad to know that there are people in this world who can see through the doomsday warnings most enviromentalists seem to constantly throw upon us. By no means do I support strip mining the entire planet, but we are only hindering ourselves when we limit ourselves to the resources that we will use.

    Ten years ago all you heard was CFCs are akin to satan himself and they are making a huge whole in the ozone layer in Antartica. If we didn't stop using CFCs, that it would certainly destroy the entire ozone layer thus leading to an hostipitable world thus killing us all. Now the part you didn't hear: the ozone hole has always been there, will always be there, and there is nothing that we can do to stop it given current state of technology. For all we know, if it wasn't there, we would have died a long long time ago. Nevermind the fact that it naturally grows and contracts on its own regardless of anything we do. Nevermind that as far as we can tell, its been there before humans ever walked the Earth.

    While you can find a study that will say anything you want it to say, the world is not running out of oil, nor will it anytime soon. The president of BP has said the biggest oil reserves ever to be discovered in the world are in areas controlled largely controlled by the United States; that is out in the Gulf of Mexico. He has said that they rival the oil fields of the middle east, yet we continue to tie our hands together and submit to whatever price OPEC says we are going to pay. Russia is quickly increasing their output much to the dismay of OPEC, which is demanding a reduction of output as to raise the price. We have the technology to get our own oil, but there are people in this country who want to see that we are slaves to whims of other countries.

    As usual, the same people who want to erase the SUV are the same people driving around in cars that don't come close to meeting the mileage standards they propose for an SUV (nevermind that they drive just as much as anyone else). What happened to capitalism? If you build it they will come, that seems to be holding true for the sport utility vehicle. If they are so damaging, why would people buy them in the first place?

    Look at the Grand Staircase/Escalante Nation Monument created by Prez Clinton. He created it with no warning or input from the state of Utah. And he didn't even come TO UTAH to announce it, he did it from the Grand Canyon hundreds of miles away from any of the people whose lives it "Enroned" (where was his concern for the little guy then?). Since the whole industry the towns were built on are now useless, they are destined to become ghost towns within ten years. The coal stockpiles in that area is what sustanined those towns; with the money earmarked for children's education. But now it will sit forever for future generations to "enjoy". Too bad they will not recieve any benefit from it as it will be in a perpetual state of "for the next generation."

    There are the biologists who planeted fur in the forest to have it protected, but since when does the truth matter? PLEASE, don't bother us with the FACTS! What? What's that? the ice layers at the poles are thickening, not melting?

    The energy market can take care of itself, alternatives fuels are being developed everyday. When there is one that is cost effective and convenient, our current sources of fuel will be replaced with different ones. Look at all the windmills and solar panels in California, but they still had the infamous power crisis in summer of 2001. Those simply do not provide enough power to meet our needs. Amazing breakthoughs are achieved virtually on a daily basis, in 50 years, oil will more than likely only be found in a museum and billions of barrels in untapped reserves, as it will be as outdated as an abacus.

    Humans have inhabited the Earth for thousands of years and we are still here...Why in the past 30 years is it all of a sudden we are all doomed just by living are lives? It's time companies that enable us to live as comfortably as we do from being demonized. The same company that writes our paycheck. The same company that pays your health insurance. The same company that gives you the Christmas bonus. The same company who will develop the future sources of energy. The same company that keeps the American dream a reality for everyone.

    I'm sure many of you think that what I have just said is equivalent to blapshpemy and will attack the way I said my thoughts as whining, or even me for thinking this way (hes just a crazy nut don't listen to him)...it's becuase you know I'm right, and no one expects you to respond any differently now...

    --
    Winter 2010: With Glowing Hearts
    1. Re:A refreshing change of pace... by spike+hay · · Score: 1

      There are the biologists who planeted fur in the forest to have it protected, but since when does the truth matter? PLEASE, don't bother us with the FACTS! What? What's that? the ice layers at the poles are thickening, not melting?

      Thank You! An intelligent post!
      I'm glad to see someone is not brown-nosing the eco freaks.

      --
      If you don't understand any of my sayings, come to me in private and I shall take you in my German mouth.
  174. suggestion: use your own brain and sensors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like many others, that say similar things, the reviewer writes: "There are two key questions involved; is human activity having a major impact on the climate of the Earth?...".

    I visit the next bigger city and I see the bubble of dirty air above it from far away. I reach the city and my eyes start hurting.

    There are innumerable other things that one can experience personaly without the need to know anything about scientific proof. In what sense does such experiences exactly differ from "is human activity having a major impact on the climate of the Earth"?

    Does the effect have to wipe out as ignificant percentage of thep opulation to be "major"? Isn't difficult breathing, bad smell, traffic noise and what have you incentive enough to move on towards better alternatives?

    What exactly do we need to have proved? And for what purpose?

    Tomas Pospisek

  175. Re: Errr, thats easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Odd. Those `publicity-craving scientists' are the same people (literally) denouncing Mr. Lomborg in SciAm. Or didn't you notice?

  176. Doesn't need to be a conspiracy. by Catbeller · · Score: 2

    What is happening is sort of a decentralized network of more-or-less in-agreement people who believe that there is a lefty environmental/liberal agenda that needs to be neutralized.

    What I've observed in the last eight years or so is that such right-leaning people have learned to spike the media lemonade, by creating pundits that sound reasonable and can be trotted out in conservative publications and new shows initially, then slowly become stars of mainstream popular press.

    The actual scientists and greens are slowly pushed off the spectrum as moderates become the new liberals, and the far right simply becomes conservative.

    It's worked on a lot of issues. Do remember that most publishing houses and news services are now owned and operated by extremely conservative men, and that bias is making itself present in many ways. Look at Michael Moore's book, "Stupid White Men". It was yanked from distribution months ago because he would not tone down his critique of Bush, and his publisher spiked an already printed book rather than publish something that offended his political views. It's now published, but the point is, non-conservative views are disappearing quietly from TV and book and newspapers. And what is indeed left is being redefined. Fox News is "Fair and Balanced" with moderate conservatives posing as liberals while right-wing loons are the new "mainstream". Wish I had got that memo.

    Point is, this book is out there, and being pushed hard, even to the point of getting flogged on Slashdot, because there are people with axes to grind making sure it influences opinion.

    From what I understand, he uses statistical games and rhetoric to mash environmental issues. Very Bell Curve; I assume he's a darling on Fox and CNN and MS-NBC. Pity I don't watch them anymore.

    The thing is, there is no heavily-backed anti-Lomborg to refute him. Science isn't organized that way. So this book will have an impact, not that one is needed with this admin in power.

    1. Re:Doesn't need to be a conspiracy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " It was yanked from distribution months ago "

      Sure it did, but the reason was purely economical.
      It was not a good market for such negative book.
      It simply was not.

      "Fox News is "Fair and Balanced" with moderate conservatives posing as liberals while right-wing loons are the new "mainstream". "

      Dude, you have this all wrong.
      It used to be that moderate liberals were posing as conservatives and left-wing loons were claiming middle ground.
      Do I have monopoly on correct perception of reality ?
      Not likely ..
      Do you ?

  177. Re:To lay your examples at the feet of "greenies"- by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2

    most environmnetal controls are a good thing, like not dumping chemicals into bodies of water, and don't litter, and don't over hunt. but a lot of the stuff is bad, the recycled paper example listed above is a good one, another is the attmpted ban on hunting (sorry, but if we remove ananimals natural preditor, we have to assume the responsability for the population control or the natural environmnet will be destroyed).

    while I do think that Lead in gas is not a good thing, it is incorrect to cite a simple correlation as proof since corrolations != causation. perhaps the lead if from other sources like drinking water that is not filltered (a very common problem) perhaps it is from lead paint, or any other source of lead. like I said it is better to be safe about lead contamination than sorry, but don't cite correlations as proof. it is also a bad Idea to replace one poison with another. find an inert substance that can replace the lead before you do replace it, otherwise, you end up with just as many problems and there is no net benefit.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  178. i dont get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    can someone explain it, i didnt get it

  179. Re:Facts and figures in The Skeptical Environmenta by Catbeller · · Score: 2

    Acid rain has no noticable effect on tree growth [Figure 98]

    Even if so, so what? It kills lakes, reducing them to algae ponds. Depends on what he wants to look at, doesn't it?


    Smoke, lead, SO2, ozone, NO2, CO concentrations in the air (US and UK) decreased steadily over the last 25 years [Figures 88, 90, 92, 93, 94, 95]


    And so? They are down because of decades of war fought by environmentalista against car and oil companies. If it is indeed down, let us pay homage to their unpaid labor.

  180. Julian Simon by Untimely+Ripp'd · · Score: 1

    I had the opportunity to see the late Julian Simon debate Garrett Hardin (author of The Tragedy of the Commons). Interestingly, Simon claimed that he, too, had started out trying to prove one thing (that large populations were a bad thing -- it was part of some conservative agenda that he didn't explain in detail) and deciding the opposite (that growing populations bring wealth and comfort).

    It wouldn't take a lot of research to rebut most of what Simon had to say. Here were two of his most extraordinary claims:

    JS: Look at Birmingham, England. I was there decades ago and you could hardly breathe for the pollution. Now the air is clean.

    Reality: The population of Britain was stable for most of the 20th century. At the time of the debate, the population of places like Birmingham had declined steeply, as Thatcher had destroyed the economies of the outlying parts of the nation. Britain had outsourced industrial production to the 3rd world (where green-types are powerless), leaving only the service jobs in London. Thus the pollution was happening elsewhere to support the comforts of life in London or Birmingham. Just as it happens elsewhere to support the comforts of life in Silicon Valley. (And let's not forget the child slaves who make most of our goods -- an inconveniently illegal policy here in the USA.)

    JS: The average person in Hong Kong has more living space than Abraham Lincoln had growing up in the rural Midwest.

    Reality: This statement is only meaningful if you share with Mr. Simon a particular values set, one that views the outdoors as hostile to human beings, and thus excludes as "living space" all of the space outside of the building in which Lincoln slept. Quite reminiscent of Secretary of the Interior Watt, who couldn't understand why anybody would want to go hiking. Of course, he supposedly also believed that God would be disappointed if we hadn't "used up" the bounty of the Earth by the time of the Rapture.

    --

    And let the angel whom thou still hast serv'd tell thee ...

  181. Quality of life by andaru · · Score: 2
    Let's assume that the environment was capable of taking everything that we are dishing out.

    That still would not change the fact that I would like to live in a place with clean air (read, "without perceptibly filthy air") to breathe, and more plants and animals to look at.

    From the hills near San Francisco, you can clearly see the blanket of smog in which people are living. Although this is a localized effect from an intense concentration of cars, etc., and might be safely blown away over the ocean, its effects completely buffered by the vastness and resillience of the environment, it is still a real downer to live in it, and I would much rather be able to simultaneously live in SF and breathe clean air.

    So even if there were no negative effects of human activity on the environment whatsoever in the long term, there would still be motivation to reduce emissions and increase the diversity of life.

    --

    Why is Grand Theft Auto a much more serious crime than Reckless Driving?

  182. Appeal to consequences by drew_kime · · Score: 2

    I've seen better explanations of this term, but this one should do. Just because the consequences of global warming are potentially catastrophic is no validation of the theory.

    --
    Nope, no sig
  183. Scientific American Calls it "Misleading Math" by Digital+Eco+Freak · · Score: 1

    Scientific American reviewed this book in its January, 2002 issue. The following is its article summary from its online table of contents.

    Misleading Math about the Earth
    ESSAYS BY STEPHEN SCHNEIDER, JOHN P. HOLDREN, JOHN BONGAARTS AND THOMAS LOVEJOY

    The book The Skeptical Environmentalist uses statistics to dismiss warnings about peril for the planet. But the science suggests that it's the author who is out of touch with the facts.

    The magazine went to four real experts in the fields addressed by Lomborg's book, and had them each review its assertions in their fields. What they found was that Lomborg carefully selected sources, twisted their meanings, and horribly misrepresented the statistics (his supposed specialty).

    A lot of people say a lot of things about the environment, and the rhetoric gets pretty extreme at times. The best way to sift through all of this is through good science with peer review. This book has neither of those.

    Lomborg claims to be a "skeptical environmentalist," but a good skeptic asks tough questions to challenge commonly held views, rather than just twisting the facts to try to prove their own point. Lomborg is really just an opportunistic contrarian, trying to make a name (and a few dollars) for himself by opposing assertions that a lot of influential people don't like.

  184. Debate & critiques by raldanash · · Score: 1

    By coincidence I was reading Lomborg's site yesterday. He trieds to answer criticisms in his critiques section. I found a lot of the articles by his detracters rather offensive in their tone (especially for the Nature, where they criticise for only using Nature papers as 1% of his sources-how petty). But check out the exchange in The Prospect, his opponent becomes progressively more snide and shrill.

    Also, if any of you have done debate, will notice how he simply avoids Lomborg's rebuttals and simply attacks him on another point. This reminds me a lot of Creationists in my debates with them-they bring up a problem with evolution-then ignore you when you respond in kind and attack you on some other point, ad infinitum.

    Conservatives and liberals tend to have their axes to grind of course. Liberals believe we should accept worst case scenarios in the context of environmentalism, but not social policy, while conservatives accept the opposite. On the other hand-please note the respone to the book Arming America which purported to show that America's gun culture is a post-Civil War thing-it came out to glowing reviews in the popular and academic press. In hindsight-a lot of its reviewers now have retracted their endorsement after find out the author seems to have citied sources that never existed (call the libraries or archives where the sources exist, and they say they never exist). Two years ago-I found the book very interesting, and though it didn't make me re-think my pro-gun orientation I accept it has a civil liberties, not historical issue, I didn't see anything wrong with it since I'm not an archival specialist. Contrast this with the Bell Curve which was torn to shreds for every tenditious citation (personally-I think they should ignored all the international sources since they aren't as well documented as the American ones were).

    --
    NO gods, NO governments, NO [OPTION]....
  185. Nobody liked Galileo, either by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

    Both the value of the research and information in this book and the reception it's getting from the Informational Powers that Be seems to differe from the reception Galileo got from the Roman Catholic Church in a matter of degrees only. Both the Church and the rabid environmentalists have had a history of speaking the "Truth" and a vested political interest in being the only source of this "Truth." And instead of disputing the information in question, the church and the environmentalists decided to take the route of character assassination. 400+ years later and herecy is still dealth with the same way.

    Anyway, the more I learn about the environmentalist debacle, the more I'm reminded of Ian Douglas' (a pen name for William Keith) Heritage Trilogy. A totalitarian world government taking power to "save the world from itself and the pending environmental disaster" and the dissenting voices weened down to the US and a handful of others. The more I hear about the single-mindedness of the environmentalists (and though that know better and use scare tactics anyway deserve their share of the blame), the more frightened I get of the multi-national organizations they hold sway with.

    1. Re:Nobody liked Galileo, either by ErikTheRed · · Score: 2

      (I can post this because it's boring having my karma capped...) Oh yeah, and, as a disclaimer, I describe my religious belief structure as "fundamentalist agnostic."

      It's been observed many times that human beings are, by nature, religious creatures. Even those post-modern (alleged) rationalists who reject God or other higher powers tend to cling to other beliefs with zeal equal to the most ardent theist, and take a similarly harsh stance on any views they see as heretical. We generally euphemize this behavior as "Political Correctness," whether is be associated with economic, racial, or environmental issues; these are generally identified with the political left. Don't get me wrong; there are plenty of unreasonable people on the political right as well (and I'm sure you can find some in the middle, etc.).

      That's my biggest beef: people who have abandoned logic and reason and have an ardent desire to persecute anyone who doesn't agree with their belief structure, whatever it may be. Personally, I hold all manner of strong views on a variety of subjects and I'm usually happy to debate these to death, but the worst show of temper that you'll see out of me is that I may call someone a jackass (usually when they're being one of the aforementioned unreasonable people).

      Perhaps what the world really needs, rather than more "truth," is some education in the ways of civil discourse and etequitte (I know Slashdot's not the best place to ask for these, but what the hell). Face it: none of us will be right about everything every time. If someone has a point, concede it. It won't kill you. In fact, it will cause you to examine your beliefs, whatever they may be, and you will probably end up wiser (one way or another) for it in the end. Either you'll change your thinking, or you'll be better prepared when making your point the next time around.

      Just my $.02

      --

      Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
    2. Re:Nobody liked Galileo, either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Einstein flunked his way through school.
      Does that mean that everyone who flunked is a genius ?
      You seem to use similar logic.

      >Both the value of the research and information >in this book and the reception it's getting from >the Informational Powers that Be seems to >differe from the reception Galileo got from the >Roman Catholic Church in a matter of degrees >only. Both the Church and the rabid >environmentalists have had a history of speaking >the "Truth" and a vested political interest in >being the only source of this "Truth." And >instead of disputing the information in question, >the church and the environmentalists decided to >take the route of character assassination. 400+ >years later and herecy is still dealth with the >same way.

    3. Re:Nobody liked Galileo, either by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

      I'm not even talking about Lomborg. I'm talking about how the "scientific establishment" eerily resembles the Roman Catholic Church of 400 years ago. Both organizations have a vested interest in maintaining their influence in international politics, both organizations claim to be attempting to save humanity from themselves, both organizations feel that they are automatically right by way of their title and both organizations seem to defend themsleves through character assassination rather than actually looking at the facts. All that remains to complete the pattern is for someone to get beatified for denouncing Lomborg (a Nobel, perhaps?).

      Have I spelled it out clearly enough for you?

    4. Re:Nobody liked Galileo, either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All systems have people entrenched in the view that the current view is absolutely and totally correct. Even science. This may actually be a good thing, since you dont want everyone going with every whim. But when someone makes an extraordinary claim (ie, going against the flow), people demand extraordinary proof. Im guessing Lomborg hasn't given any. Thus some of them tend to dismiss it out of hand, attacking the person. Oh, we'll find out by and by just how good this is, I guess ...

  186. Re: Errr, thats easy... by RealityCrutch · · Score: 1

    Errr....You know the difference between a crack-pot theory and orthodoxy is the difference between Velikovsky and L & W Alvarez. Or is that the other way around? No wait....they were all called crack pots by the 'Experts'.

  187. Things that effect the environment... by MacOSXHead · · Score: 1

    Here's a quiz.

    What is going to have a more significant effect on the environment:

    a.) Man

    b.) The next eruption of a super volcano

    c.) A collision of a large space object (asteriod or comet)

    d.) The natual variation in the output of the sun.

    Most people who claim to be green would cite "a" as the greatest threat to our existance and/or quality of life.

    On the ther hand, if "b" happened, let's say in Yellowstone (there's one there you know), North America would be history and the world's environment would be drastically altered to the point of a near extinction event. This, they say happens every 500,000 years or so and it seems we are due for one soon. That is soon in geological terms.

    If "c" happens, all the nuclear weapons on the planet set off at once would seem like a tiny firecracker comparred to the devastation thet would ensue. This could easily happen over the next 100 years.

    "d" happens all the time and could heat or cool out planet to an extent that man could not approach.

    Wow. "a" doesn't sound so bad. While it's not very cool to pump obviously toxic materials into the environment, CO2 is probably pretty harmless in comparative terms to b,c or d. As a matter of fact, some scientiists think that there were times that the CO2 concentration on the planet was much higher than it is now, and we still managed to survive till now. Jeez, life has even survived b,c and d!

    1. Re:Things that effect the environment... by cheezehead · · Score: 2

      You are right that "b", "c", and "d" will likely have a far more devastating effect than "a". However, "a" is the only thing we can influence to a reasonable extent (don't believe those silly movies that claim you can evaporate an asteroid with a laser mounted on an F-16).

      Your argument about CO2 also has some merit. In fact, if it wasn't for CO2 and the greenhouse effect, average temperature on earth would be at least 6 degrees Celsius (~11 F) lower. You could probably ski in Arizona in July. Furthermore, contrary to some belief, CO2 is not "toxic".

      However, two facts are rarely disputed:
      1. CO2 traps infrared radiation.
      2. Since the start of the Industrial Age, humankind has been dumping significant amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere.

      Some scientists believe that we could be causing a "runaway" greenhouse effect: more CO2 in the air causes rise of temperature, causes more CO2 in the air, etc. There are theories that something like that might have happened on Venus, which has an average temperature of 867 F, and an atmospheric pressure of about 90 times that on earth.
      Other scientists believe that CO2 emissions cause a negative feedback effect: more CO2 would mean more trees, thus more absorption of CO2, hence a stabilizing effect.

      I think this issue is far from settled. The optimists might well be right. However, should the pessimists be right, then we have a real serious problem. A runaway greenhouse effect would probably wipe out almost all life on earth, so it's in the same category as your other examples. Stakes could be tremendously high here. We might as well be a little careful and look into ways of limiting CO2 emissions. Saving energy is quite an effective way, it costs nothing (on the contrary...), is effective immediately, and it buys us time to explore alternative sources of energy.

      Of course, whatever the estimates of fossil fuel reserves are, eventually we will run out of it, so the CO2 emission problem will go away given enough time. Hopefully it won't be too late by then.

      --

      MSN 8: Now Microsoft even has bugs in their ad campaigns.

  188. Humans have improved the environment by AZPhysics · · Score: 1


    I think humanity has in many ways improved the environment. Whereas all of central California was once a desert, it now has fertile feilds and the biomass has grown exponentially. Same thing here in Arizona. While building roads make things hotter in the summer, they also warm things up in the winter. Many creatures take advantage of this.

    Don't get me wrong, mankind has hurt the environment. But, in making the land habitable for humans, we have also made it habitable for a variety of creatures. I bet the biomass of the world has doubled in the last 100 years (at least).

    What's more, humanity has the power to avoid another ice age. I think planetary engineering is a wonderful thing. I wish I could get to work on terraforming Mars, Venus, and the moon. Unfortuantely, that will be the work of some distant generation.

  189. rebuttals are quite good by rana · · Score: 1

    You are quite wrong in your assessment of the rebuttals. Do you want them to spoon-feed you the results? That's not how a rebuttal works. In this context, it *IS* sufficient to explain why Lombord is wrong and refer to other work as supporting information. Remember, these are magazine articles, not a 500+ page book. And besides, many of the assertions in Lombord's book are so obviously false it's hard to know where to begin when fashioning a rebuttal.

    I think E.O. Wilson's piece provides quite a bit of evidence that Lombord's view on extinction illustrates a profound lack of understanding of current progress in the field and a blatant disregard for what are generally recognized as facts in the field.

  190. Re: Errr, thats easy... by NullPointer · · Score: 2

    Not really, the threat is only as serious as you perceive it to be. I don't know if global warming is real or not, the data is as skewed as the interpretor's bias. If you believe, or want to believe, you'll see what you want to see. The sad fact is most people's views, including those of reputable scientists, are biased. The whole grant proposal system doesn't encourage diversity since those who sit on the grant committees are themselves biased and are looking to award grants to people who will confirm their ideas. I know it is true, I've co-authored several NSF and NASA proposals and have made a nice chunk of change in my spare time. Last year our team even won a share of NASA's Space Act Award. But that doesn't mean what we did was particularly interesting (to me at least), it just means we did something that impressed some folks who wanted their preconceived ideas confirmed.

    With the exception of the Jupiter thing, the examples I cited earlier were proposed and accepted by a large segment of the scientific community at the time (not unlike global warming), not because they were true, but because people seem to want to see scary things on the horizon. Poor Carl, I think he even scared himself with those oil well fires...

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    NULL
  191. Typical kneejerk illogical reaction by beakburke · · Score: 1

    We had to read Lomborg's article in The Economist in my environmental economics class. I guess some greens just couldn't avoid a typical knee jerk reaction. Anyone who disagrees with them is villified as a pro-pollution big business shill. It's this sort of dishonestand alarmist attitude that Lomborg is criticizing. Lomborg isn't anti-environmental at all. Instead, Lomborg suggests that Environmental quality is a scarce good, and is subject to tradeoffs, just like everything else in this world. This is where the greens go off the deep end. They refuse to see environmental quality as something that can be traded off. They refuse to admit that environmental quality carries an opportunity cost, just like all other choices. Politicians, scientists, economists, and the public can all argue about how much and how best to reduce pollution. But the alarmism and distortions aren't helpful to making sound policy decisions. Again, Lomborg is not opposed to enviromental protection, just to the alarmism and absolutism of many environmentalists.

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  192. That is profoundly true about way more than enviro by ynotds · · Score: 1

    My point is that the only way these people can raise money is by scaring the bejesus out of those who can be scared.

    Not just raised money, but professional fees, product sales, budget funding and ultimately votes.

    Maybe the real problem with power and influence is not what people do with them, nor even to get them, but just how evil they can become when possessed by the fear of losing them.

    If you have nothing better to do than take a microscope to any of our social institutions, including the environmental movement, it is all too easy to see that Fouccault was very close to the mark about the power of their enculturation.

    But if you take a couple of steps back you might also see that we need all of them doing pretty much what they are doing so as to provide checks and balances on each other.

    The last thing the game of life needs is one winner.

    --
    -- Our systemic servants do not good masters make.
  193. your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that's a pretty fucking twisted definition of liberal

  194. yachts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Haven't you ever heard of Greenpeace?

  195. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? Much of what I see in the environmental movement is a hatred of (pick one:) corporatism, capitalism, deregulation, industrialism, the West in general. You'd better come up with a better argument pretty quickly...

  196. Total Crap ... Reality check everyone ! by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1


    Ok. So if you had a complex system such as human society interacting with global climate , ecosystems etc. What do you think the chances are that the results would come out all positive ? (considering how many species we've made extinct).

    Right. Maybe we've done some good, maybe we've done some bad (or a lota bad) and maybe what we did didn't count for much. Then how come all of Lomberg's analysis shows only good. Gimme a break its gotta be bullshit.

    And anyway what does a political scientist know about GCMs and climatology ? Yeah sure an outsider can sometimes give a unique and incisive insight ... but not over EVERY discipline .. he hasn't invented new statistics. Something stinks here!

    --
    Bitter and proud of it.
  197. Re:Facts and figures in The Skeptical Environmenta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If it is indeed down, let us pay homage to their unpaid labor. "

    Sure. Hail "unpaid" labor of environmentalists.
    Now, since things are getting better we don't need as many of them anymore ...
    What ?
    O yeah, right I forgot. We have another all-life-ending self-inflicted plague heading our way?
    Get you checkbooks ready ...
    Our friendly environmentalists need our help again ...

  198. Re: Errr, thats easy... by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

    Studies, via simulation, in Nature as I recall after the Gulf War showed that it was actually pretty close to a global weather event. It would need to have burnt for 50% longer I think.

    Frozen Earth ? Well don't worry eventually the Ice Age will return as it does after 10,000 years of warmth (we are now at the 12,000 year mark).

    The Jupiter Effect? Maybe you are too young to remember or just plain didn't read the book. The reason Gribbin wrote the book was simple. He read two studies: 1) planetary alignments were positively correlated with sunspot activity; 2) sunspot activity was positively correlated to earthquake activity on Earth. He wrote a letter to Nature. Response ? Zip. Seeing as how a major alignment was due soon and the San Andreas fault had not slipped in quite a while he was a bit concerned so he wrote a book. In response to the book studies were done and flaws found in the initial studies. If he hadn't written the book the flaws would probably not have been found.

    Now if YOU had noticed this link and no one listened and you knew it might involve millions of lives what would you do ?

    --
    Bitter and proud of it.
  199. Ummmm . . . . by himi · · Score: 2

    Asbestos is far from harmless . . . It's seriously carcinogenic. It's released from materials containing it in many ways, including just sitting out in the sunlight until the glue binding it together into fibre boards breaks down . . .

    Getting rid of asbestos wasn't a "health nuts" thing, it was a perfectly sensible and sane decisions - it's hard to say, but it's possible that banning it's use has saved more lives than were lost in the WTC. Whatever the case, it's a really bad example.

    himi

    --

    My very own DeCSS mirror.
  200. That post and its score by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It didn't get modded up; the poster's default score is +2, because his karma is over 25 or 30 or something.

  201. Give it up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do a lot of camping/hiking/hunting and fishing. Many of the public lands I go to are abused with trash, vandalism, illigal firearms, etc.

    The times that I've been allowed to fish/hunt on private lands, I have *never* seen the same blantant disregard for the health of property.

    Based on my experience, public lands are not treated as pristinely as some think.

    Another example: how come public sidewalks and streets are littered with cigarette butts or garbage, but most peoples yards/driveways/walkways aren't?

    You're complaining about someone (oil companies) polluting their own private land? Why?

  202. Re: Errr, thats easy... by NullPointer · · Score: 1

    I only recall seeing some climatologists saying that the smoke from the oil well fires would not (and could not) reach an altitude high enough to have the effect proposed by Carl. One of them said that he (Carl) should stick with his own area of expertise and forget about weather forecasting.

    The global cooling theory is interesting, when it was challenged the proponents used the same arguments as today's global warming folks. The end result of the debate was, "better safe than sorry". They didn't know then, and I'm not yet convinced they know now.

    I didn't read the Jupiter book, just saw the news reports and remember thinking, "Whoa, what if its true!?" At the time a friend, who was living in SoCal, sent me a letter saying some of his neighbors were stocking up on canned goods and flashlight batteries in the weeks leading up to the alignment. Dire predictions are always a Good Thing for local retailers.

    The trouble with finding links in things as complex as the climate or solar physics is the large number of variables, some of which are obviously not yet known. In the sense that "better safe than sorry" gives us some tools that provide a cleaner environment, I'm all for it. Sadly, my problem is that I'm too old and cynical to embrace any more "the sky is falling" theories, though I still enjoy the debate. Yep, I'm biased...

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    NULL
  203. Re:That is profoundly true about way more than env by PHAEDRU5 · · Score: 2

    Hey! I never said I wanted a winner. Just that the observed were interesting.

    --
    668: Neighbour of the Beast
  204. two sides of same coin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    on one side we have the argument that if something has gone a certain way for X amount of time, then it will always be that way. This is most often seen where people wish to continue the absence of some negative effect. (e.g. a woman claims that despite evidence and studies to the contrary done on millions of others like her, that she can indeed continue to walk alone at midnight in an unlit parking lot in an innercity area and not get raped, mugged, etc simply because it has yet to happen)

    The other side is to assume that if something happens once or twice that contains the patterns we observe now, that we can completely predict the outcome now.

    Now the problem is not in these approaches necessary (regardless of the earlier negative example). The issue is that in reality, they are both the same coin of logic and reason. The real issue is when someone points out a pattern, that trully is very very similar and has repeated itself in various forms throughout history a staggering amount of times... yet, that person is then shot down by an ironic and hypocritical attack that claims it is under the guise of ensuring a stable and reasonable avoidance of knee jerk reactions and conclusion jumping, added with a good bit of misdirection of information and attempts at manipulation while ignoring the actual information pointed out.... sort of a pot calling the kettle black.

    If someone came up to me and after noticing the addition of spikes on my car asked if I knew what I was doing, while pointing out some 'food for thought' and comparrisons to other similar situations... well, would I then jump on him? Would I be so hate filled and enraged that my fragile ego would force me to verbally or perhaps physically attack that person, instead of simply ingesting his view and ideas and ensuring I really was making the best decision, thanking him for his input and then ensuring him that I had indeed thought of that and moving on? I think here we have at this one example the very heart of the 'liberal' problem in the world. It has never been an issue of CARE or CONCERN, rather it is always an issue of action. How does one act on that care and concern? How effective is it really? If the goal is to demonize and patronize and therefore alienate others, then a liberal ideology and tactic would indeed work. If however the idea is to protect and preserve the sanctity of life, then the ONLY logical thing to do is to ensure we do not get so wrapped up in our emotions and politics that we ignore the issue itself. Don't let the gold rush obscure the gold!

    Look at what works and try to take an enlightened view of things. What that entails is policing and knowing yourself. Don't force everyone else to pick up your tabs, and especially do not force others to do what you can and will not do yourself. Liberals are not seen by the world as caring and peaceful, anymore than terrorists and their supporters are seen by the world as peaceful and simply desiring of freedom and liberty. They indeed see themselves as that. But if I must slaughter the herd of cattle simply to prevent others from killing them for food... then it shows that I have serious wiring issues. Liberals are seen as hypocritical, tyranical, elitist, egotistical, emotionally unstable, illogical, inconsistent and blindly following sheep that care little to nothing of their stated cause, but in reality merely want to enforce their will on others and crush all those that think differently. Perhaps they should stick to education. Perhaps they should police themselves and apply the same criteria they use to attack others on themselves. Perhaps they should be the most interested in results (long term, mind you) than their policies, processes and rhetoric. After all, i can wish all I want that my relatives did not die of a disease... however my hate, anger, pain and ultimately my will or desire will not either cause history to change nor will it prevent the tragedy from happening to others. If I enact a process (or support a polician, etc) that does not good or even worsens the situation, much less turns people off of the issue, and I must resort to fabrication and misdirection of facts to manipulate others... then that says worlds about me, my efforts, my cause and my organization(s).

  205. Re:Facts and figures in The Skeptical Environmenta by gdr · · Score: 1
    The point is, a lot of environmental groups where claiming no so long ago that acid rain was killing trees. They had no scientific evidence to back this up and it turns out that acid rain has no noticable effect on tree growth.

    It didn't take much searching to find an article on greenpeace's website that still states that acid rain is "degrading forest".

    Yet envirnmental pressure groups are more believable to the general public than politicians or scientists.

    That why you should be a skeptical environmentalist. Lomborg is not saying that there are no environmental problems, he's saying that just because an environmental group says there is a problem doesn't mean there is.

    On your second point, why do I constantly here environmentalist saying that our air is getting more and more polluted, when in fact the opposite is happening? I think the environment is important, I just wish environmentalists wouldn't lie to us when stating their case.

  206. Re:Scientific American Calls it "Misleading Math" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have an interesting definition of a `real expert'.

    Let's play `match the names'. Can you tell me which of your `real experts':

    a.) wrote several books just 20 years ago warning of the dangers we face from `global cooling' and the `coming ice age'?

    b.) said in several interviews that his interests were not in science but in policy, and thus that in his writing, he must `strike a balance' between being truthful and creating enough of a scare to shape public policy?

    c.) predicted that the world's population would reach 10 billion by y2k?

    some `real experts', eh?

  207. Re:Greens taking over the world? Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Geez, at least you're honest.

    I know not what course others will take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death.

  208. Re:Environmental FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh, hello.

    Worldwatch Institute? Gee, I wonder if they have a horse in this race...

  209. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by leviramsey · · Score: 2
    The environmental movement may be based on misinformation, unfounded fear or outright deception but it is not based on hatred.

    While I grant that such groups are far from mainstream in the environmental movement, what about those groups who are convinced that reducing the world population to an "environmentally enlightened" 100,000 is the only way to save the planet?

    The World Resources Institute's stated purposes is: WRI is an environmental think tank that goes beyond research to find practical ways to protect the earth and improve people's lives.

    Just because an organization says "We are not something" does not mean that they actually are not something, especially if "something" could adversely affect their perception. If Microsoft said on their web page that they are "Dedicated to preserving the ideals and funding the development of the GNU Project," would that be accurate?

    The most dangerous person is the true believer, be it a fundamentalist Christian/Jew/Muslim/Buddhist/Hindu/Communist/Anar chist/Libertarian/Fascist/Yankees Fan/Man Utd Fan/Free Software Advocate/etc. Why? Because the true believer has been brainwashed into believing that only their mantras are true. From this, it logically follows that they consider anyone who disagrees with them to be wrong. This has the tendency (at least in my experience) to cause them to automatically disregard any argument from someone who is opposed to them ("Well, you're not a true believer in the Bible, so I will not listen to your arguments that the Bible is not the inerrant word of God").

  210. Re:The sky is falling! The sky is falling! by dgroskind · · Score: 2

    The most dangerous person is the true believer...

    In practice, political organizations of true believers, in Eric Hoffer's sense of "authoritarian faith", have proved to be emphemeral and unstable, although in the short-term they can be fairly disruptive. The reasons for their failure are that true believers are remarkably gullible and thus liable to exploitation and betrayal by their leaders. They are incapable of compromise and thus can't form alliances that give them broader influence. Even when they become large enough to pose a threat, they usually stir fair-minded centrists out of their torpor and find their opposition larger than ever.

    Most important, true believers are prone to disillusionment when, over time, the world does not unfold as they expect it. True believers rarely moderate their views. Instead, they shift from irrational idealism to cynicism when their goals perpetually elude them. As cynics, they drop out of the political process and carp from the sidelines.

    For some reason, cynicism is easier to sustain over a long period of time than irrational idealism. The result is that cynicism probably threatens public life and discourse more than hate groups and fanatics. True believers at least stir up debate and force the majority to think about and defend their values. Cynicism undermines the idea that things can ever get better.

  211. Textual analysis by ahde · · Score: 2

    it's as if we were asking you to sacrifice your first-born
    <p>
    The problem here is that <i>you</i> have set in your minds an evolutionary gulf that has somehow made you superior to the rest of <i>us</i> and given you a Darwinian right to rule over the rest of us.

  212. Contextual correction by Archie+Steel · · Score: 2

    When I say "we", I mean citizens of countries outside of the U.S. of A. who approve of the Kyoto accord, even though it isn't perfect. When I say "you", I mean citizens of the U.S. of A. who support Bush's decision not to sign the Kyoto treaty because it would allegedly cost the U.S. more than it does China...

    Never mind that, with a fifth of its population, the U.S. pollutes twice as much as China. Also, while China's economy has increased much faster than that of the U.S. over the past few years, CO2 emissions have actually decreased...Put that in your pipe and smoke it!

    No wonder people outside of the U.S. often believe that you Americans have "set in you minds an evolutionary gulf that has somehow made you superior to the rest" of the world. Lord knows your government acts as if it had a "Darwinian right to rule" over the entire globe.

    --

    Reminder: find a new sig
    1. Re:Contextual correction by ahde · · Score: 2

      when your country passes (much less actually implements) the Kyoto accord, get back to me, and I'll refill your bowl.

    2. Re:Contextual correction by RealityCrutch · · Score: 1

      "Lord knows your government acts as if it had a "Darwinian right to rule" over the entire globe."
      Dude, sorry to burst your bubble bub, but Social Darwinism is a predominantly European bailiwick.

  213. one well written rebuttal I've seen.... by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

    If you look at this there's one decent, well written, CONCRETE criticism of his work. Lomborg makes some mistakes in his statistical analysis of deforestation, and the critic points them out fair and square.

    Unfortunately, most of the rest of the articles at that site aren't nearly as well written.

  214. Um, no yourself: Erik the Red didn't find Greenlan by CRConrad · · Score: 1

    ...d; he found Iceland, but it was his son Leif Eriksson who found Greenland (and Newfoundland or Nova Scotia or something, which he called "Vinland" [='Wine-land']). There was an element of marketing in these names, sure: Make 'em sound nice so as to attract colonists, then you'll be the head honcho of a bigger colony...

    But basically, they *were* founded on truth: As Nathan pointed out, Greenland really was green at the time; the Nordic settlements he mentions, founded in the eleventh century, only died out in the fourteenth or fifteenth, as the climate got worse. And in North America (where Leif and his crew spent a winter, and later returned and had a settlement going for a while; they only gave it up after getting embroiled in a war with native "skraelings" [='Indians']. The remains of that settlement were found a few years ago, IIRC), they found some plants that they took to be grapes.

    Hey, you gotta forgive them that elementary botanical mistake (to the extent that it was one -- doesn't the grape have *some* relative that's native to North America?): Being from Norway and Iceland, they had probably never seen the real thing.

    --

    Christian R. Conrad
    mail me at iki.fi ; same user ID as here