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The Limits To Skepticism

jamie found a long and painstaking piece up at The Economist asking and provisionally answering the question: "Does the spirit of scientific scepticism really require that I remain forever open-minded to denialist humbug until it's shown to be wrong?" The author, who is not named, spent several hours picking apart the arguments of one Willis Eschenbach, AGW denialist, who on Dec. 8 published what he called the "smoking gun" — it was supposed to prove that the adjustments climate scientists make to historical temperature records are arbitrary to the point of intentional manipulation. The conclusion: "[H]ere's my solution to this problem: this is why we have peer review. Average guys with websites can do a lot of amazing things. One thing they cannot do is reveal statistical manipulation in climate-change studies that require a PhD in a related field to understand. So for the time being, my response to any and all further 'smoking gun' claims begins with: show me the peer-reviewed journal article demonstrating the error here. Otherwise, you're a crank and this is not a story. And then I'll probably go ahead and try to investigate the claim and write a blog post about it, because that's my job. Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia."

1,093 comments

  1. I am very sceptical... by ls671 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am very sceptical with regards to a "not named" author claims... ;-)

    --
    Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    1. Re:I am very sceptical... by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I am very sceptical with regards to a "not named" author claims... ;-)

      Before everyone starts putting down the author for being anonymous, please observe that this is The Economist. For those of you not familiar with that particular publication, one of its distinguishing traits is that it does not publish bylines. Ever. Editorials in The Economist are backed by the reputation of the editorial staff of The Economist, not of any individual writer.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    2. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I am very sceptical with regards to a "not named" author claims... ;-)

      Just happens to be The Economist policy not to name staff authors. Idea was to avert personal ad hominem attacks on ideas presented, and sidestep political attacks. There's some criticism noted in the wikipedia entry which i find both funny and, subjectively, true. Doesn't stop me enjoying reading it, nor fundamentally detract from the arguments presented, as you imply. Figure you know this, hence your ";-)" ;-)

    3. Re:I am very sceptical... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 4, Interesting

      one of its distinguishing traits is that it does not publish bylines. Ever.

      A benefit of that policy is that it discourages showboating ala Geraldo. Within the biz, everybody knows who wrote what so the authors get their credit within their professional circles. But the general audience, for whom the articles are meant to be written, has no name to hang any hype on.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    4. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Ok, I don't really care if he wrote anonymously or not but here is why I have an issue with him.

      Well, here's my solution to this problem: this is why we have peer review. Average guys with websites can do a lot of amazing things. One thing they cannot do is reveal statistical manipulation in climate-change studies that require a PhD in a related field to understand. So for the time being, my response to any and all further "smoking gun" claims begins with: show me the peer-reviewed journal article demonstrating the error here. Otherwise, you're a crank and this is not a story.

      Should you're words carry more weight because you have been trained in an area you are speaking on?...yep. Should you be completely dismissed because you don't have a PhD?...no and to suggest it is irresponsible and idiotic. To also suggest that someone not so decorated by academia can never show statistical manipulation is stupid as well. This is the modern version of holding mass in latin so that you have to come through the priest to get your religion. Modern "science" and more specifically the elitist academics need to be careful before there is a scientific backlash/reformation and the baby gets thrown out with the bath water. When you act like this and spread these types of attitudes you do more harm that good and eventually no one listens even if you're right.

    5. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am very sceptical with regards to a "not named" author claims... ;-)

      Don't listen to ls671! He makes bogus claims all of the time and his thinking flat out suckles donkey balls. Everyone knows climate change is false and there are not consequences to every action, or my name isn't Anonymous Coward!

    6. Re:I am very sceptical... by jmerlin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is interesting to me:

      "One thing they cannot do is reveal statistical manipulation in climate-change studies that require a PhD in a related field to understand."


      Emphasis mine. I'm a math major, granted, but I can understand it just fine. It's just basic statistics. It's numbers, if you will. Being a meteorologist doesn't enter you into some magical realm where you have special magical numbers that behave completely differently than the number systems everyone else uses in mathematics. And certainly being a Ph.D. meteorologist doesn't require you even be a bachelor in Math, does it? So how would even having a doctorate degree in meteorology or any number of RELATED FIELDS result in one being capable of understanding statistics? Honestly, this absurd statement made by the author sums up what I felt reading the entire article. It's rife with the rantings of someone who doesn't really understand what's going on, clearly admits he doesn't understand the math, yet wants to chime in and put his $.02 in while discrediting someone else just as unaccredited as himself. This is sheer lunacy.


      Any undergraduate student taking a statistics course can tell you when you're biased or hinted at what a dataset OUGHT to look like (expectations, or beliefs), the decisions you make on manipulations and adjustments to the graphs are almost dedicated to proving those correct, even if they're wrong. Just like when you sit down with a postulate you need to prove. You have the end result, and you are given some basic facts, now you're trying to force your way through definitions, techniques, tricks and the like to get the result that's on the paper. But when someone hands you an equally difficult proposition and says: "prove or disprove the following," the difficulty goes up tenfold if it in fact is not specifically chosen because it's easy to see that it's provable or easily disproved by counterexample. The same exists here. And I know that being a graduate math student I know that even I, my classmates, and even professors make more subtle mistakes than accidentally adjusting data in an incorrect fashion (even if your reason for doing so is 100% valid). I can assure anyone who's uneducated in mathematics that unless they are literally a doctorate in statistics, they can make those mistakes just as easily.


      Here's my suggestion. Open the data. Don't funnel it to some government bureau or tightly controlled data collection agency, just PUBLISH IT and let everyone scoop up all the data for themselves. Then let people with math backgrounds or anyone really to sit down and mess with the data. Let everyone see it and if the entire community agrees that data from one node looks fishy or wrong, then we can discount it as a community, not as someone who believes "well damn, if just the data between dates A and B from this place would go away, the result would be clear... hmm.. well these do look off a bit.. maybe it's an outlier, i'll just delete this data here." Keep the thermometers used, keep notes about what's being done, publish that as well. If we believe there's an outlier, we should test the thermometers and if those are defunct, then we can throw out the data without bias. If a mistake like recording temperatures in kelvin is made, well we can adjust for this, but we don't need to discard it. Let's have some common sense people. It's PEER REVIEWED SCIENCE. Well, not technically. In peer reviewed science, we can do the SAME experiment over again and get the exact same result in a predictable fashion. In this, the data we get is from YOU, so of course it could be doctored to provide a guided result. It can ONLY be peer reviewed if absolutely ANYONE can take the RAW data and come to the same conclusions you did. This entire debate is just silly. I won't believe anyone is correct until this happens. How about we give transparency a try with this global warming crap for a change?

    7. Re:I am very sceptical... by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't think there's any danger of modern science being "reformed" the way you describe. We're in far more danger of the masses infusing science with baseless conjecture due to the overall poor level of scientific education, resulting in the tainting of our scientific institutions with populist hokus. Witness NASA having to put together a press release reassuring the public after the movie 2012.

      The idiotic "everyone's entitled to their own opinion, and nobody's opinion is inherently better" idea is resulting in homeopathy being immune from criticism because their opinions are equal to the opinions of qualified doctors. Here we have climate change skeptics, on the payroll of big oil getting the same weight as scientists with real, irrefutable data, thanks to this misguided "we are all entitled to an opinion and the right to promote it".

      This is one of the fundamental flaws in the concept of free speech for all; it does not account for relative differences in resources. One wealthy liar can out-campaign ten poor truthful scientists.

      I'm not against free speech, nor do I think censorship is the answer. I don't have a clue what the answer is, nor can I even suggest a solution.

      I only want people to recognize that "free speech" as an absolute principle, while being all nice and cuddly as a concept, has very grave problems.

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      I hate printers.
    8. Re:I am very sceptical... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're right that non-PhDs can certainly do PhD-level work from time to time. But how do the rest of us know whether to trust the work without expert-level knowledge ourselves? Allowing us to know who to trust to make technical claims is part of the function of the academic degree as a social institution. Peer-review serves a similar purpose. So, yes, I think lay people generally should ignore the contributions of people without "credentials" until someone with credentials can give it their seal of approval (note that this does not mean I think that non-credentialed researchers should be ignored by the credentialed, only by laypeople), not because they are sure to be worthless, but because most of us just have no tools with which to evaluate the work other then just looking to the letters behind the author's name. Sad but true.

      So, I agree with your criticism of his implied claim that non-credentialed scientists can never contribute to advanced fields. But I think the thrust of his article (and, even, of the quote you selected) is quite correct.

    9. Re:I am very sceptical... by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Here we have climate change skeptics, on the payroll of big oil getting the same weight as scientists with real, irrefutable data, thanks to this misguided "we are all entitled to an opinion and the right to promote it".

      Of course, you should also point out that scientists at universities are funded by government grants. It's hard to get those grants if you say something that the politicians don't want you to say. While your position assumes that companies only have their own interests at heart, I contend that politicians are corrupt and wish to gain power. Global warming legislation aims to be the largest power grab since the civil war.

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    10. Re:I am very sceptical... by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Peer-reviewed articles have several problems. One is that by the time the journal is released, it is outdated. The other is it is prone to censorship of the masses. For example, if an article showed that smoking was harmful when smoking was seen both as beneficial to health, both smokers and those with much to lose if smoking was proven harmful.

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    11. Re:I am very sceptical... by Nazlfrag · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yet you have fallen prey to the same black and white thinking the GP was criticizing. Assuming all climate change skeptics are on the payroll of big oil is ludicrous, as is your suggestion that all scientists who are not skeptical have irrefutable data even when they refuse to disclose that data.

      Having a PhD does qualify you to hold an opinion, but it doesn't magically make that opinion valid, just as not having a PhD does not disqualify you from having a valid opinion. The problems you see in free speech pale in comparison to the problems with censorship.

      The answer is to engage in critical thinking no matter the source, and not to give too much weight to any authority or lack thereof.

    12. Re:I am very sceptical... by Entropy2016 · · Score: 1, Troll

      Of course, you should also point out that scientists at universities are funded by government grants. It's hard to get those grants if you say something that the politicians don't want you to say.

      I'm willing to bet that you've never been to grants.gov in your entire life. I'm also willing to bet you didn't know the application proposals are reviewed and approved by scientists (not politicians). You're probably a non-scientist / non-researcher who's attacking a system you clearly don't know jack about, so you've attempted to compensate for your ignorance by filling in the gaps with your (incorrect) assumptions.

    13. Re:I am very sceptical... by budgenator · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Before everyone starts putting down the author for being anonymous, please observe that this is The Economist. For those of you not familiar with that particular publication, one of its distinguishing traits is that it does not publish bylines. Ever. Editorials in The Economist are backed by the reputation of the editorial staff of The Economist, not of any individual writer.

      FTA

      I don't understand that formula. I don't have the math for it. The paper goes on to reject the Trewin formula for reasons which, again, I don't have the math to understand. This is academic-level statistics. Scepticism's limits

      WTF The Economist's editorial staff doesn't understand math? I can easily understand that they may not understand why a formula may be rejected in a particular context but to not understand the formula itself! I think their reputation just FUBARed.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    14. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Just from which group of people do you believe that the scientists who approve fund actually get these funds from? It seems you are the one who doesn't quite understand the system.

    15. Re:I am very sceptical... by mellon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is the situation we are in: we may or may not have a very serious problem. Most of the people who would have to do the work, and pay the price, of solving the problem do not have the time or the interest to study the matter deeply enough to know whether the situation is bad. So we have to choose who to trust. Do we trust the person who is telling us what we want to hear, or do we trust the peer-reviewed science?

      We don't have the third choice that you propose, where we figure out whether the guy who wasn't peer-reviewed is telling us something we need to know, because we don't have the time or the interest to check his or her work. We can *hope* that if what he is saying is valid, and can be verified, that it will make it through the gauntlet of scientific skepticism. But until it does, we simply don't know whether or not to listen to it.

      If we listen to everything that might be true, before it passes through this filter, then we *inevitably* are going to be guided by our own prejudices, because we simply have no other way to decide who to listen to.

      So yeah, I'm very sympathetic to what you're saying here. I'm in the same boat you are. But I just can't buy your argument, because it leads nowhere. And if enough people buy your argument, and refuse to use the tools that they actually have to separate the wheat from the chaff, and if this really is the serious situation that we are being told it is, then we are going to be begging our children for forgiveness, because it is they, and not we, who will pay the price for our choice.

    16. Re:I am very sceptical... by dmuir · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Totally agree. I like how they've started calling people who don't believe in AGW "deniers" now instead of "sceptics". Is their "science" so flaky that they have to resort to character assassination? And BTW, it's called Climate Change now. Kind of hard to call it Global Warming when past decade has seen a downward trend. Luckily they chose a term that is sufficiently vague that any variation in weather would classify as proof of Climate Change.

    17. Re:I am very sceptical... by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Good god someone has finally made a rational observation eloquently.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    18. Re:I am very sceptical... by WrongMonkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While I agree with you're basic premise of opening up the data, I think your view of the statistics is a bit limited. Anyone can draw a trend line and calculate error bars, but when multiple data sets have conflicting data, it requires to a great deal of understanding of experimental methods, theoretical models, etc. to determine which datasets are most relevant to make what kind of conclusions. The "tricks" come from matching up tree ring data, ice core data, satellite data, direct measurements and many others. Understanding the strengths and weaknesses these methods is where an expert is needed and why your undergraduate math major is less than useful.

    19. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest
      > month on record in Darwin, Australia."

      In Canada we're currently experiencing record breaking cold temeratures

    20. Re:I am very sceptical... by dachshund · · Score: 2, Informative

      Keep the thermometers used, keep notes about what's being done, publish that as well. If we believe there's an outlier, we should test the thermometers and if those are defunct, then we can throw out the data without bias

      We're talking about measurements made over the past century. Most of the thermometers are gone, and absent a time machine you're not going to get them back. What you're essentially suggesting is that we should throw out most of the data recorded before 1990.

      Incidentally, most of the data and the rationale for their correction is described in published papers. It's unbelievably, mind-numbingly boring and detailed.

    21. Re:I am very sceptical... by wellingj · · Score: 2

      You deserve a +6 Scientist rating for that one.

    22. Re:I am very sceptical... by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      The answer is to engage in critical thinking

      The public's response to the movie 2012 demonstrates that the vast majority of people simply don't have the level of education required to engage in critical thinking. Public lack of scientific education is the core problem here.

      The problems you see in free speech pale in comparison to the problems with censorship.

      I said nothing about censorship being the answer, in fact I clearly stated that I'm against it. I even stated that I have no idea what the solution to this problem is. I was merely pointing out that free speech as an absolute concept was problematic. You fabricated a point of view on my behalf that I was clear to avoid.

      I don't care what your position on censorship is, it is wrong to yell "FIRE!" in a crowded theater, or "BOMB!" on a crowded aircraft. That is putting lives at risk by exploiting human responses. These are not exercises of free speech in anything other than the most brainless dogmatic definition of the ideal.

      Free speech and a censored state are not two halves of a binary choice.

      You're the one who seems to be seeing in black and white.

      --
      I hate printers.
    23. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Honestly, this absurd statement made by the author sums up what I felt reading the entire article. It's rife with the rantings of someone who doesn't really understand what's going on, clearly admits he doesn't understand the math, yet wants to chime in and put his $.02 in while discrediting someone else just as unaccredited as himself. This is sheer lunacy.

      Actually, the editor of the blog carrying post that the article is commenting on has some background in the subject matter.

      I’m a former television meteorologist who spent 25 years on the air and who also operates a weather technology and content business, as well as continues daily forecasting on radio, just for fun.

      Weather measurement and weather presentation technology is my specialty. I also provide weather stations and custom weather monitoring solutions via www.weathershop.com (if you like my work, please consider buying a weather gadget there, StormPredator for example) and www.tempelert.com, and turn key weather channels with advertising at www.viziframe.com

      The weather graphics you see in the lower right corner of the blog are produced by my company, IntelliWeather. As you can see most of my work is in weather technology such as weather stations, weather data processing systems, and weather graphics creation and display. While I’m not a degreed climate scientist, I’ll point out that neither is Al Gore, and his specialty is presentation also. And that’s part of what this blog is about: presentation of weather and climate data in a form the public can understand and discuss.

    24. Re:I am very sceptical... by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, I have taken part in the government grant process. However, I am in one country. Are you sure that the process you describe is universal? Who are these scientists that review and approve grant money? How did they get that job? Can any scientist do it? Can I can go to my wife, (who has a science degree) and have her approve me some government money? Is it really that easy?

      Seriously. The Constitution spells out that Congress controls the purse strings. They allocate the money. If it requires the approval of other scientists, then congress chooses those scientists. It starts and ends with congress. And last time I checked, congress is a nothing more than a bunch of politicians who were able to make enough promises to get elected and will tell whatever it takes to gain more power and get reelected. Nowhere in the Constitution does it give the power to scientists to tax citizens and spend the money on their behalf.

      --
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    25. Re:I am very sceptical... by Americium · · Score: 1

      Next thing you'll be saying is that everyone isn't allowed an equal vote....which is a great idea!!! (#&!??)

      If it wasn't for the public outcry of only allowing the at least somewhat educated to vote, which in my opinion is the sole reason we allow everyone to vote. I mean come on, we have all met lots of people that shouldn't be allowed to vote. If you haven't been highly educated, and still interact with the general public (most likely does not apply to slashdot readers that aren't in IT, oh wait...), then you most definitely should agree that democracy (i.e. everyone having an EQUAL vote) cannot work; The only solution would be to have a large media company pushing the positions of intellectuals, however I find fox (the largest viewer base) to be somewhat lacking in that respect.

      I do enjoy watching Idiocracy, which inspires me to move to a third world country, where dumbasses still die, and the intelligent live on.

    26. Re:I am very sceptical... by DoktorFaust · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Should you're words carry more weight because you have been trained in an area you are speaking on?...yep. Should you be completely dismissed because you don't have a PhD?...no and to suggest it is irresponsible and idiotic.

      I largely agree with the spirit of what you're saying here, but you're conflating two issues. The author of the Economist article claims to not have the expertise to judge all of the scientific claims made in various quoted articles; so from his perspective, the smart thing to do is to believe the peer-reviewed consensus. That's all he's saying. However, this is NOT to say that global climate scientists within the field should do the same (and I think this is your point). They *do* need to listen to people outside their field and keep and open mind. It's their job.

      To also suggest that someone not so decorated by academia can never show statistical manipulation is stupid as well.

      You're absolutely correct, but the problem is that Mr Eschenbach *hasn't* shown such manipulation. Actually, the real problem is that Mr Eschenbach *thinks* that he has, but doesn't actually know what he doesn't know. In fact, in Mr Eschenbach's response to the Economist article, he states the following:

      The question is, should temperatures more than a thousand km away from Darwin be used to arbitrarily adjust Darwin’s temperature by a huge amount? You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out.

      This quote demonstrates exactly why someone like Mr Eschenbach should be ignored by most people. First, the "arbitrarily adjust" comment reveals that he didn't even understand the explanations given for how things were adjusted (they weren't arbitrary, and that was wells stated). But second, he simply dismisses out-of-hand the possibility that two datasets separated by 1000 km can't be correlated!!! Uh, whoops.

      This pretty much proves that Mr Eschenbach is wasting our time. He hasn't taken his own time to understand the arguments the scientists are making (or even basic statistics) and simply continues to repeat his claims.

      So the fact that he isn't "decorated by academia" certainly doesn't mean we should dismiss his claims outright, but it probably does mean we should be a little bit more skeptical of his claims that are so far outside of his knowledge base.

      --

      Die Menschen verhoehnen was sie nicht verstehen. -- Goethe.
    27. Re:I am very sceptical... by izomiac · · Score: 1

      I've noticed that in my own field statistics and physics are regarded as nearly impossibly difficult for undergraduates. Apparently it's a different mindset, although I never found them to be difficult myself. As my colleges gain credentials, they don't magically become good at math. There's a little instruction on statistics here and there, but nothing too serious. Therefore, there's little surprise when researchers make stupid statistical mistakes.

      My stats teacher once made the comment that in the biological sciences, probably about half of published papers have some kind of statistical error. IMHO that's truly worrisome because a Type I error can easily lead to people's deaths (i.e. erroneously finding Drug A to be more effective than the traditional approach). But my own meager statistical background suggests to me that this is probably a true statement. As part of my coursework I recently read a published article (and a prominent one at that) where the author literally reported a negative p value. Some evolution denier pointed out some statistical mistakes in the main experiment of the 40,000 generation E. coli study to the journal it was published in, and the journal's response indicates that they basically didn't care. (His other points were silly, and the p value was probably still quite low, but the reported p value is wrong.)

      I can see why a researcher might feel that statistics isn't something a layman can understand because of their own struggles with the subject. I also think he's completely wrong about that since math doesn't care about credentials. If your math is wrong then it doesn't matter if it was a retarded house cat that pointed it out. IMHO open access to data sets is essential, at least where subject privacy isn't an issue. Peer review lets way too much by, and I suspect it's exactly because the reviewers are prone to making the same kind of mistakes their peers are. Some outside scrutiny can only improve research quality.

    28. Re:I am very sceptical... by ignavus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All people are equal.

      All opinions are not equal.

      Sometimes we are not entitled to an opinion - to be taken seriously. If I walked into a heart surgery theatre (suitably sterile) and gave my opinion about the appropriate treatment, the surgeons there would be entitled to say "Throw the idiot out".

      The problem is, most of us humans know we don't understand heart surgery. Many of us humans don't realise how ignorant we are about other subjects too.

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      I am anarch of all I survey.
    29. Re:I am very sceptical... by Neon+Aardvark · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Here we have climate change skeptics, on the payroll of big oil getting the same weight as scientists with real, irrefutable data

      Perhaps you could back this up in some kind of way.

      Which climate skeptics are on the payroll of "big oil" and are getting the "same weight" as pro-AGW-IPCC scientists?

      What irrefutable data shows AGW to be true?

      Look forward to your references, you're not just pulling this out of your ass, I'm sure. Heaven forfend.

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      Azural - instrumentals
    30. Re:I am very sceptical... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Voting on facts doesn't change whether they're true or not, regardless of what the majority chooses.

      Third world countries don't have any greater chance of the stupid dying while the smart live and outbreed them. Entirely the opposite is universally observable. In all countries, but in third world ones even more.

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      make install -not war

    31. Re:I am very sceptical... by jmerlin · · Score: 2

      The AC, the insults claiming I cannot understand simple math, and stupid technical arguments here really discredit you. If you really are so highly educated, one would imagine your identity wouldn't be a frightening thing to make public. The first rule of anonymous posting: always inflate your claims. From the tone though, I'd claim enjoy the troll mod.

    32. Re:I am very sceptical... by joocemann · · Score: 0, Troll

      You are so full of false assumptions you smell like manure.

      B.S., and no I'm not saying you've got a bachelor's of science. lol.

    33. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Here we have pro-vaccionists, on the payroll of big pharma getting the same weight as homeopaths with real, irrefutable data

      See how easy that was? Don't use the tactics as every other woowoo out there. You make real skepticism look bad.

    34. Re:I am very sceptical... by joocemann · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Relevance

      Implications

      Weight

      Related-Information

      Significance

      It's not all numbers

    35. Re:I am very sceptical... by timmarhy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The whole thing is a giant strawman to begin with. they don't want limits on skeptics - if i piped up told them i believed in big foot they would be plenty skeptical. what they really want is AGW to be a protected subject, with no one allowed to rock the boat. it's completely stupid and typical of AGW fanatics, but it has one saving grace, the more of this bullshit they pull the more skeptics they will create. it has a streisand like effect when you demand no one challenges your authority.

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    36. Re:I am very sceptical... by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      so your suggesting it's a secret sauce that us mere mortals can't comprehend? i find that hard to believe. I don't need to be any kind of expert to see how extrapolating tree rings into CO2 readings might have massive opportunity for error, indeed it's this idea that we should just trust the experts that have made the line "don't worry i'm an expert" cause for laughter on many occasions...

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    37. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Luckily we have you to think for us all.

      Assshole

    38. Re:I am very sceptical... by jmerlin · · Score: 1

      Well what good are numbers without some meaning to them? 42, it's a number, it's 2*3*7, but other than that, I really don't have a whole lot. What you're describing is just data (numbers) with observational meaning imposed, which is absolutely necessary, and of course I don't think anyone would discount that.

    39. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't put words into parent's mouth, he's just saying that there is substantial domain specific knowledge required to make sense of the climate data.

    40. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I'm with you on the benefits of open data, it's naive to think that there is any amount of openness sufficient to guarantee that "absolutely ANYONE can take the RAW data and come to the same conclusions you did." The fact is, most people who look at the data will do so with an eye towards pushing their own agenda, whatever that might be, and will find a way to make the data fit their agenda. Making the data analysis 100% open may convince some people who otherwise wouldn't be convinced, and result in some valuable findings, but it will also give anyone with an axe to grind a way to delay the whole project by raising objection after baseless objection. That's exactly what the author is complaining about.

    41. Re:I am very sceptical... by cetialphav · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The way it works (in the US) is that Congress allocates funds for research in general. Agencies like the NSF (National Science Foundation), DARPA, etc actually administer the grants. They take applications and decide which are the best ideas that should be funded. The people running these agencies are academics, not politicos. For example, the National Science Board, which oversees the NSF, is listed here. While these groups control which projects get funded, they do not control the results of the research. If a funded project disproved existing theory, it is up to peer reviewed journals to publish or not.

      A common criticism of the system is that it encourages a sort of orthodoxy in research. So if the NSF things "dark matter" is a great explanation, then projects which try to find alternative explanations may receive less funding because it is viewed as a waste. This is unfortunate, but there is not enough money to fund all the possible projects so some sort of prioritization must be made. It is much better to have experts do this, even though they have biases.

      If the political parties really had that much control of research funding and the results of that research, you would expect that over the last several years you would see lots of peer reviewed research disproving human caused climate change. After all, Republicans were running congress and the White House for a long time.

    42. Re:I am very sceptical... by cetialphav · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand what peer-reviewed means. In a peer-reviewed journal, a submitted paper is sent to a small number of experts in the field. These experts carefully review the paper and submit a report to the editor (or conference organizer). This report addresses originality, importance, clarity, and soundness of the research. The authors get a chance to respond to the criticisms and a decision is then made to accept or reject the paper. This is definitely not censorship of the masses. People regularly accept papers that challenge their own research.

      In the case of scientific research, being outdated is not an issue. This isn't like a weekly news magazine. Real research takes a long time to do and it can take quite a while just to even fully digest a scientific paper. Peer-review certainly increases the latency of getting a paper published, but the benefit is that bad papers with unsubstantiated ideas do not waste a lot of people's time. This is important because it means that people know that when a respected journal published a paper, it is worth reading.

    43. Re:I am very sceptical... by aevans · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is it wrong to yell FRAUD to a HOAX? Or is that too close you an ABSOLUTE PRINCIPLE for you?

    44. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Next thing you'll be saying is that everyone isn't allowed an equal vote....

      No, but I *will* tell you that taking a vote on a factual matter, such as "Does pumping raw sewage into a river pose a health risk?" should not be done.

      The purpose of voting is to determine how many people have an interest in a particular course of action, not whether or not something is true.

    45. Re:I am very sceptical... by cetialphav · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That is very well said. The bottom line is that if I became King of the World and had to make decisions affecting the environment, I really only have three choices:

      1. Become an expert myself. This is totally impractical because it takes too long and I have a huge range of other responsibilities.

      2. Listen to lots of random people and make decisions based on which things I hear sound right. The upside is that I will hear an extremely diverse set of opinions and that the best option will likely be submitted to me. The downside is that many of the opinions are baseless claims by crackpots or people with selfish interests.

      3. Listen to the opinions of experts whose sole job is to study and test these issues. Baseless ideas will not pass this filter and so I will be presented with a narrower range of views, but the best options should still be present. The major issue here is making sure the experts are really experts and that they have no other axe to grind.

      Of these options, it seems like 3 is the most reasonable option and that is what our current peer review process is. It is always reasonable to question the expertise of the experts, but that same questioning should be targetted at random bloggers, too.

    46. Re:I am very sceptical... by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      I was using those examples to show that those particular applications of free speech could lead to lives being endangered.

      Having the freedom to exposing a fraud is one of the reasons that free speech is necessary. I don't see any contradiction between your example and mine, certainly not one that requires the use of CAPITAL LETTERS to highlight your objection to what I said.

      --
      I hate printers.
    47. Re:I am very sceptical... by Magic5Ball · · Score: 2, Informative

      The statistical maths concerned are only slightly more difficult than is required of undergraduates in natural or social sciences programs. However, as a practicing natural and social scientist (but not in geophysics), I have next to no idea of what "inter-station separation measured in degrees" or "interstation correlation" mean in terms of what the instrumentation kit is doing in the field in response to whatever phenomena is claimed to be measured. Thus, without further study, I could not confidently state whether or not the formula referenced has anything to do with reality (just as any third-year computer science undergraduate could implement almost any adequately expressed contemporary economics or finance algorithm in isolation without understanding economics or finance at all).

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    48. Re:I am very sceptical... by cetialphav · · Score: 4, Informative

      WTF The Economist's editorial staff doesn't understand math?

      Having looked at that paper and the text surrounding the formula, I wouldn't say that I understand it and I almost certainly have a better math background than the editors at The Economist. It isn't that the formula is incomprehensible; it isn't. The formula is pretty straightforward, but that doesn't mean it is easy to understand. There are not many people on the planet qualified to judge the suitability of the formula for calculating temperature trends. The Economist is making the claim that the climate-change sceptic Willis Eschenbach is not one of those people and that seems like a reasonable claim. Eschenbach is claiming, with no basis, that the formula is an arbitrary adjustment to force a desired trend. The Economist article is stating that until a peer-reviewed journal publishes a paper that backs Eschenbach's claim, it just isn't worth the time fighting over this.

    49. Re:I am very sceptical... by QuasiEvil · · Score: 1

      Should you be completely dismissed because you don't have a PhD?...no and to suggest it is irresponsible and idiotic.

      I'd mod the parent up if there was any further to go. Instead I'll just agree with him. Many of the smartest people I've known have a BS or no degrees at all, because they skipped straight into the private sector (because they were just that damn good). Skipped the academic bullshit and go straight to profit, because that's what motivated them. I likewise respect those who do work in the academic sector, but to denounce anyone who didn't spend half their life in college accumulating letters after their name is just stupid and elitist.

    50. Re:I am very sceptical... by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      Calling it "Climate Change" does nothing to increase clarity.

      The climate changes at least four times per year for much of the world. The climate changes twice a day for much more of the world. Mars experiences climate change. Planetoids, Pluto, etc. do not experience rapid climate change as compared to Earth.

      To the extent that completely halting climate change on Earth would render it uninhabitable (planet no longer responds to energy input from Sol), my preference is to live on an Earth which experiences predictable and bounded climate changes.

      My preference would be to reframe the issue in terms of human systems. China and the U.S. wouldn't need to rely as much on on coal-fired generators if consumers didn't demand lifestyles based on low-dollar-cost disposable consumer goods and entertainments, or if citizens around the world (except France) were a little less sensitive about the N-word. Deforestation and desertification wouldn't be as significant as issues if we focused on ways to recognise, store and exchange value in symbols beyond than Yuans and Euros.

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    51. Re:I am very sceptical... by siloko · · Score: 1

      Skipped the academic bullshit and go straight to profit, because that's what motivated them.

      That's a great quote - as we know someone whose primary motivation is profit is bound to be objective!

    52. Re:I am very sceptical... by polar+red · · Score: 1

      Should you be completely dismissed because you don't have a Ph.D.?

      the problem is : no-one with a PhD. can effectively, on a scientific basis, crack AGW. so, on the one hand we have a lot of scientists claiming it is real, and showing the research backing it up, on the other hand a lot of scientists trying to 'break' AGW, and failing.

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    53. Re:I am very sceptical... by nathanh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Any undergraduate student taking a statistics course can tell you when you're biased or hinted at what a dataset OUGHT to look like (expectations, or beliefs)

      Oh, I completely disagree. Most undergrad students are morons. The only reason they pass at all is because they copy off their smarter friends for their assignments. They typically fail all the mid-term exams then squeeze a passing grade in the final exam because the lecturers are lazy and recycle exam questions, so the students just memorise all the previous years exams.

      I've had an undergrad in third year (final year) who still didn't know what a pointer was. Didn't have a clue. Couldn't explain it to me even with helpful prompting. He graduated! He's probably working for EDS or IBM these days at $2000/day, coding a monolithic piece of unworkable software for Defence while still not knowing what a pointer means.

      A postgrad friend in biology gets paid to mark undergrad's assignments. She brings their scribblings to the pub and we all have a laugh at some of the stupidity they write. Another friend was a lab supervisor for comp science; he quit after only two months because he couldn't handle the sheer idiocy on display from some of the students.

      I think people put too much faith in that "university degree". It's so easy to get even idiots are getting them these days. I wouldn't trust an undergrad with anything important. I certainly wouldn't listen to their opinion on AGW statistics!

    54. Re:I am very sceptical... by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Nowhere in the Constitution does it give the power to scientists to tax citizens and spend the money on their behalf.

      No where in the Constitution does it give the power to Congress, the Executive, or the Judiciary to regulate pollution except where disputes between states occur. Since pollution is effectively littering, I'd imagine that most states on the east coast would have ample basis to block coal plants from releasing CO2 to the west of them.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    55. Re:I am very sceptical... by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think there is actually a very easy way to solve this problem...show us the code. Give out ALL the raw data, every little scrap, along with the source code for the programs they are using to manipulate it.

      I have to go with RMS and his traditional view on data, which is probably the one and only time I'll ever agree on ANYTHING with that guy, but in this case I see no other way. if you want to prove to me that AGW isn't a scam, and considering how much leaches like Goldman Sachs will make off of carbon credits it is hard not to be a little skeptical at this point, then share the code.

      I may not be able to read this data myself, but there are a LOT of really smart guys out there that can, so share it. Hiding from FOI requests is NOT the way to get anyone but the most fervent Koolaid drinkers to go along with your beliefs. After all we have had the creationists trying to debunk evolution for quite awhile now, but most folks won't believe them because the data is there for all to see. Considering that the changes required by the AGW bunches will cost the working poor untold mountains of money, can cause another bubble and enrich parasites like GS, and can cause the loss of many more jobs and folks falling deeper into poverty, I think having transparency with regards to the data, both raw and adjusted, is not too much to ask, wouldn't you agree?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    56. Re:I am very sceptical... by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I looked at the list. Thanx for providing it, BTW.

      Now, in the list, the majority of the people I see there are deans, college presidents, a few professors and some people that I have no idea why they would be there. Some of the people on the list don't even have Ph.D.'s.

      Mr. Arthur K. Reilly, for example, works for Cisco and has an MS in... well, it doesn't say.

      Dr. John T. Bruer got his PhD in Philosophy.

      Dr. Dan E. Arvizu is Director and Chief Executive of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Gee, I wonder where he comes down on AGW. Just think, if I, as a Dr. Venture style Super-Scientist could prove that AGW is a myth, this guy may be out of a job. I wonder how he would vote for my grant funding?

      Dr. Steven C. Beering is a Dr... as in MD. His science degree was honorary. He is the president of Purdue.

      Dr. Camilla P. Benbow's specialty is education.

      Dr. Ray M. Bowen is the President of Texas A&M. He does have a PhD in in mechanical engineering, although his resume is mostly academia administration.

      Now not all of these people are out of place. Kelvin K. Droegemeier is an excellent fit He has a PhD in a scientific field. He has worked in the real world and has actually done REAL stuff, not just research, not just academia. (And his name! He had me at Kelvin)...

      Still, I don't trust many of these people to know beaker from microscope, much less decide where money is being spent. Besides, should this many people in academia be deciding where government grants go? Aren't they kinda voting for their own salaries?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    57. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF The Economist's editorial staff doesn't understand math? I can easily understand that they may not understand why a formula may be rejected in a particular context but to not understand the formula itself!

      Okay - could you please explain the formula to us, then? From your link, it's:

      Wi = {ri ( 6 – dI) 2, r > 0.6, dI < 6} i=1,...,N ...1

              {0 , r < 0.6, diI> 6}

    58. Re:I am very sceptical... by ArcherB · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are so full of false assumptions you smell like manure.

      B.S., and no I'm not saying you've got a bachelor's of science. lol.

      Assumptions? How about THIS assumption:

      EPA and nine other federal agencies this week officially awarded $5.5 million dollars in climate change study grants to 27 developing countries. These nations will use the money to develop greenhouse gas inventories and action plans for reducing global warming emissions.

      Hmmm... Maybe you would like to read my assumptions from the EPA:

      On February 17, 2009, President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). The Recovery Act seeks in part to spur technological advances in science and health and to invest in environmental protection and other infrastructure that will provide long-term economic benefits. EPA manages over $7 billion in projects and programs that will help achieve these goals, offers resources to help other agencies “green” a much larger set of Recovery investments, and administers environmental laws that will govern Recovery activities.

      How much of this money do you think goes to AGW skeptics?

      Yeah, I smell manure too. Maybe you should provide some sources... Hell, even some opinions of your own instead of just hurling insults. You need something more than, "you're wrong" to make a point.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    59. Re:I am very sceptical... by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      Which climate skeptics are on the payroll of "big oil"

      You do realize that the American Petroleum Institute not only funds the AGW thinktanks, but Exxon-Mobil actually outright offered a prize for anyone who could get a paper published that defended their positions, right? If you want a specific example, Soon and Baluinas, 2003. Here's some of their background. Half the board of Climate Research resigned in protest after Soon and Baliunas's publication, by the way. So when you see hacked emails showing scientists dissing people like them, or McIntyre, or any of that ilk, realize that the scientists *really do* think that these people are putting out garbage and have vested agendas. It's just that when speaking publicly, they usually have more tact.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    60. Re:I am very sceptical... by Cwix · · Score: 1

      The only issue with that is then we have scientists on both sides twisting information. I mean they dont even try to hide it from the public, for example a poll on faux news the other day added up to 120% that is who will be playing with the numbers, and telling the stupid public that the average up temps are really everything just getting cooler. They are way to many people that trust Glenn Beck more then they would trust any scientist.

      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
    61. Re:I am very sceptical... by Rei · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think there is actually a very easy way to solve this problem...show us the code. Give out ALL the raw data, every little scrap, along with the source code for the programs they are using to manipulate it.

      While that may sound great, it's not always possible, or even legal. There are WMO rules, for example, that prohibit the sharing of certain data. That's why, for example, there are some major hurricane models whose results are publicly available but whose data is not available. I think it's stupid, but it is the case.

      Beyond such barriers, there's also the issue that many of the scientists who have been resisting FOI requests had initially been abiding by them. There seems to be a perception in the scientific community that certain people are filing FOI requests deliberately to waste their time in order to stifle research. Or worse. You need to keep in mind that most of the people filing the FOI requests are ideological foes of the scientists they're submitting requests for, since almost all climate scientists accept AGW. So, for example, one denier (a financial trader named Douglas Keenan who considers himself an amateur climate scientist) submitted a FOI request for the data on a paper authored by Phil Jones and Wei-Chyung Wang, which Jones complied with. Keenan "discovered fakery" in the paper and tried to get Wang arrested. The university invested and cleared Wang of any wrongdoing, but the damage was already done. Is it any surprise that Jones started trying to find excuses to duck FOI requests in the future?

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    62. Re:I am very sceptical... by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      In the comments section: "Oh, I forgot: for our non-regular commenters, I, sparkleby, am the blogger, and am fully responsible for this blog post."

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    63. Re:I am very sceptical... by rmushkatblat · · Score: 1, Informative

      You can't link to the Huffington Post and expect us to take you seriously.

    64. Re:I am very sceptical... by damburger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are missing the point; if everyone's idiotic claims have to be subject to point by point analysis, then intelligence can be overwhelmed by stupidity when it has superior numbers. At a certain point you've got to say "My time as a scientist is costly, and not worth spending on such an obvious cretin"

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    65. Re:I am very sceptical... by colenski · · Score: 1

      If the math is universal and does not require hyperspecialized training to draw conclusions from, this sounds like a killer app for crowdsourcing, assuming the raw data can be published even as a CSV. Wouldn't that be nifty, if people could vote on their opinions on the validity of the methods used, and display that publicly, and the methods they used to validate the conclusions? hmm, sounds like a good website in the making there. hmm. you heard it here first.

    66. Re:I am very sceptical... by damburger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, you are very lucky to have scientists to think for you. Thats our job. It takes time, dedication, and specific talent to become an expert in a field of science. Most people lack the talent and/or won't put in the time/dedication.

      Society has outsourced its heavy-duty thinking to scientific specialists, and so shouldn't be complaining when those specialists consider each others (peer reviewed) conclusions to be inherently more valuable than the rants of some-twat-on-tinternet.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    67. Re:I am very sceptical... by damburger · · Score: 1

      Which is why no scientific data about the dangers of smoking was ever published. Oh, wait...

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    68. Re:I am very sceptical... by damburger · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You think the smartest graduates go into the private sector straight off and the dumbest go into PhDs? I bet you buy into this 'university of life' bullshit don't you?

      You are part of the problem. You don't really respect academic qualification (despite what you claim) and you think that the pursuit of money will somehow lead to scientific advancement. Put down Atlas Shrugged and get a fucking clue.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    69. Re:I am very sceptical... by u38cg · · Score: 1

      That is what's happening these days. The problem is, for a sufficiently large dataset to do meaningful climate change analysis on right now, we need to use records made when none of these factors were thought to be of any importance. Some dude in 1880 who recorded local temperatures for his amateur theories in meteorology is unlikely to have had any need to go to the lengths you describe. We still need his data, though.

      --
      [FUCK BETA]
    70. Re:I am very sceptical... by damburger · · Score: 1

      AGW "fanatics"? Anyone who disagrees with you can't possibly have rational reasons for doing so? I can't imagine why the scientific community doesn't take your opinion seriously.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    71. Re:I am very sceptical... by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      "Should you be completely dismissed because you don't have a PhD?...no and to suggest it is irresponsible and idiotic"

      Context, man, context. This post is picking apart a rather lengthy, and as it turns out, spurious argument by one of these non-PhDs. So poor, in fact, that you got to wonder if it was made in good faith.

      That is the issue in the "climate debate", not qualifications, but good faith. Get this into your head if you haven't already: there are people out there paid to spread noise. Not to "win" the debate, but spread FUD. Look up, say, Steve Milloy or Marc Morano on sourcewatch, they have impressive credentials! Milloy from tobacco, Morano from Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. They can make up plausible-sounding claims way faster than you can shoot them down, especially if you, as Sparkleby said, lack a PhD in a climate-related field. Even if you do, they win, because creating noise and appearance of controversy was what they aimed for in the first place.

      Those two are just the top of the iceberg, one can easily be arguing against AGW in bad faith without having a well-documented history as a ruthless shill. So, how do you propose we defend ourselves from them?

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    72. Re:I am very sceptical... by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      "All opinions are not equal."

      But some people think that opinions, like people, are entitled to lawyers. Remember when Kenneth Brown, president of the Alexis de Toqueville Institute wrote a book smearing Linux and open source? Bruce Perens apparently asked him straight out how much it would cost to get him to write a book praising Linux instead, to which he got the reply "we can talk about that".
      The episode is interesting because Linux is not usually the target of the think tanks - it's environmentalists and people concerned about public health, mostly. They threaten more profits. But it showed just how easily you can buy yourself a shill to argue in bad faith on your behalf.

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    73. Re:I am very sceptical... by Troed · · Score: 2, Informative

      You seem to be well versed in how peer-review _should_ work. That is, unfortunately, not the same thing as how it actually works in reality.

      You might want to study "Climategate", especially Phil Jones (paper-selecting expert for the IPCC, at CRU) opinions on how to deal with peer-review when it doesn't suit his agenda.

      I can't see either of these papers being in the next IPCC report. Kevin and I will keep them out somehow - even if we have to redefine what the peer-review literature is !

      http://businessandmedia.org/articles/2009/20091203151910.aspx

      Mind-opening.

    74. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole argument, climate change vs climate scam, reminds me of something else. Christianity in it's many many varieties. The bible itself (regardless of translation) cannot be understood by the casual belier. No, we need the pope, vadican, priests, ministers, theologists, and every which kind of expert to tell the followers what the data (aka the bible) means.

    75. Re:I am very sceptical... by 31eq · · Score: 1

      If we're going to be strict about this – and I am whether you like it or not – The Economist does sometimes publish bylines. It does so for a review of a book by a former or current Economist journalist.

    76. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Ireland, I believe, part of the upper house is elected by an electorate consisting of only the members of the public who hold a degree. Would that be a useful compromise in your opinion?

    77. Re:I am very sceptical... by cetialphav · · Score: 1

      I am familiar with Climategate. There is a reason that there is so much controversy surrounding it, and that is because it is unusual. It is not normal for academics to arbitrarily exclude papers that they disagree with. No one claims the system is perfect. Any system that has humans making decisions will have bias no matter how hard we try to eliminate it, but isolated incidents of abuse does not mean that peer review is broken.

      I'm no climatologist, but it looks to me like the Climategate folks were trying to forcefully exclude bad papers from their report. It isn't necessarily wrong that the papers got rejected, but it is wrong that they were not subjected to peer review. The process really needs to be followed, even for crap science. (I certainly expect that when I submit my crap to a conference.)

    78. Re:I am very sceptical... by Neon+Aardvark · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Which climate skeptics are on the payroll of "big oil" and are getting the "same weight" as pro-AGW-IPCC scientists?

      http://www.seattlepi.com/national/124642_warming02.html

      Your example doesn't meet both conditions. Having an attempted "research boycott of two journals that published the study" isn't receiving the "same weight".

      Having the "same weight" would be appearing in an IPCC report along side the paper that this was attacking (the Mann et al "Mike's Nature trick" paper).

      So when you see hacked emails showing scientists dissing people like them, or McIntyre, or any of that ilk, realize that the scientists *really do* think that these people are putting out garbage and have vested agendas.

      Granted, but the leaked emails and documents seem to allegedly show scientists that *really are* putting out garbage and have vested agendas. And they're receiving public money. And trillions of public money rest upon their "science".

      --
      Azural - instrumentals
    79. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What makes you think senator Inhofe and his pals at the Heartland Institute are not "AGW skeptics"? - Is it the fact they are sock puppets for the coal industry? Or is it because they fund a huge number of "grassroots skeptic" sites such as WUWT and iceberg, neither of which could find data if it came flying out of their arse, which I might add it often does.

    80. Re:I am very sceptical... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      I agree with what you're saying.

      Plus, it's so ironic that this summary concludes with:

      Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia."

      This is of course no more meaningful than the scads of low-temperature records we've had this year in the states, or many ski resorts having their earliest openings in history. The concern is, of course, the global mean temperature.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    81. Re:I am very sceptical... by conureman · · Score: 1

      The problem with "Filthy Speech" as an absolute principle is that it is all ugly, and prickly, as a matter of fact. It is absolutely critical to the free exchange of ideas, however.

      --
      The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
    82. Re:I am very sceptical... by Glock27 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      All people are equal.

      Do you really believe that? It's clearly not true.

      The quote from the Declaration of Independence is "All men are created equal.". Let's go ahead and extend that to "all people". Fine.

      The point of the statement was that there is in fact no "divine right of kings". I'm fairly sure you aren't arguing that there is.

      However, the fallacy in your statement is that, after birth, all humans are interchangeable (actually that's an argument for equivalence, not equality, but that's a lesser standard). There are wide ranges of intelligence, strength, courage, stamina, dexterity...OK I'll quit listing role-playing statistics. I'm sure you get my point.

      Any system that attempts to enforce the "equality" of people in general, such as socialism, is doomed to failure. The real world doesn't work that way. Those who excel, which generally benefits society, should be rewarded. Those who don't, not so much. That simple principle is responsible for the success of the United States, and is ignored at our peril. Yes, I strongly believe in American Exceptionalism, since it's an observed fact.

      FUBO! :-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    83. Re:I am very sceptical... by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      #3 is only true so long as the 'experts' are given unimpeded access to your ear and those 'experts' aren't all in collusion. Since it has been shown time and time again that skeptics lose funding when they speak out, their voice is being impeded quite actively. And it could very well be in all their interests to make you think something is true that isn't. Only when you let everyone, including the crackpots, look at the data can you be relatively sure you're getting all the options.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    84. Re:I am very sceptical... by Glock27 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So when you see hacked emails showing scientists dissing people like them, or McIntyre, or any of that ilk, realize that the scientists *really do* think that these people are putting out garbage and have vested agendas. It's just that when speaking publicly, they usually have more tact.

      Wow, the hypocrisy here is stunning. Having read a lot of the leaked/hacked emails, it's more than clear the scientists have quite an agenda of their own. Intentionally distorting results, discarding inconvenient data, suppressing peer reviewed articles, and refusing to honor valid Freedom of Information requests all clearly happened. The first three are directly forbidden by good scientific practice. I hope those responsible have their credentials revoked, at a minimum.

      I think healthy skepticism of claims that would result in a complete re-ordering of the world economy is more than justified, whatever the source. A trillion dollars here, a trillion dollars there, and pretty soon your talking real money! :-P

      Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof, and so far the IPCC position is looking far more like smoke and mirrors than honest, unbiased science.

      The fortunate thing is that plenty of folks see this deception for exactly what it is.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    85. Re:I am very sceptical... by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      And yet both papers were cited in the AR4 report.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    86. Re:I am very sceptical... by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      They are claiming that the raw data is fundamentally flawed (it is) and that only someone who understands -all- the factors that could affect it can use that data to produce an accurate view of the climate's changes.

      Honestly, I don't think THEY know enough about the climate to fix the data, either. They clearly haven't gotten weather prediction right yet, and to claim that the information is different because it's historical and over a long time is stupid as well. Each data point is individually affected by many, many influences. Yet they pretend they can look at the data as a whole and massage it into 'correct' data. If it was that easy, it wouldn't need a PhD. And if it's as hard as they say, nobody has all the facts needed to do the work.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    87. Re:I am very sceptical... by Troed · · Score: 3, Informative

      You do realize that the AGW crowd were getting funding from Shell, Exxon, BP etc - and that they got their wishes into the so-called scientific process?

      http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/04/climategate-cru-looks-to-big-oil-for-support/

    88. Re:I am very sceptical... by conureman · · Score: 1

      I have some property that is ten meters above Sea Level. Are you interested?

      --
      The cost of that cleanup, of course, will be borne by taxpayers, not industry.
    89. Re:I am very sceptical... by Troed · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, and that's great. What you don't know about is whether, and how many times, Phil Jones managed to keep other papers out.

      The fact that he, as IPCC editor, had (and likely has) the opinion that papers trying to falsify his agenda should not be part of the IPCC work is in itself alone to cast doubt on all IPCC reports where he's had any control whatsoever on the selection process.

      Unfortunately, scientific rigor and AGW are seldom in agreement.

    90. Re:I am very sceptical... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      This is one of the fundamental flaws in the concept of free speech for all; it does not account for relative differences in resources. One wealthy liar can out-campaign ten poor truthful scientists.

      On the contrary, that is the benefit of free speech. If speech is limited, the liar with lots of resources is far more likely to be the one to have it than the poor truthful scientist.

      That's the very reason why free speech is so essential to a well-working society, and why it was enabled in the first place.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    91. Re:I am very sceptical... by mikkelm · · Score: 1

      I found this puerile jab to completely ruin the credibility of the author. It takes a significant investment of intellectual dishonesty to suffix to an article dismissing beliefs that climate change is a long, natural process unaffected by human doings a note that Darwin, Australia has seen the hottest October on record, while neglecting to mention that the record referred to goes back a mere 60 years.

    92. Re:I am very sceptical... by ls671 · · Score: 1

      > still not knowing what a pointer means

      Hmm... he must be really confused by a pointer to a pointer then !

      Or even worse: a pointer to a pointer to a pointer ;-)

      --
      Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    93. Re:I am very sceptical... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      However, the fallacy in your statement is that, after birth, all humans are interchangeable (actually that's an argument for equivalence, not equality, but that's a lesser standard). There are wide ranges of intelligence, strength, courage, stamina, dexterity...OK I'll quit listing role-playing statistics. I'm sure you get my point.

      Try to make up your mind. Either "all people are equal" means that no one has a right to lord it over others, or it means that all people must be made interchangeable. Which one is it?

      Or is this another misinformed rant about some kind of socialistic strawman to justify the divine rights of CEOs?

      Any system that attempts to enforce the "equality" of people in general, such as socialism, is doomed to failure.

      Socialism is about minimum guaranteed quality of life (the point of welfare), rather than forcing everyone to be identical. But I suppose you can't be blamed for falling for right-wing propaganda.

      And I take it that you don't believe in equality before law either?

      Those who excel, which generally benefits society, should be rewarded. Those who don't, not so much.

      Obviously. Unfortunately, the current system benefits robber barons instead.

      That simple principle is responsible for the success of the United States, and is ignored at our peril. Yes, I strongly believe in American Exceptionalism, since it's an observed fact.

      Vast natural resources, large inhabitable surface area, and protection of two major oceans from other world powers are the major sources of US success. The rest of the world being ravaged by two World Wars helped too.

      And I suggest getting over your hubris, otherwise China will overtake and pass you; and despite your flaws, I'd still rather have American than Chinese as overlords.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    94. Re:I am very sceptical... by ls671 · · Score: 1

      Although I think that pretending that only the "initiated" can understand the data is ridiculous, I would be cautious about putting the matter to a public vote in order to make up our minds.

      The truth isn't democratic. If it was, we would be doomed into a big standstill defined by what the majority of people believe. The ones that bring progress often discard what the majority of people think and even some of what their predecessors thought. Take Einstein as an example if you need one.

      --
      Everything I write is lies, read between the lines.
    95. Re:I am very sceptical... by ImOnlySleeping · · Score: 1

      You misread the paragraph you're quoting. It doesn't dismiss the guy because he doesn't have a doctorate degree, he dismisses him because he doesn't understand what he is arguing about. Just look at the stupid graph he puts at the front showing actual cooling instead of warming at the site. The guy admits in his "research" that the station moved and that adjustment makes sense to him (since it is essentially two completely different data sets at that point), but doesn't add that variation to his graph. Why? Because the graph would still show a trend upwards even without all of the other adjustments.

      --
      Everybody seems to think I'm lazy I don't mind, I think they're crazy
    96. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aaah. So how long have you been a homeopath?

    97. Re:I am very sceptical... by ImOnlySleeping · · Score: 1

      Let's start with this, "power grab" over global warming. When did that begin? What I'm getting at is that decades of research exists and those grants were issued by people in the job years before that. So unless the current legislative body owns a time machine, they couldn't have controlled the grant process decades ago. I'm certain that congress tries to grab as much power as possible, but it sure as shit isn't through grants.

      --
      Everybody seems to think I'm lazy I don't mind, I think they're crazy
    98. Re:I am very sceptical... by knewter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most people lack the talent and/or won't put in the time/dedication.

      Right, those are the only two options. No one lacks the funds.

      --
      -knewter
    99. Re:I am very sceptical... by LifeWithJustin · · Score: 1

      Just doing a quick -- very quick peer review of your post:

      Just a heads up... Republicans until this year had the White House for the "last several years". Democrats had control congress for overwhelming majority of those "last several years."

      So while the parent post isn't quite right about how exactly the money gets handed out, his silent point that the Democrats are the one handing out the money; therefore, the research is slightly slanted still stands.

      But his point is amiss to be honest. Basically congress will spend our (read: actual tax payers) money on anything, they really don't care what it is about. Take the study that was released that Men like to look at women in Short skirts.

    100. Re:I am very sceptical... by drerwk · · Score: 1
      It is worth pointing out that both papers were in fact referenced by the IPCC.
      From an editorial in Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v462/n7273/full/462545a.html

      A fair reading of the e-mails reveals nothing to support the denialists' conspiracy theories. In one of the more controversial exchanges, UEA scientists sharply criticized the quality of two papers that question the uniqueness of recent global warming (S. McIntyre and R. McKitrick Energy Environ. 14, 751–771; 2003 and W. Soon and S. Baliunas Clim. Res. 23, 89–110; 2003) and vowed to keep at least the first paper out of the upcoming Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Whatever the e-mail authors may have said to one another in (supposed) privacy, however, what matters is how they acted. And the fact is that, in the end, neither they nor the IPCC suppressed anything: when the assessment report was published in 2007 it referenced and discussed both papers.

    101. Re:I am very sceptical... by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Yes, well, it also doesn't prove Phil Jones kicks puppies.

      Here's the facts: you assert that papers are repressed. The papers are in fact referenced.

      That you then start to retreat into goal post moving and arguments from ignorance proves that you are either dishonest or just plain stupid.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    102. Re:I am very sceptical... by knewter · · Score: 1

      True. But, given that domain specific knowledge, there's another vital component: the fucking data.

      --
      -knewter
    103. Re:I am very sceptical... by Troed · · Score: 1

      I assert nothing - I quote Phil Jones :)

    104. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      My argument would be that your premise is wrong you don't have to know what to believe. If it is important enough then you should spend the time and effort to inform yourself and understand the issues and the data that is available. Just listening to what others tells you is true is a good way to get an erroneous understanding anyway, especially if they don't understand it fully or have an agenda of which you are unaware.

      Now to be clear I think that if you don't spend the time to understand it then you should refrain from actions which you know may have consequences based on that lack of understanding (alla voting for someone because they have a certain position on an issue you know you don't really understand).

      Unfortunately, my system would in the extreme lead to an oligarchy of the informed so I would hope more people would take it upon themselves to educate themselves but even so I believe an oligarchy of the informed is better than an oligarchy of the persuasive which is what you get with a system that doesn't rely on education, and in my opinion this is much more dangerous.

    105. Re:I am very sceptical... by Bongo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Society has outsourced its heavy-duty thinking to scientific specialists, and so shouldn't be complaining when those specialists consider each others (peer reviewed) conclusions to be inherently more valuable than the rants of some-twat-on-tinternet.

      We also notice that being a specialist in one area does not make you a specialist in every area. We also notice that the climate is a system that involves many specialities. What looks like a concrete weight of evidence using data and methods of one speciality, might contradict the weight of evidence from the findings and methods of another speciality. Even if we only listen to qualified scientists, scientists in different fields disagree over the climate. When I've gotten into this point in the past, you know what scientists say? They just dismiss the other speciality.

      When scientists themselves start upholding the principle of respecting science, THEN you can ask the "uneducated" masses to do the same thing.

    106. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      So I would argue that alot of the idiots voice problem you describe is a reaction to (or reformation of) the system that was too elitist. Grant you I think it's a bad reaction I still think we're bringing it on ourselves by being exclusionary and accusatory rather than educating people about issues. We focus too much on convincing people of our position than we do on teaching them our knowledge and letting them form a position of their own. In the short term they have the same effect (assuming we're right) but in the long term the persuasion approach is destructive while the education approach is empowering.

      That said I want to address your free speech issue. Free speech isn't the issue it's the education of the listeners. The reason free speech is very important as an absolute concept is that it puts the power of deciding into the individual's sphere of responsibility which does bring up some of the problems you mention. However, it's rarely about wealth but more about persuasive ability. A persuasive man will find wealth and influence for his cause a purely wealthy man will not.

      If you limit free speech you may take away the wealthy's ability to get their message out but you create another form of wealth which is held by those who control the restrictions of free speech. Now the persuasive must gather those resources instead of the wealthy's and you have the same problem in a different form. The only way I see to solve the issue is to encourage the individuals to be self-educating and to teach them. It's a slow process and it will take generations before it has any effect but it's the only thing that leads to a long term improvement IMO.

    107. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      The answer is to go and understand the issue. Look at the data and learn for yourself. The argument that it's so important that I must decide something is nuts. If I'm blind and driving on a road I know ends in a wall I know I'm going to eventually crash if I don't turn at some point. That doesn't mean the correct answer is to turn blindly. The answer is to gain enough information to make the right turn.

    108. Re:I am very sceptical... by B1oodAnge1 · · Score: 1

      The answer is to engage in critical thinking no matter the source, and not to give too much weight to any authority or lack thereof.

      This. Thank you.

      --
      RUGBYRUGBYRUGBY
    109. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Option 4 is to listen to the "experts" and learn the set of tools you need to uncover their prejudices and axes to grind as you put it. You don't have to be an expert in the field to find problems in logic and data analysis. The article argued that you did have to be an expert in the field and that you had to be accredited to do these things. This is what I have an issue with.

    110. Re:I am very sceptical... by Bongo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are missing the point; if everyone's idiotic claims have to be subject to point by point analysis, then intelligence can be overwhelmed by stupidity when it has superior numbers. At a certain point you've got to say "My time as a scientist is costly, and not worth spending on such an obvious cretin"

      The question is largely irrelevant. The real problems with climate science are being highlighted by intelligent people, not by cretins.

      There are plenty of researchers out there, qualified, with careers, respected by their peers, who look at the IPCC stuff and say it is not working. These are researchers who know how to think about hard problems.

      As for the public opinion, most people appreciate that most predictions about complex systems unfolding in the future, tend to turn out wrong, especially when those predictions are made by experts. I really would like to see where people get the idea that predicting climate is a hard science. At best it is a soft science.

      Most of the controversy comes from scientists having decided that it is a moral stance that they need to uphold, that they must not give any openings to "evil" or "dumb" people who don't have the same moral principles, whereby they would willingly work to save the planet. So they have to try to make out that the science is watertight (but amongst themselves they use nuanced academic language, and that's how they get the respect of their peers).

      It is the idea that the public is dumb and evil that is causing the controversy. Scientists have decided that they have not just superior expertise, but also a superior moral stance. Well I've listened a lot to people of outstanding moral character, and wannabe world saviours don't impress me. Trying to scare the population into "action" does not impress me.

      Climate change is a moral issue. Many believe that the public is too weak morally to do anything about it. This is not unlike Tony Blair admitting that they lied about Saddam's WMDs to get the public to support the war, when they knew full well he might not even have any, but they just wanted, for "other reasons" to get rid of him, and that even if he had no weapons at all, it was "still the right thing to do". Sound familiar? Even Al Gore says this, he said that even if climate change wasn't man made, it was still right to do things "for other reasons".

      Stop treating the public like imbeciles and maybe you'll be surprised what they are capable of understanding.

      Just how many people do you know would go to a homeopath instead of a doctor? Sure there are some. But there are some green nuts too. Often they are one and the same. Funny that.

    111. Re:I am very sceptical... by ArcherB · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What makes you think senator Inhofe and his pals at the Heartland Institute are not "AGW skeptics"? - Is it the fact they are sock puppets for the coal industry?

      I'm a "skeptic". I don't work for the energy sector.

      Here's why I'm a "skeptic": If these politicians truly believed in AGW, would they be flying private jets to Copenhagen and riding around in Limo's (1200 of them)? Would you be wasting energy running your coal powered computer to read this message? Would Al Gore live in a mansion that belches more CO2 in a month than my neighborhood does all year? Of course not. But they would do all these things if they were using it to gain power, all while telling me that I have to cut back, obey their rules, and give them more money!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    112. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Let me be clear I'm not taking the guy's position but the paragraph I quoted dismisses anyone who doesn't have a doctorate. Read it again. The author is claiming that because this guy is wrong and uninformed that he shouldn't be listened to and he advocates determining who should be listened to by their academic credentials. The whole thrust of the article (beside providing counter points to the guy) is to tell you who to listen to and how to decide who those people are. That is where I have the issue. Not with the counter arguments.

    113. Re:I am very sceptical... by cfortin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think there is actually a very easy way to solve this problem...show us the code. Give out ALL the raw data, every little scrap, along with the source code for the programs they are using to manipulate it.

      This, right here. Scientists, real scientists, can support their findings even when others have access to the same inputs and methods as the scientist uses. If you hide data, you are no longer a scientist. If you 'correct' data with a certain result in mind, you are no longer a scientist.

      A real scientist is *happy* to let everyone look at their data, because a real scientist feels that pointing out an error to a colleague is one of the best favors you can perform. Having your peers look at your work in detail, and say "hey, that's some pretty good work" is the best.

      Hiding your data and still quoting the results removes you from the practice of science. Allowing, or encouraging people to make fundamental policy decisions on outcomes you are not willing to document and support is sinful.

      A core tenet of scientific study is that results should be independently reproduced. Real scientists hunt for people to reproduce their results.

        (IIAS, PhD in EE)

    114. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      I largely agree with the spirit of what you're saying here, but you're conflating two issues. The author of the Economist article claims to not have the expertise to judge all of the scientific claims made in various quoted articles; so from his perspective, the smart thing to do is to believe the peer-reviewed consensus. That's all he's saying. However, this is NOT to say that global climate scientists within the field should do the same (and I think this is your point). They *do* need to listen to people outside their field and keep and open mind. It's their job.

      No I was trying to ignore the issue of Eschenbach's credibility so that I can argue the other issue without conflating the two. I have no problem with his counter arguments to Eschenbach. I have a huge problem with his system of what to decide. If he can't educate himself then he needs to not act when there can be consequences, IMO. Anytime someone tells me that I should let someone else decide the validity of any opinion for me I find it very frightening.

      You're absolutely correct, but the problem is that Mr Eschenbach *hasn't* shown such manipulation. Actually, the real problem is that Mr Eschenbach *thinks* that he has, but doesn't actually know what he doesn't know. In fact, in Mr Eschenbach's response to the Economist article, he states the following:

      The question is, should temperatures more than a thousand km away from Darwin be used to arbitrarily adjust Darwin’s temperature by a huge amount? You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to figure that out.

      This quote demonstrates exactly why someone like Mr Eschenbach should be ignored by most people. First, the "arbitrarily adjust" comment reveals that he didn't even understand the explanations given for how things were adjusted (they weren't arbitrary, and that was wells stated). But second, he simply dismisses out-of-hand the possibility that two datasets separated by 1000 km can't be correlated!!! Uh, whoops.

      This pretty much proves that Mr Eschenbach is wasting our time. He hasn't taken his own time to understand the arguments the scientists are making (or even basic statistics) and simply continues to repeat his claims.

      So the fact that he isn't "decorated by academia" certainly doesn't mean we should dismiss his claims outright, but it probably does mean we should be a little bit more skeptical of his claims that are so far outside of his knowledge base.

      And I think you've made my point here. You went out read the two articles looked at the discrepancy and found a logical fallacy which tells you who to believe. I'm good with that. It's a form of self-education. I'm not good with "don't listen to this guy because he's a voice from the wilderness".

    115. Re:I am very sceptical... by Kumiorava · · Score: 1

      I never understood this one, is it really so that raw worldwide temperature records over hundreds of years are hidden under one scientist group? I don't even believe that these few scientists were the ones who collected the raw data, that must have come from somewhere else. Why these few scientists are the only ones who have access to the raw data in first place?

      I bet the data request is for the data these scientists used to create their results. That data is not useful to anyone else, for verification purposes raw data needs to be processed again, independent assumptions made and new code written to draw conclusions. If the results match then results are more valid, if not then discuss on why the results were different. Looking and picking apart someone's data hoping to find inconsistencies without understanding the thinking behind the manipulations just doesn't do the trick.

    116. Re:I am very sceptical... by kayoshiii · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between "Skeptics" and "Deniers" most of the people who publish anti AGW stuff on the web are "Deniers", in that they have an agenda to specifically disprove AGW rather than simply disagreeing with the science. You can tell this by the number of articles published which don't even get basic fact checking. A Skeptic would not do that.

    117. Re:I am very sceptical... by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Yup, that's why the two (now universaly accepted to be crap) papers were published in the part of the IPCC report than Phil Jones helped edit.

      Yup, that's some powerful censorship that peer review.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    118. Re:I am very sceptical... by budgenator · · Score: 1

      No he said "I don't understand that formula. I don't have the math for it", is one local market's prices being consistently above the norm really that much different than one temperature sensor?

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    119. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Should you be completely dismissed because you don't have a Ph.D.?

      the problem is : no-one with a PhD. can effectively, on a scientific basis, crack AGW. so, on the one hand we have a lot of scientists claiming it is real, and showing the research backing it up, on the other hand a lot of scientists trying to 'break' AGW, and failing.

      So two points.

      1. That doesn't have anything to do with my argument. I wasn't writing for or against global warming in my post. In fact I was very careful to avoid that because I think it isn't important to the problem I have with the article.

      2. Since I can't keep my mouth shut I'll respond to the tangent you injected ;) It tells me that research is going on and that I should look at the data being provided, educate myself, and act accordingly. It does not tell me that I should dismiss positions or analysis because they differ from my beliefs or that I should require a PhD before I consider your opinion. Now when I do that and I find the arguments for global warming to be the more persuasive I have no problem with acting but based on evidence presented not on some anonymous magazine article telling me who to listen to.

    120. Re:I am very sceptical... by pz · · Score: 1

      I am very sceptical with regards to a "not named" author claims... ;-)

      Before everyone starts putting down the author for being anonymous, please observe that this is The Economist. For those of you not familiar with that particular publication, one of its distinguishing traits is that it does not publish bylines. Ever. Editorials in The Economist are backed by the reputation of the editorial staff of The Economist, not of any individual writer.

      An unfortunately, neither the story submitter, nor kdawson is educated enough --- ah, I mean --- sufficiently familiar with The Economist to realize they publish no bylines. I am not familiar with the submitter, but it does not surprise me one whit about kdawson.

      The Economist has some of the best journalism and writing around. I say that both as a long-time reader, but also having seen the flip side when some of my scientific research got coverage in the international press. The representative from The Economist was at the top of the heap of reporters I spoke with in terms of asking good, insightful, and pertinent questions and conveying my responses accurately.

      --

      Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.
    121. Re:I am very sceptical... by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      [ sorry, I meant cited not published above ]

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    122. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Context, man, context. This post is picking apart a rather lengthy, and as it turns out, spurious argument by one of these non-PhDs. So poor, in fact, that you got to wonder if it was made in good faith.

      That is the issue in the "climate debate", not qualifications, but good faith. Get this into your head if you haven't already: there are people out there paid to spread noise. Not to "win" the debate, but spread FUD. Look up, say, Steve Milloy or Marc Morano on sourcewatch, they have impressive credentials! Milloy from tobacco, Morano from Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. They can make up plausible-sounding claims way faster than you can shoot them down, especially if you, as Sparkleby said, lack a PhD in a climate-related field. Even if you do, they win, because creating noise and appearance of controversy was what they aimed for in the first place.

      Those two are just the top of the iceberg, one can easily be arguing against AGW in bad faith without having a well-documented history as a ruthless shill. So, how do you propose we defend ourselves from them?

      My problem is that the article doesn't stick to refuting Eschenbach's flawed analysis. It instead goes on to tell us how we should decide who to listen to and the system it proposes is horrid. It doesn't include self-education but rather claims that's not practical. Additionally, it throws in random bits of data that are just as useless to informed understanding as Eschenbach's failed arguments. There are indeed FUD spewers out there as you point out. I'd go so far as to say that there are FUD spewers on every side of every issue these days and I'd argue that the author of the Economist piece because one when he left the path of rational analysis and started telling me which "high priests" to listen to and spouting random bits of data of Darwin temp data that are as useless in the conversation as Eschenbach's pile of crap..

    123. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Eschenbach is claiming that this formula cannot possibly have been used and that the adjustments must have been pulled out from someone's ass.

      "Second, I had said that the Darwin temperature data couldn’t have been adjusted by using the GHCN method. This method requires five neighboring stations to which Darwin can be compared. Why couldn’t the GHCN method be used? I said it was because in the earlier time periods like the 1930s, there were no such stations covering that time period within 500 km of Darwin. I was wrong, it fact there is one such station."

    124. Re:I am very sceptical... by johnlcallaway · · Score: 3, Informative

      Republicans always love to repeat like sheep that "government bad, companies not as bad and at least provide something of value".

      There .. fixed that for you.

      The major problem of your argument is that for the last 8 years the Bush government only wanted to hear that global warming did not take place, and the same government has shown no hesistance to lie and cheat to get it their way. So, not only can you not believe the global warmer deniers and other flat earthers from Exxon, but you cannot even believe the global warming deniers in the same periode with government grant (if you can find any of those?).

      Which is now completely balanced by Obama administration who accepts human caused global warming as their undeniable truth and bludgeons anyone that thinks differently.

      Seems like Obama is more like a mix of Bush and Carter than the lefties will admit.

      --
      I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
    125. Re:I am very sceptical... by Moryath · · Score: 0, Troll

      It starts and ends with congress. And last time I checked, congress is a nothing more than a bunch of politicians who were able to make enough promises to get elected and will tell whatever it takes to gain more power and get reelected.

      Mmhmm. And when's the last time you saw a politician drying to drum up scare tactics to get votes?

      "Oh my god, the gays are going to destroy marriage, elect me so I can stop it!"
      "Oh my god, there's going to be world war 3, elect me so I can stop it!"
      "Oh my god, your kids are going to get sold drugs in school, elect me so I can stop it!"
      "Oh my god, your house will be worthless in the crash unless you elect me to push more fiscally irresponsible bullcrap!"
      "Oh my god..."

      And yep... "Oh my god, the world is being destroyed by global warming, elect me so I can stop it!"

      Don't tell me the leftists in Congress, and the people they've appointed to their pet agencies (which ALSO have to justify their existence... for example, the EPA has a lot less work if there's not doom-and-gloom, the-sky-is-falling crap they can use to bludgeon people) don't have a reason to push grants with a specific agenda.

      Much like Al Gore. Gore testifies that both of his "businesses" are "carbon-neutral", and that everybody else had better get "carbon-neutral" (the "math" of which is just pure horse manure) too. Surprise surprise, Gore's businesses are all about selling carbon credits. He gets rich off scaring people, pure and simple.

      Somebody earlier mentioned "this is why we have peer review." The unfortunate problem here is that the CRU emails show a deliberate campaign to subvert the peer review process. Any journal through which anything contradicting AGW got published had its reputation mercilessly attacked. Any shitty little crap journal which published pro-AGW papers suddenly found its lot improving as the CRU group started to pump their reputation up.

      If the peer review process is subverted and not honest, then you can't take peer review seriously. That is the point we're at now. At least on the topic of "climate science", there is political suppression going on that has nothing to do with the facts, and rather than examine their own research for flaws and admit they have them, they're trying to hide the flaws and going out and pushing sensationalist nonsense in order to make it easier for politicians, and politician-appointed bureaucrats, to use the sensationalist nonsense as a way to scare people.

      AGW is not real science. It's a political industry. Sad, but true.

    126. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      you would expect that over the last several years you would see lots of peer reviewed research disproving human caused climate change.

      You mean like all of the peer reviewed research that Ian Plimer mentions in this talk? It's unfortunate that most people don't take the time to learn the science for themselves, because all they want to believe are the "we're killing our Earth", "think of the children" and "there's a scientific consensus" soundbites. It's more unfortunate that there have been a number of people taking the time to actually explain the data and the models, yet rather than trying to understand it, some people are so ingrained in their psychological viewpoint that they simply repeat the soundbites back.

      Finally, look up Climate gate. And look at the code of the models and the emails. And if you still don't understand, look up what "corrected" data and "artificially adjusted to look closer to the real temperatures" mean. Also note the destroyed data (what self respecting scientist destroys their data?!) and the emails telling everyone to delete their emails. And the people doing this are the MAIN authors of the data used in the IPCC reports, such as Mann and his famous "hockey stick". Complete fraud, except they weren't doing it for money, but for psychological reasons.

      After all, Republicans were running congress and the White House for a long time.

      And this means they controlled the media too? Now that the Democrats are in office, has everyone else shut up?

    127. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > if this really is the serious situation that we are being told it is

      My understanding is that there is general agreement that temperatures are rising. Within that agreement, there is some disagreement about the cause (CO2 v Solar, etc). Among those that believe human-caused CO2 is driving warming, there is not consensus about the consequences. Where is warming good? Where is warming bad? Science can reasonably be expected to measure. To a lesser extent, it can be trusted to extrapolate.

      But, value judgment is not rightly a scientific activity. Certainly we are not empowering the peer-reviewed scientific community's with the power to choose oppressive global government as better than rising sea levels over generations time-frame. I for one would gladly choose warm-freedom over steady-state-temperature achieved by enslavement.

    128. Re:I am very sceptical... by RocketRabbit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Many people are capable of thinking for themselves, and in fact you are advocating a new priesthood.

      People who don't wear the white collar that is awarded to scientists are not all morons, and many of them have serious problems, grounded in both logic and mathematics, with the so-called science that has been revealed as of late regarding global warming. The economic solutions appear even worse.

      So, adjust your attitude or prepare for a wave of Calvanism.

    129. Re:I am very sceptical... by pkphilip · · Score: 2, Informative

      Oh ok, so the skeptics are all in it for the money while the climate "scientists" are in it only for the love of humanity.

      The Climategate emails reveal that Phil Jones and his bunch of crooks have been actively seeking funding from the same "Fossil Fuel" companies:
      http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/04/climategate-cru-looks-to-big-oil-for-support/

      Robert Socolow the President of the APS and a prominent supporter of the link between CO2 and global warming has received millions in funding from British Petroleum. Please read up on what the "scientists" think about this (since you are convinced that not a single scientist could possibly disagree with AGW).

      http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/12/10/taking_liberties/entry5964504.shtml

      Also, since you are convinced that this is some sort of American right wing conspiracy, may I point you to this Open Letter sent by German Scientists to the German President Angela Merkel way before the Climategate controversy:

      http://www.eike-klima-energie.eu/news-anzeige/klimawandel-offener-brief-an-kanzlerin-merkel-temperaturmessungen-ab-1701-widerlegen-anthropogen-verursachte-temperaturschwankungen/

      If you want the English translation:

      http://www.climatedepot.com/a/2282/Consensus-Takes-Another-Hit-More-than-60-German-Scientists-Dissent-Over-Global-Warming-Claims-Call-Climate-Fears-Pseudo-Religion-Urge-Chancellor-to-reconsider-views

      Japanese Climatologists and their disagreement over AGW:
      http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/japanese-scientists-cool-on-theories/story-e6frg6t6-1111119126656

    130. Re:I am very sceptical... by pkphilip · · Score: 1, Informative

      If a scientists makes a claim and isn't willing to substantiate that claim with data and methodology, he/she should rightfully expect to spend a lot of time answering questions.

      Or are we expected to take them at their word for it without any scrutiny? Phil Jones, Keith Briffa, Michael Mann and the entire bunch of CRU scientists could have avoided a lot of problems by just providing their data and methods to others. They could have just put it up on a website for download and simply pointed people to that site.

      Instead what they did was to put bits and pieces of data in inscrutable formats on different websites with very little to no explanation. Also, they have refused data requests even from prominent magazines such as Science and Nature.. That strikes me as deeply suspicious - or are you claiming that Science and Nature were also making unneeded "idiotic" demands when they asked for the data?

    131. Re:I am very sceptical... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      First, academics in the NSF are more divorced from reality when public policy is involved than politicians are. They are fanatics without feedback.

      Second, "peer review" has severe limitations. The peers reviewing for the (I just made this up) American Journal of Magic aren't going to be giving good marks to articles saying that magic is bunk. The articles will never be printed, and supporters will be saying "all qualified people agree" and "those who oppose magic are deniers."

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    132. Re:I am very sceptical... by mjbeam64 · · Score: 1

      So, have the mathematical models that claim to prove AGW been released as well as all of the raw data? Have independent researchers verified that the raw data fit these models well? Have the AGW models been used to make predictions about future climate temperatures which have since turned out to be accurate? If so, have all non-AGW models been put through this same process and found to be inaccurate?

    133. Re:I am very sceptical... by Vintermann · · Score: 1

      For the first thing: Sparkleby asks a very reasonable question, namely how long is he supposed to entertain such random, unsupported claims?

      Unless you have a better answer to that, you can hardly blame him for telling us what he will do (not bother anymore).

      And then, since you claim they're all as bad, I'd like to know who's climate science's equivalent to Steve Milloy. Or evolutionary biology's answer to Marc "Swift Boat" Morano for that matter (you did say all issues).

      --
      xkcd is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
    134. Re:I am very sceptical... by allcaps · · Score: 1

      You're begging the question. You're assuming that those 'whacked out' theories aren't true, but that is exactly what we need to investigate. Theories are theories, no matter who puts them forward.

    135. Re:I am very sceptical... by rainsford · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I see a lot of flaws in your logic, but perhaps the biggest one is that you are focusing on POLITICIANS and ignoring actual scientists. While it makes a great talking point, in the end, what Al Gore thinks or believes has no bearing on whether or not AGW is true or false.

    136. Re:I am very sceptical... by green1 · · Score: 1

      When did a scientist first try to publish something about the dangers of smoking?
      When did the first "peer reviewed" anti-smoking article actually get published?

      Sure, there has been lots published, but smoking was seen as beneficial in the past, and had been for a long time, it's only relatively recently that people realized it was bad, how much lag time was there before someone managed to get something published?

      Does that bode well for the process in general on any currently accepted "truths" and anyone trying to dispel them?

    137. Re:I am very sceptical... by Gonoff · · Score: 1

      Why not?

      I don't tend to read it much as it is hugely US centric and I am part of the 96% of humans not in the USA.

      When I do follow links to it, I can see why the far right may not like it. It is too politically middle of the road. To many people, moderate opinions are actually a good sign.

      --
      I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    138. Re:I am very sceptical... by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      Exxon-Mobil actually outright offered a prize for anyone who could get a paper published that defended their positions, right?

      I think this is a great idea. The pro-AGW people should do this too, if they're so confident, in the same vein as the James Randi prize.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
    139. Re:I am very sceptical... by green1 · · Score: 1

      Or maybe, just maybe, he respects BOTH, and realizes that the choice of whether to be an academic, or do something else is a personal decision that is completely unrelated to how intelligent the person is.

      Maybe the point he's trying to make is that you shouldn't ignore EITHER side because of the letters behind their name, or the lack thereof, and instead focus on what the actual message is, along with the facts the person is backing it up with.

      If you want me to believe you, show me proof, don't show me diplomas and degrees and tell me that I'm not smart enough to understand what you're saying, explain to me why you are right and show me the data.

      Likewise don't show me your paycheck and tell me that because you make lots of money you must know what you're saying, explain to me why you are right and show me the data.

      The larger point is, the data and the methods are the important part, who is presenting it is completely irrelevant. If your conclusions can stand on their own, you shouldn't be afraid to show how you got to them. (ever try to pass your high school physics of math tests without showing your work? why should the "real world" be any different?)

    140. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In answer to the first thing I don't think an informed and intellectually diligent individual should ever decide to stop examining claims (even random ones). Revolutionary thinking comes from seemingly random and contrarian ideas and you have to wade through a bunch of trash before you find treasure sometimes. Entertaining does not mean accepting but until you understand the idea and can demonstrated the flaws it possesses dismissing it is intellectually irresponsible.

      As far as unsupported that's why you have to educate yourself and investigate them. Once you know it's an unsupported claim you're correct to discard it. It's discarding it before you examine or understand it because it came from a source espousing a position you suspect is wrong that I find troubling.

      As for your questions I don't know the answers of who they are but then I didn't know the two names you mentioned either until you put them out there and I looked them up. I do believe that all contentious issues have people who spew FUD, hide data, misunderstand data to support their causes, misrepresent the other side arguments instead of responding in good faith, exaggerate the impact of their position, equate correlation and causation, etc. etc. In the age of mass media this means that they have a voice too which means its up to us to be diligent.

    141. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Apparently an issue I don't understand is how to log into slashdot...but I did write the response above.

    142. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Democrats had control congress for overwhelming majority of those 'last several years.'"

      George W. Bush took office in 2001. The 107th Congress started in 2001, and it's makeup was 50 Democrats and 50 Republicans (plus Cheney's tiebreaker vote) in the Senate, and 221 Republicans and 211 Democrats in the House.

      108th Congress (2003): Senate 51 R, 49 D, House 229 R, 205 D
      109th Congress (2005): Senate 54 R, 46 D, House 232 R, 202 D
      110th Congress (2007): Senate 49 R, 51 D, House 202 R, 233 D
      111th Congress (2009): Senate 41 R, 57 D, House 178 R, 256 D

      All values from the start of each Congress and lump Independents in with whichever party they caucus with. From 2001 to 2007 Republicans held majorities in both houses so your statement is clearly false. From 2007 to 2009 Democrats had a slim margin in the Senate and a firmer grip in the House. Currently the Democrats have a 60 vote majority in the Senate, but they manage to do less than the Republicans can do with just 50 and the veep's tie-breaker. Considering this ineffectiveness one could state that you're completely wrong: in the last several years the Democrats have never had control of Congress.

    143. Re:I am very sceptical... by DoktorFaust · · Score: 1

      Anytime someone tells me that I should let someone else decide the validity of any opinion for me I find it very frightening.

      Yeah, see, this is where we disagree -- I don't find that frightening at all. As a practical matter I can't take the time to investigate all the claims people make, so sometimes I need a way to relatively quickly place my bets. In the case of science, there's a reasonable system in place whereby erroneous hypotheses eventually get weeded out and a consensus of what is true is formed. So I do immediately assume that claims resulting from scientists in their field are more likely correct than someone not in the field.

      If there are 100 scientists who have spent their lives studying a particular subject telling me that Joe Blogger's claim about their particular field isn't true, who do you think I'm going to believe? I really do think you have to sometimes trust other people's opinions -- let them 'decide' for you.

      --

      Die Menschen verhoehnen was sie nicht verstehen. -- Goethe.
    144. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Real skepticism is based on science. Cynics and cranks use a different methodology: grab quotes out of context, lie, look at the one in a hundred study that says something that they agree with (and take it out of context, inflate it, and draw unsubstantiated conclusions from it) and ignore the other 99 that don't, and invent conspiracies. It doesn't matter if the crank is a creationist, anti-vaxer, global warming denier, or UFOlogist. Similar delusions, same methods; a crank often will hold several cranky positions at once.

    145. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Fair enough that's where we disagree. I think if you don't have the time or ability to investigate and decide for yourself you shouldn't be acting in that sphere for fear of doing more harm that good.

      As for paragraph 2 if you have read a 100 scientists opinions refuting Joe Blogger and you agree with their analysis isn't this educating yourself? The thing that scares me is the don't believe him or even take the time to look at his stuff because he's not part of the club mentality.

    146. Re:I am very sceptical... by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Here's why I'm a "skeptic": If these politicians truly believed in AGW, would they be flying private jets to Copenhagen and riding around in Limo's (1200 of them)? Would you be wasting energy running your coal powered computer to read this message? Would Al Gore live in a mansion that belches more CO2 in a month than my neighborhood does all year? Of course not. But they would do all these things if they were using it to gain power, all while telling me that I have to cut back, obey their rules, and give them more money!

      So, you are skeptic of scientific research because of what *politicians* do? "Oh look, mom! There's a politician being a hypocrite!"

      Here's an idea. Why don't you try to learn about the actual scientific research and try to determine whether or not it is true instead of babbling about Rush Limbaugh-inspired irrellevancies?

    147. Re:I am very sceptical... by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Yeah - and the part that's not numbers is the only part that supports the AGW hypothesis. It's not supported by the raw data except in the cases where over the past year the raw data has been adjusted to do so, which makes it not "raw".

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    148. Re:I am very sceptical... by canadian_right · · Score: 3, Informative

      What they did was publish thousands of peer reviewed paper, huge reports endorsed by thousands of scientists from around the world, revealed all the raw data, much of the "adjusted data", and all the reasons why the data is adjusted. IF this isn't enough, nothing will be enough to satisfy these skeptics.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    149. Re:I am very sceptical... by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      Climate change is not a moral issue, it is a fact. What we should do about it is the moral issue, but a small, loud minority that thinks we should do nothing cannot support that course of inaction morally, so they try to convince people that climate change is not happening.

      Now, I'm not really sure why these people are up in arms about climate change. They seem to think that making changes to cut back on CO2 will cost them dearly. Switching to cleaner power sources is not that expensive. Driving a smaller car that gets better mileage SAVES money. Most changes that cut back on your energy use save you money in the long run.

      What if we do nothing? The world gets warmer, local weather changes radically in some places, low places are flooded by rising oceans. Glaciers melt which may deprive millions of water. Pretty much all of these changes are disasters for poor people, and a minor inconvenience for rich people.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    150. Re:I am very sceptical... by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      I'm not worried that thousands of highly competitive scientists from all over the world are colluding on the issue of climate change. You have to be a conspiracy nut to believe that so many diverse sources of data are 'in on it'.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    151. Re:I am very sceptical... by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      What irrefutable data shows AGW to be true?

      Well, 2009 is the warmest year on record (except the US, for some reason) and our carbon levels are well above anything in the geologic record. Hard to refute that. Whether it irrefutably confirms AGW is another story, but I'd say that the bulk of the evidence points that way.

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    152. Re:I am very sceptical... by Sethumme · · Score: 0, Troll

      Global warming legislation aims to be the largest power grab since the civil war.

      And we all know how badly that one turned out. If only that war never happened, then slavery and officially sanctioned power-through-wealth could be still dominate in half the county.

      Seriously, it's good to doubt the purpose behind all politics, but in this case, scientists were researching and warning against global warming even when Bush was president (and many of those scientists on bush's payroll were silenced for it). Beyond politically-driven scientific research, a vast amount of study comes from non-profit institutions that have no ulterior motive other than accurately understanding any given aspect of our universe, whether it's about the truth of planets orbiting stars or gaseous molecules in the atmosphere trapping infrared radiation.

    153. Re:I am very sceptical... by electroniceric · · Score: 4, Informative

      The question is largely irrelevant. The real problems with climate science are being highlighted by intelligent people, not by cretins.

      I'll make the reasonable assumption that you are pretty intelligent, and evidently you are of skeptical disposition. Have you ever read any papers on climate science? How about earth science? If not, as would be the case for most intelligent non-climate-scientists (not just not just non-scientists), I can say without insulting your intelligence that you have no direct basis for determining what the general thrust of the literature is, much less what the camps are, who populates them and how strong the relative arguments are within those camps.

      There are plenty of researchers out there, qualified, with careers, respected by their peers, who look at the IPCC stuff and say it is not working. These are researchers who know how to think about hard problems.

      Unless you've read the literature, this statement, too is presumptive. What it really means is that one or more intermediaries has told you this, and you believe that intermediary more than you believe another intermediary who thinks that most climate scientists are in agreement. So in this case, this entire argument comes down to trust in intermediaries. You don't know who the camps are and who really subscribes to what camp.

      I did a "terminal masters" in ocean physics, so I have some direct familiarity with the literature, though certainly not as deep as if I were practicing in this field. My experience is that the camps lean much more towards accepting general consensus about the nature of climate change (largely anthropogenic) and the magnitude of the expected effects than the perception you describe. From what I know directly and from the intermediaries I use when I don't know directly, just about everyone in the climate science community now believes that the arguments around concentrations of carbon and warming are solid. So when people say how much warming will happen in a hundred years, that considered very hard to dispute. Where people have more critiques is how we will get there, and the closer in you get the less agreement there is. However, it's also true that for most of the really wide open questions about climate change, people have been equally wrong guessing towards faster and slower warming. The rapid melting of the Greenland ice sheet is a great example of this - nobody from the global climate modelers (like a friend of mine who's doing his postdoc in this now) to the ice physicists understood until a few years back that when the ice sheets began to melt that the meltwater would lubricate the rock upon which the sheets are sitting and cause them to slide more quickly into the ocean. So there's an example where change was called slower. On the other hand, if I understand correctly, there has been a greater uptake of heat by the oceans that was initially expected, which will delay warming on a scale of years to decades, but could result in acceleration once the oceans warm up and provide less capacity to capture heat. So that's a delay in warming.

      Just how many people do you know would go to a homeopath instead of a doctor? Sure there are some. But there are some green nuts too. Often they are one and the same. Funny that.

      This statement is also full of presumption. Look at the sales of vitamins, herbal supplements and other non-FDA-approved quasi-drugs. Those sales speak to a large body of people who do feel comfortable taking remedies that are not scientifically tested. Again I challenge you to show me your basis for concluding that they're "green nuts" - sure sounds like your impression more than any data to me.

      I don't think this a question of treating the public like imbeciles. There are a vast number of books out there for those that want to learn more about climate science. This is a question of trying to understand the state of a scientific disc

    154. Re:I am very sceptical... by guru42101 · · Score: 1

      While I can definitely see some debate as to if the climate change is our fault. The existence of climate change is without doubt. Leaving out global warming numbers and chaotic weather patterns, you still have glaciers retreating, arctic melting, and increased water levels.

      Various other parts of the "go green" movement have advantages as well. Recycling helps us reuse limited resources, alternate power helps us stop giving money to the supposed bad guys, and efficiency helps us easier sustain our significant population.

      So at the very most if the global warming cause is fabricated it is at least encouraging you to do something you should be already doing. Its like saying kids who were properly cared for by their parents live longer. The correlation is debatable, but it is still a darn good idea to do because there are other proven advantages. Instead I see people outwardly saying something equivalent to "damn if you'll see me take care of my kids, hell I'll kick em extra tonight."

    155. Re:I am very sceptical... by Ixpath · · Score: 1

      I truly believe smoking is probably not good for me. I still smoke.

    156. Re:I am very sceptical... by Alef · · Score: 1

      It isn't and should be up to single individuals to take personal responsibility for fixing a problem that we as a civilization all have caused. It would be both impractical and distributes the burden unfairly.

      Furthermore, "the politicians" isn't a homogeneous group of people that is out to take your money. The reason taxes and/or cap and trade schemes are suggested for dealing with carbon reductions, is because it allows the market to manage the allocation of emissions, instead of politicians, as the market can do this much better. It puts a price tag on what costs money for all of us (climate change), which otherwise isn't mapped into the economical system.

      These taxes or certificate costs doesn't necessarily go to any government -- generally you try to make it a zero sum game where money is circulating, while keeping the net taxation level unchanged. For example, you can use the money you get from taxing petrol to subsidize carbon neutral fuels.

      This means that, if you like to continue driving a SUV running on petrol or whatever, you can do that completely without shame. You'd be paying for it, so that others can reduce carbon emissions more, and that prioritization is entirely up to you to make.

    157. Re:I am very sceptical... by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Then we shouldn't trust them, period. This isn't some little debate that is only gonna affect the scientific community, if we do what the AGW groups want it will cost trillions of dollars, taken from just about every man, woman, and child on this planet, it will cost millions of jobs in the USA alone, at a time when we can least afford those losses, and it will set up the perfect conditions for parasites like Goldman Sachs to blow a bubble with carbon credits and cause untold misery.

      So I'm sorry, but if they can't even bother to share the data then we can not trust a single word they say. Too much money is at stake, too many parties with interests are involved, too much politics are already in play. And if they didn't want to be bothered by FOI requests they could have simply dropped the raw data on a public server and said "YOU sort it" and that would have been the end of that, so that excuse doesn't fly.

      If this debate was over something that ultimately wouldn't impact most folks daily lives, like whether there is living bacteria on Mars, then I'd say you have a point. But this is going to affect the course of our entire society for decades, perhaps centuries. It will make those on the inside richer than God and cause great misery to the working poor. With so many lives and so much money at stake it would be truly foolish to trust ANYBODY without seeing the raw data.

      After all the spokesman for AGW, AL Gore, is set to become the first Carbon billionaire from the trade of carbon credits. If that isn't a conflict of interest I honestly don't know what is. There is too much money, power, and lives at stake not to see the raw data, and hiding from FOI requests and destroying the original data just makes them look like liars or criminals.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    158. Re:I am very sceptical... by mhelander · · Score: 1

      >>All people are equal.

      >Do you really believe that? It's clearly not true.

      But "equals" is such an overloaded term. I think we can exclude from this a discussion around identity equivalence, but even just limited to a value based discussion there's room for interpretation. You seem to be making the point that the following is not an accurate description of humanity (to which I think most can agree):

      A.INT == B.INT
      A.DEX == B.DEX ....

      but what about the following idea:

      A.INT + A.DEX ... == B.INT + B.DEX ...

      Perhaps also not true, but maybe closer to reasonable?

      And what about:

      HumanValue(A) == HumanValue(B)

      To me that last one smells about right?

    159. Re:I am very sceptical... by lennier · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Would you be wasting energy running your coal powered computer to read this message? "

      Yes, my Babbage IV does run on coal, but only until my Zeppelin gets to cruising height to capture the aetheric vortex energies broadcast from Her Majesty's Venusian Colonisation Fleet.

      What the deuce, I just received a telekinetograph. The blasted Mekon's up in arms again about something new. Frightfully sorry old chap, I'll have to kick you off the blower and go show those benighted ultraterrestrials the colour of our steel. Huzzah!

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    160. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a radical concept! This is actually a very rational approach.

      Now, the bigger question: why in the hell has it not occurred to anyone in the global warming camp?

      Oh wait, it has!
      (line #1107454306 from the hacked emails by Phil Jones) - “The two MMs have been after the CRU station data for years. If they ever hear there is a Freedom of Information Act now in the UK, I think I’ll delete the file rather than send to anyone.”

      So what is it that he is afraid of?

    161. Re:I am very sceptical... by Captain+Splendid · · Score: 1

      Here's why I'm a "skeptic": If these politicians truly believed in AGW, would they be flying private jets to Copenhagen and riding around in Limo's (1200 of them)? Would you be wasting energy running your coal powered computer to read this message? Would Al Gore live in a mansion that belches more CO2 in a month than my neighborhood does all year? Of course not. But they would do all these things if they were using it to gain power, all while telling me that I have to cut back, obey their rules, and give them more money!

      Fascinating that your rationale for being a skeptic has nothing to do with the science, or lack thereof. All politics truly is local.

      --
      Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
    162. Re:I am very sceptical... by gfody · · Score: 1

      probably?

      --

      bite my glorious golden ass.
    163. Re:I am very sceptical... by DoktorFaust · · Score: 1

      Fair enough that's where we disagree. I think if you don't have the time or ability to investigate and decide for yourself you shouldn't be acting in that sphere for fear of doing more harm that good.

      That's completely unavoidable. For example, politicians must decide

      • whether power lines or cell phones cause cancer and how to regulate it,
      • whether vaccinations cause autism and if we should ban vaccinations
      • whether the H1N1 vaccination should be immediately distributed,
      • whether humans contribute to global warming and if we should regulate our contributions.

      These policy makers can't be expected to be experts in all of these fields. I don't actually expect Senator Lisa Murkowski to understand enough immunology to look at the lab notebooks of the scientists and know whether or not the H1N1 vaccination they created will kill you outright. What I do expect her to know, is who's opinion she should trust. When the scientists at the CDC tell her its perfectly safe and will actually prevent infection, she's just gonna have to believe that and make policy choices based on that information.

      As for paragraph 2 if you have read a 100 scientists opinions refuting Joe Blogger and you agree with their analysis isn't this educating yourself?

      No, it's not. How can I even know if I agree with their analysis? For example, if these scientists are telling me that adding GFP to tomatoes that I eat won't cause cancer, I'm not going to take the time (years!) to learn about details of molecular biology in order to evaluate the biochemical pathways they used to back their claims. I'm just going to trust that they know what they're saying. Even if Joe Blogger tells me they will cause cancer because genetic engineer is bad, I'm also going to just have to trust that when the scientists tell me his claim is bogus, that they actually listened to what he had to say.

      The thing that scares me is the don't believe him or even take the time to look at his stuff because he's not part of the club mentality.

      Yes! If the scientists won't even listen to the claims, then they're not doing their job. We definitely agree here. That's the scientists responsibility to listen to them. But, I sure as hell don't want Senator Lisa Murkowski giving this other guy equal credence if the scientists have already refuted the claims. The politician and the layperson should not simply assume that there are two sides to this story and consider both claims. Neither is actually equipped to evaluate the claims; they simply aren't experts and haven't invested the time.

      In my reading of the original article, the author decided to go the route of giving both the scientists and the blogger equal credibility. He took the time to investigate the claims a little deeper (as deep as his understanding would go) and then found that in the end scientists were likely right. His conclusion was simply that he wasted his time and should have stuck with believing the expert. He's not arguing the other guy is automatically wrong just because he's not an expert, but he is arguing he, a layperson, should have stuck with believing the experts; the system worked.

      The broader conclusion, from my perspective, is that this is generally going to be the case. Even if I invest 10 years of my life educating myself such that I completely understand the intricacies of some scientific field of study, I'm pretty sure I'll likely agree with the general consensus in that field as it currently stands. This is why I don't actually need to educate myself about everything; I can evaluate claims simply by considering the source. In the case of a general consensus amongst scientists, I trust that the scientific process was followed when evaluating those claims.

      --

      Die Menschen verhoehnen was sie nicht verstehen. -- Goethe.
    164. Re:I am very sceptical... by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      Considering that requests for the raw data go unanswered, I seriously doubt most of those scientists have seen the raw data. They can't make an informed decision without it.

      I don't care how many agree or disagree. I care that they are deliberately hiding things from others.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    165. Re:I am very sceptical... by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      This. The idea that any group of scientists could march in lockstep on any idea is totally laughable. It shows an absolute lack of understanding of the environment they work in. "Highly competitive" is such a polite way to describe bitter infighting, jealousy, backstabbing politics, and in some cases out and out hatred.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    166. Re:I am very sceptical... by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      This is your side of the argument.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    167. Re:I am very sceptical... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Most of the data is open. Links can be found here and at the bottom are links to master repositories of climate data.

      I would also point out that most of the thermometers used are not in the control of the climatologists using the data. Instead they are controlled by hundreds of different entities, mostly government, around the world that collect the information.

    168. Re:I am very sceptical... by lennier · · Score: 1

      "While that may sound great, it's not always possible, or even legal. There are WMO rules, for example, that prohibit the sharing of certain data. That's why, for example, there are some major hurricane models whose results are publicly available but whose data is not available. I think it's stupid, but it is the case."

      If that's the case, it's not only stupid, it's actively immoral, and the whole ethical foundation of the scientific enterprise needs to be overhauled.

      We should not be making global public policy based on inscrutable proprietary datasets. Period.

      If intelligence agencies or corporations want to keep little private data fiefdoms, fine. But don't pollute the scientific datasphere with tainted secret data which is not open to full and frank examination.

      Sheesh, Wikipedia is working this out, and that's an amateur operation. Why can't multimillion-dollar Science(tm)?

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    169. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's my suggestion. Open the data. Don't funnel it to some government bureau or tightly controlled data collection agency, just PUBLISH IT and let everyone scoop up all the data for themselves.

      Gee, guess where the idiot from Whatthefuckisupwiththat got the data he then so skillfully mangled to prove his point? From the hacked emails?

    170. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1
      First of all you're not required to be a politician and if you seek that route I believe you're taking on a responsibility to be reasonably educated on the topics for which you're making policy. Also, I think you're misrepresenting what I mean by educate yourself and equating it with becoming a leading expert in every field. As for your example I would expect policy makers to be able to state why the chose each way in the scenarios you mention and back it up with logical reasoning. If their reasoning is because so-and-so told me to vote that way, I want a new policy maker. At some point you have to trust the data being presented, sure, but you shouldn't decide you position based on looking around at who else has taken that position and blindly following. You should decide based on rational arguments from data and you should make reasonable efforts to use good data or at least understand the conditions under which your data was collected, though this is the hardest part of the process.

      You're putting good intent into author's the author's words. In my original reading of the article he actually states

      One thing they cannot do is reveal statistical manipulation in climate-change studies that require a PhD in a related field to understand.

      I think that's horrible. First of all it doesn't require a PhD in climate change studies to show statistical manipulation. It doesn't even require a degree in math. Shown how a junior high kid can apply basic digit frequency analysis and check it against a logarithmic chart (one example of how to find statistical manipulation in some data sets). Again I have no problem with this guy's defense of his global warming position or his dismembering of the other guys argument. I do have a problem with his proposed system for future analysis or lack thereof in deciding how he should act.

    171. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      One thing I will say even if we never find a point to agree on is I've enjoyed the conversation as it avoided the usual idiocy you find on slashdot. Thanks.

    172. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This debate somewhat reminds me of a situation in David Weber's Empire of Man novels. In said books, the major antagonists are the Saints, a political entity whose state religion is based off of environmental fanaticism, and whose peasants starve and freeze in tiny "low-impact" quarters while their leaders live in huge, luxurious mansions.

      This sort of thing is especially dangerous because environmentalism is a legitimate point of view and many environmental problems are legitimate concerns; well-intentioned people may be sucked in due to their wish to avoid worsening any supposed damage. I am myself agnostic as to the merits of the catastrophic-global-warming position, leaning towards against, largely because of their refusal to even talk to skeptics civilly. (As linked here, one major scientist refused to comment on the Climategate emails, and called security when the reporter asking didn't shut up and go away.)

    173. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The data are out there and published. You can even find it out of a paywall. I hear this criticism for every contentious field of science and it isn't even a valid one in any of them. Given your definition of peer reviewed science, you clearly have no idea what the raw data would look like if it fell on you from the sky.

    174. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the point here, as reiterated by many before me, is the ability to filter out crap from not crap. This is also why some of the analysis and systematics in physics are done without first looking at the data. You do Monte Carlo simulations on what your errors and noise *should* look like, you do the corresponding subtractions, and you publish the data. Note again that physics is MUCH simpler than climate in that 1) it is something you can control and repeat and 2) the parts of the system that we're studying can be isolated. However, there are times when correction must be done after looking at the data. For example, W and Z boson:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_Electron–Positron_Collider

      These are the more "obvious" ones, which is quite accessible to most layman. However, there are much more difficult and "mundane" correction that comes along with every analysis. And yes, if you have a model in your mind, you will in principal try to fit the data to your model. But as someone like yourself who knows a few things about statistics, based on the assumption of a certain error/noise distribution (not uncommon to assume, and not incorrect to do so: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_large_numbers, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normal_distribution) there are "tests" to check to see if you are in fact fitting your model or fudging your answers: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Student's_t-test, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chi-square_distribution) Of course, this is assuming that you have a parametric model. Now, if you don't have such parametric model, it's also possible that you will run into another type of analysis all together: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-parametric_statistics )

      The list goes on. There are lots of smart people out there, and a good number of them could write a good blog with good analysis against climate research. But here's the catch: I don't think there are too many of them that are both capable and have spent the time to do the background learning and research. The stuff I've listed are methods that happen to come to mind this split second, and I'm not an expert in statistical analysis. It takes time and patience, and yes, even for very smart math grad students to understand all of the pitfalls of a certain analysis. I'm all for letting everyone look at the raw data and publishing all of the processing methods, but trying to read into everyone's opinion on the data will do you no better. You're simply going to end up with lots of noise.

    175. Re:I am very sceptical... by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "Emphasis mine. I'm a math major, granted, but I can understand it just fine. It's just basic statistics. It's numbers, if you will."

      But it also requires researching the actual weather stations, knowing their history, in order to homogenize the data as accurately as possible. Just having a raw data set and math skills won't necessarily result in an accurate final trend.

      Experience in the field, knowledge of local conditions, knowledge of cycles like nina/nino, ability to analyze correlating data (ice core, tree ring) and determine when data is an outlier or not, etc..

      There are many variables that a pure math approach would not take into account.

    176. Re:I am very sceptical... by Rufty · · Score: 1

      So ever since Newton we've relied on his gravity data and no one has gone and got their own???

      --
      Red to red, black to black. Switch it on, but stand well back.
    177. Re:I am very sceptical... by mi · · Score: 0, Troll

      Socialism is about minimum guaranteed quality of life (the point of welfare)

      Socialism, first and foremost, is about the government's control over the means of production. This is justified by the supposed need for equality. Your "minimum guaranteed quality of life" is a lie: once you make the electorate accept the need for a "certain minimum quality of life" for the "unfortunate", you will begin to continuously raise that minimum, until the "safety net" becomes a perfectly comfortable place for perpetual occupation. Still, the sheer power of the redistribution will keep giving you and yours such a kick, you'll never give it up voluntarily.

      Unfortunately, the current system benefits robber barons instead.

      Another lie — intended for the already mentioned establishing and maintaining the power to redistribute ever bigger share of the nation's wealth.

      Vast natural resources, large inhabitable surface area, and protection of two major oceans from other world powers are the major sources of US success. The rest of the world being ravaged by two World Wars helped too.

      Canada has the same geography — even better, for they don't have a northern neighbor (hint: the only time, the residence of the US President was captured by an enemy, the enemy was Canadian.) Santa Ana's Mexico was not a friendly neighbor either.

      Brazil is even more wonderfully endowed — Amazon alone is a treasure trove. Unfortunately, they've dabbled with Socialism too much — some say, it is due to their being dominated by Catholicism. Either way, US is not unique in its geography. The GP is right about American exceptionalism.

      And I suggest getting over your hubris, otherwise China will overtake and pass you

      Do start holding your breath now. Thank you.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    178. Re:I am very sceptical... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Try to make up your mind. Either "all people are equal" means that no one has a right to lord it over others, or it means that all people must be made interchangeable. Which one is it?

      "Created" is the operative word.

      We all start at Day 0. Where we go from that point forward makes up the inequality.

    179. Re:I am very sceptical... by joocemann · · Score: 1

      Yeah - and the part that's not numbers is the only part that supports the AGW hypothesis. It's not supported by the raw data except in the cases where over the past year the raw data has been adjusted to do so, which makes it not "raw".

      Prove it. I don't believe you. How much should I bet that you won't prove it, or even reply, or will link me to a non-reliable source?

    180. Re:I am very sceptical... by dmuir · · Score: 1

      In principle, I agree, but that doesn't excuse the blanket covering of anyone who doesn't agree with AWG as a denier. And even if they are "deniers", calling them so, certainly won't win them over to your cause. Most of the anti-AGW stuff I've seen has dealt with the science, while most of the pro-AGW stuff I've seen has been fingers-in-the-ears name calling. Maybe we've just been visiting different sites?

    181. Re:I am very sceptical... by kayoshiii · · Score: 1

      I think so. Most of the anti AGW Stuff I have come across is psuedo scientific. It sounds plausible until you cross reference it with official records or do a direct comparison on pro AGW vs anti AGW on that particular topic.

      In many cases the ANTI AGW camp deliberately quote scientists out of context. Cherry pick data in a way that is obvious should you go to the source of the data they are quoting (there has been no warming since 1998). Often they grab apon old ideas in scientific literature that have long since been disproven (CO2 won't matter because it will reach a saturation level very soon) or construct strawmen (CO2 lags temperature historically therefore it cannot be the cause of global warming) or hold that localised temperature changes invalidate AGW theory.

      There are one or two good claims made by the anti AGW but the signal to noise ratio is terrible. Likewise there are few genuine skeptics who have a voice on the anti AGW side of the debate (and probably quite a few more people who are skeptics who don't speek publically on the subject). However the majority of what I see online is spreading of easily falsifiable propaganda.

    182. Re:I am very sceptical... by symbolset · · Score: 1

      I don't have any proofs yet. I've downloaded a good chunk of raw data and am processing it for my own amusement. I've collected about 100GB so far. It's all out there for you to read if you want to. I don't expect my proofs to mean anything to you as I'm not a climate scientist. Fortunately a compact binary representation of the temperature data can be done in 20GB, and that's not too much for one machine to fit into memory any more (I have servers with 96GB each). As part of my hobby I'm designing a daemon that loads the raw data into a memory array and answers database queries on it. It could be a year before I have my own stuff to share, but it sure is fun!

      In the meantime, here's that link to a non-reliable source you asked for. If you look at figure 5 you should be able to pick out the dust bowl drought era (1930-1945) and the rapid decline (1935-1970) that had a few scientists in 1975 concerned about an impending ice age - both events well supported by the historical record and not subject to scientific reinterpretation. Neither of these events is visible in the adjusted data. Then there's the fact that the cataclysmic rise in temperatures halted a decade ago for no apparent reason - itself a refutation of AGW. That's why their graphs stop in 2000.

      Of course this link actually restates original work by Jennifer Marohasy, an Australian environmentalist.

      If you look at the AGW alarmists' own chart of corrections (difference between raw and final) you can see that the AGW signal is imposed by the corrections and not by the data. It's as simple as that. They're telling you they made it up. Further, updates have been made in the last six months to modify the "raw" data to show the AGW signal. Fortunately archival copies are available of historical raw data and this isn't going to fool anybody.

      As a final note, not one of the climate studies uses the actual daily mean temps, even where they were observed. Instead they use the average of the extremes, which isn't accurate to 3 degrees in 99% of cases. That puts the error bars around the observations at a far larger scale than the observed phenomena. It's flat made up.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    183. Re:I am very sceptical... by TemporalBeing · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The answer is to engage in critical thinking

      The public's response to the movie 2012 demonstrates that the vast majority of people simply don't have the level of education required to engage in critical thinking. Public lack of scientific education is the core problem here.

      What do you expect from a generation that has been raised on "all answers are right, here's your reward even though you got -2 when adding 2+3." Seriously, the whole "gotta reassure their self-esteem" thing is the biggest problem in education today - not lack of scientific education.

      Then of course we get the to the whole critical thinking issues, which most colleges (and especially in science) have completely abandoned. I quotes a book on the topic a while back - where the author did a lot of research and found the liberal Christian colleges (Calvin College, Messiah College) did far better with critical thinking than the public colleges. Yeah go figure on that one - examine the issues at hand, debate them, and arrive at a conclusion does better than "evolution is the way, no other"...hmm...critical thinking, yep....gotcha there.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    184. Re:I am very sceptical... by algoa456 · · Score: 1

      Excellent post - my thoughts exactly. I am not a meteorologist, but I have advanced degrees in statistics and can (and have) read the Fortran source code of the model that was also leaked. Clearly the Economist writer did not / could not read the model source code. Besides the code being an unstructured rat's nest there was dubious data manipulation and filtering. One section seemed to filter out outliers on the low side only. But I have no context. Maybe there was a legitimate reason for doing it that way. As you say it would be much simpler if all the raw data sets (Hadley CRU, NOAA and the two satellite based measurements) are simply made available on the Internet.

      I saw similar fuzzy data related to AIDS in Africa. Since all researchers had a vested interest in showing how bad AIDS is in Africa (otherwise their grants would dry up) there was definitely exaggeration - maybe unconscious - to paint the bleakest picture possible. There was no conspiracy - it was just that almost all researchers tended to exaggerate the figures in the same direction. Many AIDS infection projections for Africa were also published in peer reviewed journals. And I am sure that every reviewer was honest within his or her frame of reference, but because everyone in the field was pulling in the same direction the (peer reviewed) figures have now been found, in retrospect to be exaggerated. Again I must emphasize, no conspiracy. Just people with a little vested interest doing their job.

      I suspect there is similar phenomenon occurring within the GW community. Imagine in this scientific climate applying for a grant to prove that GW is less serious than currently believed. You chance of getting the money would be slim to none.

    185. Re:I am very sceptical... by ReedYoung · · Score: 1
      In the spirit of Bill Maher's "New Rules" I suggest a new corollary to Godwin's Law, that if you have to resort to a parallel to the Roman Empire Religious Hegemony, you automatically lose.

      Should you be completely dismissed because you don't have a PhD?...no and to suggest it is irresponsible and idiotic. To also suggest that someone not so decorated by academia can never show statistical manipulation is stupid as well. This is the modern version of holding mass in latin so that you have to come through the priest to get your religion.

      You don't have to have a PhD, you just have to do your statistics correctly, if you have really found something significant in the stolen data. Have you even tried, or are you just being a drama queen here?

      --
      "I can't imagine how things could get any worse!" (some guy) "That could just be failure of imaginatioÂn on your p
    186. Re:I am very sceptical... by Rei · · Score: 1

      If that's the case, it's not only stupid, it's actively immoral, and the whole ethical foundation of the scientific enterprise needs to be overhauled.

      What led to this is the same sort of logic that leads to IP in the corporate world: "We spent all this effort building up this dataset/program/whatnot, and you want us to just release it for free, immediately, so others can scoop us on publication?"

      Well, yes, that's exactly what we want -- so long as you're properly cited in the research of others. If current funding realities mean that you'd lose funding for that, then the funding system needs to change, too.

      Sadly, this is the paradigm many institutions approach things from -- just like in the corporate world.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    187. Re:I am very sceptical... by joocemann · · Score: 1

      You said a lot of things but you didn't reference me to a real reliable resource that could factually and evidently discredit all that I have already read in various journals for years. You say 'this isn't going to fool anybody' but what is your point? You wrote so many things and yet you couldn't do what I asked of you, and you'll just keep talking and saying stuff without anything more than your own words.

      Sorry, I just can't accept this. I do have a university level of access to journals. Direct me and I am willing to learn. The problem, I wonder, is that I fear for your sake that the more published scientific research I dig up the more I will believe it. I've been directed to the pubs by vaccine skeptics. I've been directed to them for capital punishment data. And now, if you will please oblige me with some references I will do you the respect of looking them up and reading them.

    188. Re:I am very sceptical... by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Consider that most nations of the world arm themselves and have fought wars. All of that killing was immoral. And yet it happened, and continues to happen. USA can't even stop bombing innocent people in the middle east. Now consider whether it is just a "small vocal minority" who would not be bothered about a bit of flooding happening to someone else. The people who genuinely care about the world are a tiny percentage. My own scepticism about "we have to do something" is that most of the people who will do something are not morally developed enough to actually do the right things for the right reasons, and unintended consequences of forming global governance could be disastrous (just check out on the web all the organisations that are openly calling for global governance to combat climate change). The big organisations with the world famous politicians and other authorities behind them.

    189. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Al Gore at least says he purchases carbon offsets to balance out his own consumption.
      But then the top article that turned up about it was this. Doesn't seem particularly sinister to me. So he believes in carbon offsets so much that he bought the company. The article doesn't claim the carbon offsets he buys are in any way bogus.

    190. Re:I am very sceptical... by Bongo · · Score: 1

      I'll make the reasonable assumption that you are pretty intelligent, and evidently you are of skeptical disposition. Have you ever read any papers on climate science? How about earth science? If not, as would be the case for most intelligent non-climate-scientists (not just not just non-scientists), I can say without insulting your intelligence that you have no direct basis for determining what the general thrust of the literature is, much less what the camps are, who populates them and how strong the relative arguments are within those camps.

      Thank you for a very considerate post, it is a pleasure to read.

      Yes, I don't have direct basis, but not just because I haven't read all the literature--I don't have direct basis because I haven't replicated the findings of the literature. In effect, I get my information third hand, and most scientists get their information second hand, for they haven't replicated each paper either.

      But let's stick with my third hand perspective for a moment. I try to listen to as many opinions as possible because humans are a varied and interesting bunch, and we all have different pairs of eyes. What one persons sees is sometimes overlooked by everyone else. However, if you try to listen to many opinions, you run into the problem: there are many opinions, so which is correct? The answer to that is to remember the many ways that people might be wrong about parts of their opinions, such that with some adjustment, you can actually arrive at a more organised and inclusive whole.

      Including as many opinions as possible, whilst remembering ways in which people could be wrong, opens up one's perspective not just to the opinions and findings of one field, such as climatology, but also to other fields, such as astrophysics, geology, and even forecasting.

      Again this is all third hand from my perspective, but third hand I can tell you this: one of the lead researchers in the field of forecasting claims that the IPCC breaks most known good principles of forecasting, as empirically derived from their study of what does and doesn't in practice lead to good forecasts. So here you have one field, forecasting, contradicting or finding fault with another area, namely the IPCC's literature review and summary reports.

      Notice that I don't have to read the literature in climatology, nor the literature in forecasting, to notice that a lead published figure in forecasting, is calling into question findings of a lead authority in climate. So what do I make of this? Well I ask myself, how could they both be largely correct as much as possible and what mistakes might each of them be making?

      Well, a simple mistake is that the climatology field doesn't study forecasts in other fields. So they have not perhaps sat back to ponder, empirically, the nature of forecasting and its fundamental principles. Perhaps if one really thinks about it, the fundamental principles of forecasting might be quite a difficult question, and might merit its own community of researchers to study the problem. Climatologists might simply not have the time, just like architects don't generally have the time to conduct research into building materials, so building research exists as a separate field to architecture, even though architects build buildings. And whilst building researchers might not always be listened to by architects, building researchers couldn't just start designing buildings. Now generally I don't hear these two fields calling each other's work into question, so perhaps the lines of communication between them are running smoothly. But if not, if building researchers were say, making important discoveries about fire spread, and these were being ignored by architects, then there could be a public controversy about it, and even people who only have 3rd hand information would still hear about it.

      So I can imagine how one field could overlook things which are being studied from a different point of view in another field. I would probably then take a

    191. Re:I am very sceptical... by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      Well they must not be too concerned with their reputation if they publish garbage like this.

    192. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Believe it or not they probably found statisticians to do that work for them..
       
        Oh NOZ the conspiracy grows even larger!!!

    193. Re:I am very sceptical... by pkphilip · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It does not matter in the slightest if they published their findings in thousands of papers.. what we are interested in is the data and the code they used to arrive at that result so that we can verify these findings for ourselves. That is how science is supposed to work.

      Climate scientists aren't going to get their free pass from this peer review just because they are concerned that those peers doing their review haven't already drunk their koolaid before starting on the review.

      Peer-review has no meaning if you don't provide the data for doing this review.

    194. Re:I am very sceptical... by josephcmiller2 · · Score: 1

      How about an acknowledgement from NASA that a so-called non-credentialed person fixed some of their averaging problems that improperly biased temperatures for years after 2000. There are few more qualified from NASA, and one man corrected their math!

    195. Re:I am very sceptical... by AP31R0N · · Score: 1

      "The idiotic "everyone's entitled to their own opinion, and nobody's opinion is inherently better" idea is resulting in homeopathy being immune from criticism because their opinions are equal to the opinions of qualified doctors."
      Maybe you're confusing opinions and statements of facts/claims.

      An opinion would be "I like Lady Gaga" or "I hate Lady Gaga". Opinions are not CLAIMS. They are immune to criticism because the only aspect of it we CAN attack is the speaker's honesty. Generally people don't lie about what like or dislike. If someone likes/hates something you hate/like, any debate would be junior high school. In such a case, the grown up thing to do is to listen to what you like and let everyone else do the same.

      "Homeopathy works", is an assailable *claim*. The claim "homeopathy works" is not an opinion (or a fact), it's a claim. One that we can attack on its merits all day long. It's not the same as an opinion.

      As is "Lady Gaga ruelz/sux". It's an opinion/feeling expressed as if it were a fact.

      "I only want people to recognize that "free speech" as an absolute principle, while being all nice and cuddly as a concept, has very grave problems."

      Freedom is inherently problematic. It's troublesome for the society and for individual. For an example, look at the life of a prisoner or monk. Precious few choices... minimal freedom. For the monk, life is very safe, very tidy. At the other end of the spectrum we have anarchy. Tons of options and daily life is a HUGE risk. Suburban life following the game plan laid out for us is rather limiting, but also very comfy. Starting a business is a big risk, but can buy you great freedom.

      It's all about balance. We can let advertisers basically LIE about products, but we also let people call advertisers on their bullshit. We also allow lawsuits. Maybe the solution is to make sure both sides get a turn to talk and let people decide for themselves.

      Tricky stuff.

      Education seems to be key. Teach kids to be skeptical, to try to see multiple angles, to step back and look at the big picture.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    196. Re:I am very sceptical... by Xest · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Any system that attempts to enforce the "equality" of people in general, such as socialism, is doomed to failure. The real world doesn't work that way. Those who excel, which generally benefits society, should be rewarded. Those who don't, not so much."

      I think you're confusing socialism and communism, but don't worry, I've noticed a lot of Americans do that as communism was demonised in the cold war as it was the politics of the enemy, and since then all right wing Republicans try and tie any attempt at something like socialised healthcare to communism in an attempt to demonise such ideas. Sometimes a few throwbacks to the Nazi's being billed as a socialist party (even though they were primarily fascist) are often thrown in for good measure too. As such, America has a general misunderstanding of what socialism is, as you kindly demonstrate.

      Socialism doesn't preclude the idea that people get compensated more for working harder, or compensated less for working less. What it does do is suggest that all people should have equal access to certain shared resources- these being things like the police, the fire brigade, health services, schooling and so on. In that respect, yes, and I know this will crush your vision of you fantastic nation almost violently, even America is partly socialist because you pay taxes which cover the costs of the police and fire services such that everyone can have equal access.

      But as with many things, things can be done in parts, a country that has some socialist aspects does not necessarily have to have entirely socialist aspects, America unlike say Britain or France does not have socialised healthcare for example but all 3 have socialised police, so it's fair to say Britain and France are more socialist than the US, but it's wrong to say the US isn't socialist at all.

      Now here's the real killer for your world view, the EU is more socialist than the US in general, and yet in pretty much all measures that relate to the good of the individual the EU scores higher than the US too- the EU has a stronger economy, it has higher levels of literacy, higher levels of personal happyness, higher access to healthcare, longer life expectancy and so on. All this despite being hit harder by World War II in terms of damage, and despite having taken on board many of the poorer ex-soviet nations. The idea then, that lower levels of socialism always offer a better deal, is quite clearly false.

      Socialism doesn't have to be an absolute, it doesn't have to be bad, personally, I'd actually rather than Britain was a little less socialist, because I think here we do give too much away for free to the lazy and inept, but again, it's a game of balance- I'd hate to lose the NHS and become too much less socialist also. Similarly though, I think absolute Capitalism is bad- a nation without a socialised military would almost certainly be a nation likely long ago invaded and taken over.

      You're right, the real world doesn't work in terms of absolute socialism if absolute socialism is what you meant simply by socialism. It also however doesn't work in absolutes at all really or at least very infrequently, it works in balance- as they say, all things in moderation.

      So now that the idea of socialism should be clear, and how it applies to different countries, including the US, let's get back to the all people are equal thing.

      I don't think anyone would suggest that all people are identical, I think when people say all people are equal they're referring to the idea that all people should be treated equally in terms of core rights, or socialised services. That is, if you have a socialised police forces or healthcare then all people should have equal access to that whatever their sex, religion, colour or sexual orientation. If you have the right to free speech in your constitution, again, it should go for everyone. That's not to say a man should necessarily be able to walk into the Ladies changing rooms just like a Lady can- I think anyone suggesting that level of equality would have

    197. Re:I am very sceptical... by fooslacker · · Score: 1

      Wow I wasn't trying to do either...I actually agree with the part of the article that rips Eschenbach. I have a problem with the part of the article that acts like you have to have some sort of credential to participate.

    198. Re:I am very sceptical... by Xest · · Score: 1

      I'd wager that the people asking for the raw data and source code wouldn't even know how to interpret it or what to do with it anyway.

      What they would do is find some irrelevant non-bug in the source code and falsely extrapolate from that that man is not to blaming for global warming.

      Effectively, it'd just breed more idiocy, because the people who do know what to do with the code and data are already working with it and have come to the same conclusions independetly anyway.

      Those asking for raw data would have more of a leg to stand on if they actually took what they've already been given for what it is, rather than just twist it into what it isn't to suit their own agenda.

    199. Re:I am very sceptical... by quanticle · · Score: 1

      Seriously. The Constitution spells out that Congress controls the purse strings. They allocate the money. If it requires the approval of other scientists, then congress chooses those scientists. It starts and ends with congress.

      No it doesn't. The legislative branch passes the laws, but the executive branch executes the law. In this case, the legislature (Congress) passes a law allocating money for a general end (e.g. scientific research). The specific allocations of that money are made by executive branch agencies (e.g. NSF, DARPA, etc.). While Congress may be dominated by politicians, the executive branch has significant numbers of civil service employees who would presumably be resistant to the sort of blatant power grabs you are are describing.

      --
      We all know what to do, but we don't know how to get re-elected once we have done it
    200. Re:I am very sceptical... by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Wow, someone tell that guy to hire a UI designer, for both his website and software. /stinky

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    201. Re:I am very sceptical... by Rei · · Score: 1

      If you want to talk about "too much money invested", almost every industry in the world currently is invested in carbon. Tens of trillions of dollars are dedicated *directly* to the production, refinement, transportation, and use of carbon-based fuels. The amount of investment is incredibly lopsided in favor of industry interests to *deny* global warming.

      And that's all irrelevant to the science anyway.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    202. Re:I am very sceptical... by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      ... and how much of this money do you think goes to researching my theory that global warming is caused by an increase in the number of reality TV shows blowing hot air?

      Conspiracy I say!

    203. Re:I am very sceptical... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      Could you point me to a source? I believe you, but I'm curious about the science.

    204. Re:I am very sceptical... by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      I don't think that is being disputed.

      The problem is what influences experts.

      1) Money in the form of grants from all intents and purposes you the King of the World.

      and

      2) The way in which you get Grants, being the publishing of your academic findings in journals.

      What happens if the King, or those Journals don't give out grant money to people with a opinion different than the one they want to prove.

      I will tell you what, few experts get funding, and you get a million studies that all say the same thing (with the end result being pretty meaningless).

      Its not rocket surgery.

      I am not saying that is happening, or that it is widespread, however I find the prospect scary. Particularly when you hear about people trying to influence what gets published, and going so far to buy out the Journals to prevent it from happening. I believe in cards that is what you call "stacking the deck".

    205. Re:I am very sceptical... by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      I agree to a point, or at least with a cravat.

      In many instances, simply understanding statistics is not enough, and you have to have a good understanding of the process you are trying to describe. Otherwise you will end up making some absurd conclusions based on pretty much nothing. In this instance having the RAW data can be dangerous as they don't understand it.

      A good example of this is Quarries. Quarries are universally pretty much not liked despite being important for civilization as we know it. Some people were angry and had the predetermined opinion than operators were not doing enough to rehabilitate the areas they disturb. They got a hold of the RAW data, which CLEARLY showed about a 2:1 ratio of disturbed VS rehabilitation. They came to the conclusion that the area was being disturbed at twice the rate of rehab, so that things are continually getting worse, and thus pressured for change. However, things are not that simple. The data, was based on a slice in time of 10 years. The data also had a lot of problems with accuracy and a lack of validation. Even if you ignored the problems, and for arguments sake it was perfect, it would still be the wrong conclusion. While the numbers and the statistics were fine, the method was wrong. What they failed to consider is that, a large portion of any quarry has to be disturbed and left that way for the normal operation of the quarry. To do things, like move trucks around, have room for machines that do the work, etc... normal stuff. However at any point in a Quarries history this will be occurring, it is part of the business. During normal operation a certain amount can always be rehabbed, but that area being used will be roughly the same, and will not be rehabbed until the life of the quarry is over. Here is the kicker: As a general rule a quarry lasts somewhere between 30-150 years. So your 10 year slice of data is not enough to cover the average life cycle of a typical quarry. Also because you have much more data, than the 10 years allows for, that is any quarry older than 10 years old will have only disturbed area and the fact that you are adding new quarries (along with their area that doesn't go away until the end). So because of this the number of quarries added to your data will be much larger than those that may have been retired and totally rehabilitated within that short 10 year slice of time. I am not saying they are doing enough rehabilitation, only that the data is insufficient to make a determination of any accuracy. Because of the scale involved this makes it very difficult to determine. There are ways to do it, various methods, sampling, likely in depth studies of actual details and real life specifics. Simply taking a spreadsheet of numbers and running some simple statistics on it however is not enough.

      So there is an example of someone understanding statistics, but not so much the data. I am also saying that you don't have to be an expert to understand the data, only that if you want to make conclusions using statistics based on some particular data, you better understand the data you are dealing with.

    206. Re:I am very sceptical... by spidr_mnky · · Score: 1

      I don't have a clue what the answer is, nor can I even suggest a solution.

      Socrates would be proud.

    207. Re:I am very sceptical... by DZeroStar · · Score: 1

      However, raw data is useless without the calibration.

      Global climate change skeptics like to cherry pick specific thermometers and point out that significant modifications were made to their raw readings in order to somehow "fake" the final result that comes out of peer-reviewed papers. Those same skeptics then imply that this kind of data manipulation runs rampant within peer-reviewed science and is the only reason for the increasing temperature trend.

      But raw temperature readings from individual thermometers are not what you want to examine in order to test for a global trend. You want to remove as much bias as possible from that reading when including it in your global fit to the rest of the world's data--and you want to do this to every single thermometer in the world! Was the thermometer above grass before 1956, and above a concrete pad after? Was it subject to direct sunlight before 1941 and subject to permanent shade after? Was the physical instrument used to generate the temperature readings ever changed out for a different one? Is the reading from that specific make and model of thermometer subject to larger random fluctuations than that of a different model, or was it calibrated incorrectly in 1978 and subsequently showed a -0.5 C offset for the next three years? Was the least significant digit truncated or rounded?

      How exactly did you choose to adjust the raw data to compensate for each of these individual effects in order to produce your calibrated data?!?

      All of those questions are important to answer for EVERY data set included in a global fit.

      And how is an amateur climatologist, skeptical of the theory of man-made global climate change or not, going to handle all of these important corrections to the "raw" data? How are they going to fit their own model? Do they understand the statistical problems behind dealing with large data sets, with differing statistical and systematic uncertainties inherent in each individual thermometer's readings?

      I think people who think "releasing all the raw data will fix everything" assume far too much of the amateur climatologists that they expect to interpret all of this raw data. But these are exactly the kinds of things expected of peer-reviewed scientific publications.

      Would you ask an amateur to answer all of these questions if they processed all of the raw data on their own, or would you simply accept their analysis as "correct" if they told you the answer that you "intuitively" expect, regardless of which side of the fence you are on?

    208. Re:I am very sceptical... by josephcmiller2 · · Score: 1

      http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/updates/200708.html

      His name is Steve McIntyre and he's been doing a lot of statistics work with temp data. He's a mathemetician, not a climatologist. But when dealing with such large datasets and averaging, the statistics end is just as important as the *physical* science.

    209. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so until someone is published they aren't listened to? Sounds a little bit circular to me

    210. Re:I am very sceptical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you must also realize that their are BILLIONS of dollars being funneled to scientist "studying" the AGW "emergency", so any scientist who wants an easy path to grant money knows which horse to back.

    211. Re:I am very sceptical... by Rei · · Score: 1

      And the fossil fuel industry stands to lose trillions if strong warming legislation passes. Your point? First off, nobody goes into climate science if they want to be wealthy, and secondly, they could make far more money shilling for industry, like Soon and Baliunas.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    212. Re:I am very sceptical... by ultranova · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Socialism, first and foremost, is about the government's control over the means of production.

      No, that's communism, which is the extreme end of socialism and will very likely be made completely obsolete by personal nanomanufacturing.

      Your "minimum guaranteed quality of life" is a lie: once you make the electorate accept the need for a "certain minimum quality of life" for the "unfortunate", you will begin to continuously raise that minimum, until the "safety net" becomes a perfectly comfortable place for perpetual occupation.

      Yes, that's the point where I think our current level of technological progress, combined with current social fads - unfettered capitalism and the associated predatory behaviour - really ought to set the minimum bar. Ambition will make sure that people will reach higher, and the social safety net will encourage taking risks by making sure you'll survive.

      Unfortunately, the current system benefits robber barons instead.

      Another lie -- intended for the already mentioned establishing and maintaining the power to redistribute ever bigger share of the nation's wealth.

      Really? Getting 700 billion dollars as a reward for incompetence isn't enough to make someone a robber baron for you? Out of curiosity: just where do you draw the line?

      For the record: I'm all for putting the nation's wealth into the hands of all of its citizens, rather than just a tiny elite.

      Canada has the same geography -- even better, for they don't have a northern neighbor (hint: the only time, the residence of the US President was captured by an enemy, the enemy was Canadian.)

      Canada doesn't have the same geography as the United States. As you yourself said, it's as far North as a nation can get - there's nothing but the polar icecap further north.

      Brazil is even more wonderfully endowed -- Amazon alone is a treasure trove. Unfortunately, they've dabbled with Socialism too much -- some say, it is due to their being dominated by Catholicism.

      Brazil is a local superpower, and will likely increase its global influence in the future.

      Either way, US is not unique in its geography. The GP is right about American exceptionalism.

      Yes, it is, and no, he isn't.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    213. Re:I am very sceptical... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      We all start at Day 0. Where we go from that point forward makes up the inequality.

      So some people can earn the divine right of the kings?

      Anyway, people are obviously not equal: some are stronger than others, some are smarter than others. That doesn't mean that the strong have the right to mug the weak, nor the smart to con the stupid. Rather, the strong should protect the weak and the smart should lead for the benefit of all. That allows us all to achieve to the best of our ability and fulfil our potential.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    214. Re:I am very sceptical... by mi · · Score: 1

      Socialism, first and foremost, is about the government's control over the means of production.

      No, that's communism, which is the extreme end of socialism and will very likely be made completely obsolete by personal nanomanufacturing.

      Bzzz, someone didn't study hard enough... The noun socialism has 2 senses (first 1 from tagged texts)

      1. (11) socialism -- (a political theory advocating state ownership of industry)
      2. socialism, socialist economy -- (an economic system based on state ownership of capital)

      Getting 700 billion dollars as a reward for incompetence isn't enough to make someone a robber baron for you?

      Canada doesn't have the same geography as the United States. As you yourself said, it's as far North as a nation can get - there's nothing but the polar icecap further north.

      Canada's geography — as I myself said — is better than ours. They have ample natural resources, but they only have one neighbor to worry about, instead of two. Unlike us, who got invaded from both South and North, Canada has never been invaded... And they aren't doing too bad, but their much higher levels of Socialism impede their progress — they should be doing better than us, but don't.

      Praise be to Capitalism!

      "Robbing" means violence... Though some of the recipients are, indeed, union members, the bulk of the money went to financial and industrial companies, who threatened to simply go bankrupt otherwise — non-violently. So, no, yet again, you were using a charged term without knowing, what it means.

      I'm all for putting the nation's wealth into the hands of all of its citizens, rather than just a tiny elite.

      The "nation's wealth" is imaginary — it consists of the wealth of citizens only. The wealth redistribution you advocate implies actual robbing the richer citizens at gunpoint (via IRS or worse) even more than already done, making you an actual "robber baron" (or a cheerleader of same)...

      Canada doesn't have the same geography as the United States. As you yourself said, it's as far North as a nation can get - there's nothing but the polar icecap further north.

      Canada's geography — as I myself said — is better than America's. They also have ample resources, but only one neighbor to worry about. And the worry is less — unlike the US, who got, at different times, invaded from both South and North, Canada has never been invaded. They should be doing better than us, but don't — arguably, because of higher levels of Socialism.

      Brazil is a local superpower, and will likely increase its global influence in the future.

      Yes, but why are they so weak relative to us as of today?.. Because of Socialism... For even more obvious comparisons, consider:

      • Finland vs. Estonia
      • West vs. East Germany
      • South vs. North Korea
      • Cuba vs. Chile

      Praise Capitalism.

      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  2. gone by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How can you re-examine the original data when it's all been erased?

    1. Re:gone by arpad1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, "they" are ridiculed because of the absence of anything approximating proof of the hypothesis of anthropogenic global warming.

      If there were proof there wouldn't be any need for ridicule but the absence of proof elevates the value of ridicule from mere fun to pivotal.

      --
      Minutus cantorum, minutus balorum, minutus carborata descendum pantorum.
    2. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The emails in question specifically state that peer review would be prevented and data to review would be erased.

      It all is very Galilean in style of suppression of inconvenient thoughts and ideas.

    3. Re:gone by Volante3192 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, what about NASA's climate data? What about NOAA's climate data?

      Oh, but those weren't "debunked" so we're just going to conveniently ignore it. You cannot pick and choose what datasets you're going to side with. You have to either accept them all or debunk them all.

      I'm waiting...

    4. Re:gone by chebucto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      All what original data?

      You can't mean all data behind the climate models, because some huge faction of it is still available. You must be referring to the small subset of it that was deleted before Climate Change became recognized as the important issue it is.

      Heck, a lot of the Original Data behind such famous theories as gravity and a round earth was deleted, too. That has no bearing on the fact that those theories were proven true. Exact same thing with human-caused climate change.

      --
      The English word fart is one of the oldest words in the English vocabulary.
    5. Re:gone by Rufty · · Score: 1

      Gather your own.

      --
      Red to red, black to black. Switch it on, but stand well back.
    6. Re:gone by Trahloc · · Score: 1

      That is totally illogical "You have to either accept them all or debunk them all". With that mindset even proven false or corrupt datasets would have to be accepted. Although perhaps you don't mean that, but then I see 'debunked' as 'corrupt' or 'proven false' so in my eyes that is exactly what your saying.

      --
      The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
    7. Re:gone by AlexLibman · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, it is "Global Warming" that will be remembered as a kooky religion centuries from now, along the lines of the Aztec Human Sacrifices and the Spanish Inquisition, though with far more dangerous consequences for the human civilization as a whole. You have absolutely no evidence to back up your alleged "moral imperative" for the socialist agenda that the AGW hoaxers are trying to push!

      You keep ignoring the fact that the BURDEN OF PROOF is on YOU to conclusively prove: that climate is changing AND that the change is economically significant AND that the change is harmful AND that it is anthropogenic AND that the socialist plan they're pushing would be effective AND that it would be more effective than the more capitalist approaches (there'd be quite a few ideas on our side as well) AND that the benefits of implementing this plan would offset the costs in the long term. The only thing the power-hungry socialist elite that is pushing this bull has proven so far is their capacity for deceit!

      Humanity has reached a fork in the road between reason and blind faith, with the latter being represented by socialist scams like this one, which serve the emerging global ruling class to the detriment of everyone else. They want to clip the wings of the human civilization so that they could remain in control, keep us from multiplying and spreading toward the stars, and utilizing existing technologies through which this solar system alone can feed trillions!

      Not that I would expect some basic arithmetic to change your mind when you even fall for that "hottest month" mind-trick. Every year there's a hottest / coldest month in at least one of the world's thousands of cities, given that accurate temperature records are only several hundred months old, and given the "urban warming" effect that is completely different from GLOBAL warming!

    8. Re:gone by CAIMLAS · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Except, the burden of proof is not on the skeptics. It is on those who wish to prove the exception to the rule is, indeed, the rule. If you want people to believe in global warming's existence, you've got to prove it, irrefutably.

      Considering the history of climate prediction (lies, 180 degree inaccuracy, etc.), anyone trying to do that has a hard job ahead of them. We've been hearing "we're 10 years from total annihilation due to our abuse of the planet" since my parents were in grade school, and I've got kids of grade school age now, myself. Climatic temperatures were supposed to be 20 degrees hotter now than they are and agriculture will shortly become unsustainable for the population's feeding, according to what I remember being 'taught' when I was in grade school.

      That's a lot to fight against. Generations of people are tired of the propagandized rhetoric and general bullshit.

      If you want people to believe you - intelligent, discerning, capable people - the first thing you have to do is not treat them like idiots. That's something the climate change community (if there is one) needs to get right. The second thing they should concentrate on is not appealing to emotion (alarmist dramatization and unqualified exaggeration) but to intellect. (Look how far it's gotten the theory of evolution.)

      Another big issue which is getting in the way of people "believing" in climate change/global warming/global cooling/global atmospheric sequestering/whatever is that they're concerned about the political and economic implications of anything pushed down from governments, on account of the climate change fear mongering. Anyone who (here in the US) has had to deal extensively with the EPA knows what I'm talking about. The government doesn't tend to fix the problem at hand, they just make business-as-usual more expensive. Trade embargoes on Chinese tires? Great, tires just got more expensive. Tax fuel so people drive less? Great, you just made maintaining one's lifestyle more expensive. (And, in many, many cases, just ruined the livelihood of many others - never mind lifestyle.)

      What I am personally concerned about is the reactionary uh anacrophytes - people who seem terrified of old things. They're trying to push new, (scientifically) untried, short-term, ecologically destructive, and largely infeasible technologies such as ethanol, battery-powered automobiles, wind turbines, et cetera. Yes, there is value in expanding these technologies, increasing their efficiency, and so on. But these anachrophytes are vicious in their pursuits, and want regulations, new laws, and the like which will drastically and destructively change the economic landscape. These are the kinds of people who blather on about the "smog" that diesel engines put out, how they maintain our energy dependence - why they aren't a viable alternative to gas - yet they push things like lithium based batteries as "green". Which planet are they on?

      And now we've got this environmental summit which, optimistically, will push forth changes that will cut down on emissions/etc. Realistically, it will be another splint on the otherwise healthy leg of the US and Western countries, allowing for China and the rest of Greater India, and the third world to push closer to us - economically and militarily.

      In the best of times, such "optimistic" regulations are mildly disruptive and inconvenient to a society - at best. But these aren't the best of times; these are pretty tough times for everyone, globally. So even in a best-case scenario, we're looking at what might be generally termed, a bad idea. Struggling economies aren't terribly good at ecological preservation: they'll burn waste oil for heat, dump shit in streams, and so on. Damaging an economy for the pursuit of reducing CO2 output is ass-backwards if one has any perspective on how economies work.

      So yeah, prove me wrong. The ball is in your court, but you're a long way behind in the game due to decades of slacking/misbehavior.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    9. Re:gone by c6gunner · · Score: 5, Informative

      I can't believe that your comment got modded insightful.

      NONE of the data has been erased. Here's a quote:

      The research unit has deleted less than 5 percent of its original station data from its database because the stations had several discontinuities or were affected by urbanization trends, Jones said.

      "When you're looking at climate data, you don't want stations that are showing urban warming trends," Jones said, "so we've taken them out." Most of the stations for which data was removed are located in areas where there were already dense monitoring networks, he added. "We rarely removed a station in a data-sparse region of the world."

      Refuting CEI's claims of data-destruction, Jones said, "We haven't destroyed anything. The data is still there -- you can still get these stations from the [NOAA] National Climatic Data Center."

      In other words, the guys at CRU deleted the junk which they didn't think was worth keeping. But since their data came from external sources, all of the original data is STILL AVAILABLE. Of course, you won't hear about that at the usual denier blogs, since it's just so much easier to keep your flock bleeting in ignorance when you can say "OMFG, DEY DELETED DA DAT0RZ!!!!".

    10. Re:gone by c6gunner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I am thoroughly convinced that no amount of evidence at this point can convince the skeptics.

      Calling them skeptics is a bastardization of what skepticism is actually about. It's like calling holocaust deniers "holocaust skeptics". It's correct in a purely technical sense, but it's a slap in the face to Skeptical organizations around the world. True skepticism is supposed to be grounded in science and reason, not personal bias and misinformation.

    11. Re:gone by ffflala · · Score: 1

      You could, for example, make use of any of the other five sources of the same type of data that covered the same time period as the data.

      IOW, test whether the original conclusions can be replicated. You could even test whether the value-added data that was retained was inaccurately modified.

      It will take time, expertise, and resources to do this, but it can be done.

    12. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmmmm.

      1. There have been a couple FOIA actions that still, after 2+ years, have not been filled by the NOAA/GISS.

      That doesn't help convince me of AGW.

      2. It's pretty damn freezing. Tell me when I can wear shorts and a muscle T in December and I'll believe in AGW.

      3. Why does the tree-ring data end specifically in 1960 when the plotted temps dive downward?

      4. Why are only some of the trees in Yamal selected rather than all of the trees?

      5. Why, at the end of the tree ring series, are there only a few trees selected at all rather than the entire set?

      6. Why universally the raw data adjusted in precisely the same way. Earlier temperatures are adjusted downward, later temperatures are adjusted upwards.

      7. Why is the Medieval Warming Period completely eliminated by AGW "proofs"? Are you suggesting that documented colonization of Greenland by the vikings during the MWP followed by the gradual destruction of the colony during the Little Ice Age ... didn't happen?

      8. Curiously in most areas of science it is the proponents of a theory that are responsible for proving it. Only in AGW is the onus on the detractors.

      Not impressive by any standard.

      9. I'm freezing my ass off and could do with some global bloody warming right now. So where the hell is it?

    13. Re:gone by usul294 · · Score: 1

      well there's a big difference between not surviving several hundred years of history and being purposely deleted after a FOIA request. AGW is not a fundamental explanation of the workings of the universe, its the conjecture of the result of adding CO2 to the atmosphere and trying to anticipate the results. The question isn't whether CO2 is a greenhouse gas, that's scientific fact that has underpinings that can be readily tested experimentally. We know that CO2 absorbs IR light, it can be tested. AGW is an outgrowth of the effect that has to be modelled and inferred from past data, which isn't just a graph of past temperature and CO2 levels. One point of contention in the e-mails is that prior to ~1900 temperature is inferred from tree ring growth, until 1960 the tree rings and the temperature record matched, after 1960 the tree rings and temperature record began to diverge, in the graphs, the pre-1960 tree ring inferred record was grafted onto the post-1960 temperature record, and there are differing views on why there is a divergence. (pollution, non-linear temperature/growth relation are cited as possibilities). But at the end of the day, there's no way to do a controlled experiment, and they the models they have had in the past that suggest AGW have not predicted the present conditions, so though the best we can ever hope for is a model that cannot be tested fast enough in order to give us time to act on its conclusions. Its not as cut and dry as gravity, its how an extremely complicated, non-linear feedback system(the models do not cover this, scientists say its a secondary effect) whose operation varies with time (aka a 1ppm increase in CO2 has a different impact depending on not just the current state, but past states). That's why Ph.D's work on these things, you're trying to draw a conclusion from a situation where normal experiment cannot apply.

    14. Re:gone by wizardforce · · Score: 2, Insightful

      With that mindset even proven false or corrupt datasets would have to be accepted

      One bad dataset does not invalidate all other datasets.

      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    15. Re:gone by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia.

      I am thoroughly convinced that no amount of evidence at this point can convince the skeptics. They are traveling on faith. This is why they are ridiculed. They don't like it, but hey, neither do people who believe that they've been abducted by UFOs.

      I see your Darwin and raise you one Houston. Houston Texas had the earliest snow this year in recorded history. You would think that someone with a PHD, claiming to be qualified to write articles on climate change would know the difference between climate and weather.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    16. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I don't have a problem with people who thing humans are causing "global warming". I have a problem with their intention to force everyone to do what they want in order to fix it. I was going to elaborate on this a bit, but I decided to just quote Orson Scott Card's commentary on the situation:

      The correct solution to the oil problem, according to the ["global warming" religion], is to have fewer humans. Now, I haven't noticed them volunteering to lessen the population starting with themselves; nor have I seen their heroes bicycling everywhere (environmental ayatollah Al Gore's plane being a legendary instance).

      But they do systematically resist every solution that doesn't involve wrecking the American economy and destroying the American way of life.

      No insecticides! But also no genetically altered crops with enhanced resistance to insects and disease!

      No coal-fired power plants! But also no clean nuclear plants! (Even though France has proven that standardized nuclear power is safe and relatively cheap.)

      Yes, you can build windmill farms -- but you can't put them anywhere.

      Solar collectors? Excellent -- but don't put them anywhere, either, because they interfere with the natural ecology -- even in the barest desert. (God forbid that lizards should have more shade.)

      Collect solar power in space and beam it to Earth? Fine -- except that you are forbidden to actually receive the power anywhere because it's too dangerous.

      Hydroelectric power? Great idea -- except that you can't build a dam anywhere because it transforms a surface environment to an underwater one, which, naturally, annoys the squirrels. Squirrels, being natural nonsinners, take precedence over evil, sinful humans, the only animal that is forbidden to act according to its nature.

      Electric cars and public transportation? Great idea -- but not until after we've converted all power plants to non-carbon-emitting fuels. (Never mind that it can only ever happen the other way, converting to electric cars immediately, so they're already in place when the oil runs out or, as I hope, we stop buying it because we've met the need in other ways.)

      The conference in Copenhagen is intended to find a way to "stop and reverse climate change". That's a direct quote from Obama's press secretary. Too bad the people in charge of this stuff won't let us actually do any of the things that could make progress toward their goal.

      I agree with you, AlexLibman - the "global warming" believers need to show us some concrete evidence that A) we're changing the earth's climate, B) it's a bad thing, and C) we can undo the damage we've done.

      So far all they've shown with any degree of certainty is that the climate is changing - they haven't shown that we're causing it. (I know, I know, science disproves, it doesn't prove, but at least they could explain how they know the temperature change isn't merely the earth's natural cycle - and we do know the earth has a natural temperature change cycle, and that we are in the "temperature slowly rising" portion of that cycle. I guess the "global warming" believers think we're speeding it up?)

      So they've shown us half of part A, they've given us unsupported "educated" guesses about B, and they're holding conferences on the assumption that C is true. I don't know whether we're causing "global warming" - but honestly, I don't care. We have bigger, more immediate problems to worry about.

      Why don't we focus on smaller, provably achievable goals first, like reducing pollution (which is an excellent goal quite apart from this "global warming" shenanigans) by switching to nuclear power? If we switch, and there's a measurable effect on the planet's temperature, then we'll have some evidence pointing at their larger claims, and then we can decide what to do about it.

    17. Re:gone by gothzilla · · Score: 0

      You mean before global cooling was recognized as the important issue that is is? Er, was? I remember the global cooling scare. It's no different than the global warming scare. Nothing but a bunch of crap designed to make a few people a lot of money.

    18. Re:gone by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      So, what about NASA's climate data? What about NOAA's climate data?

      Oh, but those weren't "debunked" so we're just going to conveniently ignore it. You cannot pick and choose what datasets you're going to side with. You have to either accept them all or debunk them all.

      I'm waiting...

      The problem is the cherry picking and manipulation of that data. Personally, I don't know enough about the data to trust or distrust it. Even if I had access to the data and full faith in it, I am dependent on scientists to process that data and publish it through some "neutral" entity like the IPCC. Unfortunately, it turns out the IPCC had an agenda from the beginning and the scientist picked to process the data fudged the results. So until someone else who is fully qualified to process the data and proven to be unbiased publishes the results, I'm not about to hand over my lifestyle to a bunch of politicians who fly on private jets and ride in limo's to a climate conference to make laws restricting how much energy I use.

      Seriously, if the politicians really believed it, wouldn't they have traveled to Copenhagen on sailboats and ridden around on bicycles? Sorry, but I'm going to let a bunch of fat cats tell me I'm consuming too much.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    19. Re:gone by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      Heck, a lot of the Original Data behind such famous theories as gravity and a round earth was deleted, too. That has no bearing on the fact that those theories were proven true. Exact same thing with human-caused climate change.

      A fundamental difference between an experimental science and a historical science is that with the former but not the latter, old data can be deleted. The issue is whether one makes any claims, today, about the present only, or about the past.

      If today one asks for the gravitational constant, one can make up an experiment to answer it today. That's experimental science. If today one asks about the evolution of the gravitational constant for the last thousand years, then that requires past measurements which cannot be recreated. That's historical science.

    20. Re:gone by EQ · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      I am thoroughly convinced [in other words you refuse to think about it at all lest you come into doubt - tell me again who is the one with the closed mind?] that no amount of evidence at this point can convince the Warmerists.

      Calling them Scientists is a bastardization of what science is actually about. It's like calling holocaust deniers "holocaust skeptics" [Ah dragging out the bigoted ad hominem, how predictably irrational of you to demonize your opponent instead of addressing the arguments]. It's correct in a purely technical sense, but it's a slap in the face to Scientific organizations around the world. True science is supposed to be grounded in open data, open analysis and reason, not personal bias and misinformation.

      There, FTFY in light of the CRU emails, their stacking of the deck for editorial bias in what is allowed to be published in journals, their refusal to produce the data and algorithms and share them with critics in their field as well as those outside the field and their politicization of what is obviously a very important issue into a vehicle for massive forced political collectivism the likes of which the world hasn't seen since Mao. There is plenty of room to disagree that any significant climate change is caused by humans, or can be remedied by humans. UNless youre; as politically and economically ties to a statist solution that is forced on peopel despite the lack of conclusive evidence that the problem is real and that the solutions proposed will be effective; both of which are open to reasonable doubt -- the latter even more so than than former (although the continued rise in CO2 and the cooling of the last decade bring into question the AGW-CO2 hypothesis' validity).

      the Human-caused GW side is making extraordinary claims and demanding extraordinary actions that threaten individual liberty, social justice and the quality of life on a global scale. I suggest you remember a quote by Carl Sagan (and held by many real skeptics): Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof.. So far the proof offered hasn't done too well in normal scrutiny, much less reached a level of being "extraordinary" in any real expect that of a vehicle for political collectivism.

      --
      Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo! http://goo.gl/J9bkO
    21. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only in AGW is the onus on the detractors.

      This is one of the things that has always bothered me about it. Yea, I get it: carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, blah blah. Do we know that CO2 is causing the problem? It doesn't seem to have caused the Medieval Warming Period. Before we send the economy into the hole and funnel all our money into Al Gore' s pockets, I need to know beyond a shadow of a doubt that this is the problem, and if we do that we can fix it.

    22. Re:gone by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Climatic temperatures were supposed to be 20 degrees hotter now than they are and agriculture will shortly become unsustainable for the population's feeding, according to what I remember being 'taught' when I was in grade school.

      Six Kelvins is quite enough-- you don't need 20 Kelvins.

    23. Re:gone by c6gunner · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There, FTFY in light of the CRU emails, their stacking of the deck for editorial bias in what is allowed to be published in journals, their refusal to produce the data and algorithms and share them with critics in their field as well as those outside the field and their politicization of what is obviously a very important issue into a vehicle for massive forced political collectivism the likes of which the world hasn't seen since Mao.

      Nice blurb, but completely unsupported by evidence.

      There is plenty of room to disagree that any significant climate change is caused by humans, or can be remedied by humans.

      Sure. So what? That doesn't excuse the idiotic behavior of the denialiasts. If you're going to object, do so in a rational manner, otherwise I'll have even less respect for you than for those with whom I disagree.

      the Human-caused GW side is making extraordinary claims...

      What's extraordinary about the claim that increased greenhouse gases cause an increase in temperature?

      and demanding extraordinary actions that threaten individual liberty, social justice and the quality of life on a global scale

      That's pure hyperbole. Even if your prior point were valid (which it's not) this follow-up "point" would have completely discredited your argument. Try to stick to the facts, and we can have a discussion. Produce FUD and I'll just ignore you. Your call.

    24. Re:gone by joocemann · · Score: 1

      CO2 is a greenhouse gas. You said 'whether CO2 is a greenhouse gas', as if it isn't well understood by now. It is. CO2 is dense relative to other gasses in our atmosphere and it has a property of retaining heat. This is basic chemistry you're attempting to trivialize with questions that already have answers.

    25. Re:gone by joocemann · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you were a scientist with a relevant education in the field, you could answer all of those questions.

      Why did the dentist use a UV light on your teeth? Why did the doctor's hammer have a rubber coating on it when he hit your knee? What are your brake pads made out of? Why?

      There are lots of questions. But if you're not going to try to answer them the right way, by finding out on your own, you're just another Troll (aka Glenn Beck).

    26. Re:gone by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I see your Darwin and raise you one Houston. Houston Texas had the earliest snow this year in recorded history. You would think that someone with a PHD, claiming to be qualified to write articles on climate change would know the difference between climate and weather.

      You mean like climate == statistical data, ie lots of it, and weather == anecdotal data, ie cherry picked?

    27. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go in your garage, close the door. Run your car and hang out for a while.

      See what happens (answer: it will kill you, don't do what I said)

      But oh... Houston is colder... therefore everything else isn't real! (sarcasm)

      WTF ARE FACTS!!??!! WTF IS RATIONALITY?!!?

    28. Re:gone by oldhack · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Heck, a lot of the Original Data behind such famous theories as gravity and a round earth was deleted, too. That has no bearing on the fact that those theories were proven true. Exact same thing with human-caused climate change.

      Feel pretty dumb that you wrote this bit, don't you? :-) If you don't, then you have a bigger problem.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    29. Re:gone by Cidolfas · · Score: 1

      This.

      This makes sense.

      Sadly, the lobbyists who are controlling policy by popular opinion don't want it to make sense. They want voting issues and funding.

      --
      I am become /dev/null, destroyer of data.
    30. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is one of the things that has always bothered me about it. Yea, I get it: carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, blah blah. Do we know that CO2 is causing the problem?

      It is a greenhouse gas. No blah blah bullshit, it really is. Physics says so, observation says so. Observation also tells us that levels of CO2 are skyrocketing. This is not shocking given how much fossil fuel we are burning, liberating enormous amounts of fossil carbon as gas.

      It doesn't seem to have caused the Medieval Warming Period.

      So the fuck what? That doesn't mean anything. Do you think every warming period ever has to be due to the same thing? Do you think the Medieval Warming Period resembles the current warming trend? (Here's a little hint: it doesn't.) Start thinking.

      Before we send the economy into the hole and funnel all our money into Al Gore' s pockets, I need to know beyond a shadow of a doubt that this is the problem, and if we do that we can fix it.

      Oh, shut the fuck up about algore. He's a politician who has nothing to do with the science. He likes to get his name associated with good things, and goes over the top promoting them, to the extent that he actually feeds skepticism because he's an idiot sometimes. So ignore him already. If you need to know beyond the shadow of a doubt, go study the science and stop bleating about how you don't know for sure, OH NOES WE CAN'T DO ANYTHING BECAUSE RANDOM DUMBASS ME IS IGNORANT. If you're serious about wanting to know, the information is out there. Nobody is stopping you from informing yourself. But you'd rather wring your hands and fiddle while Rome burns because you don't want to rock your comfortable boat.

    31. Re:gone by J+Story · · Score: 1

      Where are my moderator points when I need them?

      One likes to think the best of people. So even though the UN is as transparent as a block of cement and has programs rife with corruption, one would like to think that this time, with the IPCC, science and the pursuit of truth reign. So now that the fraud is unravelling, I am disappointed but not surprised.

    32. Re:gone by usul294 · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you understood what I meant. In plainer english: Anyone can preform a simple experiment or use a simple (E=hv) equation and figure out that CO2 is a greenhouse gas. No one can preform an experiment to prove AGW, and so we've got to rely on models.

    33. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "9. I'm freezing my ass off and could do with some global bloody warming right now. So where the hell is it?"

      HEH GLOBAL WARMING WHY AM I SO COLD HEH

      man, you republicans are the dumbest,

    34. Re:gone by sycodon · · Score: 1

      And all this shows that they are not about climate change or environmentalism, they are about control.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    35. Re:gone by wwfarch · · Score: 1

      2. It's pretty damn freezing. Tell me when I can wear shorts and a muscle T in December and I'll believe in AGW.

      South Africa

    36. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Global warming is the popular label, the more accurate one is climate change. There is no shortage of data showing harm to the environment due to increases in C02. There is no doubt that C02 is rising due to human activity. Acidic oceans are going to be a big problem for humans. Argue all you want. It doesn't matter if it is a man made crisis or not. Even if the oceans were getting more acidic from some natural process ( this is not the case ) it would still be prudent to do whatever we could to reduce our carbon footprint to mitigate the effect. That's what I've never understood. It's a stupid argument. It doesn't matter if it's getting warmer or not ( it most likely is ). There are measurable effects of C02 happening right now that don't rely on historical climate data. It's a huge problem for agriculture and it's a huge problem for the fisheries. I understand it's a problem for oil companies and republicans as well, but I'm not as concerned about them.

    37. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question here is if we've got two data sets, and one had to be cheated to look like the other, do we really have any reasonable expectation that the "non-cheated" one is accurate? If the CRU dataset showed a non-warming trend when treated fairly, and GISS shows a warming trend when treated fairly, can we really say there is universal agreement that there is a warming trend?

    38. Re:gone by usul294 · · Score: 1

      To set cement used on my teeth, its cheaper than alternatives like wood or metal, depends on the brake pad but its ultimately something with a high friction coefficient. You don't have to be a specialist to have a reasonable level of understanding about the magic in things, just be reasonably smart and be able to learn and reason.

    39. Re:gone by pseudofrog · · Score: 1

      2. It's pretty damn freezing. Tell me when I can wear shorts and a muscle T in December and I'll believe in AGW.

      9. I'm freezing my ass off and could do with some global bloody warming right now. So where the hell is it?

      These quotes show a complete lack of seriousness on your behalf. I don't believe you are actually this stupid. The rest of your questions could be answered via Google, but you don't really care about the truth, do you?

    40. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exact same thing with human-caused climate change.

      Studying a forgone conclusion is not a field of science. You can study climate and be a scientist or you can restrict yourself to "human-caused climate change" and be a partisan hack. What complex theories were "proven true"? Where did you train? Do you know why evolution and gravity are called theories? Why this nomenclature is used regardless of how true or false they are? It may be that your peabrain is confused by the lack of congressional action on a gravity crisis or monkey explosion.

    41. Re:gone by Asclepius99 · · Score: 1

      The question isn't whether CO2 is a greenhouse gas, that's scientific fact that has underpinings that can be readily tested experimentally.

      You said 'whether CO2 is a greenhouse gas', as if it isn't well understood by now.

      That's exactly what the sentence said. What are you disagreeing with them about?

    42. Re:gone by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Why is the Medieval Warming Period completely eliminated by AGW "proofs"? Are you suggesting that documented colonization of Greenland by the vikings during the MWP followed by the gradual destruction of the colony during the Little Ice Age ... didn't happen?

      It is true that the Norse colonised Greenland around 1000 CE, and failed around 1300 CE. If this is meant to imply that, at that time, Greenland must have been much warmer than it is today, or that the little ice age marked a dramatic drop in temperatures, it's misleading. The reality is that there were only 2 Norse settlements in Greenland, located in fjords on Greenland's west coast. The areas of both those settlements are quite green and hospitable today, and there are several farms there now (Eastern settlment area, and Eastern settlment map; Western settlment area, and Western settlement map. Just for reference, here is a zoom of the area of the Brattahlid and Gardar farms (two of the largest/richest farms), and a zoom of the Sandnes farm area from the Western settlment), so Greenland need not have been any warmer than today to have provided the Norse with sustainable settlements. Further the archaeological evidence from the sites implies the Norse hardly had an easy life: Greenland cows were the smallest ever known, largely due to malnutrition, and it seems the cows and sheep may have had to be force fed seaweed over the winter to keep them alive -- and this was pre the little ice age. The Norse also tended to rely on trips to the Eastern Canadian coast, most likely the Labrador area, for many things, most particularly wood. Read Collapse by Jared Diamond for a good account of the settlement and decline of Greenland colonies. Climate was a factor, but one among many, and it didn't require much of a shift since the colonies were already in the brink due to other factors.

    43. Re:gone by BlackSabbath · · Score: 1

      > I am thoroughly convinced that no amount of evidence at this point can convince the skeptics.

      You've hit the nail on the head. In Australia, the Senator (Nick Minchin) that led the putsch against his own party leader (the one who was negotiating amendements to the government's proposed ETS scheme), is as hardcore a denier as they come. And I say denier, because he was (mid-90's) as equally opposed to the links between passive smoking and ill-health (at that time he was trumpeting a study by the Tobacco Institute as validating his views).

      Check out:
      http://www.smh.com.au/environment/climate-change/abbotts-warriors-place-their-trust-in-an-ancient-virtue-20091211-kokj.html?skin=text-only
      http://www.theaustralian.com.au/politics/nick-minchin-was-a-sceptic-on-tobacco/story-e6frgczf-1225805535960

      Most people currently questioning the reality of anthropogenic climate change can be categorised as follows:
      - genuinely confused or skeptical people who have often been on the receiving end of mixed messages
      - those that just can't trust what they don't (or won't put the effort to) understand (e.g. science, scientists)
      - oil/coal lobby shills/politicians who are happy to sell their mother if it suits their agenda/bank-balance
      - complete kooks (TimeCube guy; the LaRouchies; David Icke; NWO conspiracy nuts etc)

      Of these groups, only the first is really open to persuasion. Nick Minchin is at best in the second group, although he is more than likely in the third.

    44. Re:gone by usul294 · · Score: 1

      There's a big ole difference between denying a past event with eyewitnesses and believing the future will turn out a certain way because most climate scientists believe it will turn out that way. Its also entirely possible to be skeptical about AGW if you are not comfortable with temperature proxies being grafted onto measurements because the proxies didn't match actual temperatures after 1960 or if you insist that a prediction model is able to predict a future it was not trained on. For alot of people, providing the most accurate reading available at any given time and training the model on history and looking at the predictions are good enough. And even if you're not skeptical on the predictions, you can be skeptical that proposed solutions are worth it.

    45. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      NONE of the data has been erased.

      Correction, about 5% of the data has been erased.

    46. Re:gone by Biogenesis · · Score: 1

      Just for the record, this is the simplest explanation for the difference between climate and weather I can think of: weather is saying that this next dice roll will be a five. Climate is saying that if you roll the dice many times about 1/6th of the results will be a five.

    47. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      NONE of the data has been erased. Here's a quote: The research unit has deleted less than 5 percent of its original station data

      I hate to be a sourpuss, but it looks pretty bad when you begin your refutation of data manipulation by saying "less than 5 percent" is "NONE".

    48. Re:gone by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Well, and in Cologne, Germany, we don’t have any snow at all in the winters anymore. But we’re all wayy off the point by now. ^^

      I learned one thing: That PhDs or other certificates and titles more often than not, mean shit in the real world. :)
      (I essentially extend the views expressed in Lockhart’s Lament to everything.)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    49. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this reminds me of the pre vatican ii catholic church.
      you can't understand the bible yourself. it's too
      complicated. that's why we have priests.

    50. Re:gone by c6gunner · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I hate to be a sourpuss, but it looks pretty bad when you begin your refutation of data manipulation by saying "less than 5 percent" is "NONE".

      What I did by quoting that first bit is called "honesty". It's usually done by people who actually care about things like "honour", "truth", and "morality". Of course, the downside is that idiots who only care about sound-bites will focus exclusively on that single phrase, while ignoring the rest of the statement. That's the price we pay for maintaining our integrity.

    51. Re:gone by Trahloc · · Score: 1

      Agreed, neither extreme is good.

      --
      The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
    52. Re:gone by amorsen · · Score: 1

      I think you forgot the group of people who believes that no one should interfere with their life style, no matter how much that life style harms others. I personally believe that group is the largest.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    53. Re:gone by BlackSabbath · · Score: 1

      Ahh yes, the selfish. Completely missed them, so the list now stands at:

      - confused
      - suspicious
      - selfish
      - liars
      - crazies

      Actually, selfish & liars are probably variations on a theme. Both have something they are protecting/benefiting from.

    54. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Wow. "He's a Mormon" is not one, but three of your problems with him. Interesting.

      Anyway, I don't want to get into an argument about Mormons with you right now (though you're welcome to e-mail me if you feel the desire to attempt to dissuade me of my crazy Mormon ways), so I'll just say this - even conservative Mormons might have a valid point once in a while.

      As for why I quoted him rather than say it myself, well, it's faster to copy and paste, especially when his point is the same as mine (in this case). I don't always agree with OSC, I do happen to agree with but the portion I quoted.

      [Conservatives claim] A call to stop building coal plants will 100% without fail lead to the complete collapse of the American economy.

      Actually we're just saying that a call to stop using coal power will cause the American way of life to collapse if all the other viable solutions are prohibited. That's just common sense. It's a shame the environmentalists can't understand it.

      The comment about bicycling is so intellectually dishonest that it makes me sick, so I'm not even going there.

      It's intellectually dishonest to point out that the people who most vigorously support measures to (somehow) stop global warming generally aren't the people you see riding around on bicycles to save energy and reduce pollution?

      It's intellectually dishonest to point out that Al Gore, who is one of the leading supporters of the "global warming" religion, has his own jet, which obviously is more damaging to the environment than just taking a regular plane like the rest of the population?

      It's intellectually dishonest to point out that many of the "global warming" supporters want the problems they're talking about solved, as long as they're not the ones that have to implement or live with the solutions?

      Are you really trying to claim that it's intellectually dishonest to point out hypocrisy?

      Everyone knows that nuclear power is a much more eco-friendly solution [...] but it's primarily conservative NIMBY types that prevent new nukular plants from being built.

      What "everyone" knows is that historically, the Democratic party has generally opposed nuclear power, while the Republican party has generally supported it. During his presidential campaign, McCain specifically mentioned a plan to ramp up nuclear power over the next few decades.

      As for what you call the "NIMBY crowd", well, I wouldn't mind a nuclear power plant in my back yard. I also wouldn't mind a wind turbine in my back yard, nor would I mind a set of solar panels on my roof. The "NIMBY" crowd covers both conservatives and liberals; it has very little to do with politics and very much to do with the desire to have and control one's own personal space (home, backyard, whatever).

      Show me a valid example and I'll eat my words.

      People propose solar power schemes all the time, and they're virtually always opposed by environmental groups. It's not hard to find examples. (Or by "realistic proposal" did you mean you want an example of a cheap solar power generation scheme? You know full well that solar power is still on the expensive side.)

      Again, the biggest opposition to something like this is the conservative "science is evil" crowd.

      I dunno... as a conservative, my impression has always been that it's mostly the liberals that are the "science is evil" crowd.

      But personally I haven't heard anything in particular from either political party about space-based power.

      Also, it's kind of a bad idea to just go around damming up every river in sight

      Nobody is suggesting damming up every river in sight - but to unilaterally reject all potential hydroelectric dams in the name of preserving the environment is silly

    55. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.co2science.org/articles/V12/N49/C1.php

      "We would only add that this possibility is looking ever more likely, especially in light of the ClimateGate email revelations of potential tampering with (i.e., inflation of) near-surface air temperature data over earth's land area, as well as the fact that Santer et al. (2005) have noted that "a non-significant trend differential [between the surface and satellite warming trends] would also occur if the surface warming had been over-estimated by [only] 0.05C per decade in the IPCC data," and that this seemingly small differential could be responsible for a full half-degree Centigrade upward trend of near-surface air temperature over the planet's land area over the course of the 20th century."

      Reference
      Klotzbach, P.J., Pielke Sr., R.A., Pielke Jr., R.A., Christy, J.R. and McNider, R.T. 2009. An alternative explanation for differential temperature trends at the surface and in the lower troposphere. Journal of Geophysical Research 114: 10.1029/2009JD011841.

    56. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I thought I'd reply separately to your (non-"He's a Mormon") objections to OSC.

      Strong supporter of George W. Bush, including the "War on Terror" and the PATRIOT act.

      Actually he's a self-proclaimed Democrat. Yes, he supported Bush. Actually let's read his own comments on the subject in 2007:

      We keep being warned about the hideous consequences of electing Bush or of enacting the laws he proposes. But I remember all those threats and warnings.

      Bush was going to bring back Jim Crow. Well, seven years into his presidency, he still hasn't done it.

      The Patriot Act was going to turn America into a fascist nation. Well, it hasn't happened -- despite the weird fantasies of the insane Left who talk as if it had.

      We've had, for seven years, a President who has thought carefully and sought a balance between compelling opposites. We had to find a way to effectively find terrorists before they acted, without wrecking the Constitution. So President Bush asked for the tools he needed in the Patriot Act, and used other tools that other Presidents had used, including Democrats, and it worked. So far, anyway.

      Yet he has been savaged by the insane Left, who ignore the fact that the President has sought a fair balance every step of the way.

      Alright, so he's bashing on the Democrats. But what's his very next sentence?

      The insane Right is just as bad.

      You know what "insane Right" he's talking about? The ones you accuse him of supporting - the "asshole conservative types", as you so eloquently put it.

      Did you know that Card initially supported Obama, but changed his mind when Obama's positions started coming to light? Imagine that. Someone decided their political position based on political issues!

      On to your next complaint:

      Is skeptical of Darwinistic evolution.

      He's also skeptical of Intelligent Design (but for entirely different reasons). (He talks about both issues in the linked article.)

      Believes homosexuality is caused by abuse and molestation during childhood.

      Actually he only said that a significant number of homosexuals end up in that way of life due to abuse. Do you deny that?

      In other words, he only said that abuse is one cause of homosexuality.

      But don't take my word for it - let's read what he said. You'll find he mentions a whole range of causes:

      Already any child with any kind of sexual attraction to the same sex is told that this is an irresistible destiny, despite the large number of heterosexuals who move through this adolescent phase and never look back.

      Already any child with androgynous appearance or mannerisms -- effeminite boys and masculine girls -- are being nurtured and guided (or taunted and abused) into "accepting" what many of them never suspected they had -- a desire to permanently move into homosexual society.

      In other words, society will bend all its efforts to seize upon any hint of homosexuality in our young people and encourage it.

      Now, there is a myth that homosexuals are "born that way," and we are pounded with this idea so thoroughly that many people think that somebody, somewhere, must have proved it.

      In fact what evidence there is suggests that if there is a genetic component to homosexuality, an entire range of environmental influences are also involved. While there is no scientific research whatsoever that indicates that there is no such thing as a borderline child who could go either way.

      Those who claim that there is "no danger" and that homosexuals are born, not made, are simply stating their faith.

      The dark secret of homosexual society -- the one that da

    57. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Sorry for replying to myself, but I needed to clarify:

      He's also skeptical of Intelligent Design [ornery.org] (but for entirely different reasons). (He talks about both issues in the linked article.)

      I should have said "He's also skeptical of Intelligent Design as a science."

      His exact words were:

      Real science does not in any way impinge on a belief that God (or some other Intelligent Designer) created the world and everything that dwells in it. At the same time, real science does not -- and never can -- prove or even support the hypothesis.

    58. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      warm temps melt alot of the artic, cold water interferes with the gulf stream, gulf stream stalls, the WEATHER WILL DO WEIRD THINGS. wahh wahh wahh you guys said it was gonna get hot, but theres snow outside what gives? sound like my 6 year old cousin trying to talk his way out of going to bed.. but its not even dark yet.. you guys need to grow up and stop being so fucking selfish, we are fucking this world up for everyone

    59. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow ... thanks for the complete non-response. Can you give an actual response or point to some place that does? I have yet to see it. I would like an explanation for the inconsistencies other than simply being told that I'm dumb.

    60. Re:gone by Cwix · · Score: 1

      They are going to deny till they are blue in the face. I agree with you but I dont see it making a difference to some people.

      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
    61. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were a scientist with a relevant education in the field, you could answer all of those questions.

      Why did the dentist use a UV light on your teeth? Why did the doctor's hammer have a rubber coating on it when he hit your knee? What are your brake pads made out of? Why?

      There are lots of questions. But if you're not going to try to answer them the right way, by finding out on your own, you're just another Troll (aka Glenn Beck).

      to kill bacteria, to get the force to your knee without getting a hard impact on your knee, brake pads could be any number of materials but the point would be to get high friction to stop you and also the material needs to tolerate highvalues of heat

    62. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your response was not to answer any questions but make ad hominem attacks. brilliant. I'm still on the fence when it comes to global warming but when i see stuff like this it makes me believe that AGW is a big sham.

    63. Re:gone by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 1

      Is it really that difficult to read a paragraph?

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
    64. Re:gone by damburger · · Score: 1

      There is plenty of evidence - its all in scientific journals and at conferences though. If you are so mistrusting of scientists then check on what they do. Don't expect to have the evidence required to convince you delivered to your door simply because you've decided to obstinantly ignore their work.

      You can't sit there and yell 'prove it' at everything you wish weren't true, and call yourself a skeptic. There is a certain level of work you've got to put in to find proof yourself, rather than bothering professional scientists with it.

      Either become an amateur scientist yourself and look into the papers yourself, or stfu and concede that the scientists know better than you.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    65. Re:gone by damburger · · Score: 1

      100% bullshit. He asserts without evidence, and tries to link it into some evil conspiracy by Teh Commies. Climate science makes clear, evidence-backed statements, and allows for solutions to exist. This is why he is a science fiction writer not a scientist.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    66. Re:gone by Troed · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It is a greenhouse gas. No blah blah bullshit, it really is. Physics says so, observation says so. Observation also tells us that levels of CO2 are skyrocketing.

      Yes, CO2 is a greenhouse gas. However, its effects decrease logarithmically - the change from 0 to 20ppm make a huge difference. From 20 to 80ppm a lot happens as well. From 280 to 380 ... not so much.

      http://www.junkscience.com/Greenhouse/co2greenhouse-X2.png

      Regarding "sky rocketing" levels of CO2, quite the opposite. We're in a very CO2-starved environment compared to the majority of the time plants and animals have existed on the earth. We've had more than a magnitued higher CO2-levels in our atmosphere without oceans going acidic, the planet becomign like Venus etc.

      http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/PageMill_Images/image277.gif

      This is undisputed (really) science. The big question is, why's everyone pretending as if it wasn't?
       

    67. Re:gone by HertzaHaeon · · Score: 1

      1. Answered by CRU already:

      The Climatic Research Unit holds many data series, provided to the Unit over a period of several decades, from a number of nationally-funded institutions and other research organisations around the world, with specific agreements made over restrictions in the dissemination of those original data. All of these individual series have been used in CRU’s analyses. It is a time-consuming process to attempt to gain approval from these organisations to release the data. Since some of them were provided decades ago, it has sometimes been necessary to track down the successors of the original organisations. It is clearly in the public interest that these data are released once we have succeeded in gaining the approval of collaborators. Some who have requested the data will have been aware of the scale of the exercise we have had to undertake. Much of these data are already available from the websites of the Global Historical Climate Data Network and the Goddard Institute for Space Science.

      2. It's unusually warm where I am, so AGW must be true by your logic.

      3. This is called the divergence problem and is explained here and has been discussed on Slashdot before.

      7. The Medieval Warming Period is not eliminated, just nuanced.

      8. When you tell climate scientists they're wrong and you propose an alternative explanation, it's your job to prove the alternative. Climate scientists are busy proving their own stuff.

    68. Re:gone by azgard · · Score: 1

      When you talk about snow in Houston, are you talking about temperature or precipitation? I am no expert, but I know that AGW predictions include increased precipitation.

    69. Re:gone by MrHanky · · Score: 1

      No, you ridicule because you lack arguments. "Absence of anything" == your disregard for everything.

      1) CO2 levels are rising. This is measurable, and measured, and consistent with human fossil fuel consumption.
      2) The trace levels of C14 in the atmosphere is sinking, consistently with output of fossil carbon lacking C14. Thus we know that much of the excess CO2 does in fact come from fossil fuel.
      3) CO2 traps more energy from the sun in the atmosphere. This is experimentally verifiable, and verified.
      4) Global temperatures are rising. This is well known, and well researched. I've never seen a convincing argument to the contrary. Yours certainly isn't one.

      Your response? None, really.

    70. Re:gone by ImOnlySleeping · · Score: 1

      You missed the difference between deleted and erased.

      --
      Everybody seems to think I'm lazy I don't mind, I think they're crazy
    71. Re:gone by cdavidneely · · Score: 1

      Global cooling was never a serious contender. Outside of a few scenarios the only places where the coming ice age was even considered as a possibility was in magazines like Time. If you actually look at the papers published during this time period you can see the lack of scientific backing for the idea.

    72. Re:gone by knewter · · Score: 1

      Right, or understand local maxima.

      --
      -knewter
    73. Re:gone by localroger · · Score: 1

      Actually, the cold snap that hit the central US last week is partly due to an extremely cold air mass moving down from the arctic. In years past that air has tended to stay parked in the arctic, but now as it moves out it is replaced by warmer air. So yes, it snows in Texas, but as a side effect of previously permanent arctic ice melting. The distribution of solar heat energy from the tropics to the poles is fairly complex, and sensitively dependent on the shape of the oceans. It has not been entirely stable even in historical times and weather extremes of all kids are likely as it seeks a new equilibrium.

      --
      Brackets contain world's first nanosig, highly magnified:[.]
    74. Re:gone by GrantRobertson · · Score: 1

      You are picking nits with the wording and then calling that wording dishonest. To me that is the height of dishonesty. NONE of the ORIGINAL data has been DELETED. 5% of the data that was originally being considered is now no longer being considered in the specific research done by this specific group of researchers. Just because someone in some e-mail used the word "deleted" when they really meant "removed from our list of data under consideration for our specific research project" and then some propagandists at FAUX "News" jumped on that term and misconstrued it then repeated that misconstrual a thousand times does not make the misconstrual true.

      Just because you call someone dishonest does not, in some magical way, make you right despite the facts of the case. It just shows how desperate and disingenuous you are.

    75. Re:gone by s-whs · · Score: 1

      Except, the burden of proof is not on the skeptics. It is on those who wish to prove the exception to the rule is, indeed, the rule. If you want people to believe in global warming's existence, you've got to prove it, irrefutably.

      Bullshit.

      The burden of proof on refuting an accepted theory is on the non-believers who must convince the other scientists (see a book on philosophy of science, this is how science works). Here I use 'other' assuming those non-believers are scientists which they mostly aren't in the case of global warming.

      Further: "you've got to prove it, irrefutably" is impossible. Nothing can be proved irrefutably except in mathematics.

      That's a lot to fight against. Generations of people are tired of the propagandized rhetoric and general bullshit.

      Oh no they aren't, see politics. And as to your argument

      Considering the history of climate prediction (lies, 180 degree inaccuracy, etc.), anyone trying to do that has a hard job ahead of them. We've been hearing "we're 10 years from total annihilation due to our abuse of the planet" since my parents were in grade school, and I've got kids of grade school age now, myself. Climatic temperatures were supposed to be 20 degrees hotter now than they are and agriculture will shortly become unsustainable for the population's feeding, according to what I remember being 'taught' when I was in grade school.

      I don't know what school you've been in, but it must have been a crap one. I never heard anything about these matters except a mention here and there, no '20 degrees hotter'. There have been people warning about pollution since esp. the 60s (for example the feminization through plastics, medicine that's nowadays a major pollutant in water cleaning installations), also overpopulation, and you know what, all of those predictions were correct. There are severe problems with pollution everywhere, with ever growing rubbish dumps, and gasp, CO2 levels which can cause global warming.

      Now the global warming possibility is taken seriously, crackpots like you start claiming all kinds on nonsense.

      Tax fuel so people drive less? Great, you just made maintaining one's lifestyle more expensive. (And, in many, many cases, just ruined the livelihood of many others - never mind lifestyle.

      You're quite right, why consider the future of the entire planet when all you want to do is make a living, ride around in your hummer, and use up a shitload of fuel several times that used in other countries. I don't blame you, they are obviously nuts!

      And your post was raised to +4 insightful? Was there a convention of the dutch liar club "Groene rekenkamer", of the dutch magazine Elesevier who employs crackpot denier Simon Rozendaal?

      What I'm waiting for next from you is a post on why there never was an acid rain problem, as the forests didn't die after all (after the sulphur output decreases from factories etc., but never mind that, a GW-denier doesn't like the facts get in the way of good rant).

    76. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmmm

      Funny thing. NOAA/GISS has still refused to comply with FOIA request about providing data for more than 2 years.

      Makes your whole point look faintly ridiculous.

    77. Re:gone by cmsjr · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with any of the arguments you have made, but I think you underestimate the importance of both "idiots" and sound-bites. Policy comes from politicians, not scientists. In a representative democracy, politicians are (loosely) accountable to the electorate, consisting largely of "idiots", who, particularly on complex issues, tend to base their views on sound-bites. If the scientific community, and those who support it, neglect to generate compelling sound-bites and to dispel un-scientific ones, then policies for a given issue will tend to be driven by the rhetorical value of the sound-bites surrounding the issue.

    78. Re:gone by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      well there's a big difference between not surviving several hundred years of history and being purposely deleted after a FOIA request.

      Except that no data was deleted after the famous "FOIA request",

      Some e-mails were deleted. Which was wrong. But maybe understandable when you learn that McIntyre made 58 FOAI requests in 5 days. 11 FOIA requests a day! http://blogs.nature.com/climatefeedback/2009/08/mcintyre_versus_jones_climate_1.html

      And what does McIntyre want to do with the data? He's on record as saying he's not going to bother checking it if he gets it (unless someone pays him, he says). Was it done just to piss CRU off?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    79. Re:gone by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      My problem with the quote from OSC you've mentioned here is that he lumps all people in the same basket. Despite what some people may like to do, you can't stereotype all the pro-AGW people in a single category. There are extremists on all sides, and you need to weed some of it out to find what the majority is actually thinking. Remember, a loud minority shouldn't reflect badly on an entire group.

      As an example, I do think we should dramatically reduce our CO2 emissions. However, I'm fully supportive of clean nuclear, hydroelectricity, wind power and solar facilities. It's not because there are some utterly idiotic people who can only whine about every single solution that you should automatically assume that everyone thinks the same -- that's foolish.

    80. Re:gone by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      9. I'm freezing my ass off and could do with some global bloody warming right now. So where the hell is it?

      I have flowering roses in my garden.

      The plural of "anecdote" is not "data".

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    81. Re:gone by benchbri · · Score: 1
      ARRRGH! Brain melting!

      You state three requirements to get you to 'believe' in global warming. The first is the existence of anthropogenic global climate change. You are, quite simply, wrong in thinking that this must be proven to exist.

      I see you do not contend that the world is cooling, or staying the same temperature. I'll also assume you think the world is heating. There is, in fact, good evidence for this - Mars and Jupiter's temperature have gone up since we started shooting probes out there in the 70s. So let's just all agree that the earth, and the entire solar system is heating. (yes, sun, I am disappoint.)

      Well, alright, we agree that the earth is heating, so I guess now we've got to prove that it's a bad thing. Would you like to tell me how any 'educated' guess about the future can be 'supported'? Face it, there are 100s of climate models running on computers around the world, and they all say that, yeah, CO2 will lead to sea level rise, and Bangladesh is screwed. End of story.

      I'm not disagreeing with you that we should switch to nuclear (and solar, and wind...) power, but what you are doing by questioning anthropogenic global climate change does the entire world a disservice. Climate change has the ability to fuck up our grand kid's lives, and we need to do something about it, regardless if we (humans) caused this climate change or not.

      I'd just like to add that people who do not understand the Carbon cycle are idiots. Taxing cow farts? Where does the Carbon in cow farts come from. grass? Wow, nice little closed cycle there. The reason we've (presumably) been screwing ourselves over is the digging up and burning of fossil fuels, and that's about it.

    82. Re:gone by rochrist · · Score: 1

      Idiots such as yourself are reason one why we're pretty much screwed. Hyuk hyuk capitalist capitalist freeee markeettttttt! I'm sure the free market will be happy to comfort your grandchildren. Assuming you can find anyone who will breed with you.

    83. Re:gone by rochrist · · Score: 1

      I'm sure Orson Scott Card would be happy with population control if it could be demonstrated that only gays were being removed from the population.

    84. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2. It's pretty damn freezing. Tell me when I can wear shorts and a muscle T in December and I'll believe in AGW.

      Really?

      Good job on parroting the most ignorant lines you could possibly gather from Fox News and uninformed McDonald's workers.

    85. Re:gone by fbjon · · Score: 1

      Actually he only said that a significant number of homosexuals end up in that way of life due to abuse. Do you deny that?

      I'm not the OP, but I'll deny that. I'd like to see some evidence for "a small number", never mind "significant". Saying it's "one of many" reasons does not make it valid. All of what you quoted is unsubstantiated, and half of it consists of weasel words. Any idiot can write shit like that.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    86. Re:gone by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Yeah ... next time take the time to read through the whole conversation. It'll help you avoid flaming people who were making the exact same point that you are.

    87. Re:gone by joocemann · · Score: 1

      It isn't an ad hominem. it is a criticism and a supportive suggestion. That is why I made the example of indicating questions about other focus-specific questions.

      There is a time when a person needs to realize that they do not know what they are talking about and should either 1) take what is shown by those who do as good enough or 2) take part in the process by way of personal effort.

      How many anti-AGW skeptics are going into sciences to learn and understand the actual field? Little to none.

      I'm sure if I went into watching a surgical operation I might have many many questions... and if I did not heed my ignorance, I might have many many skeptical curiosities. But I have humility, I know what I do not know, and I don't pretend I am qualified beyond that.

    88. Re:gone by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with any of the arguments you have made, but I think you underestimate the importance of both "idiots" and sound-bites.

      No, I'm fully aware that sound bites can be very important in swaying perceptions and influencing public policy. I just believe that the best way to inform people is to present them with all the facts, instead of clipping out parts in order to shape perceptions.

      Interestingly enough, that also means that I'm opposed to what the CRU folks did when they merged temperature data from multiple sources into a single graph. The proper way for them to present their findings would have been to plot the full extent of all the sources, and offer an explanation of why the various bits were discarded. If they had been a little more honest and open about their methodology, they could have largely avoided this little tempest.

      So, long story short, I'm opposed to dishonesty regardless of your position.

      Policy comes from politicians, not scientists. In a representative democracy, politicians are (loosely) accountable to the electorate, consisting largely of "idiots", who, particularly on complex issues, tend to base their views on sound-bites.

      I don't have the required level of cynicism to believe that the electorate is largely composed of idiots. The problem isn't lack of intelligence so much as lack of information, and an abundance of ideological bias. You can generate sound-bites which get your message across without having to lie to people, withhold information from them, or insult their intelligence.

    89. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      You're right, we can't lump all pro-AGW people into a single category. But if you've ready anything else by OSC, you know he tends to focus on the vocal extremists (on both sides of the political divide).

    90. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      The first is the existence of anthropogenic global climate change. You are, quite simply, wrong in thinking that this must be proven to exist.

      Oh great, you're another one of those crackpots who thinks it's stupid to want proof we're causing global warming.

      You really think I should just take your word for it? Do you really not see the problem with that?

      Here, I've got a bridge to sell you. It's totally legit - take my word for it.

      Climate change has the ability to fuck up our grand kid's lives, and we need to do something about it, regardless if we (humans) caused this climate change or not.

      Here's the thing - even if I were to concede that we are causing it, nobody has shown that we're capable of reversing it (which, according to Obama's press secretary, is the purpose of the Copenhagen conference).

      And if we're not causing it, then obviously we're not capable of having a significant influence on the environment, and our attempts to reverse the process will be overwhelmed by whatever existing process is warming the atmosphere.

      Anyway, my point was that there are plenty of other reasons we should be switching away from oil and coal power, none of which involve shouting "OMG THE WORLD IS GOING TO END" from the rooftops. That has never been a good way to get people interested.

      If, instead, environmentalists started pointing out the endless list of health risks associated with oil and coal power (and the potential monetary savings we could get by switching to nuclear power), they'd get a lot more enthusiasm from the general populace.

      Put another way, my point is that whether or not we're causing the earth to warm up, doomsday "global warming will end the earth" warnings are the wrong way to go about solving the problem.

    91. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Actually he wouldn't. OSC has no problem with people's personal sexual preferences. He just gets irritated when they try to force acceptance of those preferences as "normal" on the rest of the country.

    92. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      He didn't say anything about "Teh Commies". He's talking about the vocal extremist environmentalists. (It's not his fault most of the vocal extremist environmentalists are liberals, and it's certainly not his fault that many liberals have socialist views - but nobody except you has mentioned communism.)

      Climate science makes clear, evidence-backed statements, and allows for solutions to exist

      And those thirty-one thousand climate scientists who openly put their name out there saying they disagree? Are you going to say the same thing as Obama's press secretary, that those thirty-one thousand scientists have "no scientific basis for their claims"?

      Yes, solutions exist to some of these problems. Nobody is disputing that. OSC lists half a dozen of them. The problem is that many of the vocal extremist environmentalists won't let us use any of them, in the name of "protecting the environment".

      And the recent exposure of some climate data as having been manipulated doesn't help your position. A single instance of manipulation gives reason to question the rest of the data. Why would they manipulate the data to support their thesis, if it were already provably true?

      In other words, if AGW were already provably true, they would have had no need to manipulate the data to support AGW. Doesn't that raise the least bit of suspicion in your mind?

    93. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      You deny it, but of course you have no more evidence for your position than OSC has for his.

      All of what you quoted is unsubstantiated, and half of it consists of weasel words. Any idiot can write shit like that.

      ... and your post is no different. Any idiot, indeed.

    94. Re:gone by Alef · · Score: 1

      If you want people to believe in global warming's existence, you've got to prove it, irrefutably.

      What if it's not possible to produce a proof that would convince you? Does that make global warming impossible in itself?

      Suppose that global warming really is happening. In that case you have just made it someone else's burden to convince you to save your own skin.

      Tax fuel so people drive less? Great, you just made maintaining one's lifestyle more expensive.

      If global warming is happening, your lifestyle is expensive. The difference is that the bill will arrive after a few decades, instead of when you refuel your car, and will be addressed to someone else.

    95. Re:gone by fbjon · · Score: 1

      ... and your post is no different. Any idiot, indeed.

      You have fully grasped the situation.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    96. Re:gone by joocemann · · Score: 1

      Wow ... thanks for the complete non-response. Can you give an actual response or point to some place that does? I have yet to see it. I would like an explanation for the inconsistencies other than simply being told that I'm dumb.

      If I knew who I was talking to, maybe I would feel compelled to care further. But until you decide to stop posting anonymously, I can hardly push a fart in your direction to provide a whiff of information -- for lack of knowing which direction I even need to send it.

    97. Re:gone by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      MrHanky, one correction on your #2, it's the C12 to C13 ratio that points to fossil carbon as the source of increased CO2 in the atmosphere. C14 has a half life of 5730 years so there is practically no C14 in fossil fuels because it's all decayed. Plants prefer C12 to C13 because it's lighter so there is a higher ratio of C12 to C13 in fossil fuels than in the general atmosphere.

    98. Re:gone by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/PageMill_Images/image277.gif [geocraft.com]

      This is undisputed (really) science. The big question is, why's everyone pretending as if it wasn't?"

      Scientists aren't ignoring it.
      http://www.skepticalscience.com/High-CO2-in-the-past-Part-2.html

      In summary, there are more factors than co2, and scientists do look at them.

    99. Re:gone by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      What FOIA request are you talking about? If you think it's the one in the CRU emails you are wrong. They have nothing to do with NOAA/GISS as they were made under Britain's FOI laws to the CRU.

    100. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's sillier than that. Had they left in the data with urban warming trends, it would have made the apparent warming even more extreme.

      I'm sure had they done that the critics would be complaining they should not have left it in.

    101. Re:gone by Taevin · · Score: 1
      From your blog:

      OSC used to provide support for his arguments. Now he makes unsubstantiated claims.

      I'm glad you recognize when someone spouts off unsubstantiated filth, but why do you then ignore it when you agree with what he's saying? How can you call him "level-headed" in response to that tripe?

      Already any child with any kind of sexual attraction to the same sex is told that this is an irresistible destiny, despite the large number of heterosexuals who move through this adolescent phase and never look back.

      If you're attracted to members of the same sex, then by definition you are not heterosexual (or at least not exclusively so, depending on which definition you use). If you were "homosexual" and are now "heterosexual," then in truth you are probably bisexual and have simply repressed your homosexual desires. As if repressing something on the base of Maslow's hierarchy of needs could ever be a good idea.

      Already any child with androgynous appearance or mannerisms -- effeminite boys and masculine girls -- are being nurtured and guided (or taunted and abused) into "accepting" what many of them never suspected they had -- a desire to permanently move into homosexual society.

      In other words, society will bend all its efforts to seize upon any hint of homosexuality in our young people and encourage it.

      Umm, what? No boy or girl wants to move into "homosexual society," whatever that is. They want to be treated with respect like everyone else. Taunting and abuse is supposed to drive them closer to the thing that made them the target of that abuse in the first place? I think not. Instead they repress who they are and act like someone else in an attempt to fit in (why are teen suicide rates significantly higher for homo/bisexuals, again?).

      Futhermore, how can anyone possibly say that society encourages homosexuality? In the US, half the population thinks that God created you solely for the purpose of being abused by them. Whether that be restriction of rights, social ostracism, psychological abuse through "conversion camps," physiological abuse through sterilization, or simply good ol' fashioned "beat the queer to death." Oh yes, homosexuals feel as if society is "bending all its efforts" to encourage them, let me tell you.

      Now, there is a myth that homosexuals are "born that way," and we are pounded with this idea so thoroughly that many people think that somebody, somewhere, must have proved it.

      No, no one has proved anything but then again you don't go around "proving" much of anything in science, let alone in a field as nondeterministic as human behavior. However, there is plenty of evidence for a strong genetic component to homosexuality such as, oh I don't know, just about every mammalian species studied in any depth.

      In fact what evidence there is suggests that if there is a genetic component to homosexuality, an entire range of environmental influences are also involved. While there is no scientific research whatsoever that indicates that there is no such thing as a borderline child who could go either way.

      Of course environment will affect the behavior and development of an animal. If it didn't, we wouldn't have priests claiming to be celebate and/or heterosexual while molesting little boys. And yeah, of course there are "borderline children who could go either way." I like sex with men just as much as I like it with women (actually, it's a bit more complicated than that but I'll spare you the details of my sexual desires). The "B" in "LGBT" isn't there for nothing. Of course I'm quite aware that to someone like OSC, a bisexual is not someone with homosexual desires, they're simply a confused heterosexual. He is so rabid in his hatred of homosexuality tha

    102. Re:gone by EQ · · Score: 1

      It was your blurb idiot. I was trying to show you how stupid you sounded. Skeptics (real ones) need no morons like you.

      --
      Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo! http://goo.gl/J9bkO
    103. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      depending on which definition [of homosexuality] you use

      And therein lies a substantial portion of the confusion around this issue. Conservative Christian types (of the sort that oppose gay marriage) generally only refer to a person as "homosexual" if they participate in same-gender sexual activity; on the other hand, the pro-gay-marriage supporters refer to "homosexuality" as some ingrained, unchangeable genetic trait.

      I'm going to get yelled at by half a dozen people for this, but here it is anyway: Let's assume there is some genetic predisposition to homosexuality in some people. The way conservative Christians look at it, it's like alcoholism - a person may be genetically predisposed to alcoholism, but they're not alcoholic unless they're drinking alcohol. Similarly, a person may be predisposed to homosexuality, but they're not homosexual unless they participate in such behavior. (Again, I'm not attempting to say "This is how it is", I'm merely trying to explain how conservative Christians look at the issue.)

      I think you can see where the problem arises - we're saying "it's a choice", because a person predisposed to alcoholism can choose not to be alcoholic, and we view homosexuality in the same light - as something a person can choose not to participate in.

      Of course, every time I try to explain this fundamental difference in definitions, people get sidetracked by my "predisposition to alcoholism" comparison, and they start yelling at me for calling gays alcoholics or somesuch nonsense. Please don't do that ;) In any case, if you understand the fundamental difference in definitions of each side of the debate, then you can start having a rational discussion on the subject.

      Umm, what? No boy or girl wants to move into "homosexual society," whatever that is.

      That's exactly OSC's point. Read his sentence again - society will seize any hint of homosexuality in our children and nurture it, in the name of tolerance, and it will encourage our children to accept a desire they don't actually have (that is, to be homosexual).

      Now before you go shouting "that's nonsense", just think about it for a minute. If homosexuality is viewed by society as normal and natural, then teachers in schools will be socially obliged to encourage such traits in students when they see them - just as they encourage creativity, athleticism, or any other natural trait - even romance. (School-organized dances, anyone?)

      Futhermore, how can anyone possibly say that society encourages homosexuality?

      Have you watched TV lately? Virtually every new TV show has a gay character, and they all go to great lengths to have every other character on the show be as accepting as possible of that gay person's lifestyle - and they go to great lengths to make the viewers accept the person's lifestyle as well. It's a very short jump from implicit acceptance to encouragement.

      Now, that's only the media I'm talking about; there are a lot of people who have a strange compulsion to abuse homosexuals in a number of ways (physically, emotionally, etc). Homosexuals are not the only group targeted like this. (Mormons come to mind.) I certainly don't approve of such behavior. But don't be too quick to judge the majority based on a vocal minority.

      However, there is plenty of evidence for a strong genetic component to homosexuality such as, oh I don't know, just about every mammalian species studied in any depth.

      I'll simply refer you to my earlier comments regarding the difference in definitions in answer to this comment. We generally concede the possibility of a genetic predisposition to homosexuality, but we don't agree that such a predisposition gives the person no choice in the matter.

      He is so rabid in his hatred of homosexuality that he sees any concession towards the "gay society" as an attempt to pervent these wayward so

    104. Re:gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. "He's a Mormon" is not one, but three of your problems with him. Interesting.

      Anyway, I don't want to get into an argument about Mormons with you right now (though you're welcome to e-mail me if you feel the desire to attempt to dissuade me of my crazy Mormon ways)

      It's a rhetorical device. I'm sorry that was missed on you. And no, my purpose is not to dissuade you of your religion which is most likely impossible. It was merely to point out that someone as adherent to a religion, particularly a religion as inflexible to ideas contrary to church law as Mormonism, perhaps should not be used as a demonstration of rational thought.

      Actually we're just saying that a call to stop using coal power will cause the American way of life to collapse if all the other viable solutions are prohibited. That's just common sense. It's a shame the environmentalists can't understand it.

      Yes, that's exactly the sort of absurdity I was ranting against. Right, we're just going to stop all energy production and then laugh as civilization crumbles into the ground. God you people make me sick. You're the ones by and large trying to prevent alternative sources of energy (i.e. prohibiting them). Handily, all that is left then is the current, really crappy, methods of production so then when someone complains about it you just say "omg!! you want to shut down America!! why do you hate freeeeeedom?!?!?" The fact that people complaining about coal are the ones that want the alternatives is ignored.

      Solar power is extremely widely supported. Wind power is widely supported as well (originally some of the animal wackos objected to birds being ground into mincemeat, but that stopped when everyone realized they're just as retarded as anti-science nuts). Nuclear power is supported as well, often with the argument showing that that the radioactive output of a nuke plant is significantly less than that of a coal plant. All of these suffer from lack of government support, because of lack of public support which is due to bad science, idiots like you supporting the status quo, and general NIMBY behavior.

      It's intellectually dishonest to point out that the people who most vigorously support measures to (somehow) stop global warming generally aren't the people you see riding around on bicycles to save energy and reduce pollution?

      Umm, yes? By and large, the only people riding bikes in the US are those same people. Bicycling is also not a practical option for the vast majority of Americans. Most couldn't make it down the block without having a heart attack, and since most people work far too much already, the rest can't afford the longer commute. In my case, for example, I would have to wake up very early, come home very late (and never eat dinner with my family) and have an hour or two to myself before I had to go to bed early to do it again the next day. Thus, bicycling is really only practical in urban areas and unfortunately, most American cities are extremely bike-unfriendly. Bicyclists do push for changes of course but are opposed by SUV drivers who are outraged that their roads might get thinner or they'd have to slow down for a cyclist.

      Bicycling is only practical in urban areas. Urban areas are much more likely to be politically liberal (i.e. supporting of Al Gore). Therefore it's much more likely that people supporting global warming prevention methods are going to be cycling. Every single person that I've met that uses a bicycle as their primary mode of transportation has answered the following when asked why: "I like riding, it's good exercise, and it's good for the environment (some substitute money savings for enjoyment)." It must take some amazing mental gymnastics for you to honestly think that it's people who support burning coal that are going to be the ones inconveniencing themselves by using a bicycle to get around.

      It's in

    105. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      perhaps should not be used as a demonstration of rational thought.

      Ah, so you're another one of those muttonheads who thinks religious people are incapable of rational thought. I suppose you'll also tell me that I shouldn't vote unless I (somehow) vote without letting my religious views influence my vote. (Never mind that the founders of this country were quite religious, and never mind that their religion heavily influenced our entire system of government and the laws it upholds.)

      You're the ones screaming about how restricting the use of those resources in favor of others is going to irreparably destroy the economy, remember?

      There you go ignoring my earlier post. We're in favor of moving away from coal and oil. We just don't want to do it while liberals are refusing to let us build more nuclear plants. Are you still trying to deny that liberals have historically opposed nuclear plants, while conservatives have historically supported them? It's extremely well-known...

      It's intellectually dishonest to suggest someone like Al Gore should be bicycling everywhere, yes.

      Nobody suggested that Al Gore ride his bicycle across the Atlantic. In fact I specifically suggested that Al Gore merely take a regular airplane like everyone else. Then he wouldn't have to purchase "carbon offsets", and he could use his money to, I don't know, fund further research or something. If his schedule is really so cramped that he can't allocate an extra couple of hours to take a regular plane, then he's overscheduling himself.

      A "valid" example would be a company trying to build [solar power in a desert, and being opposed by environmentalists]

      If I were to announce tomorrow that I want to put up a large number of solar panels in the middle of the Sahara, I can guarantee a huge backlash from environmentalists saying "you can't do that, you'll ruin the Sahara's natural ecology." But don't take my word for it - read on. I have linked to examples of environmentalists opposing the very energy plans you say they support. And let me tell you, it was trivial to find them.

      Evolution? Conservatives oppose it. Stem-cell research? Conservatives oppose it. CERN? Conservatives oppose it. AGW? Conservatives oppose it.

      What? Don't be ridiculous. Conservatives are generally religious, sure, but very few conservatives try to get schools to stop teaching evolution in schools. Evolution and religion are not mutually exclusive.

      Conservatives generally only oppose stem-cell research using aborted fetuses. Research using stem cells from other sources (e.g. umbilical cord blood) is not opposed. You're conflating two issues.

      I'm not sure what CERN has to do with anything. Are you saying conservatives oppose the LHC? I haven't really heard anyone in particular opposing it, other than small groups of scientists who are too unqualified to actually explain why they oppose it. This has nothing to do with our discussion; I'm not really sure why you brought it up.

      AGW? Yeah, that's sort of what this argument is about :P

      And you think we can't be the ones causing the problem? I'd love to see your logical thought process on that one.

      I already mentioned why, but apparently you missed it. The earth has a natural temperature cycle, and we are in the natural warming-up phase of that cycle. Can you prove to me that the earth would not be warming up just as much without us?

      You pretty much just said you agree with everything AGW folks want to do to prevent global warming, but you're not doing so because of global warming. If it came down to it, you'd see the world destroyed just so you wouldn't have to admit global warming exists.

      Don't be silly. I'm not the one currently

    106. Re:gone by cybrangl · · Score: 1

      "Except, the burden of proof is not on the skeptics" Actually that is completely wrong. A theory has been proposed that supposedly endangers us all. Evidence is presented. If they are wrong, there is little damage in implementing the solutions provided, and may even ultimately save us money. However, failing to act could be disasterous. "Hey Harry, I think letting the collant run out of the Reactor chamber would be bad" "Oh Geoge, you're just being an alarmist. Can you prove it is disasterous every single time?" The problem is that you can only disprove the sceptics by letting it happen, and by then it is too late. Even if the global temperature rise IS natural, and by some freak of nature, all of the pollution and CO2 we spew out has nothing to do with the excelleration, a rise in temperature is bad for us. This is simple logic. So, even IF all of these scientists are wrong, we still need to do something.

    107. Re:gone by Taevin · · Score: 1

      And therein lies a substantial portion of the confusion around this issue. Conservative Christian types (of the sort that oppose gay marriage) generally only refer to a person as "homosexual" if they participate in same-gender sexual activity; on the other hand, the pro-gay-marriage supporters refer to "homosexuality" as some ingrained, unchangeable genetic trait.

      To be clear, I was referring to the distinction between homosexuality as an inclusive term and homosexuality as an exclusive term. That is, by one definition a bisexual is both homo- and hetero-sexual (describing someone as homosexual would not preclude them from having heterosexual desires as well, by this usage). The other definition, being exclusive, would mean a homosexual is someone with only same-sex attraction.

      Furthermore, I'm not so sure; your own church defines homosexuality as more than just participation in homosexual sex:

      Homosexual problems, according to popular church vernacular, are defined as "homoerotic thoughts, feelings or behaviors."[17] In describing people with homosexual feelings, the church will often say they have same-gender attractions.

      Which is pretty much in line with how everyone uses the term.

      What I think you're really referring to is the difference between orientation and preference. I visualize this as two sliding scales which can (but shouldn't, or at least not to any great degree) operate independently. Using myself as an example, as a bisexual my orientation marker would be somewhere near the middle while my preference marker could be said to be farther on the "gay side" given my current choice of partner.

      You'll note that I did use the word "choice" there because I partially agree with you there, at least with respect to preference. I don't think you have much (if any) choice in your orientation; I certainly never asked to find men with rippling muscles attractive, I just do. Preference you have significantly more leeway because it is a result of your conscious thought, but I contend that the greater the distance between your two markers when overlapped, the greater your risk for psychological symptoms. Someone like myself might not experience too much of a hardship by choosing at completely heterosexual lifestyle as I would still have an outlet for my sexual desires. Someone at the far end of the scale on the homosexual side might have a significantly harder time since they would be suppressing the entirety of their sexual identity and not a mere portion.

      So, there's where I agree with you. Where I disagree with you is that the manner in which you present the choice is a bit of a nonstarter. You seem receptive to the idea that homosexuality is a something you can at least be born with a predisposition to, but then go on to say that you can (and should) choose to not be that way. To me, that's just as ridiculous as me saying that you might have been born heterosexual but should choose not to engage in your desires (due to overpopulation or whatever fanciful reason I might come up with). If you wanted to prove to the world that sexual behavior is a choice, you could go out right now and find some man (sorry, I'm running under the assumption you are male) to be your lover and partner. Is that really a realistic choice for you though? Could you ever feel proud and fulfilled in your life by going against who you understand yourself to be?

      Have you watched TV lately? Virtually every new TV show has a gay character, and they all go to great lengths to have every other character on the show be as accepting as possible of that gay person's lifestyle - and they go to great lengths to make the viewers accept the person's lifestyle as well. It's a very short jump from implicit acceptance to encouragement.

    108. Re:gone by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, I'm not so sure; your own church [wikipedia.org] defines homosexuality as more than just participation in homosexual sex:

      I think you're misreading the text you quoted - in fact, it specifically mentions that the church does not use the term "homosexual" to describe people with same-gender attractions, it uses the term "same-gender attraction".

      The Wikipedia article was most likely not written by the LDS Church, so I would be careful with the context of those quotes, as the article writer likely has his or her own definition of "homosexual" which may not coincide with the LDS Church's usage. The Church's stance on homosexuality and same-gender marriage is best read here and here.

      You seem receptive to the idea that homosexuality is a something you can at least be born with a predisposition to, but then go on to say that you can (and should) choose to not be that way.

      That second half is the bit that's (of course) causing the most problems. If I can be direct, the trouble is that many religious people don't want to endorse something in law that they view as a sin, even only as indirectly as making it legal. (And, unfounded or not, there are fears regarding how that indirect endorsement would affect our children.)

      You (the generic "you", referring to the LGBT movement) hear that and take offense, when (with perhaps some unfortunate exceptions) usually no offense is meant - we just don't want to endorse a lifestyle we view as a sin, and we want our children to clearly understand that we don't approve of it. (Hearing one message at school and the opposite at home can make for a confused child.)

      To me, that's just as ridiculous as me saying that you might have been born heterosexual but should choose not to engage in your desires (due to overpopulation or whatever fanciful reason I might come up with).

      I'm not asking anyone to stop living their sexual life how they want. As I said before, I don't much care what you do in your bedroom.

      Homosexuals are still discriminated against for certain rights though

      Well, one problem is that some of the things homosexuals are claiming are "rights" are actually privileges, not rights; adoption, for example, is not a right, but a privilege given to those couples that meet the criteria set by the adoption agency. If the adoption agency doesn't think homosexual couples can provide a sufficiently healthy environment to raise a child, well, that's unfortunate for such couples, but no rights have been lost.

      it's just that perhaps my sarcasm was not the best way to illustrate mine

      Sarcasm rarely comes across properly in internet-based discussions like this (which is why I specifically mentioned the facetiousness with which I made one of my comments)...

      The explanation that gays want marriage rights because they want to enjoy the same rights heteros get satisfies the observations

      But the issue is that gays don't actually gain any rights by marriage that they don't already have. There are some privileges, sure - tax credits meant to encourage having children, for example - but again those are not rights.

      I realize that probably sounds arrogant, but if you're going to claim you're losing rights, you'd better show some rights that are getting lost, not just benefits.

      (If you mention health insurance companies discriminating, well, that's already illegal in many/most places, so that sort of thing can be solved by enforcing existing law.)

      Now, on top of all that, try to look at it from our point of view - "marriage" has a deep, special mea

  3. Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    show me the peer-reviewed journal article demonstrating the error here

    Of course, on of the issues revealed is that they were preventing dissenting opinions from being accepted in peer reviewed journals...

    You can prove anything when you're allowed to select the peers reviewing.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 3, Interesting

      ...You can prove anything when you're allowed to select the peers reviewing....

      Here is an article that would have likely been rejected by those who have control over the peer review process:

      http://www.oism.org/pproject/s33p36.htm

      You will find other interesting stuff on this website, that many if not most on Slashdot would disagree with.

      --
      All theory is gray
    2. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Trepidity · · Score: 4, Informative

      While labeled flamebait, this is something of a problem, even in less politicized fields of science. Most scientists are earnest truth-seekers, but a minority are not, and the peer-review system is not always robust to them. I work in an area of computer science that will never make Fox News, but even in this area things are sometimes suppressed for what's hard to describe as other than political reasons. At the very least, politically unpopular positions get all sorts of extra hoops to jump through that others don't--- e.g. if you're casting doubt on a position the journal editor or one of his friends staked his career on, better expect some random made-up requirements. If your paper scoops a large and well-funded group's work, there's a chance it'll be rejected by one of their friends, so they get to publication first--- and their publication might coincidentally borrow a few ideas or theorems from your rejected paper.

      It's not all bad, and in fact most is probably good. But there are some very rotten parts of the scientific-publishing apparatus. It doesn't help that most journals are run by for-profit companies that are a bit shady themselves (Kluwer, Springer, etc.) who have no real interest in the quality of the science they publish or how to improve it. And it doubly doesn't help that the academic rat-race has gotten increasingly cut-throat, so people feel they need to resort to dirty tricks to get/keep a job, get tenure, get grants, etc.

    3. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      You will find other interesting stuff on this website, that many if not most on Slashdot would disagree with.

      I completely disagree with their paper on deamidation of proteins! Proteins were given to us by God and if he had intended them to be deamidified, he'd have deamidificated them Himself! We must stop these blasphemous acts by those who would play "god"!

    4. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by srjh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They weren't preventing dissenting opinions from being accepting into peer reviewed journals - they expressed disappointment in the fact that the peer review process wasn't doing its job: weeding out bad science.

      The main paper in question was a literature review paper (funded by the Marshall Institute and the American Petroleum Institute) full of bad science, where the actual authors of the papers cited claim to have been profoundly misintepreted, and in which severe methodological flaws have since been found. One of the authors doesn't even believe that CFCs affect the ozone layer. It should have stood as a textbook example of why we have the peer review process to begin with - it's not a platform for anyone to publish scientific nonsense.

      Scientists actually are pretty skeptical people by nature, those who seem to be saying "I'm a skeptic! I don't know the science, but I'm absolutely certain it's a liberal hoax and we're all being lied to"... not so much. Most "skeptics" are nothing more than contrarians; skepticism to me implies a willingness to investigate the issue for one's self, but most of the denial movement shows such a poor grasp of the science that they clearly haven't done so.

    5. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by ushering05401 · · Score: 1

      show me the peer-reviewed journal article demonstrating the error here

      Of course, on of the issues revealed is that they were preventing dissenting opinions from being accepted in peer reviewed journals...

      You can prove anything when you're allowed to select the peers reviewing.

      No, you can't. You can stonewall outsiders at best, and only until they are willing to circumvent your avenue of peer review despite the hardships and go public.

      At that point, provided there is demonstrable merit to the work, the establishment can't just keep claiming that there isn't demonstrable merit without risking their credibility as 'Peers' qualified to do review.

      Anyhow, whoever penned the response comes across as someone not directly involved with the talent in the field, only involved with normals. Anyone having been exposed to enough abnormal cognitive talent would understand that pinning a bar to entry on PHD status will get your ass alienated and your career prospects dimmed. Whoever wrote this was most likely trained to see what they see, and therefore attaching undue importance to the training. That is how most normals are. The others choose to apply preexisting cognitive talent to a field of interest and gain credentials in the process. My experience is that these types attach importance to rigor and precision, find these qualities lacking in many of their titled peers, and are therefore ready to recognize it untitled individuals when they come to their attention.

      All that being said, I have no idea if there is any merit to the particular works being discussed.

    6. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by AtomicSnarl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      More to the point, peer review is NOT theory validation -- it is supposed to be a final edit by an impartial party to find errors of fact, reason, and presentation. It is never supposed to be the "Stamp of Approval" about the topic, it is only a filter to weed out papers not yet ready for publication.

      Theory validation comes from those who read the papers and use the information to test, retest, or modify their own experiments to either confirm, deny, or suggest alternatives to the information presented.

      --
      Pacifist paratroopers yell, "Ghandi!" when they jump.
    7. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by khallow · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, you can't. You can stonewall outsiders at best, and only until they are willing to circumvent your avenue of peer review despite the hardships and go public.

      Which may be what's happening now.

    8. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Draek · · Score: 1

      But similarly, you can prove anything when you're allowed to use anything anyone's ever published on the internet.

      Trying to put some sense in the head of the guy from the Time Cube is nothing but a waste of time for all those involved. And since peer-reviewed journals are the best way we've found yet to determine who knows what they're talking about and who doesn't, that's the method they're gonna use.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    9. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So which part of his second paragraph do you actually dispute?

    10. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hokay. As someone who works in science publishing for a medium-sized (neither one of the top, nor one of the inconsequential) publishing houses:

      i) If you're casting doubt on our editorial board's position then you will indeed be expected to have more solid evidence than some random, 'out there' paper that blew in, unsolicited. That's just the way of the world. Got the evidence? All is well, it's probably an awesome scoop!

      ii) If you scoop an important and well-funded group's work, *awesome*! Get over here, we'll get you peer-reviewed thoroughly and double-quick, pulling in favours if necessary - that scoop will be great for our impact factor!

      iii) Kluwer are goddamn shady, make no mistake, but I work for a company which is both for-profit and for-science. There's no conflict, because so far we haven't been offered any money _not_ to publish the best science we can. Hell, it'd be *great* if someone would, but from experience I'd have to conclude that there _is_ no group with bottomless pockets waiting to bribe us into submission...

    11. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it would be rejected. Did you notice that authors Arthur B. Robinson, Noah E. Robinson, and Willie Soon don't even appear to have degrees or belong to an academic institution? Hard to tell if they're high school students from a red state or just fringe cranks. What other interesting "science" have these guys been doing?

    12. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 0, Troll

      An AC typed something into a keyboard. Amazing.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    13. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      For those who do not wish to google it, the publisher is the "Association of American Physicians and Surgeons" http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Association_of_American_Physicians_and_Surgeons
      The 'Journal' is the Journal of the American Physicians and Surgeons (formally known as the Medical Sentinal).

      The have such fine articles such as:

      abortion causes preterm birth later in life, and thus birth defects such as cerebral palsy to future children born to women with a history of abortion

      the Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services are unconstitutional,

      that HIV does not cause AIDS

    14. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (louder, slightly annoyed) So which part of his second paragraph do you actually dispute?

    15. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You will find other interesting stuff on this website, that many if not most on Slashdot would disagree with.

      Yes like trying to cure cancer by a change in diet as an example of pseudoscience perpetuated by this website...

    16. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Americium · · Score: 1

      Then publish open source. You might find other scientists making fun of you constantly when you get it wrong tho. ArXiV has so much crap on it already..... that I love to make fun of. (that's not to say it doesn't have good stuff too.)

      On another topic, even if the earth isn't warming, carbon is ruining the beautiful lakes here in Maine, and it's from the factories in Illinois and other states west of here. Personally, I really don't mind global warming that much (actually it hasn't bothered me at all yet, has it bothered you?), but the pollution and acid rain sucks, and that's why I try to somewhat support these climate talks (not with money tho). By the time global warming is actually a catastrophe, we should be able to cool the earth; I actually saw a great talk about how small scale nuclear warfare (not thermonuclear) between India and Pakistan would cool the Earth quite well for a decade or so..... . Seriously tho, how about we just have a real 4th of July in the USA and blow up a bunch of nukes, not only will it look fucking amazing, but it'll save the planet ;)

    17. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On this website is nothing interesting. Except for people that want to investigate the AGW denier backgrounds.

      Citation:

      ABSTRACT

      A review of the research literature concerning the environmental consequences of increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide leads to the conclusion that increases during the 20th and early 21st centuries have produced no deleterious effects upon Earth's weather and climate. Increased carbon dioxide has, however, markedly increased plant growth. Predictions of harmful climatic effects due to future increases in hydrocarbon use and minor greenhouse gases like CO2 do not conform to current experimental knowledge. The environmental effects of rapid expansion of the nuclear and hydrocarbon energy industries are discussed.

      The first article starts with this abstract. Nearly ever sentence in this abstract that makes a claim like leads to the conclusion that increases during the 20th and early 21st centuries have produced no deleterious effects upon Earth's weather and climate contradict basic physics knowledge you learn in the 5th grade ... and which I have learned 30 years ago.

      It is not funny (just did not like to start the sentence with: Isn't it funny ...) that our day pseudo scientists (likely some 25 year old uneducated deniers) don't even understand why this Abstract alone is so disappointing.

      angel'o'sphre

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    18. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Nazlfrag · · Score: 3, Informative

      That's Dr. Arthur B. Robinson, Dr. Noah E. Robinson, and Dr. Willie Soon to you. The first two are chemists and the last a physicist, all have PhDs and have published in a range of peer reviewed journals. You will need to come up with a better rationale than that.

    19. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by iris-n · · Score: 1

      Have you heard of arXiv, sir?

      I know of no group that has enough power (and evilness) to taint their date records.

      So, write down your scoop, put it on arXiv, and then submit to peer-review. I don't see how could you possibly lose it.

      I'm aware that there are journals that don't publish things that are already on arXiv (like Nature [although I don't think they do CS]). Ignore these bastards. They'll have to change their mind or become irrelevant.

      --
      entropy happens
    20. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah so therefore when Christy, SInger Lindzen, Soon and Baliunas (ALL MAJOR GLOBAL WARMING DENIERS) regularly publish in peer-reviewed journal their opinions are being suppressed? You cann't have both ways. Either the journal prevent dissenting opinions or deniers publish. Since all of these deniers have a long history of publications you are full of bovine excrement. The only people not getting published are those, like Tim Ball, who lie about their credentials

    21. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by bjorniac · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nature not allowing arXiv thing is a myth:

      "Our guidelines for authors and potential authors in such circumstances are clear-cut in principle: communicate with other researchers as much as you wish, whether on a recognised community preprint server, on Nature Precedings, by discussion at scientific meetings (publication of abstracts in conference proceedings is allowed), in an academic thesis, or by online collaborative sites such as wikis; but do not encourage premature publication by discussion with the press (beyond a formal presentation, if at a conference)."

      From :
      http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/embargo.html

    22. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by maj1k · · Score: 1

      and that ac made a good point. what part of that paragraph don't you agree with?

    23. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by cold+fjord · · Score: 5, Informative

      They weren't preventing dissenting opinions from being accepting into peer reviewed journals - they expressed disappointment in the fact that the peer review process wasn't doing its job: weeding out bad science.

      I don't think you've captured the true flavor of their hijinks.

      Rigging a Climate 'Consensus' - About those emails and 'peer review.'

      This September, Mr. Mann told a New York Times reporter in one of the leaked emails that: "Those such as [Stephen] McIntyre who operate almost entirely outside of this system are not to be trusted." Mr. McIntyre is a retired Canadian businessman who checks the findings of climate scientists and often publishes the mistakes he finds on his Web site, Climateaudit.org. He holds the rare distinction of having forced Mr. Mann to publish a correction to one of his more famous papers.

      As anonymous reviewers of choice for certain journals, Mr. Mann & Co. had considerable power to enforce the consensus, but it was not absolute, as they discovered in 2003. Mr. Mann noted in a March 2003 email, after the journal "Climate Research" published a paper not to Mr. Mann's liking, that "This was the danger of always criticising the skeptics for not publishing in the 'peer-reviewed literature'. Obviously, they found a solution to that--take over a journal!"

      Mr. Mann went on to suggest that the journal itself be blackballed: "Perhaps we should encourage our colleagues in the climate research community to no longer submit to, or cite papers in, this journal. We would also need to consider what we tell or request of our more reasonable colleagues who currently sit on the editorial board." In other words, keep dissent out of the respected journals. When that fails, redefine what constitutes a respected journal to exclude any that publish inconvenient views.

      Scientists actually are pretty skeptical people by nature,...... Most "skeptics" are nothing more than contrarians; skepticism to me implies a willingness to investigate the issue for one's self, but most of the denial movement shows such a poor grasp of the science that they clearly haven't done so.

      When it comes to climate, there seems to be two groups - skeptics, and believers. It is amazingly difficult to get believers to reevaluate new data (and perhaps endanger millions in grants?).

      Climate of Fear - Global-warming alarmists intimidate dissenting scientists into silence.
      Physics Group Splinters Over Global Warming Review
      Climate change: this is the worst scientific scandal of our generation

      Can most scientists afford to be skeptics?

      To which Paul Vaughan responded as follows:

      Personal anecdote:
      Last spring when I was shopping around for a new source of funding, after having my funding slashed to zero 15 days after going public with a finding about natural climate variations, I kept running into funding application instructions of the following variety:

      Successful candidates will:
      1) Demonstrate AGW.
      2) Demonstrate the catastrophic consequences of AGW.
      3) Explore policy implications stemming from 1 & 2.

      Follow the money -- perhaps a conspiracy is unnecessary where a carrot will suffice.

      Opposing toxic pollution is not synonymous with supporting AGW.

      After all, there is huge money to be made and transferred due to "Climate change", even if it all turns out to b

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    24. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      ok, they are cranks with PhDs (no one has said from where) working, among other things, with the Discovery Institute on "Intelligent Design". The unibomber has a PhD too, from one of the best schools in the country. It's largely besides the point.

      http://sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Oregon_Institute_of_Science_and_Medicine

    25. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by robot+marvin · · Score: 1

      quite impressive paper, but the conclusion shocked me and after finding that OISM get fundings from ExxonMobil it is quite untrustworthy. that is why I think independent research is so important.

    26. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by orzetto · · Score: 5, Informative

      The article is penned by authors of the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, an "institute" with just 6 faculty members, among which two sons of institute head Arthur Robinson, Noah and Zachary. A 50% incidence of nepotism? How can this be considered a serious research institution?

      To further discredit the paper's first author, who is also the head of the OISM, I will mention he has signed the Discovery Institute's Dissent from Darwin petition.

      Now, in addition to the shaky credibility of the authors, you say this paper has not passed peer review. I'll stick with the judgement of serious scientists, thank you very much.

      --
      Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
    27. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most "skeptics" are nothing more than contrarians

      I love it!

    28. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      One of the authors doesn't even believe that CFCs affect the ozone layer

      ... which is true. The ozone hole (discovered when we first looked) is affected by changes in the sun, and follows a natural cycle.

      1) we found it. AND IT'S GETTING BIGGER! must be our fault. Nature is static you know!!11
      2) let's do something!
      3) It's getting smaller! IT MUST BE THANKS TO US! (let's forget that it should've taken another 10-15 years for our changes to have any effect)
      4) uh-oh .. it's getting bigger again .. let's keep quiet about that.

      Yes, heard much about number 4 lately?

      http://www.sciencealert.com.au/news/20081809-18171-2.html

    29. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      as a research scientist in the field I never cease to be dumbfounded by the constant "they are making it all up to get more funding" theories.

      do you have any idea how badly a university professor gets paid? do you really think we work on this stuff for the money? Are you mad? Does it not occur to you that top numerical modelers can quit the game and pretty much walk into any financial house they want and make wheelbarrow loads of cash at any time they want? (don't tell my wife)

      and yet for some reason they do not. (well quite a few do just after finishing their phds, but they would have left anyway)

      just because you are primarily driven by greed it is a mistake to believe that all others are as well, especially those with lots of lucrative options open to them.

    30. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh dear.

      Who let the freepers in?

    31. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are bad reviewers out there, the same as there are bad scientists, and that can be a problem if you feel your paper has to be published in one, specific journal. Get the rare reviewer who can't distinguish his personal beliefs from objective science, and he can block that submission.

      If you're honestly believe that there's a cabala surrounding some large group to make sure they're first to print on every idea, you can ask that they be excluded from reviewing. If you know someone who will reject non-aligned ideas, you can ask that he be excluded from reviewing. And there are tons of relevant journals to which a rejected manuscript can be resubmitted. The problem of reviewer bias is well known, and there are well known counters to it.

      It's just possible, if your manuscript gets rejected from four or five journals, that it doesn't communicate its idea and its validation quite as well as you think it does.

    32. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by JackDW · · Score: 1

      When I write an abstract I normally try to summarise my paper, which includes the results and conclusion. Generally the abstract is the last part of the paper to be written. I know that many people will only read the abstract, so I want to make sure it accurately represents the contents of the paper. The way to do this is not to write it like an advert or teaser for the paper, but rather as a "spoiler" that tells you the ending.

      The abstract can convey the main results and conclusions of a scientific article but the full text article must be consulted for details of the methodology, the full experimental results, and a critical discussion of the interpretations and conclusions.

      --
      You're an immobile computer, remember?
    33. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for bringing this up. Peer reviewed papers are not equivalent to textbooks or to "dogma."

      Peer-reviewed papers are more of a series of open letters among equals, where two or three of those peers take upon themselves to read closely the first draft & make sure those communications waste as little time as possible. Peer-reviewed papers amount to "This is what I saw, and there's nothing obviously wrong with it."

      I think this is why the popular press and the public come away with the impression that science is fickle. They read the latest in the series of observations, which may conflict with the previous observation, and because it's in a widely-cited journal like Science or Nature, interpret the conflict as debunking the old theory. Meanwhile, the scientific community sits back and thinks about how to reconcile the conflicting observations into a unitary truth.

    34. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>They weren't preventing dissenting opinions from being accepting into peer reviewed journals - they expressed disappointment in the fact that the peer review process wasn't doing its job: weeding out bad science.

      What??

      The emails were quite clear that they were not only going to boycott a journal because they allowed a skeptic on their editorial board, but they were conspiring to remove references to articles in the journal and do everything they could to blackball it unofficially. And we'd never have known about it if it wasn't for Climategate.

      And how do you know if they're weeding out bad science when the scientists refuse to publish the data they drew their conclusions from?

      While I agree a lot of the claims of Climategate were overstated, these two points show something fundamentally rotten at the heart of climate science.

      Also, I find it amusing that /. would have an article talking about "The Limits of Skepticism" when skepticism is "bad" (you know, like AGW), but you'd never see such a thing for, say, being skeptical about God - there's no limits on skepticism about God here, no matter what. It's really quite stupid, the bias.

    35. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmmmm.

      So the Climategate emails that detail how the core AGW advocates discussed, and acted upon, how to manipulate peer review journals, eliminate editors they deemed unacceptable and how to delegitimize journals that were no longer easy to control ... are what?

      Fiction?

    36. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      :(

      Solar heliosphere moderates the amount of galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) that hit the Earth. GCRs consists of mostly hydrogen and helium (without electrons, so called protons and alpha particles at 83% and 12% of the total respectively).

      hydrogen + ozone = water + oxygen

      So, an increase in the amount of GCRs should coincide with a bigger ozone hole, and vice versa.

      It does. Why don't you like science?

    37. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1

      While I understand your sensitivity having worked for a journal publisher, my personal experience comports with the grandparent and the science blogs link. Although perhaps not the norm, personal biases of the reviewers and/or editors is often a major factor in reviews of publications and grants. I personally dealt with a situation similar to the scienceblogs link back in the early 90's. During a journal club review of a paper published in a fairly prestigious tier two journal I spotted a major and fairly obvious error in data analysis that nullified the entire paper. After kicking it around in journal club for a while, we wound up contacting the lead and second authors to see if we were missing something. Well, long story short they were not amused and were not interested in discussing it further when we didn't take "you don't know what you are talking about" for an answer. Comments to the journal were reviewed and rejected for seemingly silly reasons and since we didn't really have a dog in that fight we dropped it after two revisions.

      Your assurance that you'd love to publish a scoop is great, except the author of a paper never knows the connections of the reviewers who might be sitting on his paper because their buddy has a couple of big grants on the subject and wants to get his paper out first. The publisher might not know anything about it either. Because of the nature of peer review, finding reviewers that are sufficiently expert in the specific area of interest and not connected to the author or his competition in any way is exceedingly difficult in many areas of science. In my own specialty there were probably a few hundred principals around the world in that area, but when you broke it down to a specific line of inquiry there might only be 20 or so. Less if you want to be really specific. And most of these were heavily collaborating on one thing or another.

      I don't think there was any fraud or corruption involved in the situations I witnessed, but people have natural biases in their perceptions that color their susceptibility to new ideas. In one grant proposal I made as a student, I relied heavily on a series of papers from a group in Sweden. After being heavily grilled by one of the review committee about the technique I was planning I finally asked what was going on. He replied that I should take everything from the Swedish group with a big grain of salt - he didn't believe they were reliable. I asked how in the world I was supposed to know that - he said that's what you have to be able to do to be in research - winnow the wheat from the chaff. So his perception was that peer-reviewed journal articles were no evidence of credibility - at least not in reference to a group that he obviously had a tiff with.

    38. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Of course, on of the issues revealed is that they were preventing dissenting opinions from being accepted in peer reviewed journals...

      This is a lie. Stop repeating it. You either know it's a lie or don't know how to use Google.

      Hint - the papers Jones said needed a redefinition of peer review to get rid of were cited in the chapter of the IPCC report that Jones's group edited.

      Some censorship.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    39. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ...I'll stick with the judgement of serious scientists....

      like those whose e-mails show that they massaged the data, refused FOIA requests, call it a "travesty" that the data do not support their agenda and work desperately hard to re-make the peer review process in their favor such as to exclude dissenting scientists who are more or equally qualified to publish on the subject.

      --
      All theory is gray
    40. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

      Not publishing your data is bad science. Why do we care about leaked emails. That was their creditability down the toilet as far as i am concerned.

      I God we trust. The rest of you *show me the data*.

      --
      The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
    41. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      In the social sciences, we see a different angle on this.

      There is "research" under the umbrella "critical methods" which rather than control for bias, the authors state their bias and make no efforts to gather any evidence to refute their own a priori conclusions. Part of their justification is that opponents have the same opportunity: They can gather evidence to support their viewpoint, and then it will all get worked out in the literature.

      The problem is that for many pressing issues, political correctness will not allow the other side to voice their opinion. So one end becomes more and more "founded" in "research" while the other - which may be more correct (from a positivist POV) - gets less and less credible.

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    42. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...ok, they are cranks with PhDs ...

      So are the crooks whose e-mails were pilfered any better? They have PhD's and more degrees than a thermometer, so are those the guys you're talking about?

      I myself prefer a crank over a crook any day, especially a crook whose agenda will cost me and everybody else lots of money.

      --
      All theory is gray
    43. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...no deleterious effects upon Earth's weather and climate....

      So what data do you or anybody else have, that shows how terrible global warming would be if it were really happening? Would growing tomatoes in Siberia be terrible? Would opening up vast tracts of frozen wasteland to human habitation be a disadvantage to the human race?

      --
      All theory is gray
    44. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, for fun, I chose a random name (Roger Aamodt, PhD), from that list of scientists rejecting climate change. Roger appears to work for the National Cancer Institute, which I hear is heavily involved in climate analysis. Here's a grant proposal showing his research interest in breast cancer: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-CA-02-024.html

      But you know, maybe we should be letting these guys publish in Nature on climate change, they are scientists after all.

    45. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      There's also huge money to be lost from the changes required to deal with climate change too so I'd be skeptical of both sides of the argument personally.

    46. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Bongo · · Score: 1

      While labeled flamebait, this is something of a problem, even in less politicized fields of science. Most scientists are earnest truth-seekers, but a minority are not, and the peer-review system is not always robust to them. I work in an area of computer science that will never make Fox News, but even in this area things are sometimes suppressed for what's hard to describe as other than political reasons. At the very least, politically unpopular positions get all sorts of extra hoops to jump through that others don't--- e.g. if you're casting doubt on a position the journal editor or one of his friends staked his career on, better expect some random made-up requirements. If your paper scoops a large and well-funded group's work, there's a chance it'll be rejected by one of their friends, so they get to publication first--- and their publication might coincidentally borrow a few ideas or theorems from your rejected paper.

      It's not all bad, and in fact most is probably good. But there are some very rotten parts of the scientific-publishing apparatus. It doesn't help that most journals are run by for-profit companies that are a bit shady themselves (Kluwer, Springer, etc.) who have no real interest in the quality of the science they publish or how to improve it. And it doubly doesn't help that the academic rat-race has gotten increasingly cut-throat, so people feel they need to resort to dirty tricks to get/keep a job, get tenure, get grants, etc.

      It seems perfectly natural and common place that anybody in employment has political issues to deal with, and that occasionally these will actually get in the way of the job being done right. Institutions also need to survive, and they also have political games to play.

      What raised my sceptical curiosity about climate change was the constant repeating that anybody who disagreed was corrupt, and anybody who was in line was honest. If I accept that oil companies could be distorting research, then I have to also accept that activists can be distorting research. Any research could be distorted, potentially. Not that it is for real, necessarily, but the potential is there because we're all people with some degree of self-interest. Imagining you have a noble cause on your side really does not help one escape self-delusionary bias--at least money is a bit easier to see, but principles about saving the world? The world's religions have suffered massively due to their inability to self--discern their ideals from their human failings. But no... only the "bad" people disagree. That's what made me sceptical. I'm not a scientist, but I am human.

    47. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      we haven't been offered any money _not_ to publish the best science we can. Hell, it'd be *great* if someone would, but from experience I'd have to conclude that there _is_ no group with bottomless pockets waiting to bribe us into submission...

      They don't bribe you into silence, they start their own papers and publish contrary "evidence".
      There was a story here a while back about such an instance being uncovered, in Australia IIRC.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    48. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by DuBois · · Score: 1

      One of the authors doesn't even believe that CFCs affect the ozone layer.

      What peer reviewed evidence do you have that unqualifiedly points to CFCs as having major, driving effect on the ozone layer. I'm interested.

      --
      The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
    49. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Read MacCracken's response paper.
      http://www.realclimate.org/wiki/index.php?title=OISM
      http://www.climate.org/about/maccracken-bio.html

      This is one of the problems. People can't seem to verify the validity of anything. People think if they see charts and math/formulas that it must be real... Look, I'm sure that the Robinson's believe in what they are doing, but it doesn't make them correct. Full of errors, cherry picked data, and obvious ideology based motivations.

      I'd love it if someone could link a real paper, by a real climate scientist with good credentials, that has at least been discussed by a couple other independent climate scientists (for some review) that refutes AGW.

    50. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Interestingly it was the paper from Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas published in the journal Climate Research that is the source of the kerfuffle in the emails over blacklisting the journal and the journals editors resigning. The paper was poorly written and should not have been published.

    51. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I think you underestimate the disruption global warming may cause to our civilization.

    52. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      LOL! The editors that left the journal Climate Change resigned because the publisher would not let them inform the readers that the publication of the Soon & Baliunas paper had been a mistake and they would change the review process to avoid similar failures in the future. The editors that resigned were the ones that supported AGW. I think scientists are within their rights to not publish in journals that don't have proper review.

    53. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      Of course, on of the issues revealed is that they were preventing dissenting opinions from being accepted in peer reviewed journals...

      This is a lie. Stop repeating it. You either know it's a lie or don't know how to use Google.

      Hint - the papers Jones said needed a redefinition of peer review to get rid of were cited in the chapter of the IPCC report that Jones's group edited.

      Some censorship.

      Nobody's perfect. So they missed a publication...still doesn't prove they weren't colluding to prevent dissenting opinions. And letting one through every now and again helps through investigators off the trail, or at least make the trail a little harder to follow.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    54. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      They didn't "miss a publication" they cited the fucking paper themselves.

      Troll.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    55. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....I think you underestimate the disruption global warming may cause to our civilization....

      Instead of mentioning generalities, why don't you name a few disadvantges. The only common downside often mentioned is a rise in sea levels. In my opinion, that would be compensated by far by the increased living space that would be provided by the now desolate frozen arctic waste.

      --
      All theory is gray
    56. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...that OISM get fundings from ExxonMobil ....

      Just because that statement is found on a Wikipedia or other website, you automatically assume it's true. Of course, everything you read on the Internet is true isn't it?

      I contacted one of the people at the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, whom I know personally. He told me that the institute has never received a penny from Exxon or any other oil company or any other corporation. That allegation is a bald-faced lie which you shouldn't repeat.

      --
      All theory is gray
    57. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...I'd love it if someone could link a real paper....

      I just don't see the need for all those papers flying back and forth. Just the mere existence of fossil fuels is testimony for a much warmer Earth. Nobody has ever explained to me yet, where all that carbon was, before plants turned it into organic matter, that became the coal and oil we burn today. In a very real sense, all energy sources of mankind other than nuclear, are solar energy from long ago or the present. To make all that fossil fuel requires a much more prolific plant life than we have today. Since plants take in carbon dioxide to eventually make hydrocarbons, it stands to reason, that if there is more carbon dioxide available to them and that it is warmer, there will be more plant life and therefore more plants for animals to eat.

      --
      All theory is gray
    58. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      Man, I *knew* there was a good reason I marked you "Foe" sometime in the past.

      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    59. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ....I think you underestimate the disruption global warming may cause to our civilization....

      Instead of mentioning generalities, why don't you name a few disadvantges. The only common downside often mentioned is a rise in sea levels. In my opinion, that would be compensated by far by the increased living space that would be provided by the now desolate frozen arctic waste.

      In the long-run perhaps you could be correct. Even so, many people (a large part of the world's population lives in port cities) will be forced to relocate at a loss or become true refuges; and there will be much valuable, in both economic and cultural terms, land and buildings lost as the seas rise. You may be able to gloss-over that almost certain increase in suffering and destruction as the price to pay for a far less certain bounty of a net-increase of arable land. However, I, as someone who lives hundreds of miles from the sea-shore and hundreds of feet from sea-level, would just as soon rather not put other people through such drastic consequences, even if I'll never meet most of those that must suffer and it might mean growing apples commercially in Alaska, Siberia, and Greenland.

    60. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Yes, perhaps in 200 or 300 years after all of the permafrost has melted and and the bogginess has gone away we could settle the frozen arctic waste. Of course if it warms enough to make these frozen arctic wastes habitable it will probably mean enough ice has melted or is at least on the way to melting from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets to raise sea level in the 50+ foot range substantially reducing the available area of dry land. Meanwhile the acidification of the oceans from absorption of atmospheric CO2 will likely disrupt the ocean ecosystems that humans depend on for a substantial amount of food. Areas that are now being farmed may become deserts disrupting the supply of food. A bunch of species are likely to go extinct and who knows what we're losing because of that.

      The earth is a complex system and the changes may cause any number of unexpected results that we will have to try and cope with. It's not likely to be easy like you seem to think.

    61. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Except the reasons for blacklisting the journal Climate Research were scientifically sound. From the Wikipedia article on Sallie Baliunas.

      Shortly thereafter, 13 of the authors of papers cited by Baliunas and Soon refuted her interpretation of their work.[12] There were three main objections: Soon and Baliunas used data reflective of changes in moisture, rather than temperature; they failed to distinguish between regional and hemispheric temperature anomalies; and they reconstructed past temperatures from proxy evidence not capable of resolving decadal trends. More recently, Osborn and Briffa repeated the Baliunas and Soon study but restricted themselves to records that were validated as temperature proxies, and came to a different result.

    62. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....melting from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets to raise sea level in the 50+ foot .....

      Where do you get such numbers?. According this article here:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Current_sea_level_rise

      The sea level is projected to rise less than 1/10 of both what you assert here. Nowhere in that article is there even mention of the tremendous increase of the water carrying capability of the atmosphere as it warms. A hurricane, with all the precipitation that it dumps, is a good demonstration of the immense quantities of water is that can be held in suspension in only a small fraction of the atmosphere.

      (...acidification of the oceans from absorption of atmospheric CO2...)
      The fact that fossils and fossil fuel exist, is powerful evidence that the earth was much warmer. It supported an abundance of plant and animal life we can't even imagine today. Contrary to your assertion, many species have gone extinct, because the habitat got too cold. The vast majority of living things thrive on warmth.

      Questions I have never gotten an answer to from any global warming fear monger: Where was all this carbon which is now sequestered as fossil fuels, before the plants and animals made coal & oil out of it? Are fossil fuels anything other than delayed solar energy? If this carbon was not in the atmosphere at that time, where was it?

      Plants on land take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and plants in the oceans take it out of the ocean. The elements of hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and carbon are what plants combine with sunlight to make food. As the carbon in the atmosphere decreased, less of it was available to plants and the temperatures became cooler slowing the growth of plants and animals. If it would be possible for mankind to burn every ounce of fossil fuel, would that mean that conditions on earth would revert to what they were before fossil fuels were made? If so, let's do it.

      --
      All theory is gray
    63. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      "50+ foot" was just my wild ass guess but it's probably in the ball park. If all the ice on Greenland and Antarctica were to melt it would raise sea level around 70 meters. That's 230 feet. It would probably take a few thousand years to melt all of it because it's a damn big ice cube but it could happen. The Wikipedia article say 0.8-1.3 meters by 2100 but it doesn't say much about what happens after that. Notice I did mention 200-300 years.

      It's been at least 15 million years since CO2 levels were as high in the atmosphere as they are now. Throughout all of the time humans and our immediate ancestors have existed CO2 has hardly been above 300 ppm. It's the CO2 level we and the other living things on the planet we coexist with and depend on are evolved for. I doubt you would like the climate that existed when the coal and oil were being laid down very much.

    64. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....I doubt you would like the climate that existed when the coal and oil were being laid down very much....

      Do you mean to tell me that a nice uniformly warm earth would be bad? Would the absence of searingly hot deserts and frozen arctic wastelands be a bad thing? Because it is the temperature differences that drive violent weather of all types, would an earth with uniform temperatures be a disadvantage?

      Because water vapor is lighter than oxygen, nitrogen or carbon dioxide, such water in the form of vapor, would concentrate high in the atmosphere, where there is no or little dust around which opaque water droplets could form. There is evidence, that the area now underwater, called the continental shelf, was once dry land. Where did all that water come from?

      Neither you, nor anybody else has yet answered my question. Where was all that carbon, before it was put underground as fossil fuel? If it was in the atmosphere at that time, and Earth was a warm paradise, then what would be so bad, if that were the case again? If living things can exist in such conditions, why couldn't humans also?

      --
      All theory is gray
    65. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      What gives you the idea that increasing warmth would make the Earth a uniformly warm paradise? That statement has no basis in reality.

      There would still be the fact the the polar regions receive much less sunlight than the equatorial region that would keep that from being true. It would take truly violent weather to continuously transfer enough heat to make and keep the poles as warm as the equator. The configuration of the continents and oceans would have an effect as well. Uniform warmth wouldn't prevent rain shadows behind mountain ranges from causing a desert for example.

      If you had studied atmospheric science even a little you would know that your water vapor statement is ridiculous. The upper atmosphere is very dry because it's very cold. Cold air can't hold as much water vapor as warm air. About 99.99% of the water vapor in the atmosphere is in the troposphere (that's the atmosphere up to around 30,000 feet). That has been scientifically measured and is an indisputable fact and has always been true just because of the physics involved. The water that caused sea level to rise came from the melting of the continental ice sheets at the end of the last glacial period. When 10,000 feet of ice sitting on land melts it's going to cause sea levels to rise.

      CO2 levels in the atmosphere were much higher in the past than they are now so yes, the fossil fuel we are digging up came from carbon in the atmosphere. Your belief that whole Earth was a warm paradise then is just a fantasy. CO2 in the atmosphere is now higher than it's been in at least 15 million years and all of the life now is adapted to the current level of CO2 and the climate it produces.

    66. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...the Earth a uniformly warm paradise?....

      The existence of fossils and fossil fuel all over the earth, including the extreme north and south polar regions, is evidence of prolific life. It is far too cold today, which is why we find no fossils or fossil fuels being formed today. All that carbon now buried in fossil fuel was in the atmosphere, where indeed it contributed to the global warming that the fear mongers are now trying to prevent. The two factors, more CO2 and much warmer multiplied to make the earth indeed a warm paradise.

      (....Cold air can't hold as much water vapor as warm air....)
      That is true only as long as the moisture can precipitate out. In order for precipitation to occur, there also have to be "seeds", usually microscopic dust particles, around which rain or ice particles can form. Because the atmosphere was so much warmer, the cold temperatures necessary and the presence of seeds were separated in terms of altitude. Thus, the temperature conditions and the presence of seeds were not present simultaneously, as required for precipitation. Because pure water vapor is lighter than air, it would tend to accumulate above the normal oxygen/nitrogen/carbon dioxide atmosphere, because it could not precipitate out as it does now.

      (...Your belief that whole Earth was a warm paradise then is just a fantasy...)

      If it were fantasy, then why are the AGW mongers so worried about increased carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere making the Earth warmer? After all, we have only released a small fraction of the fossil fuels store of carbon into the atmosphere. Personally, I would much rather have the warm earth than another Ice Age, wouldn't you? To me it looks like AGW is what is the fantasy.

      --
      All theory is gray
    67. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Armin, you never give up, do you? I know that anyway because I've seen your posts elsewhere.

      Have you ever heard of something called plate tectonics? It shows that the various land masses on the earth move around. In the 4.5 billion years of Earths existence they've moved around quite a bit. Antarctica wasn't always at the South Pole you know. But there have been times when there was no ice in the polar regions and there were plants and animals on Antarctica. It's just that sea level was over 200 feet higher then.

      Those seeds you mention exist throughout the atmosphere. They may be more concentrated in the troposphere but there are plenty of them everywhere. And even if what you say was true the atmosphere gets so thin at altitude it still wouldn't amount to that much water vapor. 3/4 of the mass of the atmosphere is concentrated within the first 6.8 miles (36,000 feet) of it. The top is sort of arbitrary but atmospheric effects are first noticed in space capsule reentry around 75 miles. So 75% of the atmosphere is concentrated in the first 9.1% of the depth (6.8/75). We've been comprehensively measuring the composition of the full depth of atmosphere at various elevations since at least the 1950s and nobody has ever seen this high altitude water vapor that you claim exists. Why isn't it there now?

      If it were fantasy, then why are the AGW mongers so worried about increased carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere making the Earth warmer?

      Huh? If we expected Earth to become a warm paradise because of global warming why would anyone be worried. Of course neither you nor I will live long enough to ever see the return of an ice age.

    68. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Why isn't it there now?...

      Two reasons, first because it's too cold now and second because there is more dust in the lower atmosphere. So now, the water vapor precipitates out long before it can get to the upper atmosphere where there is little or no dust. Because there was so much carbon dioxide, which the AGW mongers fear, it was much warmer, probably around 90 F., which allows all lifeforms to be much more prolific. Pure water vapor is a better greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.

      If the earth were still so warm, water vapor would not condense into rain or snow in the lower atmosphere, as it does today. Since water vapor is lighter than air, it would rise and float on top of the atmosphere, 10 or more miles up. Since there is little or no dust at such altitudes, it could not precipitate or at least not easily, even if it were otherwise cold enough.

      The presence of fossils and fossil fuel is plenty of evidence for a warm earth paradise. Neither fossils nor fossil fuel is being made today, at least not that I have ever heard. Temperature conditions today are far below those ideal for life, which is the body temperature of mammals.

      (...Armin, you never give up, do you?...)
      If scientists would look at the data and let that data speak for itself, they might come to different conclusions. However, scientists, like other humans often have an agenda or at least foregone conclusions or pet theories. As the pilfered e-mails show once again, there is a human propensity to ignore facts or twist them. You cannot however dispute two facts: one is that it requires a much higher temperature to grow plants for fossil fuel and second, that the ideal temperature for life is higher than the average temperature of Earth today.

      You are right though, a human lifetime is microscopically small compared to the timescales involved in climate change.

      --
      All theory is gray
    69. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you but I prefer a temperature around 70 F myself. 90 F is just too damn hot for my taste.

      If what you say about you say about water vapor rising in the atmosphere were true then this would be a desert planet because most of it would have escaped to space over the billions of years the planet has existed. That happened to Mars just because of it's low gravity and thin atmosphere. There are a myriad of things other than dust particles that can be condensation nuclei. Studies of the subject have found there is never a lack of them throughout the atmosphere. I'd be surprised if you could find a creditable atmospheric scientist that would agree with your hypothesis.

      Fossils and fossil fuels are being made today. All it takes is the right conditions but that has little to do with temperature. If you buried a carcass and it lay undisturbed for a million years it would become fossilized. We've certainly found many fossils that were laid down during colder periods on the planet. A peat bog could eventually become a coal bed or oil field if it gets buried under favorable conditions. You do know that warm oceans are not nearly as productive as cold ones. Every year humpback whales (a mammal with a body temperature warmer than humans) migrate from warm Hawaiian waters, where they traveled to give birth and mate, to cold Alaska waters where they go to feed on immense spring blooms of krill and herring. There is very little for them to eat around Hawaii so they're basically fasting for the half of the year that they spend there and traveling between.

      I dispute both of your "facts". Higher temperatures (and higher CO2 levels) may increase the rate of accumulation of potential fossil fuels but they don't preclude them from forming nowadays. The real conversion to fossil fuels largely takes place deep underground where temperatures and pressures are not significantly affected by surface conditions. The ideal temperature for life is what it's adapted to. If you take a gorilla to the arctic it will die of hypothermia. If you take a polar bear to the gorillas normal habitat it will die of heat stroke.

    70. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...I don't know about you but I prefer a temperature around 70 F myself. 90 F is just too damn hot for my taste...

      Ha, I'd definitely agree with you there, but I suspect that is because we are used to it and our bodies accustomed to the lower temperature. The ideal temperature range for life I was talking about is not what individual organisms have adapted to, such as polar bears and gorillas, but the range of temperature where the chemical/biolgical life processes are most active. It is the extremely narrow temperature range found in all warm-blooded creatures. Polar bears are actually do quite well in a any zoo. Life in general adopts more readily to warmth than cold.

      (...That happened to Mars just because of it's low gravity ...)
      You certainly are correct about the considerably lower gravity of Mars not being strong enough to hold onto much atmosphere or water vapor. A rather narrow range in the strength of the planet's gravity is one of the many parameters that must be correct for there to be life, especially intelligent life. The gravity on Mars is just a little too small to hold onto enough oxygen, nitrogen and especially water vapor. It is also a little too far away from the sun for warmer temperatures in which most life forms thrive.

      (....If you buried a carcass and it lay undisturbed for a million years it would become fossilized....)
      Come now, you know that isn't true. We bury bodies all the time and they decay, that is they get broken down by micro organisms until nothing recognizable remains. To make a fossil or fossil fuel, the organic remains have to be sterilized and buried in such a manner as to exclude oxygen. Peat bogs are only found in relatively cold places, where microorganisms can break the organic matter down only very slowly. You don't find any peat bogs in the tropics.

      (...Every year humpback whales...)
      Could it be that they have adapted their lifestyle and food supply to that which is available in the colder oceans? The tropical oceans are teeming with life, just not the kind of stuff that humpbacks like to or have to adapted to eat.

      (...The real conversion to fossil fuels largely takes place deep underground ....
      That is another mystery, how these things came to be so deep underground. Of course, before something can be buried, it has to exist above the ground. Only a sudden catastrophe can accomplish both the sterilization and deep burial of the immense quantities of organic matter, that became fossil fuels under the heat and pressure. If all the plant and animal life on Earth today were suddenly buried today, it would result only in a small fraction of the fossil fuels still underground. All of plants and animals that made the fossils and fossil fuels must have been buried alive very suddenly. They could not have died and been buried over time, slowly, because then the microorganisms which also existed at that time, would have broken down the dead plants and animals into their constituent elements.

      I must say, that I really appreciate being able to discuss these things in a rational way without name-calling and personal attacks. It seems that that sort of thing is getting increasingly rare on Slashdot. Thank you.

      --
      All theory is gray
    71. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      They generally supply a cool place or a pool for a polar bear to retreat to in a zoo.

      At this point, with all we know about life on earth and the extreme environments it's found in, I'd almost be surprised if we don't find at least some simple forms of life on Mars.

      Of course an undisturbed buried carcass would become fossilized over time. It's not the parts that rot away but the parts that don't, bones and teeth, sometimes hair, feathers and scales that become fossilized. In some extraordinary cases softer parts have been prevented from rotting and been fossilized but it's pretty rare.

      There is plenty of life in the tropical ocean but the waters there are nutrient poor compared to cold oceans. But it's seasonal, in the spring there are huge blooms of phytoplankton in the colder oceans that peter out in the fall. The amount of life in colder waters can be an order of magnitude greater than in tropical waters at times of the year and is seldom less.

      No sterilization is needed and all deep burial needs is time and plate tectonics. There may be occasional catastrophic events, like volcanoes, but they are not necessary to the process. After all how did fossils of sea life end up at 20,000 feet in the Andes? The Nazca Plate is subducting under the South American Plate pushing up the Andes including the old sea floor where the fossils are found. The Andes have been rising for over 100 million years.

      From the Wikipedia article on coal:

      Coal starts as layer upon layer of annual plant remains accumulating slowly that were protected from biodegradation by usually acidic covering waters that gave a natural antiseptic effect combating microorganisms and then later mud deposits protecting against oxidization in the widespread shallow seas — mainly during the Carboniferous period — thus trapping atmospheric carbon in the ground in immense peat bogs that eventually were covered over and deeply buried by sediments under which they metamorphosed into coal. Over time, the chemical and physical properties of the plant remains (believed to mainly have been fern-like species antedating more modern plant and tree species) were changed by geological action to create a solid material.

      Petroleum is thought to have formed when the remains of zooplankton and alge settled to the bottom of lakes abd seas under anoxic conditions then is buried under sediment.

      Neither of those requires sudden catastrophic events.

      I never saw the point in name calling and such. Every one is entitled to their opinion, but at the same time they're not entitled to their own facts. I do admit to occasionally being snarky though. Thank you for a rational discussion.

      --
      We don't inherit the earth from our parents, we borrow it from our children.

    72. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      arminw, I refreshed my memory about why colder seas are more productive than warmer seas. It's because cold water is able to hold more dissolved gas so it has a considerably higher oxygen content than warm water. A higher level of dissolved oxygen allows the sea life to lead a more energetic lifestyle. I just wanted to let you know the accurate reason.

    73. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...why colder seas are more productive than warmer seas...

      I agree, that this is true of animals who breathe oxygen dissolved in the water, but it is not necessarily true of plant life which "breathe" in CO2.

      My main point in this whole discussion was that before or while the fossil fuels were formed, all of the CO2 was in the atmosphere and the whole planet was considerably warmer. All of life, especially plantlife, was unimaginably prolific.

      This whole global warming propaganda is primarily designed to accomplish at least two political things. One of them is a socialistic/communistic system to transfer wealth from the haves to the have-nots and the other is to eventually help usher in a one world governmental system which at some point in the future which will be run by a cruel dictator who will make Hitler and Stalin seem like saints in comparison. The whole Hitler scenario was a sneak preview of the future, except that it will be worldwide.

      --
      All theory is gray
    74. Re:Enter the closed loop you cannot enter. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      There is both more oxygen and more CO2 in colder waters. That's why I used the word "gas". Cold water can hold more dissolved gas of any kind than warm water.

      Climate change from CO2 is a global problem and requires global solutions. To not respond to it because of some fear of world government is to cut off your nose to spite your face. If some of the worst possible effects of climate change come to pass our civilization will collapse and we won't have to worry about a world government, just your friendly local despot.

  4. reply by Willis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/sticky-for-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/

    1. Re:reply by Willis by jasonwc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thanks for the link. I know that on Slashdot you're not actually supposed to read the articles, but nonetheless, I found the Economist post and the author's response illuminating. The author raises good points about the dangers of over-reliance on the peer review system. It's a good system but it is not doesn't always work - crap gets through and good articles aren't published. Simply ignoring any non peer-reviewed work puts far too much faith into the system.

    2. Re:reply by Willis by jasonwc · · Score: 4, Informative

      Why the hell did this guy get moderated down? He posted the author's response to the Economist article! It's directly relevant.

      Isn't this precisely the risk of overreliance on the peer review system? Unpopular opinions get silenced. I would mod up the parent but can't as I have posted in the thread. So, I'm going to repost the link:

      Willis Eschenbach's Response to the Economist Article:
      http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/sticky-for-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/

    3. Re:reply by Willis by jasonwc · · Score: 1

      Just in case anyone is wondering, when I saw the post it was at "1". Somebody moderated as "Overrated" after I responded to the link.

      Moderation 0
          50% Insightful
          50% Overrated

    4. Re:reply by Willis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking strictly as a layperson I prefer to read peer reviewed literature. It's like there aren't enough hours in the day to chase down every little fact.

      I'd thought of myself as a pretty skeptical reader but to be honest these emails from FOI2009.zip have eroded my confidence in the peer review system and consequently I question the quality of my skepticism. It appears in some regards I've simply been lazy and gullible. Since I'm being honest, I have to add that I've regarded AGW somewhat skeptically for a few years now. I just never suspected to discover such a level of guile. The idea of peer review is wonderful. The current system doesn't seem to be working so well.

    5. Re:reply by Willis by jasonwc · · Score: 1

      I agree. I generally only read peer-reviewed articles because they do a pretty good job of weeding out the crap. However, I am an aspiring attorney, not a scientist. While it may be more convenient to only read peer reviewed articles, that doesn't make it acceptable to ignore everything else in the academic literature.

    6. Re:reply by Willis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the hell did this guy get moderated down? He posted the author's response to the Economist article! It's directly relevant.

      Possibly because the "author's response" is a page named "404 page not found"?

    7. Re:reply by Willis by jasonwc · · Score: 1

      That's odd. The article was there when I posted. Try this link:

      http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/12/sticky-for-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/#more-13888

    8. Re:reply by Willis by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      He got moderated down because now that the cat's out of the bag, climatologists and their lackeys are attempting damage control.

      They are clearly more inept at damage control than they are with writing code, though.

    9. Re:reply by Willis by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1

      I guess it got unstickied. The working URL is http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/the-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/

    10. Re:reply by Willis by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Sigh, I had thought of posting that to all the self proclaimed skeptics who insist on giving Watts a platform, instead I am becoming rapidly depressed as to how many apparently intelligent people take his word as gospel.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    11. Re:reply by Willis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is NOT the response. Checking the dates shows that.

    12. Re:reply by Willis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unpopular opinions don't get silenced, they get submitted to another journal.

      It just isn't that hard to get something published if you are persistent at it, even if the paper is poor, and the real review happens after publication anyway. Getting something published in a peer-reviewed journal is a basic sanity check. That's all. It keeps the total fluff out. Thus, if people can't even rise to that standard, then their arguments and data must be pretty poor indeed.

      Furthermore, half the editors I know are willing to publish papers even if they are "unpopular", as long as the rationale and data in the paper is good. They look for articles that will shake things up a bit. Then they look forward to receiving the subsequent "comment" and "reply" articles. I see the same thing from reviewers: "I disagree with the author's conclusions but feel that this is a good paper and should be published" is commonplace. Keeping an "unpopular" but well-documented and possibly correct idea out of the peer-reviewed literature would be almost impossible, which is why my reaction to any suggestion of conspiracy ranges from laughter to "So what? That isn't an excuse for not getting it published somewhere."

  5. What? by OverlordQ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For some reason I don't think going, "Lalalalalala, I can't hear you" instead of refuting the points they bring up is going to engender somebody to change their viewpoint, rather the opposite. If somebody is already believing there is a cover-up this is about the only thing you could do, besides admit it, that reinforces that idea.

    --
    Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
    1. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For some reason I don't think going, "Lalalalalala, I can't hear you" instead of refuting the points they bring up is going to engender somebody to change their viewpoint, rather the opposite. If somebody is already believing there is a cover-up this is about the only thing you could do, besides admit it, that reinforces that idea.

      Yes, please tell scientists to stop doing that.

      They need to answer questions and not send in armed UN goons to harass journalists when asked questions they want to avoid.

    2. Re:What? by mpe · · Score: 0, Troll

      For some reason I don't think going, "Lalalalalala, I can't hear you" instead of refuting the points they bring up is going to engender somebody to change their viewpoint, rather the opposite.

      Sounds like you are talking about the "warmies", except that they are usually considerably ruder. When it comes to anything which does not fit with their claims.

    3. Re:What? by jwhitener · · Score: 2, Informative

      You don't think there is some limit to what one should have to respond to?

      If someone adamantly believed that they had conclusive proof that the sky was red, should a scientist have to take the time pointing out why the person is wrong?

      In an ideal world, the "sky is red" believer wouldn't get any air time or attention. However, because controversy sells, and because there are many large cash sources paying to create controversy, news agencies cover it as if a real debate existed.

      This is EXACTLY the same as the tobacco "debates" when there was a scientific consensus that smoking was harmful. Counter "scientists" and counter views sprung out of the woodwork. Funding came from institutes, funded by other institutes, back several layers to business interests in the tobacco industry.

  6. Rebuttal by zerosomething · · Score: 1, Informative

    Posted at http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/08/sticky-for-smoking-gun-at-darwin-zero/ Take a look. The real point is the need for openness and open critical review of the methods used.

    --
    It all starts at 0
    1. Re:Rebuttal by zerosomething · · Score: 1

      Redundant? I did post this before the others

      --
      It all starts at 0
  7. It would only be fair... by HebrewToYou · · Score: 5, Informative

    ...to link to Willis Eschenbach's response in the summary. It appears that The Economist didn't even bother to contact Eschenbach before publishing this article by an apparently unnamed author. That isn't exactly what I would consider high-quality journalism.

    --
    I'm not popular enough to be different.

    Homer Simpson, The Simpsons

    1. Re:It would only be fair... by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      That isn't exactly what I would consider high-quality journalism

      I would. You are talking about journalism (where what matters over all is to sell), not about scientific papers.

    2. Re:It would only be fair... by Jeeeb · · Score: 2, Informative

      As was pointed out previously in discussions the Economist has a policy of not publishing by lines. So to dish the originally author for being anonymous is wrong. As for Willis Eschenbach's response I imagine there would be many interested but it gives a 404 error at the moment.

    3. Re:It would only be fair... by geoffrobinson · · Score: 3, Informative
      --
      Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    4. Re:It would only be fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Since you apparently weren't aware of it - none of the authors of The Economist append their name to their articles.

    5. Re:It would only be fair... by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Groan, I'm starting to get a taste of why climate scientists simply stop responding to so called skeptics.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    6. Re:It would only be fair... by DMiax · · Score: 1

      As you should know before speaking of good and bad journalism, an unnamed article is considered an expression of the views from the journal itself. This is why they did not call the guy. It's not open to discussion, they think what they have written. And it is a display of intellectual honesty and clarifies the stance of the journal, so that you can take that into account next time you read it.

    7. Re:It would only be fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Economist articles are almost always anonymous
      See http://www.economist.com/help/DisplayHelp.cfm?folder=663377 'Why is it anonymous?'

    8. Re:It would only be fair... by corbettw · · Score: 1

      An "unsigned" commentary in the Economist is just a step ahead of an Anonymous Coward on Slashdot. If the person is not willing to put their name to their work, then their work must not have any real value.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    9. Re:It would only be fair... by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I know how you feel but I keep going because the more you keep correcting their errors the more people on the fence are going to see them for what they really are. Climate scientists have better things to do with their time than wasting it on refuting claims that they examined and discarded a decade ago.

  8. re Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I beg all of you to please see this TED Talk before modding me down again. Ive been labelled heretic for posting on related stories in the last couple of weeks, actually modded insightful until the thought police arrived and modded me troll.

    The weather exhibits chaotic behavior and to find precisely one single cause for variation is futile, like CO2 emissions from human activities.

    The hottest day on record! screams the summary. Er, well since 1941. Well and good, how do you know the hottest day last century in Australia didn't happen in 1940?

    The Earth has been getting warmer since about 10,000 years ago. Truth. AGW doesn't explain that. But it does follow that the Earth was getting warmer while we humans still lived in caves and were probably numbered in the thousands, not in millions of people. No, we are told. AGW is about the speeding up of warming. Really? We know for sure what the speed of variation would be without humans around? Let us not confuse premises with facts.

    The variables are many and not one of them is well understood: ocean currents, atmospheric currents, solar radiation (insolation), the effect of the strength of the Van Allen belt, volcanic eruptions, etc. No weather model can correctly predict past, known, climate; how can one believe that the future predictions are correct?

    We need a more open discussion and a lot less cries of burn the heretics. We are talking about science, not religion.

    BTW, if anyone knows of a climate model that correctly predicts past, known weather, please post a link.

    --
    Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    1. Re:re Time for open discussion by timmarhy · · Score: 1, Insightful

      unfortunately the heretic repsonse is all too common. here in australia it's so out of control we actually have a department of climate change (thanks kevin bloody rudd). we sent 60 people to the summit, even a baggage handler. this whole thing is going to be a big waste of money, i can already see it.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    2. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But your opinion doesn't matter, because people who don't want to looose their funding won't let your perspective through peer review.

    3. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      BTW, if anyone knows of a climate model that correctly predicts past, known weather, please post a link.

      At your service

    4. Re:re Time for open discussion by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The article's point isn't to ignore all that. It's that to say that some random blogger likely doesn't have the tools to correctly analyze the data, and may well be doing their own shaping of the facts. And proving that to yourself is going to take a couple of hours (at least) of research and your time. The end result of which is probably going to be that the people who posted the data were aware of the factor in question, went and checked what the source was, and have a good explanation for what's going on with the data and why they did what they did.

      All of which is public record, and has been analyzed six ways from tuesday, by people with far better credentials than you or the blogger is likely to have.

      So, in this writer's opinion, it's not worth his time. If someone can get into the peer-reviewed journals, where the standards of competence and knowledge are much higher than on a random blog, he'll pay attention. Because every time he's gone and done the background check on some blogger's new climate data scandal, he's found it isn't a scandal at all, and quite often (like in this case) the blogger already knew that. But was posting it as a scandal anyway.

      So it was a waste of time, both to read the blog and to take it seriously.

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    5. Re:re Time for open discussion by evil-merodach · · Score: 1

      Yes, we need the hoi polloi to discuss global warming; we need to teach the controversy in our schools. We can't let the experts spend all those years out of their lives doing all that sciencey stuff without the rest of us putting in our uninformed two cents and deciding the matter.

      While weather is a chaotic system and can't be predicted with precision, the trend in climate change can be discerned. Sure, we don't know how bad things are but we do know that if things continue as they have been, we can expect unpleasantness at the very least.

      And 10-11K years ago? That's when humans invented agriculture.

    6. Re:re Time for open discussion by kevin7kal · · Score: 1

      Doesn't Look like trolling to me. Maybe I'm naive, but I was using dial up when that meant dialing into a BBS.

    7. Re:re Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 1, Troll

      Please, please. See a great talk from David Deutsch at TED towards the end he talks about global warming, very interesting point of view.

      And no, I'm not a climatologist, but neither I'm uneducated and will not bow before ANY priest of ANY religion.

      Show me hard data; show me the experiments that prove your theory and I will certainly and humbly accept whatever it is you are saying.

      Now, if you want me to just take you word for it, sorry. No can do.

      In the 1970's the then current and accepted theory by the high priests was that pollution (i.e industrial waste gases) was going to freeze the Earth. Now it is going to burn it.

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    8. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take a look at this graph and then tell me there's anything special about the last 200 years. There obviously isn't.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ice_Age_Temperature.png

      We're not as hot as 130k, 240k or 340k years ago. And somehow I don't think our co2 is responsible for those peaks. Al Gore may disagree.

    9. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      > The article's point isn't to ignore all that. It's that to say that some random blogger
      > likely doesn't have the tools to correctly analyze the data, and may well be doing their
      > own shaping of the facts.

      Nor does some random assistant patent examiner

    10. Re:re Time for open discussion by glodime · · Score: 1

      In the 1970's the then current and accepted theory by the high priests was that pollution (i.e industrial waste gases) was going to freeze the Earth.

      Are you sure that the "accepted theory" was global cooling or was it a theory that was accepted by a few scientists?

    11. Re:re Time for open discussion by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      We have a few examples of classic denialist behaviour here. You start off by acting like the suppressed whistleblower. You've got the facts, but the man is trying to keep you down.

      The weather exhibits chaotic behavior and to find precisely one single cause for variation is futile, like CO2 emissions from human activities

      Denialist behaviour: keep making the same point that has been discredited time and time again. Weather is not the same as climate. If you toss a coin a hundred times, it will come up heads approximately 50% of the time. But that doesn't mean that you will know what the result will be on the 101st toss.

      The hottest day on record! screams the summary. Er, well since 1941. Well and good, how do you know the hottest day last century in Australia didn't happen in 1940?

      (No, it says the hottest month on record.) Now you have a bit of denialist misdirection. You couldn't argue with the fact that it was the hottest month on record, so you tried to change what they said to being the hottest month in the last century.

      In any case, do you have any reason to think that some month in 1940 was hotter than any in the years after that? Or maybe are you trying to introduce unjustified doubt. This is textbook stuff: you don't have any facts with which to argue, so you just ask questions (that you can't answer yourself - I'll give you a hint, RTFA) to make it appear that opposition haven't considered all the possibilities.

      The Earth has been getting warmer since about 10,000 years ago. Truth. AGW doesn't explain that

      This one is my favourite. What makes you think that it is getting warmer? Oh, you suddenly believe what the scientists say! The hockey stick graph gets discredited because we apparently can't accurately measure the temperatures before 1850, but we can measure it 110,000 years ago. It is this that cherry picking of results of which both sides accuse the other.

      But is it relevant? Can the sudden increase in warming over the last century really be attributed to the end of the last ice age? As a comparison, 1998 was dramatically hotter than the surrounding years. This is not attributed (by anyone reliable) to global warming, but rather to El Nino. Do you think that it is possible that the similar sudden increase in temperature seen over the century may also be attributable to something other than the extremely mild warming the planet saw prior to that?

      I have always maintained that it is not the amount of temperature change that is the problem, but the speed of which it occurs. If it happens too fast, the all animals (including humans) have problems adapting. This results in a large number of species going extinct.

      No weather model can correctly predict past, known, climate; how can one believe that the future predictions are correct?

      That's a pretty bold statement. Which models have you look at? This might be one of those "Something doesn't exist, although I have never bothered to check" moments.

    12. Re:re Time for open discussion by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Great theories often fall flat when the assumptions they are based on are incorrect. Weather is chaotic, climate is not. Climate is the long term statistics of weather and is insensitive to initial conditions.

      A good test of a model is it's ability to predict unknown phenomena, climate models of the 80's predicted a phenomena that is now called "polar amplification", they also predicted that the stratosphere would cool from increased CO2 while the troposphere would warm, both trends have been observed by sattelites. Other predictions have also been observed.

      Here are a few reasons why you may get modded as a troll

      The Mathematical definition for chaos comes from Lorenz who spotted the principle while studying weather models, to insinuate climate scientists are unaware of these facts is simply ignorant*.

      There is a whole branch of science that is a sort of cross between climate science and geology, it's called paleoclimatology, to insinuate climate scientists have somehow missed natural variation is also ignorant.

      The radiative forcings that effect climate have been taken into account in models, without the AGW component the upward trend in tempratures dissapears. To suggest climate scientists somehow missed the giant ball of flames in the sky is ignorant.

      Here is a link (scroll down to the embedded video), that uses finite element analysis and basic physical/chemical laws to correctly reconstruct past CLIMATE regardless of the initial RANDOM values that define the weather. All the various models I am aware of have the same ability. The video is somewhat simplistic since it does not show the ocean currents and other features of climate that it predicts but if you have ever looked at weather patterns you will clearly recognise that hurricanes are predicted in the correct places, other larger features are much more acurately simulated.

      ignorant* = Not an insult and definitely curable, watching TED talks is an excellent place to start the road to recovery.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    13. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The end result of which is probably going to be that the people who posted the data were aware of the factor in question, went and checked what the source was, and have a good explanation for what's going on with the data and why they did what they did.

      So you are saying verifying the data/assumptions/explanations from first principles is a bad thing now? Or that only a few anointed should do it? No wonder climate scientists are getting a bad rep. You are on the way to becoming a religion.

    14. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The hottest day on record! screams the summary.

      I think the hyperlink might have confused you. They are underlined and stand out by default. You can click on it and it will take you to another page.

    15. Re:re Time for open discussion by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's the hottest month on record by mean temperature and there's actually a prediction made by climate scientists in Australia that Darwin would have the greatest increase in mean temperature of Australian capital cities in the hot months, meaning that Darwin, instead of Perth, would have the most days per year over 35C within a few years (and if you look at the article, it actually makes a note of the number of days over 35).

      In other words, they made a prediction based on the science and that prediction is proving to be correct.

    16. Re:re Time for open discussion by jstults · · Score: 1

      It's that to say that some random blogger likely doesn't have the tools to correctly analyze the data

      Most of the palaeoclimatology stuff is just curve fitting, they use Matlab (Octave) and R (read the emails), so yeah, some random blogger actually would have the tools that the 'pros' use quite readily available. The silly thing with the paleo stuff is that it is so easily reproducible if you have access to the data, that's why there's a bit of empire building by data hoarding in this community.

    17. Re:re Time for open discussion by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      The Earth has been getting warmer [wikipedia.org] since about 10,000 years ago.
      That is wrong.
      The earth got warmer roughly 10000 yeas ago. Since then it had minour fluctuations in temperature.
      Now the earth is rapidly heating up since 50 years.

      Mind you, there is a difference between 10000 and 50 years.

      effect of the strength of the Van Allen belt,

      Oh my god, and what should the Van Allen Belt have to do with climate? Hello? your ignorance is beyond my understanding.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    18. Re:re Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      Hello TapeCutter, thanks for the lengthy reply. Perhaps trying to condense my thoughts on a small post I oversimplified some things.

      Clearly, scientists are aware of all the things you mention but I think that somewhere, somehow a scientist got to talking to a politician, the politician to reporter and the thing got blown out of proportion.

      Now all three (scientist, politician and reporter) are too deeply mired to just back out, so they must predict greater catastrophes to keep face.

      I'm old enough to remember how the report of the Club of Rome, Limits to Growth, was presented by the media and the hysterics that surrounded it. And not that the report is wrong, simply that it ignores progress, same problem with Malthus; yes, population growth should be arrested, yes resources are finite but, big but, technology makes more efficient use of such resources and thus population can grow larger that was thought possible.

      I don't deny that global warming is occurring, actually I pointed out that has been happening for at least 10,00 years. Historically, Greenland, due to a warmer climate, was settled by the Norse around 1,000 years ago, then came the 1400's and the climate got colder, deforestation and other factors killed every Norse in Greenland. So yes, climate change is real and yes it can kill entire populations.

      What I have a problem with is with scientists (actually politicians with the help of grant-seeking scientists) telling us that they have the solution and the solution is for rich nations to go on living well and poor nations to go on being poor.

      Should we be spending money on stopping the unstoppable? I think we should be spending money on creating more efficient ways of using our resources and helping people everywhere live better lives.

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    19. Re:re Time for open discussion by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1


      Show me hard data; show me the experiments that prove your theory and I will certainly and humbly accept whatever it is you are saying.

      The data is easy googled.
      If you want hard data be shown I suggest you write polite letters to scientists of your choice, add a return envelope with your address on it, provide a stamp and if you expect a CD with data some money for the poor soul who has to burn it.

      The rest is then up to you.

      Hard data can be found and read since ever. It is YOUR responsibility to get that data, not the scientists mail it to you.

      Your post implies that there is no hard data and that is why I would have modded you down and the few previous posters as well.

      It is not you, your words, or you attitude which had caused me modding it down, it is the fact that you basically insult everyone that he is not giving you the stuff you need to get enlightened.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    20. Re:re Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      Please read this paper if you have enough education to actually follow it.

      As Bazilevskaya pointed out in papers published in 1991 and 2000, cosmic ray influx appears to have a relation to weather and cosmic ray influx is partly determined by the strength of the van Allen belt.

      Please, don't call ignorant someone who points out a fact just because you never saw it on TV

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    21. Re:re Time for open discussion by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Thanks, although I might quibble with the details that's a much better explaination of a reasonable point of view.

      What I have a problem with is deliberate obufscation and propoganda in the name of skepticisim, it matters nought if the subject is AGW, evolution, or tabacco. Not only does it ruin the careers of respectable scientists with inuendo and smear, it also trains impressionable minds to dissimiss science in favour of dogma.

      BTW: I'm also an old fart, I vividly remeber my 10yo self landing on a plate of spaggetti while watching Armstrong land on the moon.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    22. Re:re Time for open discussion by Paltin · · Score: 1

      In the 1970's the then current and accepted theory by the high priests was that pollution (i.e industrial waste gases) was going to freeze the Earth. Now it is going to burn it.

      For someone who claims to be skeptical and demanding of evidence before accepting something as true... why does that go away when you start making claims? You make a mockery of yourself when you claim that there was a accepted theory in the 70's about global freezing. There was no such thing.

      There were some articles in Newsweek and similar magazines that made that sort of claim... but they didn't reference any conclusive peer reviewed work.

      In short, you're more then happy to make claims without a shred of evidence. Instead of expecting us to show you the data and experiments, if you want to get to the bottom of it... you need to go read, learn, and understand what's already out there. Scientists have done the work; the onus is on you to understand it before you dismiss it.

    23. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, the Economist claiming blogs are not trustworthy. No conflict of interest there!

    24. Re:re Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      [mandatory] Get off my lawn! [/mandatory]

      Yes, I watched the moon landing on TV (B&W of course) and your mention of it made me think of the many things we, as humans, have accomplished in the last 50 years.

      I still believe in the human capacity to adapt and succeed, I'm just worried silly about politicians, who are more concerned with their personal well-being than with humanity's well-being.

      I don't have a good answer but I'm far from believing Al Gore has a better one.

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    25. Re:re Time for open discussion by Burnhard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's that to say that some random blogger likely doesn't have the tools to correctly analyze the data

      On the contrary, if the raw data is available and the method used to massage it, then the tools are readily available. It's interesting to me that when Prof Mann produces a paper where he's fiddled with the data (as shown by Wegman, McIntyre/McIntrick and as verified by Dr North of the NAS in congressional testimony), the paper is not retracted, it's `defended' (mostly by use of blogs). The same is true of Briffa's Yamal chronology and Steigs choice selection of PC's in his Antarctic Warming paper. We aren't talking particle physics here; you don't need a billion dollar accelerator to reproduce this kind of analysis.

    26. Re:re Time for open discussion by Troed · · Score: 1

      I don't know if he's sure, but I am. That we're heading into another ice age was the accepted state of science and taught in schools (I'm from Sweden - a new ice age means we need to move .. ).

      Actually, looking at ice core data I'd say it's pretty much inevitable:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFbUVBYIPlI

    27. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the difference between a blog and a peer reviewed journal? Blogs are reviewed as well, usually by far larger numbers of people. Maybe you don't want to stake your life on a blog post the second it comes out. But if someone posts something worthwhile, it will attract attention, review, criticism, validation, etc. as much or more so than any journal article. Different medium, but the end result is the same. The problem with most peer reviewed journal articles is that they are reviewed once for publication, then get squirreled away in subscription only locations, where only very few people ever seem them.

    28. Re:re Time for open discussion by Bongo · · Score: 1

      I beg all of you to please see this TED Talk before modding me down again.

      Thank you for the link I'll watch it now.

      Just from the title, can I say, it has been obvious to me for a long time that AGW has been a conflict about morality. The key is to look at what people propose to do to solve AGW. That tells you their morality.

      There is nothing in AGW science that tells you what you should do about it. If you are a Robert Mugabe, you probably think of climate change as an opportunity to exploit to starve all the people from competing factions. You can starve them deliberately and blame it on climate change. Or if you are really lucky, climate change happens for real and those people are left stranded without food. Then you just prevent them migrating and starve them all. There is nothing about AGW that will change people's morality. This is what the environmental movement fails to understand. They see it as a way to make everyone become caring people, caring for each other and for the environment. It is far more likely that people will just react from the moral level that they are already at. A tribal Afghan will not stop firing rockets at American gunships just because he's now decided to devote himself to saving the planet. A Buddhist isn't about to stop spending all this time chanting in temples just because he's realised what he really needs to do is go out and learn how to build solar power stations for the village, as life is suffering anyway, so what difference does it make if the suffering is because of flood or disease? At the most climate change will be a football for environmentalists to progress the green party in Western countries. Nobody else cares.

    29. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The weather exhibits chaotic behavior ..."
      And climate doesn't What's the Difference Between Weather and Climate?

      "The Earth has been getting warmer [wikipedia.org] since about 10,000 years ago....."
      Let's take a look at the Holocene Temperature Variations

    30. Re:re Time for open discussion by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      "We aren't talking particle physics here; you don't need a billion dollar accelerator to reproduce this kind of analysis"

      The required tools aren't equipment. The required tools are education (specific to the field), knowledge, experience, and wisdom. One of the "controversies" is how the data was homogenized. Deciding how to "fiddle" with the data, requires the above mentioned "tools".

      And once someone "fiddles" with the data and produces a resulting trend, the correct way a lay person should judge the quality of the result, is by checking out the reviews of that result by other people who posses the correct "tools". Other experienced, peer reviewed scientists.

    31. Re:re Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      I agree with your comment and I hope you like the talk.

      Besides morality, there is a real difference between the opinions of someone living, let's say in the USA, and someone living in a rural area in a developing country.

      I work everyday with people in rural areas in southern Mexico and I think that what they need is more industry besides more education; yes, it is bad for the environment, but one can't really face this people and tell them they must starve so that people in developed countries can continue to live in comparative riches.

      Plus, a lot of what the media presents is in my humble opinion overblown.

      But to find a solution we must talk and face the reality of life on each side. Name-calling is not going to solve the problems we face.

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    32. Re:re Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That being the case, do you agree with the NAS endorsement (particularly Dr North's endorsement in testimony) of McIntyre and McIntrick's critique of Mann's hockey stick, backed up by Prof Wegman? These people have knowledge, experience and wisdom. Thankfully, even I am able to follow the "fiddling" and see how it's in error.

    33. Re:re Time for open discussion by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Of course one of the things that come out of all those released emails on the topic from apparent "scientists" were people actively trying to block publications or submissions from anyone that didn't agree with their findings. It has been also pointed out since this whole thing got rolling, many "scientific" peer review journals have become more concerned with advocacy and politics than actual science.

      I am not saying that we should not pay attention to these mediums, however I would disagree strongly that one should disregard any other source simply because it isn't approved. That reeks badly of fanaticism and religious fervor. I will say it again, people and scientists need to stop being lazy and whiny. It makes me so angry when I hear this sort of bunk. They are basically saying, I don't want to have to bother refuting these crackpots (notice the actual word he used in the article: "humbug" denoting how seriously he is taking this), people should just believe me because I am right. That is BS, and against scientific method. Also there is nothing to say they have to disprove anything, they only have to PROVE what they are saying, and people will make up their own mind what they feel is correct. At some point consensus will be determined (which it already has to a certain degree), and that will be the facts until proven otherwise.

      I personally do not disagree than some action should be taken, however unprofessional attitudes, and a continued troubling activities of supposed scientists wearing more than one hat, to myself discredits not their findings so much as their intentions. I really hope all of this is not a construct of some underlying pattern of the global scientific community as a whole and how they undertake science professionally.

      Anyway I have no problem with people arguing passionately their position (even if it should be unbiased and dissociative), however the time old argument of "I am right, and you are wrong because you are stupid" doesn't hold too much water for me, nor does it really make me want to believe anything you say. You want me to take things on faith, and only read ascribed books, as interpreted by specialists.

      You sir just described religion, a bible, and priests. Have fun with that fun club. They seem to be doing so much good for the world these days.

    34. Re:re Time for open discussion by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      I'm not familiar with all the details of that, but from googling a bit, it sounds like further review is needed.

      There are criticisms of the Wegman's report on the wikipedia page about the hockey stick.

      The Wegman report has itself been criticized on several grounds:
      The report was not subject to formal peer review.[46][47] At the hearing, Wegman listed 6 people that participated in his own informal peer review process via email after the report was finalized and said they had no objection to the subcommittee submitting it.[44]
      Dr. Thomas Crowley, Professor of Earth Science System, Duke University, testified at the committee hearing, "The conclusions and recommendations of the Wegman Report have some serious flaws."[44]
      The result of fixing some of the alleged errors in the overall reconstruction does not change the general shape of the most recent part of the reconstruction.[48]
      Similarly, studies that use completely different methodologies also yield very similar reconstructions[48].
      The social network analysis is not based on meaningful criteria, does not prove a conflict of interest and did not apply at the time of the 1998 and 1999 publications. Such a network of co-authorship is not unusual in narrowly defined areas of science.[49] During the hearing, Wegman defined the social network as peer reviewers that had "actively collaborated with him in writing research papers" and answered that none of his peer reviewers had.[44]
      Gerald North, chairman of the National Research Council panel that studied the hockey-stick issue and produced the report Surface Temperature Reconstructions for the Last 2,000 Years, stated the politicians at the hearing at which the Wegman report was presented "were twisting the scientific information for their own propaganda purposes. The hearing was not an information gathering operation, but rather a spin machine."[46] In testimony when asked if he disputed the methodology conclusions of Wegman's report, he stated that "No, we don’t. We don’t disagree with their criticism. In fact, pretty much the same thing is said in our report. But again, just because the claims are made, doesn’t mean they are false."[44]
      Mann has himself said that the report "uncritically parrots claims by two Canadians (an economist and a mineral-exploration consultant) that have already been refuted by several papers in the peer-reviewed literature inexplicably neglected by Barton's 'panel'. These claims were specifically dismissed by the National Academy in their report just weeks ago."[50]

      From a cursory googling of Wegman and North's credentials, they do look like they have the right tools. Whether their conclusion is correct, is a matter of further peer review taking place.

      Right now, the volume of studies agreeing with AGW far surpasses the 4 scientists being critical of it.

    35. Re:re Time for open discussion by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      BTW, if anyone knows of a climate model that correctly predicts past, known weather, please post a link.

      Why would you expect a climate model to predict weather? That's not their function. Rather they predict the envelope that weather fits within. The chaotic nature of weather is not an issue with climate because it just defines the limits of the chaotic behavior not what happens between those limits. My understanding is that climate models do a pretty good job of predicting past climate.

    36. Re:re Time for open discussion by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Nor does some random assistant patent examiner [wikipedia.org]

      Who was a PhD candidate in physics at the time he worked in the patent office and was well known to the faculty.

    37. Re:re Time for open discussion by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      They were not trying to block publication of papers they didn't agree with. The incident referred to in the CRU emails is in reference to a paper that was poorly written and contained errors which should have never passed peer review. For instance they used records more reflective of changes in moisture than temperature. Why would you want publish in a journal that has ineffective peer review?

    38. Re:re Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      As I understand it (and I might be mistaken) climate is the average weather for a given region in a given time range (usually 30 years), thus I would expect that large variations over long times such as the Medieval Warm Period (lasted about 500 years) or the Little Ice Age (about 300 years) to be predicted (actually, post-dicted) by our climate models.

      As I understand it, no climate model predicts the MWP or the Little Ice Age; thus in my view, if your model can't tell me what the climate was, then I have no confidence that it can tell me what it will be.

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    39. Re:re Time for open discussion by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      When they use climate models to look at the past they call it a hindcast (as opposed to forecast).

      There is evidence that the MWP was a regional phenomenon centered around the North Atlantic area, perhaps due to some changes in ocean currents. The LIA has some but less evidence for regionality. My understanding is that climate scientists are not dissatisfied with their hindcasts considering the uncertainties involved in the inputs. The GCMs are apparently quite good on hindcasts for the last 100 years or so where we have less uncertainty of the inputs.

  9. Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by highways · · Score: 4, Informative

    A little history. Darwin was bombed and mostly flattened in 1941 by the Japanese during WWII. And, most likely, the weather station with it.

    Hence, it was probably re-built at a different site with different local effects.

    Next?

    1. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      Actually, in the article it specifically says that the climate station was moved from the post office (downtown, and near the harbor, both of which are heat centers for different reasons) to the airport.

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    2. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by highways · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected.

    3. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by phantomfive · · Score: 2, Informative
      It's probably worth mentioning the original author's response to that argument:

      This might make sense if there were any "dramatic change in 1941. But as I clearly stated in my article, there is no such dramatic change. The drop in temperature was gradual and lasted from 1936 to 1940. The change from 1940 to 1941 was quite average. So that claim of yours is nonsense as well. In any case, the change in screening did not coincide with the 1941 move. In my article I cited a reference to a picture of a Stevenson Screen in use in Darwin at the turn of the century. Perhaps you didn't bother to read that.

      Hard for me to know who is right without actually looking at the data, but honestly I would be surprised if there were any dataset as large as the global temperature dataset that didn't have some errors in it at least.

      --
      Qxe4
    4. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by radtea · · Score: 1

      Hence, it was probably re-built at a different site with different local effects.

      And regardless, I'm sure I can find someplace that happens to have had the coldest year on record. Which proves nothing, because we're talking about "climate change", not "global warming".

      There's a lot of good science in climatology, but anyone who claims that AGW is a slam-dunk, rather than a highly plausible proposition, is not making the claim on scientific but rather political grounds.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    5. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by dbIII · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      A little geography. Darwin is a VERY small city so your weird statement is bullshit grasping at straws.
      I don't know why I bother. Facts are not going to help against those that are convinced that everything said by scientists and educated clergy is a lie. Climate is just the next anti-intellectual soft target after evolution for groups that see education as a threat.

    6. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by dbIII · · Score: 1

      but anyone who claims that AGW is a slam-dunk, rather than a highly plausible proposition, is not making the claim on scientific but rather political grounds.

      Unfortunately it's the other way around because the scientific debate was sorted out in the 1980s.

    7. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by EQ · · Score: 0, Troll

      Sorted out in the 80's? Oh really? Like when they were trumpeting oncoming ice ages? Come on man, are you really that fucking gullible?

      --
      Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo! http://goo.gl/J9bkO
    8. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I was attending university at the time and there was certainly no more "trumpeting oncoming ice ages" than there is now. You've been fooled by revisionism.
      Calm down, step back, and think about why you have the views you do. Try to remember who told you and where they got it from - bonus points if it's a cocaine addicted DJ with political aspirations. You are not gullible, you are simply part of the target group of some expensive PR.

    9. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      I think you're confusing the 1970s with the 1980s. Either that, or you didn't listen to the part about global thermonuclear war.

    10. Re:Simple Explanation: Darwin was bombed in 1941 by Cwix · · Score: 1

      "On 19 February 1942 at 0957, 188 Japanese warplanes attacked Darwin in two waves. It was the same fleet that had bombed Pearl Harbor, though a considerably larger number of bombs were dropped on Darwin than on Pearl Harbor. The attack killed at least 243 people and caused immense damage to the town. These were by far the most serious attacks on Australia in time of war, in terms of fatalities and damage. They were the first of many raids on Darwin."

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin,_Australia#1900_to_present

      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
  10. My take by RJBeery · · Score: 0, Redundant

    It's possible that the CRU of East Anglia grossly manipulated the data in an attempt to influence the public, AND that their presumptions that they are trying to make the data fit to happen to be true anyway. Ironically, bad science does not make it wrong necessarily

    Nevertheless, Climategate was a blow to scientific integrity. If you don't think so then you haven't read enough about it.

    1. Re:My take by bmo · · Score: 1

      "Ironically, bad science does not make it wrong necessarily"

      If you deliberately do bad science, it doesn't matter that you came to the right answer. You've discarded the trust people had in you. We don't need any more Piltdown Men.

      It also didn't help that for the past 25 years we've had extreme hyperbole from far too many AGW types telling us we're turning the Earth into another Venus or that we're going to drown and then make ridiculously bad movies about it, e.g., "Waterworld".

      If people had their questions answered without namecalling, condescension or "the sky is falling", most people would listen. While many scientists sneer at public relations in general and even popularist science magazines like Discover, communication is important if you don't want to sound like a pompous asshole and actually get your point across.

      The head-ramrod of the East Anglia CRU comes off as a complete asshole. That's a BIG problem.

      More Sagans, please. Less assholes.

      --
      BMO

    2. Re:My take by Artifakt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      At this point, the East Anglia issues that have any actual evidence are twofold. Out of hundreds of thousands of e-mails, a very few seem to show signs of a couple of scientists wanting to make some data that has odd properties fit the rest of their data. The second issue is actually the bigger one - how can it be science if data is privileged and so not necessarily available to anyone else wishing to double check the original experiments. The problem of unverifiable sources is actually the bigger issue, IMHO.
              But the data problem itself is not unusual for science - people doing real science in perfectly legitimate ways sometimes have to make judgement calls about how much weight to give different data, and peer review and other methods sometimes involve meta-judgements about those.
              A legitimate example would be where there were, say, four studies that all included at least 100 cases or more in their sample size, and a fifth study that had a much smaller size, say 13 cases. There is more than one means of statistically weighting that fifth study so it can be included but not given as much significance as the others, and the question of which methods to use is not always clear. I'd argue that since the first e-mail to draw attention was about some tree ring data that gave pretty good predictions up to the early 1960's, but that didn't predict the actual observed numbers very well post 1960, and they had other tree ring data from multiple areas that kept on giving good predictions up to the latest samples (about 1999), they had a similar problem. High altitude or latitude tree samples are certainly a smaller database than those for more common regions, as well. So, the data that didn't match well with everything else and didn't predict now established observations very well either seemed to also come from a special case database in other ways.
              Yes, it shows that scientific integrity isn't always happening at every possible level. I don't think the researchers in question looked hard enough at how to treat the data fairly - they probably saw it as flawed enough that it simply couldn't be relied on, and wanted to have no part of it. Since the data had some useful predictive value for pre-1960 records, it was really more like a minority opinion than true bunkum, and the researchers should have considered what were the ethical limits of manipulating that data - but it does seem to be data where some types of manipulation (by which I mean mathematical normalisation, not a big red eraser approach) are justified.
            But I think we have always had that problem. People do get caught cooking data and publishing deliberate frauds. Anyone who follows science knows not every practitioner is infalliably honest, constantly committed to absolute integrity, or adheres to all the formal principles of science. If that's the standard for science to earn respect, there are enough doctors that don't fully follow the oath that we should have no respect what-so-ever for medicine, and I shudder to think what would be a proportionate response to politicians. Here, somebody literally stole those e-mails, and it seems safe to construe that theft as a politically motivated act. If anyone wants to argue that the theft was motivated by the noble persuit of the TRUTH, I'd listen, but right now, I don't believe it.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
  11. The answer is yes. by timmarhy · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The moment you demand all skeptics believe "just because", it stops being science. global warming is a perfect example of something with questionable science reaching the point it's being treated as a religion, and anyone questioning it is a heretic.

    we are in serious trouble if someone can't question manual manipulation of dataset's which are the basis of spending trillions of dollars of tax payers money on carbon trading. it's even more disturbing is the fact they get labels such as "denialist" - if you are incapable of leaving the emotional responses at the door, then you aren't fit to be argueing the science.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    1. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It amazes me how people will simply follow the latest "fad". It was "Global Warming", but then when the temperatures started to decline, as many had predicted, it became "Climate Change". If government can demonize one of the elements of life, then they can have a greater level of control over the world. This has been the trend for hundreds of years, more government. If we think back to the 70s gas crunch, it was a well held "belief", but industry, the population and government alike, that we were "running out of oil"... This Climate change BS is nothing more than the latest attempt to TAX and CONTROL everyone, and if Copenhagen is successful, then we will be very close to a tyrannical world government. Yes, the "New World Order" is real, do your homework, it is not what you have learned that is it, it is not a movie plot, a "conspiracy theory", or a complete crock. It is just the modern equivalent of imperialism. Google "Kennedy secret society speech" ... he describes it well. However, no matter what I say here, those who do not want to be objective and do their OWN research will just think I'm a nut. But, for those of you that that have the slightest suspicion that things are not as they should be.. research it!!!

    2. Re:The answer is yes. by wizardforce · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I believe that the climate science isn't the problem in terms of AGW; the problem is that the solutions to AGW are arguably economically questionable. Hence the issue has become intensely politicized. People who strongly oppose the proposed solutions to AGW are often the same ones who tend to argue aainst AW as a whole regardless of their actual knowlede of the topic. People need to be able to separate the two issues from one another, that is to say that the existence of AGW is a separate issue than any solutions to AGW. However, it will never ever happen. Both ends of the issues will not yield ground and everyone ends up losing something in the bickering.

      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    3. Re:The answer is yes. by Volante3192 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The moment you demand all skeptics believe "just because", it stops being science.

      Understanding why the speed of light in a vacuum is the universe's speed limit requires a 300 year history in scientific advances, and that's considered dogma.

      Sometimes you just have to accept that the other person just might know more about a topic than you.

    4. Re:The answer is yes. by timmarhy · · Score: 1, Redundant

      if they do know more about the topic then answering the skepticism shouldn't be a problem should it?

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    5. Re:The answer is yes. by Draek · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The moment you demand all skeptics believe "just because", it stops being science. global warming is a perfect example of something with questionable science reaching the point it's being treated as a religion, and anyone questioning it is a heretic.

      If you *know* it's questionable, then send your explanation to a peer-reviewed journal for all of us to see.

      You can't? pity, but chances are then you're no different from the thousands of other "armchair scientists" making outrageous claims with no actual backing, as the guy analyzed in TFA. And making actual scientists try and reason with all of you is an utter waste of their time, which we'd rather they spent doing their actual job.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    6. Re:The answer is yes. by srjh · · Score: 1

      Well, no, but to pretend that they aren't actually doing so in the age of Google is a little disingenuous.

      There are only so many times you can rebut stale contrarian talking points before you sound like a broken record. Particularly when you are 100% certain that the target isn't remotely interested in listening.

    7. Re:The answer is yes. by Draek · · Score: 1

      To a single person, yes, as was the case in TFA. To a hundred, or a thousand however? the lifetime of an individual only goes for so long, y'know, and if the internet has proven anything is that there's no shortage of idiots.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    8. Re:The answer is yes. by Dantoo · · Score: 1

      I'm sure that I cannot be alone in being sceptical of the claims made by the loudest communicators on both (I concede there may be more than two) sides of the debate.

      "Does the spirit of scientific scepticism really require that I remain forever open-minded to denialist humbug until it's shown to be wrong?

      My answer to this has to be:

      "I am equally sceptical of denialist and non-denialist humbug until it's shown to be not wrong".

    9. Re:The answer is yes. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The moment you demand all skeptics believe "just because"

      First let me say the next line is not directed at you but at the Heartland Institute and other groups that get the "denier" label put on them.
      It's really more a case of "lay off the misleading bullshit you are paid to dispense you freaks" only phrased in more polite language. It's a situation where one group is expected to be squeaky clean and the other are professional liars. Their success is equivalent to the highly successful PR campaign to increase the number of women smokers in the USA some years back and no more ethical.

    10. Re:The answer is yes. by timmarhy · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      it's funny you mention people not listening. if there is any group out there that isn't interested in listening to rebuttals it's definately the global warming crowd.

      from day 1 i've never met an AGW believer who i've been able make pause for even a second when i mention warming on other planets in the solar system, the fact CO2 only supplies 2% of the warming effect, the fact CO2 rise lags warming, the fact the warmest years on record were in the 1940's. all of this nevers gets a look in, even in the mid 90's when this whole debarcle was gaining momentum. The discussion always degrades into an emotive name calling exercise from them. accusations of being paid off are frequent.

      I think at it's core, the promblem for AGW believers is they have invested so much in the arguement that the gaps in their hypothesis are filled with faith rather then science. and i'm all for faith in an idea before it's proven (many break throughs have happened this way), but NOT when your forcing me to agree and forcing trillions of dollars to be spent to combat what could well be a non issue.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    11. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you have direct proof of the Holocaust? Are you skeptical that it happened without direct proof?

    12. Re:The answer is yes. by timmarhy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      hah i love the peer reviewed journal response. it's a perfect closed loop, you can make the challenge because you know no scientific journal is going to publish an anti AGW paper, and it lets you avoid answering any questions.

      ask yourself what's so threatening about someone like me asking why CO2 lags temperature gain? after all i'm just an armchair scientist, your mighty peer reviewing brain should be able to crush my arguements with ease, right?

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    13. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "if you are incapable of leaving the emotional responses at the door, then you aren't fit to be argueing the science."

      Unfortunately there are very few Vulcan's living on Earth.

    14. Re:The answer is yes. by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      I've visited Mauthausen, and seen plenty of video and eye witness accounts of it. so yes i do have direct proof of it. If there wasn't any of the old camps still standing, no eye witnesses and no video footage then yes i'd be a skeptic.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    15. Re:The answer is yes. by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 1

      Peer-review journals cost money to publish in. The average arm-chair CITIZEN can't be expected to spend money to ask questions, especially about how his taxes are being spent. Enter the greatest force for democracy in recorded history: the internet, which gives everyone a soap box and puts teeth into the First Amendment, or its equivalent in any of the civilized democracies, or barring that, the free speech portion of the UN Declaration of Human Rights.

      This is a case of freedom. Period.

    16. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I grew up hearing the claims of CFC's depleting the ozone layer and acid rain causing deforestation, and I saw them to be true with time. Once a few measures were put in place to reduce the root cause, the problems all but vanished and nature rebounded with astounding speed. The key here is that those "theories" of the root causes could be physically modeled in laboratories, not extrapolations of curve fits as is the case with global warming. I've thrown students out of lab courses for what I then considered to be faking data, only to observe graduate level statistics courses teaching methods to normalize and transform data to modify the influence so that they fit some model; so called acceptable methods of data manipulation to achieve the desired result. Not being able to refute the AGW concepts is like not being able to refute that there is a God. There is no physical proof, but rather bits and pieces of information here and there that could be interpreted in some manner that can either confirm or deny existence. Without hard evidence, the debate recycles and nothing of consequence is gained but a sore throat from the shouting matches. Politicians love a good crisis, as people tend to willingly give up their hard fought rights so that government will do something to fix it. In this case, politicians have fed the competitive nature of funding and status in the community by throwing money and prestige to anyone publishing supporting articles. When the journal asks for reviewers, it seeks out those with long histories of publishing well received articles, namely those who have raised the "impact" of the journal on the field, as this builds prestige of the journal and with it, more subscriptions. Editors and reviewers know this and support whatever zeitgeist exists at the time, be it global warming alarmism, meteoric crashes with earth, or terrorism. At the end of the day, science has been politicized for the gain of some and the detriment of all. Few realize the consequences that the actions of these "climatologists" will have on the implicit trust of the scientific method, but those that do shudder at the thought of science being reduced to the same level of public trust as talk show hosts. For all the armchair scientists, I say that they are on to something when they question how increased taxes and government spending are the solutions to global warming. Skepticism of group think should be encouraged, not shouted down. That is the way of science.

    17. Re:The answer is yes. by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Insightful

      My problem isn't so much what's in the peer reviewed journals (maybe there are problems with the data, if so I assume we will eventually see that), most of the stuff I've seen in peer reviewed journals seems ok.

      It's the dramatic hysteria and propaganda that you hear outside of the peer reviewed journals that really gets to me. The idea that if we don't stop emitting CO2 the oceans will rise, flooding out ocean front cities. There is no peer reviewed article proving that, quite the opposite, actually.

      When you read peer reviewed articles, scientists are careful to put in qualifications and caveats, as they should. What I object to is the propaganda that comes after that fact, ie: "CO2 is a positive radiative forcing component (verified fact)..........therefore if we keep adding CO2 to the atmosphere the results will be disastrous (wild conjecture)." Carefully watch what politicians say when they start talking. Very often they will start with something that is verified in a scientific way, then extrapolate in ways that no good scientist would dare to do. The fact is, global warming as presented in scientific journals is not nearly as disastrous as the event presented in the news.

      In a way it reminds me of Y2K. At the time I would read articles in journals like Communications of the ACM, studying how much it would cost to fix various things, and estimating the number of computers that might have issues. Then I would look at the news and hear predictions of power plants exploding and airplanes crashing and wild unrest. At some point there was a disconnect between the science and the propaganda.

      I object to the propaganda.

      --
      Qxe4
    18. Re:The answer is yes. by c-1ee · · Score: 1

      Oh here we go again. Please link instances where properly and substantively peer reviewed papers that refute AGW has been denied publication by a respected science journal. If you can't, it's pure conjecture on your part at best, spreading FUD at worst.

    19. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You can't? pity, but chances are then you're no different from the thousands of other "armchair scientists" making outrageous claims with no actual backing, as the guy analyzed in TFA.

      Not quite...

      I’m a former television meteorologist who spent 25 years on the air and who also operates a weather technology and content business, as well as continues daily forecasting on radio, just for fun.

      Weather measurement and weather presentation technology is my specialty. I also provide weather stations and custom weather monitoring solutions via www.weathershop.com (if you like my work, please consider buying a weather gadget there, StormPredator for example) and www.tempelert.com, and turn key weather channels with advertising at www.viziframe.com

      The weather graphics you see in the lower right corner of the blog are produced by my company, IntelliWeather. As you can see most of my work is in weather technology such as weather stations, weather data processing systems, and weather graphics creation and display. While I’m not a degreed climate scientist, I’ll point out that neither is Al Gore, and his specialty is presentation also. And that’s part of what this blog is about: presentation of weather and climate data in a form the public can understand and discuss. .....
      . ..... While I have a skeptical view of certain climate issues, I consider myself “green” in many ways, and I promote the idea of energy savings and alternate energy generation. Unlike many who just talk about it, I’ve put a 10KW solar array on my home, plus a 125 KW solar array on one of our local schools when I was a school trustee. I’ve retrofitted my home with CFL’s and better insulation, as well as installed timer switches on many of our most commonly used lights.

      I also drive an electric car for my daily around town routine.

      I encourage others to do the same when it comes to efficient use of energy and energy conservation.

    20. Re:The answer is yes. by anonicon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      if they do know more about the topic then answering the skepticism shouldn't be a problem should it?

      Answering the skepticism is completely acceptable. Answering the skepticism one skeptic (of millions) at a time, with each skeptic having a different set of skepticism, and frankly not asking in the spirit of education but in cynicism IS A PROBLEM.

    21. Re:The answer is yes. by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yes except peer reviewed journals do in fact routinely publish anti-AGW articles.

      The problem is that none of these articles have been successful in establishing an alternative model.

      So that's a big old FAIL for the anti-AGW guys.

    22. Re:The answer is yes. by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      google climategate. it shows very clearly the CRU guys cooking up ways to discredit or sink journals publishing anything anti AGW

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    23. Re:The answer is yes. by srjh · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is a perfect example of what I'm talking about.

      You bring out examples of supposed flaws in global warming as a "gotcha" argument, but ignore the fact that each and every one of these arguments has been repeatedly debunked.

      Again - you're ignoring rebuttals to denialist arguments, then pretending they don't exist. It's not that no-one's listening to your arguments, it's that they are scientific nonsense.

    24. Re:The answer is yes. by Kohath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sometimes you just have to accept that the other person just might know more about a topic than you.

      Other times, you don't.

      Peer review is essential. When the science is being used as an excuse to control everyone's life, then everyone is a peer, and we are all entitled to review the findings.

    25. Re:The answer is yes. by bnenning · · Score: 1

      the problem is that the solutions to AGW are arguably economically questionable

      That, and the loudest AGW proponents seem to have no interest in anything other than their preferred solution of drastically curtailing energy usage. For example, we could build 400 nuclear plants in the US and replace all the electricity that we currently get from coal. But the same environmentalists preaching doom from AGW have prevented any nuclear plants from being built in the last 25 years, which is pretty good evidence that their real motivation is to change our lifestyles to how they think we should live, rather than actually solving the problem.

      People need to be able to separate the two issues from one another, that is to say that the existence of AGW is a separate issue than any solutions to AGW. However, it will never ever happen. Both ends of the issues will not yield ground and everyone ends up losing something in the bickering.

      Agreed.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    26. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I am in principle sceptic about the gas chambers. But I don't consider that detail important in the big scheme of things.

      There are plenty of pictures of the holocaust on Wikipedia. That in itself is enough to prove that there was a systematic extinction of Jews, Poles and Gypsies. What proportion of them died in gas chambers is more or less irrelevant to history, since history primarily deals with questions about what people believed and wanted, what their motivation was and so on.

      If for example it was discovered that the famous gas chambers were actually an hoax by the Allied countries, it would not rock the history about the holocaust as much as you may think. It would not need to be rewritten much. The big question in the history of the holocaust is not how the Jews died, but what the fucking hell the Germans were thinking.

      Although if the gas chamber were a hoax it would sure rock the history of Allied propaganda during and after WW2.

    27. Re:The answer is yes. by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      If by "wild conjecture" you mean "hypothesis which can be supported by performing experiments and observations to gather empirical evidence to support or disprove it", yes!

    28. Re:The answer is yes. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Pay attention man, you'll hear tons of wild claims that have no real basis in science.

      --
      Qxe4
    29. Re:The answer is yes. by calidoscope · · Score: 1

      Einstein's theories of relativity give easily testable predictions, many of which have measured to great precision. AGW models rely on a water vapor feedback mechanism with an uncertainty close to the same magnitude as the predicted effect. This is more like the factor of ignorance used in civil engineering analysis rather than relativistic physics.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
    30. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but to be fair, he said AGW believer that he's met. Maybe he's never met an expert. I could prove damn near anything by asking some idiot on the street while avoiding experts in the field. Which seems to be what he did. Case closed.

    31. Re:The answer is yes. by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      But that doesn't mean that some of the predictions of disaster that seem wild on face value aren't based in science or that real science isn't being done to test them. It's all about signal to noise ratio and doing the scientific leg work to sort out the chaff.

      For example, talking about the raising sea level putting population centers under water is a wild claim of disaster that on face value is both hysterical and propagandistic. But there is a scientific basis for it and we can empirically test whether the ice is melting and the sea level is being effected by it.

    32. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um they are the ones saying 'hey change your ways'. They are asking for TRILLIONS of dollars in funding and changes. Well they damn well better prove it and making absolutely crystal clear to everyone. They better make time for it... Many times when I work with someone 'who is too busy to help or explain something' it usually means they are so out of their league and way behind in actually doing anything because they do not understand it at all.

      I was hoping for some proper science. It has been evident for many years that all we get out of these folks is 'trust us we know what we are doing you wouldnt understand all the statistics'. You even help them do it with your 'dont bother the man behind the curtain'. Well try us. Or as my professor with a doctorate in statistics said on the first day of classes 'lies damn lies and statistics'. You can cherry pick data to make things have a higher mean or lower or whatever you like. Just by changing a few numbers, or adding in something, or even throwing things out. Hell its a stats 101 exercise to do so.

      I was hoping both sides would calm down and do some real science. Instead both sides have retrenched in. The REAL skeptics should be the scientists coming up with these ideas. They should spend every day trying to disprove their own ideas. Instead we are plowing forward as if everything is on the line. It may very well be. But if the science behind it is 'fuzzy math' then we are could be wasting a good amount of money when we could be doing things like buy food for people who need it. Or other worthwhile endeavors.

      The skeptics or 'deniers' are busy building their own plans now on the leaked data. And the GW crowd is busy trying to bury the PR disaster. Instead of real science we get politics and finger pointing. A pox on both groups.

      My spidy BS detector is going off in a big way with both of these groups. It is rarely wrong. *sarcasm on* Trust me... I dont have time to discuss it, its a waste of my time *sarcasm off*

    33. Re:The answer is yes. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The rising sea levels is a good example of a claim that has become propagandistic. Let's look at the underlying science, shall we?

      The IPCC report projects ocean levels to rise at around 3mm a year or so for the next century. At first you might think, yeah, add that up, and pretty soon it can be a lot. But then you realize that along any given coast, geological processes (such as plate tectonics) make a significantly bigger difference than 3mm. For example, I believe the Atlantic Coast is gaining an inch every year. That is several times more than the effect from rising oceans.

      So really we have more to worry about from plate tectonics than we do from global warming when it comes to sea levels.

      --
      Qxe4
    34. Re:The answer is yes. by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When the science is being used as an excuse to control everyone's life, then everyone is a peer

      That is not the definition of a peer. A peer is someone who is knowledgable enough about the subject matter to be able to judge it intelligently.

      However, if you want to give it a try, read some papers about the climate published in scientific journals. That way you are not filtering the message through an blogger with an axe to grind (from both sides of the debate). You will then not find anyone who says that you should believe in climate change "just because" (as the grandparent put it), because in a published paper they have to show their working.

    35. Re:The answer is yes. by selven · · Score: 1
    36. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you *know* it's questionable, then send your explanation to a peer-reviewed journal for all of us to see.

      AH! So--anyone who can't get into "peer review"--isn't part of the Holy Brotherhood--you should have
      explained that at the start!

      You can't? pity, but chances are then you're no different from the thousands of other "armchair scientists" making outrageous claims with no actual backing, as the guy

      Another AH! Nobody enumerated that you have to have "Backing" to be one of the REAL Holy Brotherhood-
      again--this should have been revealed long ago--and saved countless troubles! You DO have YOUR Offical
      Guild Membership and License from the Holy Brotherhood--yes?

      analyzed in TFA. And making actual scientists try and reason with all of you is an utter waste of their time, which we'd rather they spent doing their actual job.

      Oh--ACTUAL scientists. Oh dear! To quote the person you were responding to? (Since you didn't post your Real Scientist Holy Brotherhood
      OFFICIAL license(tm)?) "You are incapable of leaving the emotional responses at the door, and you aren't fit to be arguing the science", etc,
      etc, etc. Pity, but thank you for playing though!

    37. Re:The answer is yes. by argStyopa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "The problem is that none of these articles have been successful in establishing an alternative model."

      Really? That's the standard?

      Because, as far as I recall, all the 'standard' and accepted models in the 1990's predicted warming, warming and more warming, yet the last decade hasn't seen it.
      The models predicted, if not more hurricanes, then at least stronger more devastating hurricanes. That hasn't happened either.

      So really, you're asserting that anti-AGW haven't proposed an alternative to a model that DOESN'T WORK?

      --
      -Styopa
    38. Re:The answer is yes. by mvdwege · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, it does not. The two smoking guns that the denialists bring up are not smoking, and not guns at all:

      1. There was a call for a boycott of a single journal, because it's editor insisted on publishing provably bad papers over the objections of the peer reviewers.
      2. There was a throwaway comment about two papers up for the IPCC AR4 report, given without context. That the comment was throwaway and not meant in earnest or not followed up upon is also proven, by the very fact that both papers were referenced in the AR4 report.

      Stop parroting the denialist blogs. It makes you look stupid.

      Mart

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    39. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I object to the propaganda.

      Fair enough. There is some exaggerated propaganda. Just like with Y2k. But don't forget that part of the reason that Y2k didn't "happen" is that prople fixed quite a few bugs before 1 January 2000. Lots of money was spent on Y2k, and not all of it was wasted.

    40. Re:The answer is yes. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Hm? You can explain why the speed of light in a vacuum is as fast as you can go to a ten year old in a couple of hours.

      Climate is a lot more complicated, but the big reason you can't explain it simply is because nobody understands it. Still, even without actually understanding it you can identify trends.

      The global warming crowd does have a bad habit of rather overstating the certainty in things, but that's probably due to how politicized the issue has become.

    41. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The propaganda goes both ways. I recall a caller into a right-wing talk show host who argued that sea levels couldn't possibly be rising because ice is less dense than water. As ice melts, shouldn't sea levels recede?!

    42. Re:The answer is yes. by jcupitt65 · · Score: 1

      asking why CO2 lags temperature gain?

      That's an easy one to explain. Every pop sci "top 10 climate myths" article covers this point, for example:

      http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn11659-climate-myths-ice-cores-show-co2-increases-lag-behind-temperature-rises-disproving-the-link-to-global-warming.html

    43. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The problem is that none of these articles have been successful in establishing an alternative model.

      Ergo, AGW exists?

      FAIL for you.

    44. Re:The answer is yes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're no different from the thousands of other "armchair scientists" making outrageous claims with no actual backing

      Yeah! You''re starting to sound just like Al Gore!!

    45. Re:The answer is yes. by jabster · · Score: 1

      And making actual scientists try and reason with all of you is an utter waste of their time, which we'd rather they spent doing their actual job.

      Yeah! Doing their jobs!

      Which apparently means flying off to Copenhagen, driving around in gas-guzzling limos and SUVs, and galavanting around with the free hookers.

      As soon as those screaming about the Climate Crisis, start ACTING like there's a Climate Crisis, maybe I'll start to listen to them.

      Instead they spew out carbon equivalent to all of that expelled by Morocco for an entire year.

      Crisis my ass.

      -john

      --
      Slashdot: you'll not find a more wretched collection of villainy and disreputable types...
    46. Re:The answer is yes. by Draek · · Score: 1

      So you object to the blantant misrepresentation of scientific facts by mass-media journalists lacking the necessary education to understand the issue they're writing about?

      Welcome to the club, active since... well, one hell of a long time. Read this and this for a rough idea on how modern journalism really works.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    47. Re:The answer is yes. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Just for the sake of precision it was one editor that got the paper in. Later the editor-in-chief and several other editors (but not the one that put the paper in) resigned when the publisher wouldn't let them print a retraction.

    48. Re:The answer is yes. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The IPCC report projections on sea level rise is now considered very conservative. The latest projections are 1-2 meters of sea level rise by 2100. It wouldn't surprise me to see that getting adjusted upwards again in 10 years.

    49. Re:The answer is yes. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I don't know why you think so. Do you have an article to back up your claim, or is it something you just heard? Wikipedia doesn't mention a rise of even a meter in the most extreme case. If you have a citation for that, I'd like to see it, but I'm not sure you have a good source for your claim.

      --
      Qxe4
    50. Re:The answer is yes. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Take a look at this.

      The "adjusted upwards again" part was just my supposition.

  12. kdawson is a douche by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Round here, we don't appeal to authority as a way to argue your point, and we should not degrade people asking legit questions by calling them "denialist" - as if they "deny" for living or something.

    Except maybe those FSM loons, but that's cthulu's business to take care of.

  13. like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Uberbah · · Score: 1, Insightful

    For some reason I don't think going, "Lalalalalala, I can't hear you" instead of refuting the points they bring up

    Because it's a waste of time, that's why. Offering evidence to a denialist ostrich is like showing a copy of Obama's birth certificate and birth announcements to Birther Republicans: no matter how much hard evidence you provide, it's never enough. Denialist ostriches aren't disagreeing because they have a qualitative or quantitative argument to the contrary, because their objections are based on ideology, not science.

    1. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Nutria · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because it's a waste of time, that's why. Offering evidence to a denialist ostrich

      Not every climate skeptic is a denialist ostrich. Many of us can be converted with patience, lucidity and openness.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    2. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by OverlordQ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, but you're not trying to convert them, as you said it wont happen. What you're doing is trying to convince the people on the fence. They see, somebody laying out refuting the points of the AGW crowd, which then responds with basically "U STUPID", that isn't going to gain any more fans.

      --
      Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
    3. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Denialist ostriches aren't disagreeing because they have a qualitative or quantitative argument to the contrary, because their objections are based on ideology, not science.

      The hard part is differentiating between the ideologues and the merely vociferous. Refusing to consider anything that has not been peer-reviewed is an ideology all of its own. Ultimately it comes down to a judgment call for anyone who is less than a perfect expert in the field. Although I am a big fan of applying the little boy who cried wolf criteria - the more unsupported claims someone makes, the less weight their opinion should carry. Of course that requires investigating prior claims which is generally more work than most press-release reporters are willing to do.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    4. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Insightful
      because their objections are based on ideology, not science.

      From where I sit, it's the people putting arbitrary "corrections" into the programs to make them come out the way they want and refusing to accept any articles that don't toe the party line into their "peer reviewed journals" who look like religious zealots, and the soi-disant "deniers" are the ones who are trying to do things in a proper scientific manner. Remember, boys and girls, if the facts don't support your theory, a scientist changes the theory, while an activist conceals the inconvenient facts.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    5. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh, please, you liberal god-hating scumbag, Obama has yet to provide proof that his birth certificate is not a clever hologram. Until then, I'll just continue believing he was born in Indonesia/Kenya.

    6. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Draek · · Score: 0

      Pity that most of you, alleged converted-to-be, are just closet ostriches who try to make themselves feel better about it by either demanding unreasonable levels of evidence before converting, such as asking for accurate temperature readings from everywhere around the world for the past 500 years, or simply apply a vague and/or subjective criteria such as "make me feel you're right" so they can answer "I don't think it's enough" to anything they show.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    7. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Shakrai · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Take a look at the data for your fucking self, but quit doing the bidding for Exxon Mobile.

      I'm not so worried about Exxon Mobil. I am worried about the economy as a whole if we tie both our hands behind our collective backs. Particularly when we can't promise that the nations that compete with us on the global stage (*cough* China *cough*) will do the same.

      What good does gutting our economy do when China continues to bring a new coal fired power plant online every week? What will that accomplish in the long run other than to disadvantage the next generation of Americans and reduce our standard of living?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    8. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by amRadioHed · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The "birthers" would say the same of themselves. Most irrational people don't think of themselves as irrational, of course that's just another example of them being unable to face reality.

      Some of them are different, but when I come across them... let's just say I'm skeptical.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    9. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by phantomfive · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I have. It's not very convincing. In fact, based on your dogmatic certainty, I suspect it is YOU who has not read the research carefully.

      When you get done, you will realize: everyone knows that CO2 makes the earth warmer because of the greenhouse effect. Not everyone acknowledges that there will be catastrophic effects if we don't limit CO2 output. In fact, depending on how we limit CO2 output, it is not even certain that the effects of the limitation won't be worse than doing nothing at all. Certainly the opportunity cost is worth taking into consideration.

      --
      Qxe4
    10. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by metacosm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      #1. Some of the data was deleted (obviously, it has been mentioned many times).

      #2. Some of the data was contractually banned from being shared (the Met is working on getting this fixed, sent requests to 180 counties).

      Secret and deleted data is NOT a good basis for anything, and the Met agrees, and wants to redo it transparently over the next three years.

      I hope the Met gets permission to do that, I would love some really transparent / open process work around this.

      I was shocked when I found out that stuff based on "secret" or unpublishable data, or deleted data was allowed to be written up in a peer reviewed journal. How the hell do you review something you can't see the data to?

      While this is a 'pressing' issue in the west, and they there is a strong bias for action, screwing it up and having bad science will have a huge impact on how it is viewed by India and China in the future... it is worth doing it all in a hyper-transparent and straightforward way.

    11. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by pitchpipe · · Score: 3, Informative

      Particularly when we can't promise that the nations that compete with us on the global stage (*cough* China *cough*) will do the same.

      I work for a global mining giant, so I really can't be considered a tree hugger, but China is starting to kick our ass on green technology. Maybe it is inevitable, but I really believe that if we implement some of the policies sooner rather than later - and we know they're coming - that we will be at least as competitive if not the leader in these things. I really love this country (the US). Damn, the better it does the better me and my children do.!

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    12. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Shakrai · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I would love to see the US become a leader in green technology. I'm not convinced that the best way to accomplish that is to impose new taxes that dramatically raise the cost of living for American citizens while increasing the size and scope of government. I don't see how you build a green economy by gutting the current one and diverting much needed capital into Uncle Sam's coffers.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    13. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Nutria · · Score: 1

      How the hell do you review something you can't see the data to?

      Get Fellow Travelers to review it?

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    14. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Nutria · · Score: 0

      Most irrational people don't think of themselves as irrational, of course that's just another example of them being unable to face reality.

      Let's play Devil's Advocate: Are you the irrational one? How do you know? Because you believe what White-Coated High Holy Scientists (in consultation with other White-Coated High Holy Scientists, i.e. peer reviewed journals) proclaim is The Truth Which Requires Immediate, Massive Globe-Wrenching Economic Changes?

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    15. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by rlp · · Score: 1

      Take a look at the data for your fucking self

      That's exactly the point - CRU stonewalled for years on releasing their raw data and then conveniently 'lost' it. NASA is being sued for their data and have fought releasing it for two years. New Zealand researchers have been accused of fudging their data. Science is by nature an open enterprise - if these researchers refuse to release their raw data, refuse to release the source code for their models, stonewall the release of data, actively try to suppress critics in their field, and either ignore or corrupt the peer review process than they are NOT practicing science. Thus any 'results' they get should be put in the same class as 'cold fusion', 'creationism', and the 'Loch Ness Monter'.

      --
      [Insert pithy quote here]
    16. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by GNT · · Score: 3, Informative

      But you do realize there clearly ISN'T proof of the hypothesis? Do you realize that there clearly was malfeasance? Several times in fact. IPCC released it's spreadsheet of the data only to be hosed by the fact that it deliberately tossed out the Medieval Warm period?

      Even so, simple historical knowledge should convince you AGW can't be true. Greenland used to be GREEN with vegetation. It is presently covered in ice. What does that tell you? England, during the Roman Empire, was a major exporter of WINE.

      Even so, KNOWN data from other fields, like ice cores, shows conclusively that CO2 is rising AFTER the temps.

      If like me, you did satellite stuff, you KNOW that CO2 represents a miniscule IR component. It's water vapor (and thus clouds) that are much more important.

      And last but not least, just a microscopic percentage change in the output of the sun will warm the Earth, as will precession and nutation of the Earth/Earth orbit will.

    17. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by GNT · · Score: 1

      Not really people..

      For starters the greenhouse effect is used to explain the surface temperature of Venus which IS a function of CO2. The same is not true of Earth's atmosphere because CO2 is a miniscule component.

      Lastly, humans hardly put a dent in global CO2 concentrations regardless of the claims of the IPCC et al. You can prove it to yourself simply by comparing to what your average active volcano throws out every year. The checksum mentality would do lots of you AGW fans a world of good, because it would show you how tenuous your grasp of the matter realy is.

    18. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am worried about the economy as a whole

      Which has nothing to do with climate science.

      Climate scientists don't have the luxury of tailoring their results to keep Congress in check any more than physicists had the luxury of tailoring the atomic model to prevent the first fission bombs from being designed.

    19. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by fm6 · · Score: 1

      I thoroughly agree with you, except that I think that "ideology" is the wrong word. Consider the birther movement: there's no system of belief behind it. Obama's whole persona (liberal politics, exotic name, heavy-duty African-American cultural vibe) just rubs them the wrong way, and they'll never admit that his election was legitimate.

      Climate change deniers are just the latest version of the people who've been pretending that ecological and resource problems just don't exist, and doing so for as long as I can remember. Declining biodiversity? No big deal. Running out of oil? Hey, they've been saying that for years; it's just a scam to pump up the price. The don't want to make the changes needed to cope with these issues, so they'll believe any scatterbrained theory that says they don't have to. It's like the joke about the guy who jumps off the top of the Empire State building. When he's about halfway down, somebody calls him on his cell phone and asks him why he's killing himself. "Killing myself? I'm just proving that jumping off buildings isn't as dangerous as they'd like you to believe. Look, I've been falling for a long time, and nothing nasty has happened ye....."

    20. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      Bingo!

      Better still, make up the metadata where none exists to disprove UHI effects

      Remember, its not scientific fraud if they don't ask you to produce the goods! Unless you're Hwang woo Suk...

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    21. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because it's a waste of time, that's why. Offering evidence to a denialist ostrich

      Not every climate skeptic is a denialist ostrich. Many of us can be converted with patience, lucidity and openness.

      Frankly, not that I've noticed.

      Here's a question: have you actually ever read the IPCC report on the physical basis for climate change? I don't mean, have you read the critiques of it written by other people who are telling you not to bother reading it. I don't even mean, have you read the summary for policy makers. I mean, have you actually read the report?

      Assessment report: The physical science basis, for what it's worth.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    22. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      So its unreasonable to ask for the original data and the methodology before impoverishing everyone and refactoring the world economy?

      The opposite of skepticism is gullibility.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    23. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Livius · · Score: 1

      People like climate change deniers, birthers, creationists, Holocaust deniers etc. don't want the truth, they want their fantasy. They know perfectly well that what they pretend to believe in is not true. That's the point - you have to defy reality and believe something untrue in order to join the club, and if you can believe something knowing it's not true, you can continue to believe it even after it's disproven.

      As hopelessly unrealistic fantasies go, consequence-free infinite economic growth does sound good.

    24. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by anonicon · · Score: 1

      Not every climate skeptic is a denialist ostrich. Many of us can be converted with patience, lucidity and openness.

      Grow up, we're not your parents. Take your patience, lucidity, and openness and bone up on the subject instead of expecting other people to hold your hand and convince you. If you want to remain a Denialist Ostrich, feel free to, but don't be surprised when you consistently catch blowback for such enthusiastic ignorance.

    25. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Uh no it didn't. Greenland was named greenland to attract settlers. If you can't even factcheck the most simple of arguments how can I know that the rest of what you write isn't just made up shit?

    26. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Forgive my ignorance, but since you brought up Birthers (had to look that one up) and the Obama birth certificate thing: was a birth Certificate finally produced? The only thing I'd managed to find info about was some sort of quasi-birth certificate, which did not indicate actual birth location, just that he had been born.

      I think a large part of the whole "Birther" argument is that Obama simply hasn't provided his own birth certificate (or any other certificate, for that matter) for validation. (Of course, this overt dismissal just makes the Birthers look crazier, which I think is the point.)

      But that's also the point of the Birthers, from what I'm seeing. McCain, Kerry, Gore, Bush - they all had extensive dossiers saying "this is who I am, this is what I did". Obama just has PR, and that's the issue. There has been nothing irrefutable, in the form of paper documentation, backing up any of the man's claims: just words of friends, friends of friends, and people within the same social/political sphere. That doesn't convince me of anything other than cronyism.

      Am I saying he wasn't born here? No. But I am saying that someone isn't playing above the boards on this one. Not dishonest, but secretive - and that at least suggests something to hide. Where's the era of open politics he promised us?

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    27. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by dbIII · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because you believe what White-Coated High Holy Scientists

      Once you start falling for the "science is a rival religeon to drag fools away from baby Jesus and condemn all it's worshippers to hell" crap then you are getting beyond the realms of rational debate.
      Science has nothing at all to do with religeon.
      Manipulative arseholes are just setting it up as a strawman to win arguments along the line of "they sacifice babies to Moloch - well Science is just like that". You have just been conned by such manipulative arseholes that see educated clergy and scientists as a threat to their political power and you are picking up their argument second hand.

    28. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by c6gunner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not every climate skeptic is a denialist ostrich. Many of us can be converted with patience, lucidity and openness.

      That's a fair enough argument. The question then becomes, what's the cost/benefit trade-off?

      Take another example - 9/11 conspiracy theorists. Yes, some of them can be deprogrammed and brought back into mainstream society. I've done it a few times myself. But how much time and effort should we really be putting into this? Do we REALLY need multi-million-dollar studies which 90% of them will ignore anyway? How do we approach the problem? Even if we put all our time and energy into it, how do we know when we've reduced the movement down to just those who are unable to listen to reason? Do we continue the effort for the next thousand years, or is there a point at which we can say "enough is enough"?

      Honestly, I was never 100% convinced that AGW is a problem that we should to be worrying about right now. Probably not even 80% convinced. What I do know that this "climategate" manufactroversy is complete fucking nonsense. If anything, it's put me further into the mainstream camp simply because it's exposed the sheer lunacy and ignorance of the other side. If you're at all swayed by the release of the CRU e-mails, you seriously need to re-examine how you discriminate between good and bad data.

    29. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by anonicon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Here's an idea: if you believe the GP and the majority of people who believe as he does are irrational, haul out your global climate data sets and indicate why they're irrational. It couldn't be worse and would probably be a lot better than the wretchedly stupid argument you just "formulated."

    30. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The location of birth is given as Hawaii. It is hard to miss on a one page certificate.

    31. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Even so, simple historical knowledge should convince you AGW can't be true. Greenland used to be GREEN with vegetation. It is presently covered in ice. What does that tell you?

      It tells me that, with that single, simple statement, you've announced that you know absolutely nothing about climate science.

      FYI, it's quite possible, and, in fact, quite normal, for some parts of the world to experience temperature trends which go against the average global temperature trends. If you don't understand such a basic concept, how can you possibly expect to understand any of the other claims made by climate researchers?

    32. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by pitchpipe · · Score: 1

      Greenland used to be GREEN with vegetation. It is presently covered in ice.

      Yeah, and Iceland used to be covered in ice. It is presently GREEN with vegetation! Fables are SO cool!

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    33. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by pitchpipe · · Score: 1
      I want to see the land that is covered in New Zeas! I've been to a place that was covered in Engs. Also, I've heard of a place that was covered in Ires, but I don't believe it. What would be really weird is to see a place that was completely infested with Pos. How about one that was saturated in Scots. One with a bunch of Switzers would just be fuckin' kwazy! I don't even know what one would look like if it was covered in Thais. How about one covered in Swazis. All of this shit would be nuts. In fact, I think that you could call it "nutation".

      I'm well fucking aware of what it means to motion btw.

      --
      Look where all this talking got us, baby.
    34. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes but it is just not one factor, the earth can absorb x amount of compounds that are in the air and alot of water vapor. The problem is we have transformed hydrocarbons that were in solid state into the air at a rate that can't be absorbed by natural means and that changes the climate. Trees, ocean, and allege and other things can revert this but not if we keep cutting down trees and having the navy dump nuclear reactors into the ocean disrupting eco systems. Its not just one thing. The one thing that you are right about is that it probably did go in a cycle it just now we have altered the cycle and we won't be around to see it complete unless we change our impact.

      Also if you do "satellite stuff", take a look at the ice coverage of earth and the permafrost that is no longer permanently frozen. More than one factor

      Also England i'm sure can still grow wine if it wasn't used for cow pastures or expansion of population on a very limited land area, it takes alot of land to have a vineyard.

      Are you really readying the economist and slashdot and are stupid enough to deny that humans have a huge impact on a closed ecosystem that never had man made human objects (minus the minuscule amount of resources lost by sending space probes and meteors bringing in materials to the earth)

    35. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by thoth · · Score: 1

      I am worried about the economy as a whole if we tie both our hands behind our collective backs. Particularly when we can't promise that the nations that compete with us on the global stage (*cough* China *cough*) will do the same.

      What good does gutting our economy do when China continues to bring a new coal fired power plant online every week? What will that accomplish in the long run other than to disadvantage the next generation of Americans and reduce our standard of living?

      This is the core of the real issue behind AGW... how to diplomatically ask/beg/tell/force developing nations to put the brakes on their growth, since consumption/pollution in the first world is at various higher levels already. It's hard to tell China (or any other nation) to adopt various restrictions when on a per capita basis, they are under-consuming resources and under-polluting in comparison. Hard to do it without appearing as huge hypocrites.

    36. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mellon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right now a lot of the reason that we are so energy-inefficient is not because we aren't being taxed enough, but because things like building codes are heavily biased against energy efficient homebuilding. So most of the homes that are build are insanely inefficient. Office buildings tend to be more efficient, but still not at the level of efficiency that would be possible if the codes were biased in favor of efficiency, rather than against it. E.g., I'm building a house in Vermont. The guy at the local lumber company was *aghast* when I told him I wanted 14" thick walls and R40 insulation. Nobody does that! In *Vermont*! That's just lame - there's no excuse for building an energy-inefficient house. They're more comfortable, hugely cheaper to heat and cool, and don't cost much extra to build--yes, you spend more on insulation, but you can buy a cheaper heater or chiller.

      Another problem is the tragedy of the commons: nobody's willing to conserve first. So everybody buys an SUV, because everybody else is buying an SUV, and so we all need SUVs to avoid being crushed by other SUVs, or whatever. To solve this sort of mexican standoff, government regulation is actually a really effective solution. CAFE standards work. Unfortunately the anti-regulation climate of the past 30 years has prevented them from doing much good as technology has advanced--ironically, CAFE standards could have prevented the extraordinarily painful market correction that came to a head in 2008 in the auto industry, but since the auto industry lobbied so hard against it for so long, they had to be bailed out.

      So sure, maybe carbon taxes aren't the right idea. Maybe there are other things we should do first. But for some reason nobody seems to be doing them.

      The theory with carbon taxes is to offset them against other taxes, so that they are revenue-neutral for people who are being reasonably conservative, revenue-positive for people who are being very conservative, and revenue-negative for people who are being outright wasteful. So if you modify your behavior, carbon taxes *should* save you money. But sure, for people who aren't willing to do that, they'll suck. And consequently, they'll probably never be enacted, because nobody likes to tighten their belts. And so later on we'll all get to tighten our belts a lot, suddenly, instead of a little, steadily.

    37. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Kohath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You've made some good points and one bad one. Note how correcting you on the bad one (Greenland) seems to be a substitute for a genuine rebuttal.

    38. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by drsquare · · Score: 1

      The whole point of Internet conspiracy theorist nutjobs is that they cherry pick single facts which may actually be true, but then pair them up with a conclusion with no actual valid inference. It makes them look convincing whilst spouting complete bullshit.

      For example, look at a picture of the 1969 moon landings:
      1. The US flag is fluttering in the wind.
      2. But there's no wind on the moon, it's a vacuum, so there's nothing to blow the flag.
      3. Therefore, the moon landings must have actually been filmed on Earth.

      Axiom 1 seems to be correct, and 2 is definitely correct and I infer 3, which seems logical, but it's complete shit. This is what deniers feed on. On Slashdot, you only need four fellow nutjobs to follow you around to give up +5 insightful, and lend your posts extra authority to casual browsers.

      He is right that Greenland used to be warmer than it is today. However when he makes the massive leap of logic, that as temperature changes happen naturally, they cannot happen artificially, he has made an inference he has no right to. A pan of water can warm up if left in the sun. If I then put the pan on the cooker, is it a hoax to suggest the flames are making it boil?

      But then, who am I to argue with someone who 'does satellite stuff'?

    39. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by HadouKen24 · · Score: 1

      Clearly, you haven't looked up what the average volcano throws out every year. All volcanoes together emit about a hundred times less CO2 each year than humans do.

    40. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by bnenning · · Score: 2, Interesting

      CAFE standards work.

      No they don't. SUVs came about as a direct result of CAFE loopholes. (They're "light trucks", yeah right). Increasing the gas tax would be far superior; not only would it encourage fuel efficiency in a way that can't be gamed, it would encourage other ways of saving gas like reducing commute distances.

      I completely agree that revenue-neutral carbon taxes would be a good policy; even if AGW is completely false it would be no more economically harmful than our current income and payroll taxes.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    41. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      Axiom 1 seems to be correct, and 2 is definitely correct and I infer 3, which seems logical, but it's complete shit.

      Thanks, I laughed so hard at that bit I almost choked. I'll definitely be quoting you in the future :)

      You're absolutely right, except that it's not just "internet conspiracy theorists". This has been going on for a long, long time. Go back and look at the claims made about the JFK assassination, and you'll see the same pattern. Hell, 2,000 years ago, after Rome burned to the ground, there were fools running around blaming Nero ("OMG, INSIDE JOB!"). I'm willing to bet that they used the same "logic". It's human nature. We see an event which we can't explain, we come up with a plausible explanation, and then we ignore all contrary evidence in order to make ourselves feel smarter. That sort of behavior is exactly why we came up with the scientific process; it's meant to counter the inherent fallibility of man.

    42. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by DoktorFaust · · Score: 1, Insightful

      They see, somebody laying out refuting the points of the AGW crowd, which then responds with basically "U STUPID", that isn't going to gain any more fans.

      Here's the problem: the Economist article actually responded to the various claims by checking out sources, while Mr Eschenbach's reply ignores the informative responses to his questions from scientists and he doesn't actually show the statistics were bad (he just claims it's obvious they must be). YET, Mr Eschenbach continue to spout out his claims.

      So what now? Should the scientists continue to repeat the same thing over and over again back to Mr Eschenbach until he finally decides to spend a few weeks/months/years of his time actually trying to understand the issue? If they do keep responding, then it suggests there's real debate going on here. There isn't. The debate ended when Mr Eschenbach couldn't respond with actual science.

      --

      Die Menschen verhoehnen was sie nicht verstehen. -- Goethe.
    43. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      So everybody buys an SUV, because everybody else is buying an SUV, and so we all need SUVs to avoid being crushed by other SUVs, or whatever.

      What if people just like having an SUV? It's bigger, more comfortable, easier to transport stuff around in, etc, etc. I personally don't own one but I don't feel the need to punish those that do.

      ironically, CAFE standards could have prevented the extraordinarily painful market correction that came to a head in 2008 in the auto industry, but since the auto industry lobbied so hard against it for so long, they had to be bailed out.

      They didn't have to be bailed out. The proper course of action would have been to let them fail for their stupidity and allow the capital that we are now throwing at them to go to more productive enterprises instead.

      So if you modify your behavior, carbon taxes *should* save you money.

      I don't think it's the proper place of government to be trying to "modify" the behavior of the citizenry, but even if I went along with your logic, have you ever known a tax that didn't eventually morph into just another revenue source? I'm extremely skeptical of any claim that a carbon tax will save me money, even if I "modify" my behavior.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    44. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      It's going to be equally hard to sell the American public on the concept of voluntarily accepting a lower standard of living.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    45. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      B-b-but October was the hottest month on record in Australia! That's absolute PROOF it must be AGW! Just like how me being alive right now is proof that the Flying Spaghetti Monster created us all!

    46. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1


      For starters the greenhouse effect is used to explain the surface temperature of Venus which IS a function of CO2. The same is not true of Earth's atmosphere because CO2 is a miniscule component.

      The sam is true for earth because it has nothing to do with the actual amount. You have x parts per million and your greenhouse effect is X. You have (x+100) parts per million and you greenhouse effect is X+(100 * factor). There more CO2 you have the stronger is the greenhouse effect. Your claim is just bullshit.


      Lastly, humans hardly put a dent in global CO2 concentrations regardless of the claims of the IPCC et al. You can prove it to yourself simply by comparing to what your average active volcano throws out every year. The checksum mentality would do lots of you AGW fans a world of good, because it would show you how tenuous your grasp of the matter realy is.

      Why don't you just add up the amount of coal, oil, gas burned pr year and calculate the CO2 emission from that? Then you only need to define a base year, lets say 1800, and you can add up every year the produced CO2 until you reach the level from today. (Yes, I know you are to smart and to lazy to google for the amount of CO2 produced every year, to smart to add it up and to smart to compare the sum with the actual level)

      Hint: http://www.grist.org/article/volcanoes-emit-more-co2-than-humans/

      It debunks your claim. Where the fuck should a vulcano get the C and the O2 from to produce CO2 in any relevant amount? Ah ... yeah those mysterious O2 springs and those mysterious mythril mines which are polluted with Carbon. Far less hen 1% of the years CO2 "exhaust" comes from vulcanos, 99.5% are human mad.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    47. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1, Flamebait


      Medieval Warm period?

      Even so, simple historical knowledge should convince you AGW can't be true. Greenland used to be GREEN with vegetation. It is presently covered in ice. What does that tell you? England, during the Roman Empire, was a major exporter of WINE.

      What do have medieval warm periods to do with climate change? Human made even?

      How can you write such bullshit and not se your self that you are so wrong? England right now is also again a booming wine country!!! You know what? It became tis the last 20 YEAR. Never in earth history a climate change happened during such a short period of time.

      The medieval micro warm period was a natural one ... and because of that you believe the current one is natural as well? Hello??? On what basis? In medieval times when it was warm. (less warm then now ... you don't even seem to understand that ice in greenland needs a few 1000 years to build up and a few 1000 years to melt ... normally) However in medieval times we had a warm period that 100% for certain was not caused by CO2 produced by humans. So how can you compare a not CO2 based and not human based warm period with a CO2 based on, human made one which we have now? How can you draw conclusions from a natural phenomena to an artificial one? How can you be so stupid? No not ignorant ("ignorant" means, you don't know basic stuff, probably not your fault) But stupid (stupid means, with the stuff you know, no matter how less it is, why do you come to such braindead conclusions?

      The rest you wrote about water clouds, water vapour, sun activity and your ice core probe claims is just so utter nonsense I don't have the nerves to enlighten you ....
      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    48. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Phil-14 · · Score: 1

      Of course China would outcompete us when it comes to "green" technology. They drill for oil and mine for coal with great enthusiasm, which directly correlates to lower costs for plastic and aluminum and steel with which to build renewable power sources from. Given their relative lack of environmental regulation, labor regulations, etc., it's a lot cheaper for them to build a windmill out of plastics and aluminum than for a US-based manufacturer to make the same thing.

      --
      (currently testing something about signatures here)
    49. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      For example, look at a picture of the 1969 moon landings:
      1. The US flag is fluttering in the wind.

      You can tell that from a picture? I'd need several frames to infer that.

    50. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by ffflala · · Score: 0

      I'm not so worried about Exxon Mobil. I am worried about the economy as a whole if we tie both our hands behind our collective backs. Particularly when we can't promise that the nations that compete with us on the global stage (*cough* China *cough*) will do the same.

      First off, the US has *always* produced more emissions than China, and their population is ~4 times as big as the US.

      Secondly, your hands-tying metaphor is off. You're equating eliminating a current resource with investing in alternatives & backups. That mindset is keeping us from having alternative & backups. You know, just in case.

    51. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But that's also the point of the Birthers, from what I'm seeing. McCain, Kerry, Gore, Bush - they all had extensive dossiers saying "this is who I am, this is what I did". Obama just has PR, and that's the issue. There has been nothing irrefutable, in the form of paper documentation, backing up any of the man's claims: just words of friends, friends of friends, and people within the same social/political sphere. That doesn't convince me of anything other than cronyism.

      (facepalm)

      You may not want to trust everything the Birthers say about whether Obama has offered more than just PR. Just a suggestion.

      (Just as you may not want to trust everything the AGW deniers say about whether the science shows there is anthropogenic global warming.)

    52. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Taevin · · Score: 1

      Forgive my ignorance, but since you brought up Birthers (had to look that one up) and the Obama birth certificate thing: was a birth Certificate finally produced?

      Ignorance is one thing, it can be fixed. Willful ignorance, is a much more serious problem. With an extremely simple search you could have saved yourself the trouble of writing a four paragraph post filled with vague references to shadowy figures that pull strings to get a black man elected.

      I'm sure you're incredibly busy though and have many more posts to make so, please, allow me.

    53. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by secondhand_Buddah · · Score: 1

      Frankly, I don't think that there are many 'climate change deniers' among us. The climate does change.
      The real issue in question is about how significant AGW really is, and of course, the huge political agenda and the consequences thereof that surrounds this somewhat shaky theory.

      --
      Participatory Governance : The only feasible option for a real democracy, where everyone really does have a say.
    54. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference being, of course, that Obama actually showed a copy of his birth certificate. How would you know if the 'denialist ostriches' have valid arguments if you never consider them? Ad hominem attacks do nothing to refute arguments, just to fuel them.

    55. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      The difference being, of course, that Obama actually showed a copy of his birth certificate.

      There is no difference, as global warming data is not just available, it's plentiful. Look online. Go to your local university and check out the scientific journals and read the peer-reviewed studies. If some of the raw data is proprietary, sign the NDA and knock yourself out.

      How would you know if the 'denialist ostriches' have valid arguments if you never consider them?

      Because they're based on whatever canard is most convenient at the time, not based on scientific research. Like how some thickening arctic ice sheets meant that global warming was a hoax - except they were thickening not because of colder weather, but from increased precipitation - brought on by warmer temperatures. Now it's these cherry picked emails and snippets of code. Tomorrow it will be some other distraction/misdirection.

      Now, find some objections that have actually gone through the scientific method, gone through peer review, and we'll talk.

    56. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Mashiki · · Score: 2, Informative

      I have actually. I realized one thing about IPCC reports. They're political not scientific, see here's the problem with groups like the IPCC. They're supposed to put on a diplomatic face on the science, presenting unbiased information to the public and government. In this case they're not even doing that, rather they've taken the road that: It's done, settled, and if you don't believe what we're telling you; You're the idiot.

      Remember when a government body that's supposed to exist for the open discussion of information rejects opposing theories you should be questioning that body. Even when that opposing theory(s) have valid peer reviewed research.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    57. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Co2 is a +15k year lagging indicator. Read the science yourself, because the IPCC is politics. Pure politics.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    58. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by hazem · · Score: 1

      You can tell that from a picture? I'd need several frames to infer that.

      There's actually video that is referred to by the moon-landing deniers.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1UEv2PIzl4

    59. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by hazem · · Score: 1

      And actually, it appears Mythbusters did experiments with a flag in a normal atmosphere and in a vacuum. They simulate the initial motions and twisting of planting the flag. The residual motion lasts much longer in the vacuum.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCPIchZDSr4

    60. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Cwix · · Score: 1
      http://www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/born_in_the_usa.html

      There is his birth certificate, with place of birth "Honolulu", a raised stamp, stamped by the registrar that made the certified copy "Alvin T. Onaka" If you read the article, you will see how factcheck.org personally handled the document, and WHY the document IS REAL. Any other required information that is needed.. parents home towns or whatever, is not on the birth certificate, and the state gives out a short form birth certificate, there is no way to ask for a "full" one. The only time that information is on a birth certificate, is the one that is filled out by hand at the time of birth, and you cannot get that version of the certificate. so that "quasi-birth certificate" IS THE ONLY ONE HE CAN GIVE YOU.

      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
    61. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by fm6 · · Score: 1

      You seem to have invented your own definition of "denier". I'm talking about those who deny that climate change is man-made.

    62. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      9/11 conspiracy theorists?

      Oh, for f*** sake here we go again with that biased, blind, overconfident and arrogant bullshit. How awesome must your mind powers be that you so valiantly distance yourself from the apparently mentally deranged.

      I want people like you to debate me in public so I can expose you for the pseudo-scientific and historically/contextually impoverished twats that you are. Not here though, that would be a derail.

      Ah. Felt better getting this off my chest. When it comes to 9/11, Slashdotters are basically religious nuts. Sorry to say, but the somewhat invisible cultist groupthink and value system that permeates this great site then turns to a big minus. The sacrosanct orthodoxy may not be blasphemed, or you will suffer the standard battery of insults and bigotry from indignant pseudo-skeptics. Such overconfident sophists tend to forget though, that prominent 9/11 commissioners don't believe their own report.

      That approximately half of the 9/11 family members have the same problems with the 9/11 commission report that we do. So give us all a break and get off the high horse, and read their concerns on http://www.911independentcommission.org/questions.html

      Then come back and deride these people in the same cultish and preprogrammed slash socially handicapped manner that you deride people who DARE question the 9/11 commission report. The bible of the post-9/11 world, in which we torture, wiretap and wage illegal preemptive wars. In which Pavlovian fear conditioning (TERROR! TERROR! TERRORIST! TERROR) and erosion of civil rights rule our existence.

    63. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Troed · · Score: 1

      There more CO2 you have the stronger is the greenhouse effect.

      ... logarithmically. 0-20 ppm, here we go. 20-80 ppm, yep - huge difference.

      280 to 380ppm. Not so much.

      AGW isn't about CO2 itself, but mythical positive feedbacks that are pure speculation. Some of those models have now been tested by observation and turned out to be completely false - the feedback was negative instead.

      http://ohjelmat.yle.fi/files/ohjelmat/u3219/kaavio7.jpg (Lindzen, water vapor)

    64. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by dalutong · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It isn't about gutting the current economy. It's about providing incentive structures for developing green technology.

      Businesses don't develop new methods and technologies unless they have a reason to. Sometimes that reason is that an entrepreneur saw that the future would be different and had a product that would advance us towards that new paradigm.

      Sometimes external factors, usually the government, create such incentives. For instance, look how much technology has been developed for military purposes. All of those were provided by the government.

      And the government can provide non-war incentives. Like carbon credits. That proposal has been the green-technology version of micro-loans, a private-sector way to assist a public-sector problem. Make it make sense to find ways to lower emission so you can sell your credits to another company and businesses will find ways.

      The GP said that China has become a leader in green technology. It has because the government realizes (all too well) that it can't keep down the same path forever. For many, standards of living have increased to the point where the cost of living can no longer be met by low-level factory jobs. Those jobs are moving to Vietnam and elsewhere. So China has focused on higher-level jobs.

      In the same way, it's realized that its water pollution and other problems like that can only be ignored so long. That they will slap them in the face (like pollution during the Olympics almost did) if they don't start addressing it. The big question will be, as the GP suggested, whether we (US), or other countries that eventually provide green incentives, will be buying Chinese technology and hiring Chinese contractors to pursue such incentives or if we will be on the cutting edge enough to use our own resources. The longer we wait to "jump on the bandwagon," the more likely that scenario is.

      --

      What comes first, finding a teacher or becoming a student?
    65. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      Take another example - 9/11 conspiracy theorists. Yes, some of them can be deprogrammed and brought back into mainstream society. I've done it a few times myself.

      So what, exactly is your non conspiracy theory to explain what happened? It would also be somewhat difficult to reconcile with "...brought back into mainstream society." Considering the version pushed by the US government and broadcast media is a conspiracy theory anyway.

    66. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      Let's play Devil's Advocate: Are you the irrational one? How do you know? Because you believe what White-Coated High Holy Scientists (in consultation with other White-Coated High Holy Scientists, i.e. peer reviewed journals) proclaim is The Truth Which Requires Immediate, Massive Globe-Wrenching Economic Changes?

      Is this anyway not an extraordinary claim? i.e. one requiring extraordinary evidence. Instead we have weak and highly manipulated evidence, stuff which isn't evidence at all and even some which appears to disprove the claim being made.
      On top of this have ad hominum attacks from those who believe. Why call someone a "denier" if you have clear evidence that they are wrong? IME this tends to be the behaviour of those who have no evidence to refute their critics but can't be wrong for political reasons. They may even suspect their critics of being right.

    67. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point of the taxes is not to get into Uncle Sam's coffers. It is so that the product considered harmful for the environment should be more expensive than the product considered beneficial for the environment.

      The consumer then has the choice to pay less for the environmentally good product than for the environmentally bad product and will choose the environmentally good product. Thus the consumer will not pay more tax.

    68. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by MaJeStu · · Score: 1

      because their objections are based on ideology, not science.

      From where I sit, it's the people putting arbitrary "corrections" into the programs to make them come out the way they want and refusing to accept any articles that don't toe the party line into their "peer reviewed journals" who look like religious zealots, and the soi-disant "deniers" are the ones who are trying to do things in a proper scientific manner..

      Except that the corrections aren't arbitrary, and you don't know what you're talking about.

      Do you even know what flux correction or parametrization is?

      --
      The best mixed martial arts training in Boston - www.redlinefightsports.com
    69. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mutube · · Score: 2, Funny

      Greenland used to be GREEN with vegetation. It is presently covered in ice. What does that tell you?

      That you're an idiot?

    70. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is just a matter of opinion that the corrections are 'arbitrary'.

    71. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      Except that the corrections aren't arbitrary, and you don't know what you're talking about.

      Maybe not, but enough people who do have examined the code that if there were good reasons for the corrections, somebody would have pointed it out. If nothing else, the coders at the CRU would have defended their decisions if there were an innocent reason for them. Please note that none of the "scientists" who's emails were leaked has denied having written them, or claimed they were altered, and not one of the coders has defended the "corrections" or the way the code was manipulated.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    72. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 0, Troll

      Here's an idea: if you believe the GP and the majority of people who believe as he does are irrational, haul out your global climate data sets and indicate why they're irrational.

      All climate data can do is show that things are changing. It says nothing about why.
      It's also a big "problem" that ice core data shows that atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration follows temperature. You can make a case from this data for warming "causing" more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. But this data also shows that varying atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration does not affect temperature to any significent degree. The whole AGW theory thus appears to be without any foundation.

    73. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      I have actually. I realized one thing about IPCC reports. They're political not scientific, see here's the problem with groups like the IPCC. They're supposed to put on a diplomatic face on the science, presenting unbiased information to the public and government.

      Really? I though that the point of any political group was to produce and distribute propaganda.

    74. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by rochrist · · Score: 1

      I see what you did there! The little insinuation that climate change researchers are actually damn dirty commies!!! Hawwww!!!!

    75. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      So its unreasonable to ask for the original data and the methodology before impoverishing everyone and refactoring the world economy?

      It shouldn't be unreasonable to ask for those when considerably less extreme "solution" are advocated. It might also not be a bad idea to look at the proposed response to see if it's the best solution (even if it's a solution at all) regardless of if the data, methodology and whatever assumptions are being made all check out.

    76. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This shows that you're not trained in climate science, or you would understand that the corrections are not arbitrary.

      As for the journal, the problem there was that the paper was a turkey that was getting snuck in. If it had been published, it would have been shot down effortlessly and would have been embarassing to the journal.

      Remember, publishing is just the first step: after that, a paper gets tested by the teeming masses of peers. It's got to be robust, and that one just wasn't.

    77. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      From where I sit, it's the people putting arbitrary "corrections" into the programs to make them come out the way they want

      This is after this sort have thing being discovered before, the so called "hockey stick". How much of the output of such a program is due to the data and how much is due to the program itself?

      Remember, boys and girls, if the facts don't support your theory, a scientist changes the theory,

      Regardless of the theory; how much it needs to be changed or how many previous facts appear to support the original theory.

      while an activist conceals the inconvenient facts.

      As wall as attempting to shout down anyone noticing inconvenient facts. By such methods as ad hominum attacks or making unreasonable demands on them, when they would not do so with someone who agreed with them.

    78. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      But you do realize there clearly ISN'T proof of the hypothesis? Do you realize that there clearly was malfeasance? Several times in fact. IPCC released it's spreadsheet of the data only to be hosed by the fact that it deliberately tossed out the Medieval Warm period?

      Or you get people claiming that the MWP, together with the "Little Ice Age", wasn't global enough... Then call people who disagree "deniers".

      Even so, simple historical knowledge should convince you AGW can't be true. Greenland used to be GREEN with vegetation. It is presently covered in ice. What does that tell you?

      Most of Greenland has been covered in ice for a long time. What is telling is that where there were Norse settlements is now permafrost. Had that been the case when these people arrived there they would have left cursing the name of "Erik the Red".

      England, during the Roman Empire, was a major exporter of WINE.

      If you use viticulture as a measure of climate then England is cooler than it was in Roman times.

      Even so, KNOWN data from other fields, like ice cores, shows conclusively that CO2 is rising AFTER the temps.

      As well as falling after temperatures have fallen. When ice cores were first looked at it appeared that there was a good corallation, thus it was reasonable to conclude that this showed the theory of CO2 concentration driving temperature was valid. Later, and more accurate, analysis showed that whilst temperature could affect the CO2 concentration it simply cannot be the case that CO2 concentration affects temperature. If an increase in C02 in the atmosphere caused any significent warming then together with warmer temperatures increasing CO2 in the atmosphere then you'd have a positive feedback loop of increasing temperature and atmospheric CO2. If this had ever happened we probably wouldn't be around to discuss it.

      If like me, you did satellite stuff, you KNOW that CO2 represents a miniscule IR component. It's water vapor (and thus clouds) that are much more important.

      Water vapor, as clear steam, is a significent "greenhouse gas". However clouds, where the water is more likely to be in liquid or solid form, shade the surface and reflect solar radiation. They do still trap some heat, but possibly less than the same amount of water as a gas.

      And last but not least, just a microscopic percentage change in the output of the sun will warm the Earth, as will precession and nutation of the Earth/Earth orbit will.

      There's also the sunspot theory. Which actually relates to the solar magnetic field. The more active the field the more it shields the solar system from cosmic rays (as well as producing more sunspots). Cosmic rays help produce clouds in the Earth's atmosphere (effectivly a huge "cloud chamber"). Note that the Spörer, Maunder & Dalton Minima were periods when the Earth cooled. (The Dalton Minimum being after the start of the industrial revolution.) We are currently in what is know as the "Modern Maximum". Thus by this theory we'd expect to be in a "warm period". Indeed sunspot activity appears to be a reasonable match for temperatures, at least over the last thousand years or so.
      Thing is that there is nothing we can do about it. No amount of "carbon trading" is going to make the slightest difference to the Sun (or any other star).

    79. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      However when he makes the massive leap of logic, that as temperature changes happen naturally, they cannot happen artificially,

      It's just as much a "leap of logic" to arbitarily state that one thing is "natural" and another is "artificial", if not more so. Without being able to fully understand and explain the natural processes which warm and cool the Earth how can you have any baseline? Has there even been an attempt to exclude natural causes. e.g. Is there a period of high sunspot activity which corresponds with a cool Earth or one of low sunspot activity which corresponds with a warm Earth?

      A pan of water can warm up if left in the sun. If I then put the pan on the cooker, is it a hoax to suggest the flames are making it boil?

      If all you have is the hot water from two pans (or the same pan at two different times) how do you tell how they were heated? (Discounting that the examples are artifical, since pans are artifacts.)

    80. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Uh huh....and where in the IPCC report, or in what peer reviewed journal did you grab that piece of information from? Because as far as I can tell, it is complete myth and you have nothing to back it up with.

      --
      Qxe4
    81. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by mpe · · Score: 1

      Climate change deniers are just the latest version of the people who've been pretending that ecological and resource problems just don't exist, and doing so for as long as I can remember. Declining biodiversity? No big deal.

      The only way in which it's likely to be an issue is if human activity an ecosystem being able to move as it could in the past. Climate change is nothing new for Earth's plants and animals, including humans. "Carbon trading" probably won't help here since it's unlikely to result in human built structures being moved out of the way. Is it going to stop the destruction of entire ecosystems.

      Running out of oil? Hey, they've been saying that for years; it's just a scam to pump up the price.

      The oil industry's involvement in bio-fuels may well be. If anything the whole AGW fuss draws attention away from the simple fact that petroleum is a limited resource and being so relient on such a thing isn't a good idea.

    82. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      You get points for not being an anonymous coward, but lose points for flailing around with the "official conspiracy theory" canard.

      If you can't or won't understand what the phrase "conspiracy theory" means, there's very little for us to discuss.

    83. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Well, consider the const/benefit of "saving the planet". Consider to cost/benefit of transforming the world population's moral stance. Let's see, in Johannesburg today, there are people faced with the moral question of whether it was right to put tyres around the necks of collaborators and thieves and set them on fire. In China they are faced with the moral issue of whether the government should force people to have no more than one child. In Afghanistan they are faced with the moral issue of whether allegiance to one's clan is more important than peace. The list goes on... that's just a sampling of the diversity of the moral issues around the world. What will the cost be of trying to convert all these people to change their lives to make their primary or secondary concern, the moral problems of the environment? From a cost/benefit stance, you'd be better off forgetting about climate change for a hundred years until the rest of the world is in a place where they have sorted out all their other shit and can actually begin to respond to the demands of global citizenship. Plus don't forget most of the world is religious, or tribal, or both. But some politicians would have us think that this can all be related to climate change, even suggesting that pressures of climate caused this or that genocide. Really? I think you'll find genocides and tribal conflicts and national conflicts were happening for the same reason they have always happened--namely people have a pretty low and narrow perspective, which comes from the sorts of cultures and living conditions that you find Europe used to be in the middle ages. Many women in the world can't even read, and let's not get started on gender equality. Buddhists don't even accept equal rights for women as that's just a minor detail to do with the incarnate world, which is all illusion anyway. Sure not Western Buddhists, but check out the rest of the undeveloped world. Really, from a cost benefit analysis, there is zero to be gained from trying to hit people with world-centric global issues and responsibilities when they are still dealing with much older shit. Sorry if this sounds a bit rantish--there is a very big world out there and trying to summarise the breadth of diversity of culture out there is not easy. We really forget how far the West came in development. We expect everyone else to suddenly become global citizens just because we realised we didn't need an SUV after all. Meanwhile in Afghanistan they are still running to their local war lords for protection and revenge against... Western soldiers. Just think about that.

    84. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Why call someone a "denier" if you have clear evidence that they are wrong? IME this tends to be the behaviour of those who have no evidence to refute their critics but can't be wrong for political reasons.

      No, just the opposite is true. It's the existence of clear evidence that they are unwilling to acknowledge that makes someone a denier. No matter how much evidence is has been shown to a birther they will not change their tune.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    85. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Climate change is nothing new for Earth's plants and animals, including humans.

      That's like saying that the sinking of the Titanic was no big deal, because everybody gets wet now and then.

      Yes, climates have always changed. This change is happening real fast, with drastic consequences, at least for those of us dependent on normal human activities. You know, like growing food.

    86. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Greenland used to be GREEN with vegetation. It is presently covered in ice. What does that tell you?

      That we can safely ignore everything you say because you just repeat garbage you've heard somewhere else without bothering to think about it for ten seconds let alone check to see if it is correct.

      Anything that you say that is by chance also correct we'll hear elsewhere anyway, so no loss.

    87. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      That's one of the biggest problems with the proponents of doing nothing to respond to global warming. China is making big investments in green technology as they're doing in Europe as well. The US is not going to be the leader in this field and we'll be buying it from overseas. There's a wind farm they're putting in in Texas that has windmills imported from China. Those could have been made in the US putting our citizens to work.

    88. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      The problems in Darfur may well be largely caused by climate change. The Sahara desert is advancing to the south forcing nomadic people to change their range encroaching on farmers lands.

    89. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by dylan_- · · Score: 1

      So its unreasonable to ask for the original data and the methodology before impoverishing everyone and refactoring the world economy?

      Actually, refactoring the world economy to make it more efficient will enrich everyone, not impoverish them. If Americans could reach the same energy efficiency as Europeans (which is a pretty easy target, since they're hardly the best) it would allow a further 100 million people to live at the same level of affluence as Americans, creating another huge market for the world.

      Mind you, the fun thing about economics is that it's such a load of crap, you can make any statement sound reasonably plausible. Still, at least I actually have some basis for my statement, as opposed to your effort.

      --
      Igor Presnyakov stole my hat
    90. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Hahahahaaha! I'd say that there's an excellent chance that this example could be caused by climate change. The problem with that statement is that it really means nothing. Climate change undoubtably caused the entire Sahara to expand to it's current size, so how is that relevant to the discussion? Climate change has always been going on, so saying something is a result of climate change is really telling me nothing.

      The fact is the earth has been changing since it was formed. It's not a static system. Since we can't even reliably predict the weather, even in the short term, how am I supposed to take the word of "experts" who say they've got it all figured out. (Yes, I know weather and climate are different, but step back a little and see the bigger meaning here). In every other scientific discipline we see countless examples of scientists telling us they are the experts and they understand how it all works, then later rescinding that statement when something clearly proves them wrong. Why is climate science somehow different? Does anyone really believe they understand it enough to isolate man's influence from all other inputs? I think our understanding has barely scraped the surface in all areas of science and we might want to eat a big more humble pie before making such foolish and arrogant statements about our level of knowledge.

    91. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by rho · · Score: 0

      1) People skeptical of the solidity of the science in AGW are not 9/11 conspiracy theorists. You're comparing one to the other because it makes your argument simpler. It's a meaningless and dishonest comparison. The questions don't go away simply because you call the questioner a Nazi.

      2) It's not just the emails, though they are somewhat damning. People are looking at the code, and they're looking at the provenance of the information as well. It's not encouraging. It's certainly not "settled science". It looks more like "settled results".

      3) Any rebuttal that begins with "you have to have a Ph.D. to understand why this number should be a 3 instead of a 4" smells funny. I don't have to have a Ph.D. in astrophysics to understand the basics of absorption line spectrums, because the explanation is straightforward and well understood. Hiding behind credentials is not a substitute for understanding thoroughly enough that you can explain the hows and whys and defend them.

      I'm actually of the opinion that carbon emissions are not good, and we should do something about them. Carbon emissions make a fairly good metric for efficiency, and encouraging efficiency is a good thing. I object to grand, sweeping changes negotiated in the political sphere because once you introduce politics you can't disentangle it. Especially inside the global political sphere. Carbon emissions become a club to wield against political enemies and defend political interests, and it becomes decoupled from the environmental good.

      So I'm in favor of continuing study of climatology, and to continue to work on the climate models. This is good science that we need to know. I'm in favor of establishing some kind of baseline to measure carbon emissions so we can make something like informed decisions. I object to climatologists needing to come up with doomsday scenarios to justify their funding, and I object to emissions legislation whose primary purpose seems to be redistribution of wealth. I don' think this makes me a 9/11 conspiracy theorist, nor a birther. Yet I think the current state of climatology is full of holes concealed by a lot of hand-waving.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    92. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right now a lot of the reason that we are so energy-inefficient is not because we aren't being taxed enough, but because things like building codes are heavily biased against energy efficient homebuilding. So most of the homes that are build are insanely inefficient. Office buildings tend to be more efficient, but still not at the level of efficiency that would be possible if the codes were biased in favor of efficiency, rather than against it. E.g., I'm building a house in Vermont. The guy at the local lumber company was *aghast* when I told him I wanted 14" thick walls and R40 insulation. Nobody does that! In *Vermont*! That's just lame - there's no excuse for building an energy-inefficient house. They're more comfortable, hugely cheaper to heat and cool, and don't cost much extra to build--yes, you spend more on insulation, but you can buy a cheaper heater or chiller.

      Sorry, I missed the part where regulations (AKA building codes) interfered with your attempt to build a more energy efficient house. What you describe sounds more like regional tradition and culture caused the response you got from the local lumber company. Now building codes can reflect local traditions, but their intended purpose is safety so they may very well conflict with traditional building practices as well (especially when newly enacted). I certainly agree that building codes can, and should, promote both safety and energy efficiency; but you have yet to provide an example of them actually being biased against energy efficiency.

    93. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Ferretman · · Score: 1

      Actually the correct term is "Skeptic".

      As a scientist I want to see the facts and will draw my own conclusions, thank you. Right now, my take on the various temperature data is that the planet is almost certainly warming but the evidence for mankind having anything to do with it is thin and contradictory. Both of these conclusions are consistent with known global cyclic data (i.e., we're coming out of an Ice Age) and the scale of human-induced factors vs. natural climate.

      Lots to learn here, lots to study. By NO means does any credible scientist call any debate on this "settled".

      --
      Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc
    94. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Yes, scientists are not always right but until someone is able to show why they are wrong I think the odds are you go with the current understanding. To reject what climate scientists say is happening because it doesn't fit your ideology and will force you to adjust your lifestyle is just stupid because if they're right and we don't try to do anything about it the crash when it comes will just be that much harder.

    95. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Many people have offered reasons why their conclusions don't make any sense and how they have gotten it wrong (the recent period of global cooling comes to mind). Since climate science has become something more akin to a religion (see the repeated use of the derogatory denailist label) it has been setting off the common sense alarm the more I listen to them. The leaked emails show the same disdain for anyone who questions their work.

      I don't have an ideology, nor do I fear an adjustment to my lifestyle. It's just when someting sounds like a duck, looks like a duck and acts like a duck then it's generally a duck. In this case climate science sounds, looks and acts like a quasi-cult and so I'm skeptical. My observation of scientific certainty during 40+ years has shown me they often claim their intellectual superiority and absolute certainty of their conclusions and only end up having to revise their theories. If you're going to talk about playing the odds then I'd say the odds are in my favor since their science seems pretty thin.

    96. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      What recent global cooling? If you think it's been cooling since 1998 you're wrong. AP gave the temperature data to several statisticians without telling them what the data represented and asked them to analyze it for trends. They found no cooling trend over time. Read the story here.

    97. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by intheshelter · · Score: 1
    98. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Did you even bother to read the story? I picked it because it was the first reprint of the AP article I found on Google.

      What the article basically says is that it's not statistically valid to say there has been global cooling lately. If you look at the temperature record of the last 130 years there are several periods where global temperatures dropped for 5-10 years. It doesn't change the long term upward trend. So when you say "recent global cooling" you're propagating misinformation (that's fancy talk for telling a lie).

    99. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Has there been recent global cooling? . .. Yes. No lie there.

      Did their climate models fail to predict this (the climate models they tell us to believe in without question them)? . . . Yes. No lie there.

      Seems like you are the only one propagating misinformation. (that's fancy talk for telling a lie).

    100. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      There has not been recent global cooling in any meaningful way. Take a look at this graph of global temperature since 1880 and tell me that the past decade looks any different than any other similar period. Despite being the coldest year of the decade 2008 was still warmer than any year before 1998 and 2009 will be a warmer year than 2008 unless the next 15 days are -200 or so. The 2000s are still going to be the warmest decade on record.

      Climate models didn't fail to predict "this" because they don't even attempt to predict it. Climate models don't try to account for natural variability because they can't. You can't predict the timing of an El Nino or the lower than normal solar minimum we're currently experiencing or any number of other natural factors that affect the short term weather but average out over longer periods of time. That's why (at least some) climate models project a 30 year average trend line. That's long enough to smooth out the effects of short term variations like we're currently experiencing. That's the difference between climate and weather.

    101. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Well, I looked at your graph. First, I do see global cooling during that period. Second, your qualifier "in any meaningful way" is a bullshit way to sidestep the issue in the hope that it will somehow silence a critic. Third, saying the 2000's are still going to be the warmest decade on record is an unknowable statement so, again, it's complete bullshit.

      In response to your statement about climate models not failing to predict it because "they don't even attempt to predict it", that is bullshit as well. The whole existence of the climate model is to predict the future climate and so your first sentence in this paragraph is so ridiculously incorrect it boggles the mind. The statement, "Climate models don't try to account for natural variability because they can't" also leads me to wonder if you have really thought your argument through. If climate models can not account for natural variability then how could we possibly use them as a tool? If you don't know what natural variability is then how can you discern what un-natural variability would be? The next incorrect point in your argument is the fact that you saty that climate models can't predict the solar minimum we're having, when climate "scientists" repeatedly say that the solar minimum has been factored into their climate models and thus solar minimums should not be used as a point to dispute their findings. And, finally, your attempt to turn the 2000's into "weather" to disqualify it from contention is ridiculous. All your stats refer to climate and any dissenters points only refer to weather, is that how it works?

      Sorry, but your whole post is riddled with the standard fare of climate cultism. Climate science seems less about science and more about clever debating techniques to try and disqualify anyone else's arguments.

    102. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      And how many other dips in temperature do you see in the graph? What "in any meaningful way" means that if the cooling trend is 15 years or less it doesn't mean the earth is cooling because it's happened before because of natural variability and other factors. For instance look at the years from 1894 to 1904. The year to year variations in that period are similar to what we've seen since 1999 but that didn't stop the warming that's happened since then. By your description there was a cooling trend from '98-'99, '02-'04, '05-'06 and '07-'08. There was a warming trend from '96-'98, '00-'02, '04-05 and '06-'07. From a climate perspective those are absurd statements. If you have some secret information about why it will start really cooling off in the future you should let us know about it.

      If you take the 2000s to be 2000 to 2009 then there's only 14 days left in that period and it's not possible that it won't be the warmest decade on record. Even if you take the 2000s to be 2001 to 2010 then 2010 would have to be so cold to bring the decadal average down lower than the 1990s that it's ridiculous to contemplate. As I said, every year since 1998 has been warmer than any year before 1991 and only 1999 and 2000 were cooler than any year since 1989. I don't take that to be a cooling trend.

      I don't doubt that anything about climate models boggles your mind as you obviously have no clue about what they model. Maybe I can simplify it enough for you but I have my doubts. Climate fundamentally is the statistics of weather. It is a description of the trend of weather over long periods of time. To use a radio analogy climate is the carrier signal that the noise of weather and natural variability vary around. Climate models are projecting that carrier signal, or you could say the average weather. They don't and as I said can't project the details because they are chaotic. Another example of a chaotic system that you can model the general characteristics of is a lump of radioactive material. It's impossible to predict when any specific atom will decay but it is possible to say that in a half life of the material half of the atoms will have decayed.

      We understand natural variability just fine (but of course there's always more details to learn). While you can't give the exact timing and strength of something like the El Nino/La Nina cycle you can say something like "Based on past records of the phenomenon, over the next 30 year period we expect about 7 El Ninos and 7 La Ninas to occur and it will have this effect on climate". Since climate models don't attempt to predict those short term variations that's good enough to use in the model.

      On solar, what climate scientists say is that solar input is factored into the models because that is the source of nearly all of the energy input into the earth system but the current solar minimum can only be used in hindcasts since it's a phenomenon that can only be forecast in general terms of the 22 year solar cycle and past performance being expected to continue. No one predicted the current unusual solar minimum. Maybe in the future we'll be able to do better. But when you're modeling a 30 year trend it doesn't matter much exactly what the solar cycle does as long as it doesn't stray too far from past observations (which is hasn't) because the variations average out over that long of a period. If a natural variation averages out like that over the period you're examining then it's reasonable to model it with a straight line that is the expected average over 30 years because you're not trying to project the short term variations.

      I'm not trying to disqualify the 2000s at all. Please include it. Just don't make up your own definition of what climate is. There has been no discernible cooling trend lately unless you cherry pick 1998 as your starting year and even that cooling trend is barely discernible. That's just not a scientifically valid way to do it.

      I challenge you to disprove any of my statements with real data. You may be able to nitpick some of it but the basic ideas are scientifically correct.

    103. Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Really? I though that the point of any political group was to produce and distribute propaganda.

      That's government. Policy groups like the IPCC put the face on.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
  14. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by brainchill · · Score: 0, Troll

    Oh .. .and where I live it began snowing earlier than ever ... mid october and is now experiencing the coldest temperatures in recorded history.

  15. Hottest month in Darwin... by Nutria · · Score: 2, Informative

    They've been keeping records for what, 150-200 years? That's a lot by our puny standards, but not in geological times.

    And when you say, "tree rings!", I ask, "How precise are they?" A cool but sunny summer, or hot but dusty/cloudy/smoky summer could produce anomalous results.

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    1. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by wizardforce · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's only anomalous if there's only one set of data points. YOu can take samples from all over the planet if you wish and compare the various samples which significantly reduces any local effects that skew the data. Isotope ratios can also be used to give an idea of the climate as well. Just because we haven't been keeping direct temperature records does not mean that the data set just stops.

      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
    2. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by Nutria · · Score: 1

      That's a very interesting article. I just bookmarked it.

      However, note "we have no analogue for what will happen next."

      Also, (dark, heat-absorbing) Chinese soot has been found in Arctic pack ice, the Himalayas and the Colorado Rockies. Trapping that soot (like the US did in the 1970s) would restore ice levels.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    3. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by Jacques+Chester · · Score: 1

      Darwin was founded in 1869 as Port Darwin / Palmerston.

      The data under discussion is a series from records beginning in the 1880s, which were later continued into a series taken from a weather station at Darwin Airport (from the 1920s onwards, I believe).

      There are anomalies in the series which coincide with the Japanese bombing of Darwin and the city being struck by Cyclone Tracy, the worst natural disaster in the city's history.

      Two things that aren't exactly clear to me are:

      • When the airport-based series takes over from earlier records, and
      • Whether "airport" means the current site of the airport, or the original site of the airport (which is much closer to the sea), or some mix of both.

      I suppose if I still lived in Darwin I could ring the Bureau of Meteorology and ask them about it. They or the State Library should be able to sort out the question of what was gathered where and when.

      --

      Classical Liberalism: All your base are belong to you.

    4. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by Neon+Aardvark · · Score: 1

      And when you say, "tree rings!", I ask, "How precise are they?" A cool but sunny summer, or hot but dusty/cloudy/smoky summer could produce anomalous results.

      Some carefully selected tree ring series are very, very accurate until 1st January 1960 (just after the calibration period) when they become massively inaccurate, and MUST NOT BE PLOTTED.

      Also, "denialist" isn't a loaded, flamebait term.

      --
      Azural - instrumentals
    5. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by oldhack · · Score: 1

      This catastrophic global warming claim just doesn't pass the bullshit detector test that we in science/tech fields develop.

      It's one thing to theorize the origin of the universe with Big Bang theory. Wholly another to set trillion-dollar policies based on tenuous model of poorly understood climate of Earth based on the data available that is, given the timescale involved, less than inadequate.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    6. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      thats nice. now show me how that translates into man made CO2 and into warming. ice bubbles is a LONG way from having anything solid enough to demand we spend trillions on changing the worlds economy.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    7. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by Kenoli · · Score: 1

      They've been keeping records for what, 150-200 years? That's a lot by our puny standards, but not in geological times.

      More like 68 years. Not really a lot by anyone's standards.

      Anyway it seems almost offtopic in the summary.
      Some crazy global warming drama, oh and BY THE WAY the average temperature record for October at some place gets beat by 0.4C!
      I'm not sure how something so ridiculously insignificant be relevant to this story.

    8. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      No but it gets less accurate. The only way to know for sure what temperature something is is to actually measure the temperature. To do otherwise, you have to infer it. The more inferential you get, the more levels you have, the more error potential you have. As an example:

      Suppose I want to know how much power is flowing through a given wire. If I directly measure the wire's voltage and amperage, I get an extremely accurate result. Now assume I can't do that, what I instead have to do is measure the amount of light given off from the light bulb that is causing the load on the wire. Ok, doable, but there's now a lot more room for error. For one, it is harder to measure the total light output and to measure the power. Also I have to make correct assumptions about things like the efficiency of the light bulb. Failing to do so will offset my numbers. Now suppose I can't measure the light directly, I can only compare it with other lights to attempt to find a similar level. Now suppose I can't view the lights directly, I have to look at a reflection of the light, and so on.

      At each point, there gets to be more and more problems, more and more room for screwups. Also, even if I do everything right, at each point maximum precision degrades. I just cannot be as precise as I was earlier, even if all my measurements and assumptions are correct.

      So that's the problem you get with indirect temperature measurements as well. There are a lot of confounding factors. In the case of tree rings precipitation would be a major one. However even if you manage to get all that accounted for, it is still less accurate. Ok well that's a problem when the change you are talking about is small. If your change falls within your margin of error, you've got nothing. If I tell you there's been an increase in X of 1% but my margin for error is +-5%, well then I haven't told you anything useful.

    9. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The story in the link is in error. Last October was NOT the hottest on record... it's the hottest on record (mean monthly max of 34.8) at the DARWIN AIRPORT. Earlier, the weather station was at the post office, and recorded several higher MMMs for October.

      1882 35.3
      1883 34.9
      1886 35.2
      1888 35.3
      1889 35.7
      1891 35.2
      1892 35.5
      1893 35.3
      1901 34.9

      http://www.bom.gov.au/jsp/ncc/cdio/weatherData/av?p_nccObsCode=36&p_display_type=dataFile&p_startYear=&p_stn_num=14016

    10. Re:Hottest month in Darwin... by Troed · · Score: 1

      No, it doesn't. The ice core shows one thing - and if you want to show that the current levels are higher you need to graft a completely different dataset (CO2 as measured at Mauna Loa) onto it.

      So, a real scientist would now investigate if there's a reason to think the ice core might not show short term fluctuations - and lo and behold - there is :) It's called gas diffusion, and would cause peaks and troughs to become smoothed over time as the ice compresses.

      http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6V61-4F1GYYN-1&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchStrId=1133886259&_rerunOrigin=google&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=76ca7039c45b0a7d173716e8b8c8e8a2

      http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6V78-48XV20J-TR&_user=10&_origUdi=B6TJ6-4BT7H1X-2&_fmt=high&_coverDate=04%2F30%2F1992&_rdoc=1&_orig=article&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=f9e5b003426d2b42cad752f7fc6961d3

      Thus, the headline of the post you link to is not scientifically accurate. The ice cores show no such thing - but a proxy with direct measurements tacked onto it does.

      (Yes, that is exactly the same technique that was used to create the now-falsified temperature hockeysticks)

  16. What a stupid post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you need a Phd to be able to say anything about climate, tell Al Gore to shut his big mouth, especially considering all the wrong graphs he has show.
    If this guy claims that he knows and others don't why does he write "Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia.". This is a weather forecast of a local event, this has absolutely nothing to do with the current debate, and proves that the author is a jerk.

  17. If it requires a PHD by Norsefire · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If the dissenters are morons who don't understand it, what does that make the believers? Blind-faith followers? You can't have your cake and eat it too.

    1. Re:If it requires a PHD by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If the dissenters are morons who don't understand it, what does that make the believers? Blind-faith followers? You can't have your cake and eat it too.

      Ultimately it comes down to reputation - nobody can be an expert in everything. So you - as a regular guy whose vote doesn't really count anyway - have to rely on the reputations of the people making claims and the reputations of those refuting the claims. Even the people who do have a vote - politicians, the men with man-sacks full of gold, etc - have to ultimately rely on reputations too, just they have an obligation to do a much better job of evaluating those reputations before making up their minds.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    2. Re:If it requires a PHD by Sygnus · · Score: 1

      You can't have your cake and eat it too.

      Then what's the point of having cake?!?

      --
      First posting isn't trolling. It's...first posting. :) -- Illiad
    3. Re:If it requires a PHD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who get out of the way and let smart people figure things out? Or do you try to tell doctors how to make vaccines better too thanks to the news article you read?

    4. Re:If it requires a PHD by Draek · · Score: 1

      If the dissenters are morons who don't understand it, what does that make the believers? Blind-faith followers?

      Well, yeah. But Occam's Razor says that it's better to trust the guy with the PhD than the guy without, so we're marginally superior sheep at least ;)

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    5. Re:If it requires a PHD by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 1

      But Occam's Razor says that it's better to trust the guy with the PhD than the guy without, so we're marginally superior sheep at least

      Nope. Occam's Razor says nothing at all about trusting anyone. I think the one you're looking for is "argument from authority" and its a logical fallacy.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    6. Re:If it requires a PHD by Draek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wrong. Occam's Razor says that, faced with alternate theories both explaining satisfactorily the same phenomena, you must assume as correct that which requires the least assumptions.

      Here it's between "people who have studied for many years the field have determined such, and have decided not to answer critiques from anybody who can't demonstrate having studied the field similarly" and "people who have studied the field for many years have conspired to create a false impression upon everybody else, and silence any critic who dares break the illusion". The one that requires the least assumptions is, obviously, the former instead of the latter, therefore that's what you must assume as true until proven otherwise.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    7. Re:If it requires a PHD by IICV · · Score: 1

      So NASA says "Hey guys, we've found an asteroid that has a 90% chance of hitting the Earth in a hundred years. We don't really know what'll happen, but we're pretty sure it'll be bad."

      Would you say that the people who believe them and start taking steps to minimize the damage the asteroid can cause are blind-faith followers? You'd need to have a PhD in astrophysics and your own observatory to really check up on NASA; would you rather believe a bunch of assholes with telescopes in their back yards, who say it's really just Sputnik 14?

      It's the same situation with the IPCC and global climate change.

    8. Re:If it requires a PHD by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      If the dissenters are morons who don't understand it, what does that make the believers? Blind-faith followers?

      No, they're morons who don't understand it, too*. The difference is, believers are willing to admit that fact, while dissenters like to pretend they know better and should be the ones dictating reality.

      *This obviously excludes the PhDs who are qualified.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    9. Re:If it requires a PHD by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      "Wrong. Occam's Razor says that, faced with alternate theories both explaining satisfactorily the same phenomena, you must assume as correct that which requires the least assumptions."

      Wow. That's a more mangled Occam's razor than usual.

      Occam's razor is usually literally stated as "entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity" which is generally interpreted as, given two equally good explanations of a set of observations, the simplest is more likely to be correct.

      There's nothing about "must assume." Occam's razor is a general guideline, not a law of nature.

    10. Re:If it requires a PHD by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      So NASA says "Hey guys, we've found an asteroid that has a 90% chance of hitting the Earth in a hundred years. We don't really know what'll happen, but we're pretty sure it'll be bad."

      If NASA were to say that, I'd assume they were full of crap - they can't predict an orbit that accurately that far in the future.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    11. Re:If it requires a PHD by Draek · · Score: 1

      From your link:

      Occam's razor states that the explanation of any phenomenon should make as few assumptions as possible, eliminating those that make no difference in the observable predictions of the explanatory hypothesis or theory.

      Or later on:

      When competing hypotheses are equal in other respects, the principle recommends selection of the hypothesis that introduces the fewest assumptions and postulates the fewest entities while still sufficiently answering the question. It is in this sense that Occam's razor is usually understood.

      So, same meaning, only sightly different phrasing.

      There's nothing about "must assume." Occam's razor is a general guideline, not a law of nature.

      "Must assume" != "it is so". "Must assume" = "should assume to avoid burdening one's own hypothesis with unnecessary problems". You can believe, of course, that the entire scientific body of the world is conspiring against Truth, Justice and the American Way of Life, much like you can believe your cat created the universe yesterday and your whole "life" is nothing but a memory implanted by him in your brain. It's just that, without specific data making it the simplest explanation over those we already use, you'll just end up looking like a fool in the world's eyes if you do so.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    12. Re:If it requires a PHD by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Occam's Razor says that, faced with alternate theories both explaining satisfactorily the same phenomena, you must assume as correct that which requires the least assumptions.

      How would that apply to the two postulations that:

      1) the variability of the Sun's output causes the temperatures on Earth to fluctuate over time

      -or-

      2) disregarding fossil evidence of the CO2 concentration fluctuating out of sync with the Earth's temperature over time, CO2 concentration is really what's affecting temperature this time, and it's Man's fault, and the only way to solve this is with one-world government policies, even though any proposals on the table will have a negligible effect, and model sensitivity to support such regulator schemes has been shown to be incorrect but must be accepted anyway.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  18. Peer Reviewed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, so we put a bunch of people in the same room that (usually) have the same opinion about the science their doing? Here is the problem I see: Right now Climate change is popular, if you do publish a paper that says "Wait guys, you might not be right..." you get it peer reviewed and it will get rejected 100% of the time... If the board is all one sided like it is now, what is the point?

  19. You Don't Need a PhD to Know When a Chart's Bogus by thepainguy · · Score: 1, Troll

    In my Inconvenient Truth Analysis, I point out how Al Gore and/or his graphic designers use a set of information design tricks to try to increase the visual impact of their money slide. For instance, on the right side of the chart you can see where they overlaid one set of data (the red peaks) over another (the blue peaks).

  20. Science by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Most of the anti-AGW crowd is simply doing armchair, a-priori reasoning behind why AGW is false. "Humans are too puny to have an effect!" they say, or "The climate has changed drastically fast even without humanity being around!" Often there are political reasons for holding this position--certain arguments on how to deal with GW are certainly political in nature, and may come into conflict with one's own dogma, and thus psychologically one may be predisposed to oppose GW on that basis.

    HOWEVER, that does not mean that some people that argue for AGW do not fit into the same shoes. Remember, just because you are "correct" does not mean your reasoning is. Naturally, someone that hates big business and "the man" may also psychologically have a reason to believe in AGW--another reason to rage on about the status quo.

    If I was a betting man I'd bet for AGW, but really I know the science behind it is quite complicated and I know I'm nowhere near competent to make a good, solid argument on the matter, so I must approach the issue with a tempered agnosticism while leaning a bit towards the AGW side because that's the verdict by a vast majority of hard-working PhDs, and I highly doubt that climatologists consist of some dark, left-wing communist sect of economy-destroying conspirators. That is what true skepticism is, noncommitance (particularly emotionally) to a position particularly when you are not an expert on it. Many on both sides of the GW debate are not skeptics but reactionaries with their thought ruled by political underpinnings. Most of the people I know that rant about how AGW is a fraud no absolutely nothing about the mechanisms scientists go about acquiring the data on past climate conditions.

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

      I am instantly skeptical of any scientist that makes statements such as "this can only be understood by someone with a PhD in a related field"

      In my experience, people making these kind of claims don't know nearly as much about the subject as they want people to believe they know. That, or they believe they are a god, and then they are just as likely to have made up the data to begin with.

    2. Re:Science by arminw · · Score: 0

      ...I highly doubt that climatologists consist of some dark, left-wing communist sect of economy-destroying conspirators...

      However, the pilfered e-mails show that these so-called scientists have an axe to grind. They labeled it a "travesty" that the data do not support their socialistic political agenda. They also tried to pervert the open peer review process by not allowing those who have contrary papers to publish them. That, to me is a most terrible thing for anybody who wants to call himself a scientist to do. Those guys should hand their degrees back and go drive a garbage truck.

      --
      All theory is gray
    3. Re:Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sadly I don't have mod points, but I approve this message.

    4. Re:Science by darjen · · Score: 1

      I also lean towards AGW as well. but I'll be damned if political action has any chance in hell of fixing these problems. seems to me like technology is our only way out.

    5. Re:Science by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I am instantly skeptical of any scientist that makes statements such as "this can only be understood by someone with a PhD in a related field"

      Many nuances are involved in many fields that may not be immediately obvious.

      And your point is certainly wrong when taken to the extreme, such as theoretical particle physics or the like.

    6. Re:Science by RightwingNutjob · · Score: 1

      1+1=2 everywhere, even in abstract algebra. If you claim that even that part of the smell test for your theory-that-if-taken-as-true-means-less-freedom-for-me-and-cushy-government-policy-making-seat-for-you is too hard for me to understand...well, the founding fathers wisely put the first and second amendments into the constitution to discourage this sort of behavior.

    7. Re:Science by CAIMLAS · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm one of those done armchair, a-priori reasoning on global warming. Here are my reasons for believing it's "not true":

      * Those behind the "global warming scare" (Gore and the others at the political forefront) are making money hand over fist for their efforts through things like carbon credits. That sounds like a profit scam moreso than someone(s) genuinely concerned.
      * The "man-caused climate change" argument has been made since my parents were in grade school, and now I've got kids that age. Yet, the arguments have been not only significantly, but drastically different. They are also emotional and alarmist arguments - what we typically call "propaganda" - not providing any actual facts or explanation with the presentation.
      * It is not because AWG "may come into conflict with one's own dogma, and thus psychologically one may be predisposed to oppose GW on that basis." It's because it will impact me, at my wallet, negatively. It will hurt everyone who falls under whatever "climate saving" tax that comes out of this, while helping (through our pain) countries like China (which have/enforce no such regulations).
      * There is enough of the data supporting "global warming" being found fraudulent, inaccurate, or intentionally misleading (with fairly regular basis, it seems) to call suspect to the rest of it.
      * If there is a dissenting voice supported by evidence of any type, they are usually ridiculed by the AGW establishment (publicly, on the news and what not) once or twice, and then promptly ignored.
      * Politicians have decided to politicize global warming by pushing a solution before we are certain - dead certain - that a) we are, indeed, responsible for the 'warming' and b) there is anything we can do about it, and c) what the actual causes are, and d) that anything we might do about it would actually be productive - ie, not result in more harm than good.
      * By that last point, I mean: don't destroy the economy outright, or make it less productive. Why? Because poor economies, and poor peoples, tend to not be environmentally conscientious. It won't do a hell of a lot of good if we're all driving EVs in 10 years if everyone is dumping or burning their motor oil to save money, or discarding their spent battery cores in the dump.

      Basically, I'm repulsed by the reactionary, emotional, and illogical approach the AGW supporters take, and the deceptive, immoral political means they will go to reach their ends. It's disgusting and not befitting of an intellectual mind. Furthermore, they're pushing for things which I know (as someone who has read at least a little about history) are ultimately more destructive than instructive.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    8. Re:Science by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      "Most of the anti-AGW crowd is simply doing armchair, a-priori reasoning behind why AGW is false. "Humans are too puny to have an effect!" they say..."

      I'd argue the opposite.
      Since the beginning of history, mankind has thought he was 'special' or able to control/effect nature.
      We thought for a long while that we were at the center of the universe.

      I'd argue that the pro-AGW crowd is most likely simply continuing this tradition, albeit negatively, and just don't like the idea that humans and their impact are too trivial for the global environment to care.

      --
      -Styopa
    9. Re:Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the anti-AGW crowd is simply doing armchair, a-priori reasoning behind why AGW is false. "Humans are too puny to have an effect!" they say, or "The climate has changed drastically fast even without humanity being around!" Often there are political reasons for holding this position--

      And you start your diatribe with 2 logical fallacies. A pair of strawmen and an ad-hominem.

      And there's a third later on:

      by a vast majority of hard-working PhDs

      An appeal to authority.

    10. Re:Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, please, please support your conclusion through analysis of one of the hundreds of publically-available historical climate datasets.

      Please also show us your scientific reasoning and alternative climate model that supports your position.

      I don't care a whit about the political aspects, I want to see your science so that I can verify your results - just like I am able to do for mainstream research.

      Pardon? You can't?

      That's what I thought.

  21. Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It really does weaken the position of those who support the AGW theory. Why? Because it is name calling and over simplification. Pretending that everyone who doesn't agree with you is simply in denial of what is happening and then making up a cute little label is not the sort of thing that speaks to a rational debate. It is the kind of thing a con man would do, and thus makes people wonder, why would you use those tactics?

    So as a start, you have to understand that there are some major differences in terms of what people believe who are skeptical of the AGW thing. These are just some examples:

    1) There are people who believe the whole thing is a crock, there is no warming, it is all made up, etc, etc. These are the only people who could be called in denial, by any stretch of the imagination.

    2) There are people who believe that there has been a warming trend recently, however the trend is entirely natural. It is right in line with the kind of trends seen historically, and thus there is no cause to believe this is anything but a natural occurrence. They are skeptical that humans are contributing in any significant fashion.

    3) There are people who believe that there is warming, and indeed man is contributing to it, but that the result will not be problematic, and perhaps beneficial. They do not accept the conclusion that the warming will lead to catastrophe, even though they do accept that humans are at least partly causing it. They are skeptical that a warmer Earth will be bad for humans.

    4) There are people who believe that people are causing the warming, and that it will lead to worse conditions, but that it would be even worse to attempt to stop it. They believe that the money spent on trying to stop such a thing could be better spent on other things to improve human life. The sort of thing that while warming might cause X additional deaths per year, spending money on that instead of other things would lead to 5X additional deaths per year. They are skeptical that the proposed solutions are the best.

    5) There are people who believe that people are causing the arming and that it needs to be stopped, but that reducing output won't do that. We need a different solution like geoengineering or something. Reducing CO2 output wouldn't help, at least not enough to matter, so we've got to find another solution. They are skeptical that the proposed solutions would do anything.

    6) There are people who believe that people are causing the warming, and that it will be bad, but there is fuck-all we can do about it. We are too far along, shit is going to happen anyhow, so we might as well apply our energies and money to surviving the change, not to trying to prevent it, since that it impossible. They are skeptical anything can be done at all, other than to try and survive the change.

    So a big part of the problem with trying to frame everyone as a "denialist" is the simplification of the argument, to try and say "Oh they all just ignore everything that is said." No, in fact, many don't. They simply come to a different conclusion. Also they may well find enough evidence to sustain part of the argument, but not all of it. You find people who say "Sure, I'll buy the world is getting warmer. We've got pretty good instrumental data on that. However I'm not so sure about CO2 being the cause. The data on that is more shaky. Either way I'm really skeptical that a warmer Earth will be a bad thing, there's essentially no data to support that." They aren't just saying "La la la, I can't hear you!" They are just not convinced by all the arguments.

    Well, when you simply dismiss them as a "denialist" and act as though they are a moron, that does nothing to convert them. In fact, it may do the opposite. They say "Hmmm, this is the kind of thing con men do. When someone questions them, they just attack and shout down their questioner. They are afraid of scrutiny. They want you to accept what they say, unquestioningly. Why are AGW proponents acting like this? Could they be con men?"

    So seriously, knock it off with the label. You are doing nothing to help.

    1. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by techno-vampire · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It really does weaken the position of those who support the AGW theory. Why? Because it is name calling and over simplification.

      It's also a blatant attempt to demonize and marginalize them by linking them implicitly to Holocaust deniers.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    2. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Misguided liberals hijacked W's tactics. Liberal, conservative, doesn't matter - it's stupidity, stupid.

    3. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by thoth · · Score: 1

      It really does weaken the position of those who support the AGW theory...

      The thing is, most anti-AGW proponents come off as people not wanting to change anything because it isn't convenient for them. So naturally, denying everything allows things to proceed as they are now, along the current status quo.

      Even if you don't believe AGW, how about some related topics:

      1) The U.S. currently consumes 25% of the world oil. China and India each have about 3 times the population. If China and India scale up and consume oil at the same per-capita rate as the U.S., then they will use 150% of the world's oil. That's probably not going to sit well with the rest of the world, besides being impossible and causing serious economic problems.

      2) The U.S. currently produces around 20 metric tons of CO2 per capita. This is inline with other first world nations and/or oil rich nations. China and India are around 4 and 1 metric tons per capita. Once again, if they scale up to match their first world peers, that's a lot more CO2 pouring into the world's atmosphere.

      So deny global warming all you want... that isn't going to solve the actual problems we're headed towards. Some models indicate temperatures will rise between 1 and 6 degrees C over the next century, and we can probably get along fine at the lower end. But it is more likely that economic distortions and/or all out energy wars will wreak havoc, before the oceans flood have a chance to drown us all.

    4. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It really does weaken the position of those who support the AGW theory. Why? Because it is name calling and over simplification.

      It's also a blatant attempt to demonize and marginalize them by linking them implicitly to Holocaust deniers.

      I don't think that is the intention, but I find the comparison amazingly accurate: Both are holding positions in face of overwhelming consensus by people who are experts in the subject as well as in face of physical evidence. Both are often politically motivated in their preconceived notions. Neither can be reasoned with rationally...

    5. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Bios_Hakr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your first point only holds true at current prices. As more people come into the "modern" era, the prices will go up. In short, those who are now in 3rd world conditions can never really get out of those conditions in an oil-based economy.

      --
      I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
    6. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      The thing is, most anti-AGW proponents come off as people not wanting to change anything because it isn't convenient for them. So naturally, denying everything allows things to proceed as they are now, along the current status quo.

      Unless you probe the person, you'll never figure out what point of the grandparent's scale the person falls in. You're just blithely assuming that they're "denying everything" when in fact they may not.

      In short, you're practicing the worst kind of prejudice, lumping everybody who doesn't agree with you exactly into the same group.

      Try treating people as individuals, who have formed their own opinions. You might gain more traction.

    7. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by techno-vampire · · Score: 2, Informative
      Both are holding positions in face of overwhelming consensus by people who are experts in the subject as well as in face of physical evidence.

      You do realize, don't you, that current polls show that less than 90% of qualified climate scientists believe AGW has been proved? Doesn't sound like much of a consensus to me. And, unlike history, when it comes to science consensus means nothing, only the facts.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    8. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your post.

      It is my point of view as well. I don't deny global warming, I just don't think the proposed "solutions" will solve it and I don't think that reducing output will stop it.

      We need to use more technology to find ways to capture CO2 faster than it is output, because the many millions, actually billions, of people living in poverty around the world will one day be outputting more CO2 as their standards of living rise.

      I actually make a living raising organic, free-range cattle; so I feel very pissed when someone tells me I am a lackey of big oil or whatever, but I know free-range cattle does not scale, not to feed billions of humans; so it is more of a cool luxury rather than a true solution to hunger and it does contribute more CO2 (deforestation) than industrial raising of cattle, but ask anyone and it is very, very green thing to do, and actually very profitable.

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    9. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Trepidity · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the consensus is at quite different orders of magnitude. The Holocaust is a historical event that happened, and happened so recently and at such a large scale that there ample physical evidence, large numbers of photographs, and testimony from participants, and even thousands of eye witnesses still alive.

      Anthropogenic global warming is orders of magnitude trickier. In its strongest form, it's a prediction about what is likely to happen in the future, to an extremely complicated dynamical system with millions of variables. Even in the purely backwards-looking form, it's an attempt to reconstruct a temperature record from heterogenous and often problematic sources, factor out confounding factors, and attribute a portion of the observed data to human activity. It doesn't take skepticism in general to realize that no matter how well done an endeavor like that is, it can hardly hope to be as certain as the knowledge that a particular widely observed and well-documented historical event happened 55 years ago.

    10. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by thoth · · Score: 1

      Yes... but the larger point is that IF 2 BILLION more people start demanding oil at the rate the U.S. does (or whatever country of choice that currently consumes a lot), the economic changes and market warping that will occur will cause some major issues around the world. Prices will skyrocket, entire industry segments will face shortages, etc.

    11. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by thoth · · Score: 1

      Fine, then continue reading past what you quoted... glad you're so concerned over proper protocol, while misdirection attention from the main point. Which is: doesn't matter if you believe in global warming or not, we're headed for economic problems that will likely be far more severe.

    12. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      That's a rather ridiculous statement on the face of it. Science does not "prove" anything. Science is about developing and refining a set of working assumptions that are used to predict future events. If you were to ask a scientist if any basic assumption was proven he should answer no.

      I'd really like to see that poll. Do you have a link to the original question that was asked?

    13. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by sheriff_p · · Score: 1

      Awesome points; this is the kind of post that we need a "Best Of" flag for.

      --
      Score:-1, Funny
    14. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I understand correctly, because demand goes up, prices will go up, meaning things will end up reverting (more or less) eventually...

      Sounds about right.

    15. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Kohath · · Score: 1

      The thing is, most anti-AGW proponents come off as people not wanting to change anything because it isn't convenient for them. So naturally, denying everything allows things to proceed as they are now, along the current status quo.

      Wow. They actually want to keep doing things that, as far as they can tell, make them better off? Those people sound completely rational.

      1) The U.S. currently consumes 25% of the world oil. China and India each have about 3 times the population. If China and India scale up and consume oil at the same per-capita rate as the U.S., then they will use 150% of the world's oil. That's probably not going to sit well with the rest of the world, besides being impossible and causing serious economic problems.

      Economics explains how populations behave under these pressures. More oil becomes available and/or prices rise and demand drops. I think it's in the first chapter of every elementary Economics book.

      Also, the talking point about the US using 25% of resources is a half truth. We're 27% of the world's GDP. We produce things with those resources. You thought we were just hoarding them?

      2) The U.S. currently produces around 20 metric tons of CO2 per capita. This is inline with other first world nations and/or oil rich nations. China and India are around 4 and 1 metric tons per capita. Once again, if they scale up to match their first world peers, that's a lot more CO2 pouring into the world's atmosphere.

      And? I guess the people of China and India shouldn't want to have better lives? Or shouldn't be allowed to?

      So deny global warming all you want... that isn't going to solve the actual problems we're headed towards. Some models indicate temperatures will rise between 1 and 6 degrees C over the next century, and we can probably get along fine at the lower end. But it is more likely that economic distortions and/or all out energy wars will wreak havoc, before the oceans flood have a chance to drown us all.

      You'd think a century would give us time to take 10 steps back from the water line. Or build a half meter high sea wall in critical spots. I guess not though.

    16. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      I'd really like to see that poll. Do you have a link to the original question that was asked?

      Alas, I don't. If you prefer to deny it exists, I shan't argue.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    17. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      The thing is, most anti-AGW proponents come off as people not wanting to change anything because it isn't convenient for them.

      And a lot of pro-AGW proponents come off as activists whose primary goal is to impose their preferred lifestyle globally, regardless of whether it makes sense economically. Drastically reducing our energy consumption is just one possible solution, but it's the only one most environmentalists are interested in. Look at their decades of FUD against nuclear power, which has arguably resulted in more environmental damage than every squadron of Big Oil lobbyists.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    18. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yes... but the larger point is that IF 2 BILLION more people start demanding oil at the rate the U.S. does (or whatever country of choice that currently consumes a lot), the economic changes and market warping that will occur will cause some major issues around the world. Prices will skyrocket, entire industry segments will face shortages, etc.

      Shortages leading to higher prices is what will provide the capital to develop alternative sources. It makes existing alternatives more competitive now. It doesn't matter if you more slowly consume an non-renewable resource, it runs out if you use it. That means both we will transition to other energy sources and we will stop putting CO2 from non-renewable resources into the air at a certain level determined by physical reality rather than politics.

    19. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      Outstanding post. It would be great if you could get it to a wider audience. AGW proponents are being needlessly polarizing and alienating those of us in categories 4 and 5, with whom there should be some common ground.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    20. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Skeptics who do not use reason and logic are often called denialists. This is an attempt to keep the term skeptic a useful one. While this term may be hurtful, it also happens to be factual.

      It is a waste of time debating someone who will never be satisfied with the evidence. In short, denialists can't be converted. They act like morons and should be treated as such. They should not be given credibility.

      People who believe in AGW but have differing ideas about the response to it are NOT denialists. Anyone who conflates the terms is misusing them. You have constructed a strawman. Not very helpful.

      Disagreements about the response to global change/warming (AGW or not) are perfectly reasonable. Wasting time debating denialists takes away from the things we should be doing.

    21. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by luzr · · Score: 1
      Sorry, I can agree with above points, but where is the "settled science"? There are good reasons to get aways from fossil fuels, but that does not prove or disprove AGW theory, correct?

      That's probably not going to sit well with the rest of the world, besides being impossible and causing serious economic problems.

      See? Right here you say that artificially increasing prices of oil via carbon tax is OK, but if prices will go up because of economy (that happens if some resource becomes scarce), all sudden everything is wrong and we will have serious problems. Don't you see that carbon taxes will create exactly the same problem, this time possibly for some artificial reson?

    22. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Cwix · · Score: 1

      Source?

      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
    23. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Cwix · · Score: 0, Troll

      I just don't think the proposed "solutions" will solve it and I don't think that reducing output will stop it.

      If a car is about to hit a kid, and you dont think you could save him would you walk away without trying?

      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
    24. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by azgard · · Score: 1

      So how many percent of support the second best theory available has? Saying "it's not proven" is not the same as saying "it's not the most likely explanation".

    25. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      I am not denying that it exists. Logically one cannot prove a negative; that is the claim that no such poll exists cannot be proven.

      However since you cannot actually provide evidence of the existence of this poll I am free to apply other logic that make it very apparent that the existence of a poll as you describe is very unlikely.

    26. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Arthur+Grumbine · · Score: 1

      Great post! I, and dozens of intelligent, educated, and honest people that I know, would fall into one of the 2 through 6 categories.

      The only adjustment I would make to this post would be to ease off the whole "con man" angle. Although I'm certain that many people feel this way about certain AGW proponents, that term(con man) is more antagonistic than equivalent terms like "disingenuous", "closed to criticism", or "suspicious".

      --
      Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure everything I just said is completely wrong.
    27. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by downhole · · Score: 0, Troll

      Thank you for taking a more reasonable look at why many people don't really buy into AGW. For me, I don't really have the time to fully evaluate the claims that the earth is getting warmer and that it is mostly due to human release of CO2. IMHO, for things like this, we can never really be 100% sure about it - it's more of a question of how confident we are in the whole chain of events, that the earth is warming, that the warming is caused by human activity, and that the results of this warming will be catastrophically bad. What are you prepared to do about it based on your level of confidence in the theory?

      I may not know much about climate theory, but I do know a little about power production technology. The important part to me is that I have no confidence that human society as a whole will be able to achieve a meaningful reduction in CO2 output. Even the current debates, which are mostly for stuff like reducing the rate of increase of CO2 output or holding the output rates to a level of a few years ago, have gone nowhere, and as far as I can tell, if you fully buy into AGW, those levels of reductions will accomplish nothing at all. None of the solutions that the big AGW advocates have been pushing really work - solar power, wind power, electric and hybrid cars have no capability to give us a really meaningful reduction in CO2 output in the context of AWG theory; even if they manage a 10% overall reduction, which I highly doubt, it still won't change anything. The best thing we can do to actually reduce CO2 output is to build lots more nuclear plants - they are a pretty mature technology and they work right now, and each one can fully eliminate a gas or coal plant which produces tremendous amounts of CO2. But even if we went all-out on that, I still don't think we could take enough fossil fuel plants offline fast enough to even slow down AGW.

      If you wanted to actually reduce CO2 emissions enough to make a real difference, you'd have to turn off all of the fossil fuel power plants and abandon all of the cars, trucks, trains, buses, and ships, and do it all right now. You'd have to reduce human society to a 18th century subsistence farming level of technology. Trouble is, there are 6 billion people on the planet, and we can't feed them all with subsistence farming. If you really want to do this, then a LOT of people are going to die. Like billions of people. The Holocaust, the Gulags, Mao's mass murders, all of it is just a drop in the bucket compared to what this would cause. Even nuclear war probably wouldn't kill that many people. And you'd also be saying goodbye to the technology what would allow us to save ourselves from all of the other potential threats to human society out there.

      It's pretty damn hard for me to believe that even if AGW is real and the results will be catastrophic, that it will be that bad. I say we keep doing pretty much what we're doing right now and rely on our ever-increasing technology to prevent or mitigate anything bad that actually happens.

      I'm also affected by the behavior of the big AGW pushers - if these guys really believe that AGW is happening and that the results will be apocalypse-level bad, then why are they always flying private jets to ritzy conferences where they drive around in limos and SUVs, producing more CO2 than some small countries? Why are they pushing things that won't actually reduce CO2 emissions meaningfully, but will make them rich and increase their levels of power and influence? It looks like they're just milking the theory for money and power. If they don't really believe it, then why should I?

      --
      I don't reply to ACs
    28. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      Except that the arguments have been rebutted repeatedly and scientists have a lot better things to do than repeat the same research ad infinitum every time someone who doesn't have a clue what they're talking about calls the whole thing a crock based on some very shaky arguments.

    29. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      I agree 100%.

      You can also add to your list of "denialist" categories:

      I agree that something is going on, and man may be the cause of it, and everything you say might be true, and the consequences to be dire enough that we should probably start doing something about it now, however I do not believe you have proven ANYTHING definitely, nor have you inspired my confidence (which is what it is all about really) in your scientific method, your professionalism, or your arguments.

      When scientists are prepared to try and actively disprove their own theories to try and reveal the truth, then I will hop on to the band wagon gladly. The opposite seems to be the rule however. The fact that they are trying to prove "denalists" "wrong" rather than to try and see if they are true simply tells me they have preconceived notion of what is right and wrong. The fact that there is a word at all for "denalists" tells me this is going the wrong way.

      I know given the nature of the problem, getting an totally definitive answer will be very difficult, but ultimately not necessary. It just has to be definitive enough to form a consensus. Perhaps I am too harsh, but they seem to want a consensus before they have definitively proved their hypothesis. For me science is about repeatable results. As much fun as simulations and models are, until they can accurately predict the past, they are all but so much fiction. I don't envy the amount of work required due the sheer scale of time, physical area, and number of variables, but I don't think that is an excuse. If you are not up to the task, then don't call it science, call it Artistic Modeling or something, just don't hang this under the Scientific tree for creditability. You have to earn that.

    30. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Dragoness+Eclectic · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And if said scientists don't have the inclination to explain themselves as to why I should change my lifestyle/agree to huge new taxes/accept massive new government controls, I don't have the inclination to vote for these things or ask my elected representative to do so. "Because I said so" is not an acceptable reason when you are reaching for my wallet.

      --
      ---dragoness
    31. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      They have repeatedly explained themselves; that's the whole point of the article. Just because some dick has cherry-picked dubious looking data to create a non-existent scandal doesn't mean that really important work on finding a solution should have to stop. It's better just to say: "come back when you can prove you know what you're talking about".

    32. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calling someone a denialist is a lot kinder than calling them a fool or a liar.

  22. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by MichaelSmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    none, not one of these people has been able to reliably prove that humans have anything to do with climate change.

    And why would that matter? If we believe the climate will change to reduce our living space thorough riding sea levels then we should do something about that, regardless of the root cause.

  23. Only Logical Solution to Wacko Skeptics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You may borrow my tinfoil hat. Just remember to re-energize it before you return it.

  24. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by icebraining · · Score: 2, Informative

    No, we don't:

    Ice bubbles reveal biggest rise in CO2 for 800,000 years

    By Steve Connor, Science Editor
    Tuesday, 5 September 2006

    The rapid rise in greenhouse gases over the past century is unprecedented in at least 800,000 years, according to a study of the oldest Antarctic ice core which highlights the reality of climate change.

    Air bubbles trapped in ice for hundreds of thousands of years have revealed that humans are changing the composition of the atmosphere in a manner that has no known natural parallel.
    Related articles

            * Frances Cairncross: We must start adapting to climate change
            * Search the news archive for more stories

    Scientists at the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in Cambridge have found there have been eight cycles of atmospheric change in the past 800,000 years when carbon dioxide and methane have risen to peak levels.

    Each time, the world also experienced the relatively high temperatures associated with warm, inter-glacial periods, which were almost certainly linked with levels of carbon dioxide and possibly methane in the atmosphere.

    However, existing levels of carbon dioxide and methane are far higher than anything seen during these earlier warm periods, said Eric Wolff of the BAS.

    "Ice cores reveal the Earth's natural climate rhythm over the last 800,000 years. When carbon dioxide changed there was always an accompanying climate change," Dr Wolff said. "Over the past 200 years, human activity has increased carbon dioxide to well outside the natural range and we have no analogue for what will happen next.

    "We have a no-analogue situation. We don't have anything in the past that we can measure directly," he added.

    The ice core was drilled from a thick area of ice on Antarctica known as Dome C. The core is nearly 3.2km long and reaches to a depth where air bubbles became trapped in ice that formed 800,000 years ago.

    "It's from those air bubbles that we know for sure that carbon dioxide has increased by about 35 per cent in the past 200 years. Before that 200 years, which is when man's been influencing the atmosphere, it was pretty steady to within 5 per cent," Dr Wolff said.

    The core shows that carbon dioxide was always between 180 parts per million (ppm) and 300 ppm during the 800,000 years. However, now it is 380 ppm. Methane was never higher than 750 parts per billion (ppb) in this timescale, but now it stands at 1,780 ppb.

    But the rate of change is even more dramatic, with increases in carbon dioxide never exceeding 30 ppm in 1,000 years -- and yet now carbon dioxide has risen by 30 ppm in the last 17 years.

    "The rate of change is probably the most scary thing because it means that the Earth systems can't cope with it," Dr Wolff told the British Association meeting at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.

    "On such a crowded planet, we have little capacity to adapt to changes that are much faster than anything in human experience."

    http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/ice-bubbles-reveal-biggest-rise-in-co2-for-800000-years-414711.html

  25. Is this an issue outside the US? by br00tus · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Outside of the United States (other than some ignored sectors in England) this is not even a problem. Scientists and the intelligentsia know about global warming and how it is caused by humans. I'm not even sure how data from the last century could be manipulated - anyone with a thermometer can verify it, and the so-called "disputed" data is all very recent. All of this is really more of a window into the American psychology or politics or what have you than anything to do with peer reviewed climate change. Even if one scientist was manipulating data, which is not the case anyhow, that would not change the laws of physics where the burning of gasoline produces carbon dioxide. Some anonymous criminals break into a university's computers, hold onto the data for months while they cherry pick certain quotes, then release it just before the Copenhagen summit. This has no effect anywhere except in the United States, where a Senator from a fundamentalist, rural state demands the anonymous criminal's accusations be investigated. In a country where people have to battle to teach evolution and common descent of life, and not that some magic man in the clouds created all living things several thousand years ago; where we have a $27 million dollar museum in Kentucky showing this latter theory or faith or whatever, is this the country where we want to hear the opinions of the amateurs from?

    1. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "anyone with a thermometer can verify it,"

      That same thermometer (a satellite really) has shown a decrease and leveling off of global temperatures over the past 10 years which disagrees with all global warming climate models. But I guess that FACT is only part of the American Psychology. It is people like you with attitudes like yours that ushers in fascism. The mass murder of people and the rejection of facts based on emotional appeal is part of the European/Asian psyche.

    2. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Sterops · · Score: 1

      That same thermometer (a satellite really) has shown a decrease and leveling off of global temperatures over the past 10 years which disagrees with all global warming climate models.

      Where is the RAW data of this satellite?

    3. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Chris+Oz · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately is in not just happening in the land of the brave. In Australia we have our own crack pots and looney politicians that just don't "want to believe". Fortunately they are not in power but they still do damage. This blind faith that it will be OK seems to be pretty locked up with fundamentalism and self interest. The vocal opponents either have some link to coal (our major CO2 pollution source) or are part of the vocal religious minority. While they are very much in the minority they are noisy and do receive media attention.

      I do have sympathy with scientists on this issue. At some point it isn't worth wasting time arguing with someone who is so intellectually impaired by their "beliefs" that they aren't actually capable of having a rational discussion about the issue. It is like arguing with fundamentalist christians about evolution. At least on this point we are well advanced of the US, Australian is pretty secular by world standards and extremely secular by US standards, acceptance of evolution is high. Event the religious establishment generally accepts that the science is in.

      Normally I would say just give them a couple of years and the loons will come around, but in this case we don't have a couple of years to waste.

    4. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by arminw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...the burning of gasoline produces carbon dioxide....

      Indeed it does, but where was all this carbon dioxide, before it became fossil fuel? Was not the carbon from every bit of fossil fuel and coal that has already been burned and that is still underground in the atmosphere once upon a time? The earth was a lot warmer then, but that seems to be good, because living things not only survived, but thrived. Aside from the unproven theory that the ocean levels would be significantly higher, why would a warmer Earth be bad?

      Why don't you stick to science, rather than bringing religion or politics into the discussion? The pilfered e-mails show that these supposedly neutral scientists have a political agenda. That is why they labeled it a "travesty" that the data doesn't support their socialistic political agenda.

      --
      All theory is gray
    5. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, and Greenland is green right? It sooooo warm right now, it's all rising so stratospherically, that a place where the Vikings settled and farmed, is nothing but a vast icesheet.....

    6. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      Sssh! Don't start talking sense about how oil comes from a previously more carbon-rich biosphere! That'll break their tiny minds and deprive them of a cause to feel needless moral superiority over.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    7. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1

      Ssssh - don't tell people that the ancient high carbon atmosphere had creatures adapted for it that had evolved over millions of years to deal with it, as the increase in carbon took an extremely long time to create, and don't tell people that we're upending a lower carbon position in a few centuries, far too fast for creatures to evolve to the new carbon dispensation, and since tey are ill adapted to it, we are facing a mass extinction not seen since te Permian, which is the last time something like this happened...

      --
      Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    8. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by c-1ee · · Score: 1

      I think what I read on an earlier /. comment sums this up the best. AGW or not, don't #@$#ing trash the planet!

    9. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by grumbel · · Score: 1

      why would a warmer Earth be bad?

      All our infrastructure is build around our current climate and having to change it all due to climate change would get kind of expensive.

      That is why they labeled it a "travesty" that the data doesn't support their socialistic political agenda.

      Go watch this and learn that the quoted text happen to be all out of context and none of them so far indicate actual fraud.

    10. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Reapman · · Score: 1

      To be honest I think the point your making is hurting your argument. Saying that ONLY the United States (and parts of England) are stupid enough to believe that global warming isn't happening shows you aren't paying enough attention to the non English speaking parts of the world, and even those countries that do speak English (such as Canada where I am). It is quite likely that you only hear about views coming out of the US because either your from it or because thats where a lot of media comes from. I get some news from Japan and I'd say that there's some differing opinions there, too. Thats just one example. Also note, telling me to look at my thermometer, when here it's currently -30C, isn't going to help much.

      Note, I'm not saying I disagree that global warming/change isn't happening, I'm saying your argument isn't helping your case. Please stop assuming that outside of the US is some enlightened wondrously great world. People are people anywhere you go, being American doesn't make people naturally smart or naturally dumb.

    11. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by telomerewhythere · · Score: 0

      Well, the K-T event tells me that "I will Survive"

      All Mammal species survived that event.

    12. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by XDirtypunkX · · Score: 1

      Were humans among the living things that were thriving at that time?

    13. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1

      KT != Permian. KT is less than Permian in every sense.

      --
      Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    14. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....as the increase in carbon took an extremely long time to create...

      I am sure you meant to say, that it took a long time for the biological processes to sequester all that carbon that was originally in the atmosphere. Before the fossil fuels formed, ALL of the carbon, every bit of it, was in the Earth's atmosphere. Gradually, over a long time, all that carbon was put into the ground by plants, where most of it is still today, especially in the form of coal. Thus it took a long time to COOL the earth until it reached today's conditions. The presence of fossil fuel and fossils in Antarctica provides clear evidence for earth with a much warmer past.

      --
      All theory is gray
    15. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      America, UK, Australia.

      Notice a trend?

      It's what the froggies call the "anglo-saxon" countries that are having this problem.

      Odd.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    16. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....All our infrastructure is build around our current climate and having to change it all due to climate change would get kind of expensive...

      Yes, it would be quite expensive and cause a lot of turmoil if the adjustment had to be done all at once, such as over a few decades. Everything that man builds wears out eventually and has to be replaced. Would it be such a big deal, if your descendants a century or two from now would have to rebuild New York or London on new ground? A lot of land area now frozen wasteland, would be habitable. What the heck is wrong with that?

      --
      All theory is gray
    17. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Were humans among the living things that were thriving at that time?....

      What difference does it make whether they were not? Humans are mammals and mammals survived just fine. Among all creatures, humans are the most adaptable, mostly because their intelligence.

      --
      All theory is gray
    18. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1


      Aside from the unproven theory that the ocean levels would be significantly higher, why would a warmer Earth be bad?

      What bullshit argument is this? When the ice is melting, where do you think the water is going to? To nowhere?
      Oh my god.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    19. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....When the ice is melting, where do you think the water is going to?....

      First of all, only the ice on land has the possibility of raising the level of the ocean. If all of that ice melted, it would do so over a long enough period of time, to give people time to move their already decaying civilization to higher ground. Farms and cities could exist in areas that are now frozen wasteland.

      --
      All theory is gray
    20. Re:Is this an issue outside the US? by telomerewhythere · · Score: 0

      You are correct, except KT killed all dinosaurs and Permian didn't.

  26. Pitchforks and torches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I wouldn't want to be lynched either.

    1. Re:Pitchforks and torches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The lynchings are most likely to be done by the global warming nuts, not to them. Manmade global warming has become a religion, in all but name. Millions upon millions of people who otherwise resent governement interference are squawking for their governments to "do something, before it's to late!" and to "Think of the children!"

      That glaringly obvious fake hockey stick that the messiah showed the world made all those converts, while at the same time, forcing honest men and women to ask, "What the fuck?!"

      You should read up on some of the past geological ages. Ice ages have come and gone. Global warming is a well established tradition - as is global cooling.

    2. Re:Pitchforks and torches by aplusjimages · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is what I've been telling people for years. I would also like to add that the smog in L.A. is also cyclical and natural, as well as the bad air in China. None of it is man made except for the lies that surround it. There's no way humans could pollute a planet let alone a city.

      --
      Can I bum a sig?
    3. Re:Pitchforks and torches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "None of it is man made except for the lies that surround it." That's clever. How can a pun be untrue?

    4. Re:Pitchforks and torches by emilper · · Score: 2, Informative

      would you enlighten me on how does CO2 cause smog ?

    5. Re:Pitchforks and torches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The lynchings are most likely to be done by the global warming nuts, not to them. Manmade global warming has become a religion, in all but name.

      On the contrary the lynchings are more likely to be done by that fraction of denialists who are making violent threats, including death threats against scientists and activitst. "Manmade global warming" is not a religion, in name or otherwise. What has become "almost a religion" is the denial of science which does not accord with some people's religion, ideology or business plan. Whether it is to deny evolutionary theory, the role of HIV in AIDS, the human contribution to climate change or the carcinogenicity of cigarette smoke, the same anti-science arguments and tactics are deployed, often by the same people (esp. in regard to AGW and smoking).

  27. PhD required? by TheCaptain · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Average guys with websites can do a lot of amazing things. One thing they cannot do is reveal statistical manipulation in climate-change studies that require a PhD in a related field to understand.

    Aye, there's the rub...

    I think the author is overlooking two simple facts: not everyone with a website is an "average guy", and that there are more than a few people in the world who are capable of understanding advanced mathematics and statistical methods who don't have the related PhD that apparently enables one to do so.

    1. Re:PhD required? by joe_frisch · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You don't need a PhD to publish in a refereed journal. If you find an article you disagree with, publish a different analysis.

      Most science really is difficult. You don't need a formal education, but you do need to be able to read the real journal articles (not some condensed version) and write coherent objections. Even better - join a climate research group.

      My field (high energy accelerators) has nothing to do with with climate change, but it has similar problems. When we propose a multi-billion dollar, 10s of kilometer long accelerator, someone will argue we should use NEW laser acceleration technology - it would let you build the accelerator on a tabletop. The arguments as to why this doesn't work are quite technical - but are nonetheless true. (BTW - its just to dang expensive IS a perfectly valid argument)

    2. Re:PhD required? by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      You don't need a Ph.D., but there is a certain set of cultural norms and barriers you have to cross, quite apart from the technical aspects. It took me a few years as a Ph.D. student to figure out how to write papers that "sounded like" someone in my field, after which getting stuff accepted got much easier. Even in blind-review systems, that authenticating as "this sounds like it was written by 'one of us'" can make a bigger difference than you might think.

      As a reviewer, I actively try not to do that, but it's really tempting, because honestly, a large proportion of the papers that don't sound like they were written by someone in the field aren't actually good. But it does mean that good stuff by outsiders is more likely to get rejected just because the reviewer noticed it was from an outsider who failed to blend in well enough, and didn't really give it a chance. Doubly so if it makes any even remotely controversial claims.

    3. Re:PhD required? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe that we often lend too much weight to the letters PhD. They used to have a sort of mystical air about them, until I got a PhD. Then I realized that besides the few really brilliant people, there are a lot of more normal people that just worked hard but are of a more mediocre intelligence and can say dumb stuff about the field they have studied.

    4. Re:PhD required? by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      Yes - it is a real problem. How do you tell who is a "scientist", or more importantly, how do you tell whose comments are important enough to study?

      I remember as a grad student getting a paper from someone who had a new theory of magnetism based on the "spherical photon". He had even done experiments with an old radio set. I looked at it very briefly, and it didn't seem to be based on conventional science, and it didn't seem to make any new testable predictions so I ignored it. But what else could I reasonably do?

      I think that in order to do science you need to understand the existing state of the art and know the language. This is a large barrier to discussion, but I don't see a good option.

      There is a lot known about most science fields (I think far more than the public realizes), and maybe it makes sense for people to catch up on that before trying to extend the knowledge.

    5. Re:PhD required? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I also find this canonization of PhDs very dangerous. For one, it is something of a religious thing (which is why I chose the term). "This person has a PhD and thus must be an authority on the subject, you have to list to what he says because you can't possibly understand what's behind it." Well to me that kind of things sounds a lot like "This person is a priest and thus must be an authority on the subject." You are being told "You can't understand, so just believe the authority." That is problematic, and is completely contrary to the scientific method. As such it can lead to bad science.

      For an interesting example, google around for James Randi's dealings with Homeopathy. You have to remember that this wasn't something that came out of nowhere, there was actually a respected lab in France getting results. Randi (along with others) came in to test it and in the end found it was bullshit. However a large part of the reason that this was going on was because a PhD was at the head of it, and there was a canonization going on. "Oh he's a distinguished professor so he MUST know what he's talking about! You can't question him, you aren't on the same level!" Good science was being left at the door because a PhD said it must be the truth.

      Then there is, of course, as you've mentioned that plenty of people have good understandings of obscure topics, despite no degrees. A degree means you trained in a formal academic setting and did what they required to get it. That's all. A great example of people who are experts without degrees would in the the programming world. People like Michael Abrash or John Carmack who don't have advanced degrees (or sometimes even undergraduate degrees) yet are experts in their field. They have an understanding in excess of almost anyone else, have done original research and so on. That they can't prepend "Dr." to their name isn't relevant.

      Finally, as you also noted, some things aren't even all that complex. Perhaps a journalist finds inferential statistics hopelessly complex, however not everyone does. You don't need a PhD to deal with that and indeed if you did we'd find it in far less use since there are few people with Math PhDs, fewer still with a specialization in statistics. Rather it is something that PhDs (and grad students and even undergrads) make use of in their work. A not especially complex tool in a large box of tools they use to do their research.

      To me, it just reeks of canonization, of the "academic priesthood" idea. There is no way the normal man could POSSIBLY understand this, thus we all have to accept it as holy writ. No, sorry, I don't like religion for that kind of thinking and I REALLY don't like it in my science. We need zombie Feynman to come back and slap some sense in to people with statements like this.

    6. Re:PhD required? by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      It is a running joke with the people I work with that a PhD makes you an "expert" in a field - and most of us have PhDs. In most sciences, a PhD represents the start of your career.

      That aside though how should the public decide who to listen to? With thousands (or in the days of the internet millions) of different voices there is no way to pay attention to everyone.

      While it is tempting to suggest that everyone study the issue for themselves, but these issues are complex and require a large investment in time. I'm not saying that an average person couldn't understand, but rather that they can't afford to take the required time.

      I don't know anything about climate science, but in other fields it takes literally years to gain enough background information to understand the discussions. It is find for public-minded physicists to talk about the Higgs as a "god particle" and "generating mass" but those words have very little do to with the real theory.

      So if we don't use education level as an indicator, what do we use to determine where we should direct our attention? (serious question - how do we decide among the millions of voices?)

    7. Re:PhD required? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think those facts overturn the author's conclusion. His point is that, although some guy with a website might really have a point that casts doubt on AGW, it takes a lot of time to investigate and find out if this is the case - and since the odds are so low in the first place, it's just not worthwhile. If the guy with the website is actually competent, then that raises the odds - but how are you going to find that out, except by spending hours investigating in the first place?

    8. Re:PhD required? by Daishiman · · Score: 1

      Apparently those brilliant people who understand statistics can't be bothered to refute AGW. Might it be perhaps because some of them HAVE looked at the process, consider it sound, and don't find it worthy of their time to add an "I agree" to the endless posting of much more valid scientific work?

    9. Re:PhD required? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about years of study required? If you have spent at least a decade of your life seriously studying in depth a very specific field of science, chances are you have something to show for it, like a PhD in a closely related field, or a position in a related department in some institution, or publications in the topic, etc.

      Modern science is too specialized to enable you to analyze climatology papers, for example, just because you know something about statistics. Although I have no doubt there are self-taught prodigies around capable of giving good arguments in topics they are not experts, I don't think they are more than a few, and certainly not a bunch of random bloggers.

    10. Re:PhD required? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really ? What percentage of global warming deniers are they ? Honestly, if they are that familiar with chaos theory, nonlinear PDEs, CFD/FEA maybe they should get their 'observations' published in peer reviewed journals ?

      Why is it that the 'website guy' only keeps writing opinions in his own blog and expects that to be respected ?

  28. Everything You Need To Know About AGW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is everything you need to know about global warming. Pay attention to the time scale.
    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/12/12/historical-video-perspective-our-current-unprecedented-global-warming-in-the-context-of-scale/#more-14034

    The biggest problem facing humanity isn't unprecedented warming, it's unprecedented hubris.

  29. Same as argument against Darwin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is the denialist seem to feel one inconsistency and you HAVE to throw out an entire theory. With Darwin if there's any piece of missing information then the entire theory is false. And of coarse the Bible needing no proof is correct. With weather if one area gets cooler and the rest hotter than of coarse the Earth isn't heating because one area is cooling. Weather simply doesn't work that way. You can have a severe drought east of the Rockies "because" there is flooding West of the Rockies so the fact there's rain on the west slops doesn't mean there is no drought on the eastern side. Weather is complex and scientist know that but the lay person doesn't. It's easy to cherry pick evidence and make it say whatever you want. My question to the deniers is how many once in a hundred year events has to occur in a single decade before you acknowledge there's a problem? Weather and temperatures have to be viewed as a whole and over time not a single event. You can have one year of cooling and not mean the trouble is over. It's taken several decades to confirm the change but the change is traceable to the beginning of the industrial revolution.

  30. Peer review is not everything by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There are tons of examples of peer review not working. Even ignoring papers that are outright fraud but still manage to get through, scientific journals are places for debate, they don't establish truth. Any particular paper (that is good) will be looking at certain evidence, and possibly be considering its implications, it doesn't establish the final word on the matter.

    Now, you can choose to rely on the opinions of scientists to form your opinions, and often that is enough, but if you really want to be sure of any particular topic, you should investigate it yourself. It might take a lot of work, but you will be rewarded with knowledge.

    That said, global warming isn't all that inaccessible. If you have a basic background in math and physics, you can get close to the cutting edge just by reading the IPCC report since its such a great summary of the field. I guarantee you will quadruple your understanding of the topic just by reading that alone, and it will give you a good launching point to dig deeper, because everything it talks about is directly referenced to real peer reviewed papers.

    Some interesting things I found reading the IPCC report:
    • It isn't entirely certain that the net effect of human pollution is warming, it could also be cooling (see chapter 2).
    • Despite some sensationalistic propaganda floating around, sea level rises are happening slower than geological processes (plate tectonics etc) on any given coast (see chapter 5).
    • There is no reliable knowledge of how much CO2 has affected the current warming trend. The report says 'most of it' based on the logic that they can't think of another explanation.(see chapter 9)
    • The writers of the IPCC report aren't very confident of their main conclusion, which is that it is very likely that most of the recent warming is human caused. In the report, they are very careful to qualify that statement; although they are not so careful in press conferences (see the synthesis report).

    Every self-respecting geek who is willing to opine on the subject of global warming should read that report. Otherwise they are leaving themselves uninformed.

    --
    Qxe4
    1. Re:Peer review is not everything by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      There are tons of examples of peer review not working.

      We know this, but it definitely helps to cut the crap to manageable levels.
      Otherwise we'll never stop refuting the proverbial idiots in a hurry.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:Peer review is not everything by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I'm not arguing against peer review, I'm just saying it has limits. Peer review is useful for reasons you just mentioned, but once you start using it as the 'standard of truth', you are going to be in trouble. Peer review doesn't guarantee that the paper is correct. If you seriously need to know the truth of the matter, you'd better get to the edge of the field yourself and do your own research.

      That is hard, I agree, but once again you will be rewarded with knowledge. You have to choose and be aware of what you want the limits of your knowledge to be.

      --
      Qxe4
    3. Re:Peer review is not everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      The quotes cited below are taken from the "Climate Change 2007: Synthesis Report" (dated Nov. 2007).
      Needless to say, it's unclear what report the original poster was quoting.

      • It isn't entirely certain that the net effect of human pollution is warming, it could also be cooling (see chapter 2).

      "Most of the observed increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic GHG concentrations. This is an advance since the TAR's conclusion that 'most of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in GHG concentrations' (Fig- ure 2.5). {WGI 9.4, SPM} ... It is likely that there has been significant anthropogenic warming over the past 50 years averaged over each continent (except Antarctica) (Figure 2.5). {WGI 3.2, 9.4, SPM}" (p. 39; emphasis in original).

      Nothing, ever, is entirely certain in science. Even "laws" are constantly tested and retested.

      • Despite some sensationalistic propaganda floating around, sea level rises are happening slower than geological processes (plate tectonics etc) on any given coast (see chapter 5).

      "Sea level rise under warming is inevitable. Thermal expansion would continue for many centuries after GHG concentrations have stabilised, for any of the stabilisation levels assessed, causing an eventual sea level rise much larger than projected for the 21st century (Table 5.1). If GHG and aerosol concentrations had been stabilised at year 2000 levels, thermal expansion alone would be expected to lead to further sea level rise of 0.3 to 0.8m. The eventual contributions from Greenland ice sheet loss could be several metres, and larger than from thermal expansion, should warming in excess of 1.9 to 4.6C above pre-industrial be sustained over many centuries" (p. 67).

      • There is no reliable knowledge of how much CO2 has affected the current warming trend. The report says 'most of it' based on the logic that they can't think of another explanation.(see chapter 9)
      • The writers of the IPCC report aren't very confident of their main conclusion, which is that it is very likely that most of the recent warming is human caused. In the report, they are very careful to qualify that statement; although they are not so careful in press conferences (see the synthesis report).

      Yes, not very confident:

      "Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, as is now evident from observations of increases in global average air and ocean temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice and rising global average sea level. {WGI 3.9, SPM}
      Many natural systems, on all continents and in some oceans, are being affected by regional climate changes. Observed changes in many physical and biological systems are consistent with warming. As a result of the uptake of anthropogenic CO2 since 1750, the acidity of the surface ocean has increased. {WGI 5.4, WGII 1.3}
      Global total annual anthropogenic GHG emissions, weighted by their 100-year GWPs, have grown by 70% between 1970 and 2004. As a result of anthropogenic emissions, atmospheric concentrations of N2O now far exceed pre-industrial values spanning many thousands of years, and those of CH4 and CO2 now far exceed the natural range over the last 650,000 years. {WGI SPM; WGIII 1.3}
      Most of the global average warming over the past 50 years is very likely due to anthropogenic GHG increases and it is likely that there is a discernible human-induced warming averaged over each continent (except Antarctica). {WGI 9.4, SPM}
      Anthropogenic warming over the last three decades has likely had a discernible influence at the global scale on observed changes in many physical and biological systems. {WG

    4. Re:Peer review is not everything by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yes, every self-respecting geek should. Because you can never trust another "self-respecting geek" lurking Slashdot to tell the truth.

      Exactly. If everyone would get their info from the IPCC instead of sites like realclimate or climate-skeptic, the quality of discussion around here would go up dramatically. Don't believe it just because I say it, go to the source.

      However, let's be scientific about it, shall we? Analyze it for yourself and see if their logic makes sense. For example, let's talk about this famous quote you mentioned from page 39 of the synthesis report [warning: big PDF]:

      "Most of the observed increase in global average temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic GHG concentrations. This is an advance since the TAR's conclusion that 'most of the observed warming over the last 50 years is likely to have been due to the increase in GHG concentrations'

      This is an example of a conclusion that was drawn independently by the IPCC. That is ok, they are trying to make conclusions, but we should try to figure out why they conclude what they do.

      The first thing to note is the disclaimer footnote that says, " Consideration of remaining uncertainty is based on current methodologies." So, they've left themselves some wiggle room, in case they are wrong. Alright. No one ever mentions that in any press conference, but scientific reporting is never any good.

      What we want to know is how they came to this conclusion. They direct us to WGI 9.4, where we read the main justification for that conclusion is that they can't find any other way to explain the current warming other than anthropogenic causes. They are basically laying their claim on the idea that we have understood every significant global process enough to eliminate every other cause. Furthermore, they explain that the computer models agree with them.

      Now, maybe you think that is enough evidence. For me it is not. But I encourage you to read the document. Go to the science and decide for yourself; don't believe just because I, or anyone else, tells you.

      --
      Qxe4
    5. Re:Peer review is not everything by http · · Score: 1

      "Every self respecting geek" my ass. Is it really that hard to provide a proper link to the document you're advocating as good background material? Or did I get it wrong, because really, it's just a guess that that's the one you're referring to. There's several dozen available on the IPCC web site for the last session alone. I'm not in the mood to dig through them all, only to discover that the one you're talking about was from two, maybe three sessions back.

      Did I guess correctly?

      --
      If opportunity came disguised as temptation, one knock would be enough.
      3^2 * 67^1 * 977^1
    6. Re:Peer review is not everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scientist are always careful to qualify what they say, it's part of the scientific language because everything they say is supposed to be objective, verifiable truth. That doesn't mean they are not confident about what they are saying, just that they can't ultimately prove it, which is truth in every topic in every science.

    7. Re:Peer review is not everything by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      They are all good reading. If I were to provide a link, I would have linked here. That said, obviously WGI is the most relevant in establishing the truth of global warming.

      --
      Qxe4
    8. Re:Peer review is not everything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Every self-respecting geek who is willing to opine on the subject of global warming should read that report."
      Welcome to slashdot. I didn't read your article.
      I agree the government report should be read. I just don't think I have to read it to comment on your interesting things.

      "It isn't entirely certain that the net effect of human pollution is warming, it could also be cooling (see chapter 2)."

      This is hardly comforting. C02 is a greenhouse gas, it is supposed to warm the earth. What's doing the cooling? Nuclear dust? On that note I might submit that during times of war with lots of aerial bombing we might see lower temperatures for particular areas that lose sunlight, but I presume that afer about 5 days that gets really difficult to quantify. Anyways, this strikes at the heart of the issue. How do we regulate new pollutants such as cesium-137 and strontium-90?
      http://news.softpedia.com/news/Nuclear-Blasts-Provide-with-Foolproof-Art-Authentication-Method-89302.shtml

      "Despite some sensationalistic propaganda floating around, sea level rises are happening slower than geological processes (plate tectonics etc) on any given coast (see chapter 5)."

      I fail to see how this matters as long as the sea levels are rising faster than expected. Heck, I believe someone's done the math on an earth without ice.

      "There is no reliable knowledge of how much CO2 has affected the current warming trend. The report says 'most of it' based on the logic that they can't think of another explanation.(see chapter 9)"

      This isn't saying nearly as much as you think it is. For a legal analogy "the suspect we found is the only one we have because he's the only one that fits the descriptioin". It's not so much science as it is logic and observation, but after enough observation and enough agreement on the logic this is usually as good as it gets.

      "The writers of the IPCC report aren't very confident of their main conclusion, which is that it is very likely that most of the recent warming is human caused. In the report, they are very careful to qualify that statement; although they are not so careful in press conferences (see the synthesis report).
      "

      Politics?

  31. Time for open discussion by ambrosen · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    BTW, if anyone knows of a climate model that correctly predicts past, known weather, please post a link.

    It's called hindcasting. It's done quite frequently. I point this out not because I know lots about climate science or anything, rather to show that you know even less than me.

    1. Re:Time for open discussion by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      Actually, I know that I know nothing!

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    2. Re:Time for open discussion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and the saying goes: hindsight is always 20/20.

  32. Proof by assertion by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 3, Funny

    No, "they" are ridiculed because of the absence of anything approximating proof of the hypothesis of anthropogenic global warming.

    Except the absence you assert exists, does not, in fact, exist. There is a total absence of the "absence of anything approximating proof of the hypothesis of anthropogenic global warming".

    ...the absence of proof elevates the value of ridicule from mere fun to pivotal.

    Since you have proven nothing by your silly assertions it is pivotal that I call you a goofball.

    1. Re:Proof by assertion by jc42 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Perhaps it's time to once again point out that "scientific proof" is a red herring. As any number of science's theoreticians have carefully explained over the years, scientific methods rarely if ever actually "prove" anything. Rather, science works mostly with a double-negative approach: An accepted theory is one that we have failed to disprove. Scientific testing and data collection is mostly aimed at showing that a hypothesis is wrong. Results that agree with a hypothesis are generally called "support", not "proof", because usually the tests can't provide proof. But a single (correctly done;-) test or observation is often sufficient to disprove a theory.

      This is why scientific theories are often called "tentative". Scientists are always trying to think of new ways to test a theory, and sometimes they succeed in finding situations where a theory fails. The poster child for this was the failure of Newton's mechanics to explain a number of anomalous observations about a century ago, which led to Einstein's theories explaining how the universe actually works. Of course, his theories have never been "proved", either. They have merely withstood hundreds of new experimental tests. Tomorrow some physicist (or high-school student) may produce a new test that demos an exception to Einstein's equations. But until then, they are accepted not because we've proved them, but rather because we have repeatedly failed to disprove them.

      Of course, fundamental physics is "easier" that climate in an obvious way. Weather is much more complex than things like particle physics or orbital mechanics, which can be reduced to some fairly simple equations (though not quite as simple as we thought back in Newton's day). Anything dealing with weather has to be treated statistically, since the complexity is far beyond the capacity of our most powerful super-computers. (Our computers can't even model a butterfly's wings in detail, much less the effect the butterfly has on weather halfway around the world.;-) Since the public is generally totally ignorant of statistics, it's not surprising that people would fail to understand what the AGW theorists are telling us. It's fairly obvious that even most of the posters here in this "nerd" community don't understand the difference between weather and climate. You don't have much of a chance of understanding the issue without a good grounding in statistical methods, in addition to all the kinds of chemistry that you have to understand.

      But the constant use of forms of the words "prove" and "proof" in regard to scientific theories should be treated with humor, since such words are an open statement that the author doesn't know much at all about scientific methods. Those are media and propaganda terms; they have very little use in scientific discussions. Proofs are what mathematicians do. Scientists do disproofs. (And it is interesting how well the radically different approaches of math and science complement each other. So far I haven't read much enlightening from either camp on this topic, just the observation that they play well together. But we all know that.)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    2. Re:Proof by assertion by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      But the constant use of forms of the words "prove" and "proof" in regard to scientific theories should be treated with humor, since such words are an open statement that the author doesn't know much at all about scientific methods. Those are media and propaganda terms; they have very little use in scientific discussions.

      Outside the context of a scientific paper, I always just assumed the word "proven" with regard to scientific theory was just shorthand for a more precise meaning involving the probability of a null hypothesis being confined below a certain margin of error, because it's obvious that scientific experiments don't "prove" things in the way that mathematical proofs do.

      What word would you prefer we use instead? Or must we be pedantic and spew out a whole word salad in every other sentence where we would otherwise say proof or proven, as if we're constantly writing abstracts?

    3. Re:Proof by assertion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your argument is reduced to an ad hominem attack much like the summary?

    4. Re:Proof by assertion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WHOOSH

    5. Re:Proof by assertion by joocemann · · Score: 0, Troll

      Perhaps you should close your garage door, turn on your car, and hang out for a good 15-20 minutes.

      Fyi, don't do that. I'll end up being investigated for causing you to die (because you are ignorant and gullible).

      But... you might find some proof.

    6. Re:Proof by assertion by sycodon · · Score: 1

      When the "solution" is to tank our economy, you better fucking "prove it".

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    7. Re:Proof by assertion by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      What it isn't ridiculous to claim, however, is that carbon dioxide will, over time, be released from stores underground into the atmosphere. These stores, when they were in the atmosphere millions of years ago, contributed to a warmer climate worldwide. We don't know the level of contribution, but they will eventually, at an indeterminate time, help the climate change if we don't do something about it.

    8. Re:Proof by assertion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. It is the job of the scientist to be a skeptic of everything. Also, something I don't see out of 'scientists' trying to prove global warming is any use of the statistics of the sun's activity in relation to global temperatures. Since that is where our planet's heat comes from, it would be prudent for us to bounce any data we have off of data about the sun.

      The Global Warming Scare has been more about politics than actual science, and what I see more than anything else are excuses to globalize everything we do. It's not an American problem, it's not a European problem, it's a Global problem. So let's go out and create a global system to govern it, so now we have talks about global government in Copenhagen. We create a global taxation without representation occurring with the carbon tax attached to the Copenhagen agreement. So then we have to pay to breathe, since what comes out of our lungs IS carbon dioxide. What next? This is becoming Earth worship... maybe a global religion later on?

      So then it becomes not only the scientists, but we the people who need to be skeptics, not only of the science but of our own government.

    9. Re:Proof by assertion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, I got modded for talking about global governance of climate? Or was it the comment about the activity of the sun in relation to global temperatures?

    10. Re:Proof by assertion by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't be a problem nowadays. With a sufficiently old car the CO will kill you, but it's unlikely that you have a car without a catalytic converter.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    11. Re:Proof by assertion by andymar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Climate encompasses the statistics of temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, wind, rainfall, atmospheric particle count and numerous other meteorological elements in a given region over long periods of time. Climate can be contrasted to weather, which is the present condition of these same elements over periods up to two weeks." Wikipedia.

      You are saying the the complexity of weather is far too complex for our super-computers. This is evidently right since they can't accurately predict temperature for
      next days weather.

      How is it possible to predict that the temperature will rise globally with 2 degrees celsius in the next 50 years ? There should be some huge error
      bars rendering the results useless.

    12. Re:Proof by assertion by damburger · · Score: 1

      Go right ahead then, because CO2 is completely harmless.

      Legal Disclaimer: I am not responsible for the deaths of anybody who thinks that CO2 isn't toxic and is willing to test that assertion with their lives.

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    13. Re:Proof by assertion by GrantRobertson · · Score: 1

      In statistics class we just said, "failed to disprove." It is only a few more characters and my fingers don't hurt at all from typing them.

      Given that the world is full of uneducated deniers of almost every scientific principle that has so far been shown to be "statistically impossible to disprove" - and are therefore considered to be "statistically improbable to disprove" by those knowledgeable in the field - perhaps it is now time for scientists to learn to be as exacting in their everyday language as in the language they use in published papers.

      If the word salad becomes too onerous then perhaps we could start using acronyms. I vote for SID because it is short, pronounceable, and stands for both "Statistically Impossible to Disprove" (as in: the statistical possibility of the current data being wrong is very low) and "Statistically Improbable to be Disproved" (as in: a meta-analysis of all trustworthy research shows that a statistically high enough proportion of all research in the field leans statistically far enough in a particular direction - even when the research was honestly attempting to disprove the theory - that a statistically high number of trusted and vetted researchers in the field agree that it is highly unlikely that the theory will ever be disproved).

    14. Re:Proof by assertion by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 1

      There's a whole lot of possibilities: find evidence for, show, demonstrate. For what it's worth I find it a little pedantic but I've seen increasing amounts of people confused about the scientific method itself. Scientists being more careful with their terminology might give the hucksters less ammunition about the requisite degree of rigor to "prove" something in science.

    15. Re:Proof by assertion by amorsen · · Score: 1

      You need about 10% concentration of CO2 to kill someone. Burning a liter of fuel isn't going to get you there, unless the garage is very small. If you have a car which burns more than a liter at idle in 20 minutes, you need a better car. Also, the CO2 will escape if you have any holes to the outside near the bottom of the garage.

      Perhaps if you seal the garage and lie flat on the floor...

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    16. Re:Proof by assertion by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's time to once again point out that "scientific proof" is a red herring. As any number of science's theoreticians have carefully explained over the years, scientific methods rarely if ever actually "prove" anything. Rather, science works mostly with a double-negative approach: An accepted theory is one that we have failed to disprove. Scientific testing and data collection is mostly aimed at showing that a hypothesis is wrong. Results that agree with a hypothesis are generally called "support", not "proof", because usually the tests can't provide proof. But a single (correctly done;-) test or observation is often sufficient to disprove a theory.

      Unfortunately when I've said as much, in my reaction against the message that "the science is settled", I've been told that I don't understand science and I'm naive about how science works. Apparently Popper's ideas are not considered to be the way the world works anymore. Then I get really sceptical about what global warming advocates are saying, and then people say I'm just ignorant.

      I'm almost not that bothered if they all said that as far as we know so far, it looks like there is a problem with the climate... I would be quite happy if they just said, as far as we can see, and we can't be sure, but there could be a big problem ahead with the climate. Then we could as a society simply consider the risks, and choose what to do, and how. But someone somewhere seems to have decided that it is time to force the world to change... for whatever reason... and they're using science as propaganda. Then they have the cheek to say that the public doesn't understand science... whereas they've corrupted how they represent it to the public already.

    17. Re:Proof by assertion by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      Oh get real. A word can have different shades of meaning.

    18. Re:Proof by assertion by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      A catalytic converter actually increases the output of CO2 by converting unburned hydro-carbons to CO2 and water mostly.

    19. Re:Proof by assertion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have to rely on Wikipedia to compare the definitions of "climate" and "weather" and you STILL don't understand it, then you just might be a massive moron whose "insight" isn't worthy of a middle school student publication.

    20. Re:Proof by assertion by jc42 · · Score: 1

      A word can have different shades of meaning.

      Of course, and in common speech, they usually do. But in scientific writing, words usually have fairly precise definitions. It's common for different scientific fields to use the same word with different meanings, of course, so you should always be aware of the definition used in the current field of discussion.

      But the words "prove" and "proof" aren't used very often in many scientific fields, except when they're discussing math. As others have mentions, you more often see short phrases like "failed to disprove" or "the data supports", to express the idea that tests have been done, and the results support a hypothesis. Nobody much bothers to add "but doesn't prove it", because that's just a waste of words among people who understand scientific methods. The closest they usually come is the standard "further research is needed", the cliché that has been described as the most important part of the last paragraph of a scientific paper.

      When you read "scientific proof", it's usually from non-scientific sources such as the media. We had an especially egregious example of this a few years back, when the Republicans started widely calling for "sound science". If you investigated this phrase, you found that their definitions required that the science be good enough to prove the results. Since scientific methods generally don't supply proofs, this turned out to be an approach that was mostly used to dismiss a list of scientific results that they didn't like. There was a strong suspicion that the people who invented this particular campaign tactic knew quite well what they were doing, and understood that the general public didn't have enough understanding of scientific methodology to see through it.

      I haven't much seen the phrase "sound science" for the past year or so, so maybe they've put that approach aside temporarily. I have wondered how much flak they got from knowledgeable scientists over this particular misleading bit of anti-science propaganda. I know that it has come up in discussions around the concept of the "Republican war on science". It is a good example for people interested in propaganda techniques.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    21. Re:Proof by assertion by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Yes, but CO2 is not particularly deadly. CO on the other hand is really nasty.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    22. Re:Proof by assertion by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      You're right. I missed that you said CO rather than CO2. Nevermind.

  33. "AGW denialist"? by John+Hasler · · Score: 0, Troll

    So what European country will be first to make "AGW denial" a crime?

    Look. These guys are wrong, ok? So just say so. Once. And then move on. Do eminent geographers launch into frenzies of analysis whenever some loony asserts that the Earth is flat? Acting defensive just makes you look defensive.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:"AGW denialist"? by Dude+McDude · · Score: 1

      So what European country will be first to make "AGW denial" a crime?

      France.

  34. Ask Elvis Presley, he put it in Bin Laden's bunker by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    You people are just as retarded as the Apollo denialists.

  35. Let's waste time on YEC by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 2, Informative

    Sure, and all biologists should spend time repeating the same arguments proving that earth is over 6000 years old instead of doing science.

    No matter what is said and done, denialists will deny, it's a genetic disorder, nothing can be done about it.

  36. Gravity: teach the CONTROVERSY by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    Who says that fellow Newton was right? Why are the so-called "scientists" believing his "theories" (they're just theories, people, wake up!) blindly? Just yesterday I saw an apple floating UP instead of down as Mr Newton claims. Surely if one apple does not move down, why should we believe him as far as the movement of heavenly bodies are concerned?

    1. Re:Gravity: teach the CONTROVERSY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right ! And, by the way, after driving today, I noticed that my watch was 2 secs FAST with respect to the clock in my house! Is it a proof that Einstein has only done crappy rantings?

    2. Re:Gravity: teach the CONTROVERSY by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      you sir, fail very badly. http://csep10.phys.utk.edu/astr161/lect/history/einstein.html

      without einstein who was skeptical of some of newton's predictions, we wouldn't have relativity today.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  37. How is this flamebait? by Puff_Of_Hot_Air · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why was this modded flamebait? The scientific community is still a human institution, and thus vulnerable to the various human weaknesses. My concern is not with the science behind climate change research, it is with the politicising and extremist ideological behaviour on _both_ sides. To me, this is the issue with these emails. I know the political bullshit goes on, but it worries me when bullshit looks as though it may be influencing the scientific process. A rationalistic approach is the only hope we have for determining the actual reality of climate change, and so I don't like to see "delete that data", or "hide that trend". I don't care if the scientists in question believe they need to do this for the "greater good". I want my science to be science.

    1. Re:How is this flamebait? by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      Why was this modded flamebait?

      -1 Censored

      Happens to me all the time because I don't buy into the Slashtard groupthink. I'll often get about four plus mods and three minus on the same post.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    2. Re:How is this flamebait? by DiamondGeezer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This happened three years ago when anyone attacked Wikipedia. Now everyone knows that Wikipedia is chock full of crap and is getting worse.

      --
      Tubby or not tubby. Fat is the question
    3. Re:How is this flamebait? by c6gunner · · Score: 0, Troll

      Why was this modded flamebait?

      Because he's using his ignorance of the field of climate science to imply that the peer-review process is no better than a religion. If you can't see what's wrong with that, then there's something very wrong with you.

      The scientific community is still a human institution, and thus vulnerable to the various human weaknesses.

      That's right, they are, which means that no matter how good the system is there will always be some who abuse it. On the other hand, it doesn't mean that the system itself is no better than one which is based on faith-based acceptance of dogma.

      To put it another way - sure, in any democracy there will be people who take advantage of the political system to give themselves increased wealth and power at the expense of others. That doesn't mean that democracy and fascism are the same thing, even though there are plenty of idiots who will tell you that they are. And those idiots would get modded "flamebait", also.

    4. Re:How is this flamebait? by c6gunner · · Score: 0, Troll

      Happens to me all the time because I don't buy into the Slashtard groupthink.

      No, it happens to you all the time because you don't take the time to think. As long as you insist on throwing emotional FUD all over the place, you're going to keep getting modded down.

    5. Re:How is this flamebait? by Kattspya · · Score: 1

      Has there been any newly released studies on wikipedia? I've only seen studies which came to the conclusion that wikipedia is as or more accurate than conventional encyklopedias.

    6. Re:How is this flamebait? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me guess you rely on conservapedia?

    7. Re:How is this flamebait? by mpe · · Score: 1

      A rationalistic approach is the only hope we have for determining the actual reality of climate change, and so I don't like to see "delete that data", or "hide that trend".I don't care if the scientists in question believe they need to do this for the "greater good".

      Possibly you should, since people motivated to do things for the "greater good" (at least in their opinion) are more of less capable of anything. Including paving the "road to hell" with their "good intentions". Faith mixed with politics tends to be a very dangerous combination, the faith need not be religious either.

  38. They never thought of that by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    An amazing number of poorly educated Fox News watchers like yourself stunned scientists worldwide by coming up with such an objection. They never thought about it, them fancy pansy learned people! That'll learn them!

    1. Re:They never thought of that by Nutria · · Score: 1

      An amazing number of poorly educated Fox News watchers like yourself

      God, I so dearly love ad hominem attacks by Those Who Know Best!!! Makes me all cuddly warm inside.

      Besides, I don't watch FNC.

      They never thought about it

      Then explain it to all us poor sots who managed to get CompSci and Math degrees and then left academia.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    2. Re:They never thought of that by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Well, you see... we scientists have accomplished our masters and doctorate degrees, unlike you normals - er, bachelor graduates. We do science-y things and co-mingle amongst ourselves, fermenting our ideas in the colander of academia.

      (They use this elitist exclusion to explain why we can't understand it, and - demurely - we're supposed to just accept their egghead commands.)

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  39. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by arminw · · Score: 0, Troll

    ... where I live it began snowing earlier than ever ....

    And where I live, we have had the coldest early December in about 20 years. It must be caused by all this global warming.

    --
    All theory is gray
  40. I see... by Treeluvinhippy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The author is a skeptic only as long as their skepticism and logic leads to conclusions that match the authors personal beliefs. As soon as it doesn't, well lets put a damper on critical thinking. Mmkay?

    --
    >
  41. Sadly, this explored the limits of credulity by crmartin · · Score: 1, Troll

    ... and demonstrated the anonymous Economist author was a little short of the facts.

    1. Re:Sadly, this explored the limits of credulity by wizardforce · · Score: 1

      Your link is broken.

      --
      Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
  42. AGW deniers are Fox News watching types by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If you look at the website of actual scientists, and in particular, if you want to weed out the crap, science bloggers who haven't created a web site solely to peddle their American Enterprise Institute-sponsored, Fox New-inspired, American Petroleum Institute-approved AGW denialism crap, they all (99%) support the consensus.

    In other words, if you find an AGW denialist website, it's one of the following:
    - political rag (no scientific credentials)
    - industry-sponsored self-serving outlet (scientific creds tainted by obvious conflict of interest when it's not 100% PR)
    - denialist scientist with nothing else to tell the public but denialism

    Look at scienceblogs.com. Not one denialist. Or maybe 1 in 100. Look at all the publically speaking scientists; no, I'm not asking you to trust them more for that, I'm asking you to look at them because they spoke to the public before talking of GW. They don't just talk of that. The occasional scientist denialist only creates his blog to speak of that.

    1. Re:AGW deniers are Fox News watching types by GNT · · Score: 1

      Sure and the world is flat and 99% believed that once. Only it's not true and as a poster above pointed out, Greenland -- a vast ice sheet -- used to be settled and farmed by Vikings. So much for global warming. Never mind the pre-1940 rise when there was no f'ing way it could be AGW.

    2. Re:AGW deniers are Fox News watching types by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Ah yes the Medival Warm Period affecting northern Europe.

      Did you know that current temperatures in Greenland are higher than those in the MWP? And oh yes they are farming there now. It isn't a vast ice sheet any more.

    3. Re:AGW deniers are Fox News watching types by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_set.php?categoryID=2207

      http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/

      define "vast ice sheet"

      (Not saying you don't have a point to make. Just saying it looks like a vast ice sheet from where I'm sitting.)

    4. Re:AGW deniers are Fox News watching types by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      Just saying it looks like a vast ice sheet from where I'm sitting

      That depends on where you look -- if you look where the Norse settlements were...

      Eastern settlment area, and Eastern settlment map
        Western settlment area, and Western settlement map. A zoom of the area of the Brattahlid and Gardar farms (two of the largest/richest farms), and a zoom of the Sandnes farm area from the Western settlment. Plus ground photos of the ruins:
      Gardar ruins; Bratthlid ruins; Hvalsey church ... You'll find it's fairly green.

    5. Re:AGW deniers are Fox News watching types by Troed · · Score: 1

      Ah yes the Medival Warm Period affecting northern Europe

      ... and the rest of the world.

      http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/hockey-stick/mwp-global-studies-map-i-1500.jpg

  43. Argument From Authority - by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "As long as I have a PhD, I can sit here safe and sound in my ivory tower where no criticism can possibly reach me!"

    This is the real reason that nobody takes these smug fucks seriously anymore. Academia is a country club. Members of the unwashed masses need not apply - you can't afford it anyway.

    That said, I understand that it's important to consider the source of information and criticism, but plainly scoffing at critics instead of making it your life's work to explain shit to them over and over again, endlessly if need be, is only going to marginalize our intellectual elite further and make them seem even less trustworthy to the people they should be reaching out to and trying to inform. They probably like it that way; the alienation reinforces their belief that they're members of a proud and essential few. It's too bad that this very same alienation and the dickish attitudes that cause it only make them even more irrelevant in a world that increasingly no longer cares about or respects them. (Save for the armchair intelligentsia, of course.)

  44. Global Ice Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the 70's and early 80's published science was stating that we are heading for an Ice Age. Many respected scientists came up with ideas such as covering the poles in coal dust to raise the earth's temp.

    I am a statistician. The models are non-robust.

    See:
    http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,944914,00.html

  45. Fairly big issue in NL by Animaether · · Score: 1

    From practically every discussion I've seen on this, the selective quoting from the e-mails.. a lot of damage has been done.

    Quite frankly this has 2 causes, at least in NL:
    1. We're cheap bastards. Lowering our co2 emissions, investing in green energy, etc. etc. is all costing us money.. on the individual and government level. So anything that challenges the notions that 'threaten to' invoke plans regulating going green is welcomed with wide open arms.

    2. We, and I daresay most people around the world, have short attention spans and are lazy. A person like Glenn Beck opens his mouth reading those choice quotes off an autocue, and outrage ensues. A shitton of scientists then tackle those quotes, what they mean, what the underlying data is, and so forth and so on.. and 5 seconds in the person watching the TV will have already zapped away to one of 7 variants of "American Idol" (well, their NL equivalents).
    Unfortunately, there is no soundbite cookiecut easily consumed way of educating people beyond the level of an 8 year old - and the matter at hand is far too complex for most 8 year olds to comprehend.

  46. Just wait. by hyperion2010 · · Score: 1

    Some day they will find out that we've been faking it. Don't EVER let them find out about "first order approximation" or we will be sitting around trying to explain Taylor's theorem to them for the next 150 years >_.

  47. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by radtea · · Score: 1

    Air bubbles trapped in ice for hundreds of thousands of years have revealed that humans are changing the composition of the atmosphere in a manner that has no known natural parallel.

    Curious, but I wonder why the article doesn't mention the dramatic and sudden rise in temperature ~9000 BC due to a Dansgaard-Oeschger event, which is a far larger effect (8 C rise in ~ 40 years!) than anything projected by unphysical AGW simulations. It's almost as if the author of the article is deliberately engaging in anti-scientific fear-mongering by focusing on purported causes rather than actual effects.

    --
    Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  48. Requires a PhD? by FatherBash · · Score: 1

    "One thing they cannot do is reveal statistical manipulation in climate-change studies that require a PhD in a related field to understand." Hmm, that must explain why Freeman Dyson is so skeptical! He has no PhD either!

  49. Ignore the parent!!!!1! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    This is Slashdot. We have to believe that that there is something sinister going on with the author's name being withheld, so that doubt is cast on the article and therefore AGW in general. Namegate! NAMEGATE!!!!1!!1

    1. Re:Ignore the parent!!!!1! by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1


      This is Slashdot. We have to believe that that there is something sinister going on with the author's name being withheld, so that doubt is cast on the article and therefore AGW in general. Namegate!
      NAMEGATE!!!!1!!1eleven

      I thought for once I fix that for you, usually not my business ;D

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    2. Re:Ignore the parent!!!!1! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Informative?

  50. China Axiom by PietjeJantje · · Score: 1

    It is all irrelevant because of the China Axion:

    Every unit of energy saved, for example a barrel of oil, will be obtained (for a now lower price) and burned by the Chinese.

    Humanity will obtain all fossil energy from the ground and burn it. Question is how long it will take us.

    1. Re:China Axiom by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      Nevertheless, from the point of view of America alone, it might be nice if we stopped sending billions of dollars to countries that hate us.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    2. Re:China Axiom by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      However, while terrible, giant powerful dictatorships are useful in the keeping of stability in the middle east. Look at what happened when we took down a powerful dictator (Saddam Hussein) and the chaos that was then released. Even the most powerful middle east countries such as Iran, pose little threat to the US as a whole. In the absolute worst case scenario, they can nuke perhaps one or two US cities with ICBMs, but if it comes to a cold-war era standoff, Iran is so tiny that a near total destruction of their military can be accomplished with a quick military strike. Until technology improves to allow reliable cultivation of crops in desert conditions, the middle east will never be stable and will instead rely on super-powerful dictatorships or foreign occupation to be peaceful.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  51. Unless it's peer-reviewed, I'm not going to listen by davide+marney · · Score: 1, Insightful

    But if the peer-review process itself has been corrupted from within, what then? The basis for your trust is gone. Those who gamed the system have made it impossible for you to continue to practice as you have.

    To be a good scientist now, you must _refuse_ to participate in any review process involving the same group of peers as before. You must have a clean assessment with a new team. You must re-affirm old measurements, re-assess old assumptions, and come to fresh conclusions.

    In a word, you must rebuild your body of facts. Climate science has fallen victim to one of the oldest of human weaknesses: we "know" when we have the right answer, so we become very good at explaining away all evidence to the contrary.

    Climate science is like a sensor suspected of recording data incorrectly. You must to send it back to the lab, re-calibrate and re-measure. There is no other choice.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  52. No, I don't fail badly at all by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    I studied both newtonian mechanics and special relativity in college, so I'm perfectly aware of its limits, fuckyouverymuch.

    It is still used today by scientists and engineers most of the time. It's merely imprecise when you approach relativistic speed and/or huge masses.

    1. Re:No, I don't fail badly at all by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      imprecise is another word for WRONG is it?

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    2. Re:No, I don't fail badly at all by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Nope. Accuracy and precision are two different things.

    3. Re:No, I don't fail badly at all by Cwix · · Score: 1

      Hmm so just by being imprecise the entire thing should be thrown out. I see so when my speedometer says im going 25 mph and I'm only going 24 I should replace it? Or here, the bible says that the earth is 6000 years old or some odd number like that, well its obviously imprecise, lets junk it. --- Note im just making a point that imprecisions != wrong, just an example, not an attack on religion.

      --
      You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
  53. Once again, not an ad hominem by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    An ad hominem is saying "you're a bad person therefore you're wrong".

    I'm just saying "you're wrong and you're a bad person". In very technical terms (pardon the jargon) it's called an "insult."

    1. Re:Once again, not an ad hominem by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Ah. Fortunately, I'm old enough that words don't hurt anymore.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    2. Re:Once again, not an ad hominem by jelizondo · · Score: 1

      Well, thanks for the clarificiation.

      FUCK YOU

      Now that is an insult.

      --
      Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
    3. Re:Once again, not an ad hominem by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      A poor one, giving incidental credence to the assertion that you folks be poorly educated Fox News gobblers.

  54. Fame Whores by Moe+Taxes · · Score: 0, Troll

    Science will always have it's fame whores and agenda driven hacks, on both sides of any issue.

    Climate Science looks an awful lot like Social Science, mounds of data with statistics offered as proof.

    If there are not results that can be reproduced in a controlled experiment I can't call it science.

    Even if the worst scenarios turn out to be true there is no excuse for totalitarian world government.

    --
    It took a real world war to end the airplane's patent wars. - Fâché Rouge -
  55. The AGW crowd rediscovers the science of anecdotes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember back in the days, when skeptics were posting anecdotes and depictions of local events and local temperature readings, and the AGW crowd said:

    * Anecdotal and local evidence is irrelevant and unscientific

    * Posting such is a populist appeal to ignorance and emotional response intended to manipulate the debate

    * Posting such detracts from the discussion because the relevant (global statistics) is tainted by the irrelevant (local anecdotes)

    Suddenly - NONE OF THIS IS THE CASE ANY LONGER! ANECDOTAL EVIDENCE LIVES! HALLELUJAH!

    Or in other words: As in every other field of life, the art of manipulation is to postulate general rules and laws which you defeat your opponent with - once those general laws and rules are no longer useful you invent new ones. This is law 1 to 100 of reality creation.

  56. So... by oGMo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So you judge information based on who told you rather than what they told you?

    --

    Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage

    1. Re:So... by ChipMonk · · Score: 1

      Sometimes, yes. If Charles Manson were to tell me that 1+1=2, I would still want some kind of third-party analysis.

      I'm not saying this case calls for such skepticism. But just because ad hominem doesn't prove or disprove an assertion, doesn't mean it's never an appropriate response.

    2. Re:So... by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      So you judge information based on who told you rather than what they told you?

      So you'd listen to a three year old's opinion rather than that of a physician? Sometimes obvious does not equal correct.

      The bottom line is that we all make determinations of the validity of information based on a combination of factors. Using peer review as a basis for information validity seems to work better, in general, than other criteria.

      --
      That is all.
    3. Re:So... by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1


      So you'd listen to a three year old's opinion rather than that of a physician? Sometimes obvious does not equal correct.

      I bite.

      First of all (your mistake) you said "listen". Yes I would listen to a 3 years old the same way as to an (un aged) physician. If the 3 year old tells me the cat took the dead fish and the physician tells me, the wet slippery fish skin and the slopy ground here might have let it slip under a bush ... then I draw my own conclusions.

      Probably the kid ate the fish ... but this still makes the physician wrong.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    4. Re:So... by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Using peer review as a basis for information validity....

      is generally a good way to go, but in this case, the pilfered e-mails show that certain so-called scientists shamefully manipulated the system. They tried and did exclude from peer review, equally qualified scientists who had a different interpretation of the data. They also manipulated the data and termed it a "travesty" that the data did not show what they desperately wanted to show. The movie "Expelled" clearly shows that this peer review system is easily broken when the subject is controversial.

      --
      All theory is gray
    5. Re:So... by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "So you judge information based on who told you rather than what they told you?"

      I can't speak for the OP but my level of skepticisim on any particular source definitely depends on their track record. As such anyone who is connected to with the CEI or the Heartland institute starts the race for my attention with a severe handicap.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    6. Re:So... by jabithew · · Score: 1

      No, you judge information based on how thoroughly it's been checked by other people.

      --
      All intents and purposes. Not intensive purposes.
    7. Re:So... by Cassius+Corodes · · Score: 1

      What? Did you do sophistry instead of a real degree?

      --
      Control is an illusion, order our comforting lie. From chaos, through chaos, into chaos we fly
  57. The 1990s called, they want their complaint back by russotto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That was once the rallying cry of the AGW "consensus" -- that skeptics didn't publish in peer reviewed journals. The skeptics, however, managed to do so. The response of the "consensus"? As seen in the leaked emails, they attempted to prevent the studies from being published and to boycott the journals which published them. So enough about the "peer review" stuff. Number one, it's been done. And number two, it's quite disingenuous to demand peer reviewed articles while working behind the scenes to prevent them from being published.

  58. April is the cruellest month by gzipped_tar · · Score: 1

    Every year a whole shitload of peer-reviewed articles get published, most of which are worthless crap that are not necessarily lies.

    Peer review is not a QA process. A review board of peers does not guarantee the quality of a paper just like a jury of peers does not guarantee justice. A paper passing peer review only means that the paper has met the *minimum* standard of getting published. It left to the readers to assess the value and trustworthiness of the paper, which is what *publication* is for in the first place. If I read a paper and don't agree with its author, I publish my own research to refute it rather than file a complaint against the reviewers (who are usually anonymous anyway), and wait for the feedback from the reviewers, and hopefully get it approved for publication asap.

    But here, we're talking about the *leaked* stuff here. Being leaked means that the material has NOT passed peer review, and the above chivalrous way does not apply.

    There are indeed "interesting" things going on according to the leaked material (esp. a readme file by an unlucky "Harry"), and it's interesting enough for a heated and hopefully fruitful discussion, which is NOT at the peer-reviewed-publication level. On the contrary, these discussions provides a good complement angle which is not necessarily worthless.

    Oh, and by the way, April is the cruellest month, breeding lilacs out of dead land, mixing memory and desire, stirring dull roots with spring rain ;-) [emphasis mine]

    --
    Colorless green Cthulhu waits dreaming furiously.
  59. Re:You Don't Need a PhD to Know When a Chart's Bog by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    Al Gore is a politician. Everything he says is utterly irrelevant to the scientific issue.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  60. Not expecting much from "Peers" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With all due respect, the peer review system in every professional discipline I have been exposed to is flawed.
    The real troubling fact about this is the people in the professions know it, complain internally about it, but never dissolve it because of the lack of a real alternative.

    Face the facts, the guys at the IOCC are busted, no peer review is going to change that.

  61. Three things by Jacques+Chester · · Score: 2, Interesting

    1. I'm from Darwin. It's a lovely town to live in -- relaxed, beautiful and friendly (though on the downside there's a housing crisis now). It's always great to see the homestead up in lights. I miss living there.

    2. Adjustment is a fine thing but of course subjective. I'd be interested in seeing the average adjustment across all data points. If the law of averages holds -- ie if there really is correction for effectively randomised local conditions -- then the worldwide average correction should be close to zero. I don't think that's too much to ask, is it?

    3. A worldwide emissions trading scheme will create an estimated $3 trillion market. That's hammer-of-god money. It scares me, personally. Carbon taxes have the same effect in economic terms, with fewer places for fiddles to hide. It's also easier to offset carbon taxes with income tax cuts.

    Until recently I've been pretty much convinced of human global warming. Now I'm beginning to wonder. I'm not a skeptic / denialist / seal-murderer per se, but the current round of stuff is ... unsettling.

    --

    Classical Liberalism: All your base are belong to you.

    1. Re:Three things by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Your point 2. seems flawed. There is no "law of averages" as you describe. One way to understand the issue is that if you flip a coin 100 times there is only an 8% chance that the result will be 50% heads. As you increase the number of flips that percentage decreases.

      Wikipedia has a discussion of this if you are interested.

      As far as cap and trade, I agree that a carbon tax is a lot more sensible. I hope we end up there. Unfortunately it appears that any political efforts to materially reduce the human carbon footprint are doomed due to something akin to the prisoner's dilemma. So we are going to find out if AGW theories are correct or not.

      Things are looking good for humanity over the next couple of centuries IMHO.

    2. Re:Three things by Jacques+Chester · · Score: 1

      I'm definitely not a statistician and I am naturally a shameful blight on the face of our profession. But would adjustments follow some sort of distribution, at least? I'm more optimistic that we'll dig ourselves out of this with technology -- but that's not the issue at hand.

      --

      Classical Liberalism: All your base are belong to you.

    3. Re:Three things by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Depends on the nature of the adjustments. There are two types that I am aware of:

      1. Data set trimming. This is essentially throwing away outliers, that is data that is "bad" for various unknown reasons. Generally the criterion is a measurement more than 3 standard deviations from the mean.

      2. Adjustments due to systematic variations. For example if a sensor is located near a growing population center the measurements it provides are likely to be changing with time due to this environmental effect. This would be adjusted.

      While perhaps data set trimming could generate a random set of corrections the adjustments due to systematic variations would definitely not.

  62. religion... if only... by purpleraison · · Score: 1

    "Does the spirit of scientific scepticism really require that I remain forever open-minded to denialist humbug until it's shown to be wrong?"

    Does this apply to religion as well?

    Unfortunately, folks only assume this applies to science, but how many muslims (christians, et al.) think skepticism applies to religious snake-oil salesman as well? Consider this: if religions were held to task too we would never have met George Bush or Osama Bin Laden.

    --
    I am open source, and Linux baby!
  63. Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by TapeCutter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ah yes, it doesn't take long for someone to post a link to the fully qualified blogger Anthony Watts whenever the word skeptic appers in conjunction with climate, but if you call yourself a skeptic then consider the following...

    Well before Watt's stared his website scientists had already explained how adjustments are made to compensate for the urban heat island effect but that didn't stop our pluckly little weatherman from building a website to show those ivory tower dwellers where they were sorely mistaken. As Watts fame (and income) grew, NOAA thought it might be a good idea to try and add some clarity so they took 70 weather stations that Watt's himself had rated as the best. They re-ran their analysis with just those stations and compared the result to the original analyisis using all 1200+ stations. Lo and behold the two curves were virtually identical as can be seen on the first graph in NOAA's response to Watts. Why? - Because the trend does not rely on the abolute temprature, it relies on the changes in temprature. Such systematic errors in measurement have long been known and handled by mathematicians and scientists alike.

    Observant readers may note that a fully qualified political scientist by the name of McIntyre did manage to get a paper on the subject published in an obscure journal which was subsequently hyped so much that the US senate held an inqusition (err, inquiry) into Mann's 1997 hockey stick paper.

    The inquisition called on the US National Acedemies of Science to proffer an opinion on McIntyre's claims. Their testimony came down heavily in favour of Mann's conclusions but also made some minor crticisims of his confidence levels. Mann being the leading scientists he is took those critcisims seriously and subsequently published an extended study in the journal Science, yes that's right, the world renowned journal published by the very same organisation who critcised his confidence levels.

    McIntyre's paper failed to stand the test of time but rather than having another crack at science he went off to become yet another fully qualified blogger and created the popular front site "climate Audit", I say front site because both Watt's are McIntyre are stongly associated with the anti-science lobbyists at the CEI and the Heartland Institute (now there's a couple of targets for an email hack if I ever saw one).

    McIntyre used his site to continue pushing the claim that Mann had hidden his data (where have we heard that before?). To put it politely, I am highly skeptical of that claim. If it was true then how did NAS come to it's conclusions in their testimony, and how is it that many others have also replicated Mann's work? Why is it that both Watts and McIntrye take selective quotes from the testimony to loudly declare that they "discredited Mann's hockey stick"? - You would think that if the testimony actually came to that conclusion then they would want you to read it. Yet nowhere on either site will you find an link to the testimony because...well...skeptical people might actually go and read it.

    Considering the above farcical chain of events I don't blame Mann for expressing his desire to keep McIntyre's discredited paper out of the IPCC reports, I would have said the same thing. However this does not change the fact that the paper was subsequently included and discussed.

    For those who don't like to read scientific papers and abhore pdf's there is an excellent summary on the youtube channel Climate crock of the week, unsurprisingly Watt's abused the DCMA in an attempt to have the video removed.

    The skill of genuine skepticisim starts by learning to be skeptical of ones own ideas and beliefs. It's siad that a great scientist starts every day by

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    1. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by grcumb · · Score: 1

      The skill of genuine skepticisim [sic] starts by learning to be skeptical of ones own ideas and beliefs.

      Amen! 8^)

      I'm just posting here because it's almost certain that this superb summary of recent events is going to get buried in the deluge of blind assertion.

      More of us should try to bear in mind that logic is not a 'fire and forget' proposition.

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    2. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the compliment! I saw someone had posted a reply and was expecting abuse and obfuscation from the usual suspects.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    3. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by grcumb · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the compliment! I saw someone had posted a reply and was expecting abuse and obfuscation from the usual suspects.

      Mission accomplished, then. 8^)

      --
      Crumb's Corollary: Never bring a knife to a bun fight.
    4. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by robinjo · · Score: 1

      Thank you for posting a link to NOAA's response. Could you also post a link to the complete set of raw temperature data for those 70 stations? 70 separate download links will also do. And I'd certainly like to have the original raw data before any adjustments.

      I don't have a problem if you or NOAA or anyone proves McIntyre or Watts wrong. But I need to have some proof instead of rebuttals. These e-mails have changed the situation so, that neither side should be believed without solid evidence. Say-so isn't enough.

    5. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by Bongo · · Score: 1

      The inquisition called on the US National Acedemies of Science to proffer an opinion on McIntyre's claims. Their testimony came down heavily in favour of Mann's conclusions but also made some minor crticisims of his confidence levels.

      If by "minor" you mean chopping a 2000 year reconstruction down to 400 years ??? (because anything earlier was deemed by NAS to be too unreliable?)

      And what was just after 400 years? The Medieval Warm Period. The whole point of the hockey stick was to demonstrate the that MWP hadn't happened globally. But now the NAS panel found the hockey stick just couldn't be relied upon for anything back that far.

      And yet you call this "minor crticisims of his confidence levels" ? Ridiculous.

    6. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "because anything earlier was deemed by NAS to be less reliable than the stated confidence level

      Fixed that for ya. Look up the follow up paper for the corrections and extentions.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    7. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      You will never find proof in science, my advice is to look for evidence or run the numbers yourself.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    8. Re:Skeptcisim vs Propoganda by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      You can find links to NOAA's data here. If you want links to the historical raw data I believe you can find it here or here but you may have to apply corrections to the data yourself.

  64. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by onefriedrice · · Score: 1

    And why would that matter? If we believe the climate will change to reduce our living space thorough riding sea levels then we should do something about that, regardless of the root cause.

    The cause is important because if climate change is not at all or predominantly caused by humans, why should we think that we can do anything to stop the climate from changing anyway? If there's one thing we can all agree on, it's that the climate changes. (Period.) The Earth goes through an ice age; the glaciers grow. The ice age ends; the glaciers recede. We know this happens, and that it occurs apparently without human intervention (or interference). Therefore, nobody should be alarmed that Earth is warming; that's what it does. Will a warmer planet be bad for humans? Maybe, maybe not. There are a lot of unanswered questions remaining, but they're all mostly irrelevant if we don't know the answer to the most important question: is there even anything humans could do to stop climate change if we wanted to? It would be great if we could find answers to the questions that remain before passing sweeping global warming legislature. Unfortunately, the debate has turned ugly. Name-calling such as "denialist" certainly doesn't contribute much to the dialog or convince many people...

    --
    This author takes full ownership and responsibility for the unpopular opinions outlined above.
  65. Re:reply by Willis fresh url by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  66. Open-minded? by MaggieL · · Score: 1

    I'd say somebody who's referring to skepticism as "denialist humbug" is in no danger of being accused of being "open-minded". For him the "science is settled". Sad.

    This isn't science, it's collectivist religion.

    --
    -=Maggie Leber=-
    1. Re:Open-minded? by dwguenther · · Score: 1

      You just proved the author's thesis.

    2. Re:Open-minded? by Falconhell · · Score: 1

      denialist humbug

      If it quacks like a duck.......

  67. Wrong conclusion by meburke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    After wading through the article, I'm skeptical about the conclusion: There is no evidence that "peer review" significantly increases the validity of a scientist's conclusion; only that it will test the methods that led to that conclusion.

    There are many historical instances of "peer review" either bolstering false conclusions because the reviewers were inclined in the same direction, or denying the conclusion because it didn't fit in with the orthodox view.

    --
    "The mind works quicker than you think!"
    1. Re:Wrong conclusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't RTFA, but I bet the author's point was that because there are many recent instances of blogs bolstering false conclusions and abject crazyness, if you are serious about examining the current state of the science it makes sense to review the dialog in the scientific community The alternative is to devote hours of research to disputing any of a potentially unlimited number popular writers who can muster only enough rigor to fool other bloggers.

  68. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by phantomfive · · Score: 1
    OK, here's my problem with that article. It starts out with a nice, scientific, analysis of atmospheric composition. And then, suddenly it comes out with this quote:

    "The rate of change is probably the most scary thing because it means that the Earth systems can't cope with it,"

    What? Where did that come from? What does he mean, the "Earth systems can't cope with it?" I'm pretty sure the earth will do just fine. Does he mean that CO2 is being put into the atmosphere faster than it is being absorbed? But saying it like that doesn't sound as scary. And then he concludes with this entirely unsubstantiated quote:

    "On such a crowded planet, we have little capacity to adapt to changes that are much faster than anything in human experience."

    The article started in such a scientific fashion, and now it ends with propaganda. There is no scientific justification for claiming we have little capacity to adapt to these changes.

    This is a perfect example of a lot of global warming ideas: they start with solid science then extrapolate into fear-mongering and propaganda.

    --
    Qxe4
  69. Some of them really are "denialists" by Livius · · Score: 1

    There are skeptics and there are cult-like denialists. Denialism exists and it has to be fought because it is particularly damaging. Since the phenomenon is poorly-understood, we need to be able to discuss climate change and raise doubts and questions without the lunatic fringe dismissing the whole thing on the feeblest of pretexts.

  70. one month does not a pattern make... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..."Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia."

    Yeah? So? In July of 2001, I bed 6 different women and was having sex like crazy, almost every day. Does that make me a studly playboy? It does if you focus on JUST that month.

    Once you factor in the rest of my life prior to (and since then) I am a far cry from a stud/sex machine. In fact you could almost classify me as a loser sexually. (before and since are pitiful numbers). That month was a fluke and should not be used to judge my overall sexual prowess, unless you want to skew the results in my favor.

  71. Re:You Don't Need a PhD to Know When a Chart's Bog by bmo · · Score: 1

    But it is relevant.

    It's relevant because he's supposedly one "in on the science" and if he goes 'round misrepresenting the science, what are people to think? That the science is bogus? Well, yeah, and that's what we've got. I said earlier that there's been a lot of hyperbole from AGW proponents and bad movies made about AGW, and it only makes people feel like they're being bullshitted, especially when they're namecalled and condescended to when questions are asked.

    Enough with the bullshit. If you want people to believe you, don't misrepresent the science, don't exaggerate, and don't trick people.

    And most of all, don't deliberately make people feel stupid by doing so.

    --
    BMO

  72. Why is this even an issue? by rantingkitten · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I've never understood why this is even an issue. Okay, from a purely scientific standpoint it would be interesting to know whether or not humans are having an effect on the climate. But as a practical matter I don't see why anyone has a problem with cleaning up our act. The basic goal is "Hey guys, maybe we'd all be better off if we found better ways of producing energy than by burning stuff and letting the smoke into the atmosphere."

    The only arguments I've heard from the (usually conservative) anti-global-warming crowd are absurd. They fall into two main points as far as I can tell -- one is "It's anti-capitalist" and the other is "Government has no business telling private companies what to do."

    In fact this is perfectly illustrated by the above post, who says

    Naturally, someone that hates big business and "the man" may also psychologically have a reason to believe in AGW

    How is that "natural"? How does that even remotely follow?

    "It's anti-capitalist" is just ridiculous. As an example, say we want to reduce emissions and stop using coal, so let's use nuclear. Where do they think the nuclear plants are going to come from? Someone is going to have to build, staff, and maintain those, and sell the resulting energy at profit. There are thousands of potential jobs just from the construction alone.
    Someone has to design, manufacture, install, and maintain the smokestack scrubbers. Someone has to design, manufacture, and upkeep new and more efficient engines. Or solar panels, or hydroelectric power stations, or whatever. All creating jobs, all being done at profit.
    There's a whole green industry waiting in the wings to do these things. How on earth is it anti-capitalist, anti-business, or anti-"The Man" to see a need for better and more efficient service, and provide that need at profit?!

    "Government has no business telling private companies what to do." I don't get this one either. Private industry would never regulate itself in consideration of anything but its bottom line. There's a reason we're not all still working 14 hour days and dealing with child labor -- and it's not because corporations voluntarily relaxed those standards. Why does anyone think it's a good idea for companies to crap all over everything, dump any pollutants they want anywhere they like? But the second someone suggests that maybe that's not good, out comes Fox News and their ilk to blame government for ruining everyone's fun.

    Finally, I don't see how anyone can argue that we can continue to take billions of tons of carbon-based fuel, set it on fire, release whatever combustion byproducts into the atmosphere.. and absolutely nothing bad will happen. So, again, even if it's not having any actual effect on the global temperature, wouldn't we all be better off not breathing that crap?

    --
    mirrorshades radio -- darkwave, industrial, futurepop, ebm.
    1. Re:Why is this even an issue? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      How is that "natural"? How does that even remotely follow?

      Does it need to? The supposed "economic conservativism" and "small government" of the right in no way is logically connected to the abortion issue, or even military intervention overseas, and yet all those issues are strongly linked. Likewise, economic regulation typically championed by the left is unrelated to the abortion issue as well, and is also unrelated to hate crime legislation, and is also unrelated to affirmative action.

      Private industry would never regulate itself in consideration of anything but its bottom line.

      Correction, corporations often do not do much beyond their bottom line, because of the diffusion of responsibility of the corporate structure--and most chilling, the fact that people buy products from companies they nonetheless think operate immorally. Corporations make money either by government largesse or because someone is buying their products. It's naive to blame business (naive, but trendy) and ignore the long lines of people patronizing them and allowing them to exist.

      "Government has no business telling private companies what to do." I don't get this one either. Private industry would never regulate itself in consideration of anything but its bottom line. There's a reason we're not all still working 14 hour days and dealing with child labor -- and it's not because corporations voluntarily relaxed those standards. Why does anyone think it's a good idea for companies to crap all over everything, dump any pollutants they want anywhere they like? But the second someone suggests that maybe that's not good, out comes Fox News and their ilk to blame government for ruining everyone's fun.

      I'm not sure, but I don't think -most- people ever worked over 14 hours a day, and minimum wage (and 40-hour work week) was actually first started by Ford:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Ford#Labor_philosophy

      So actually, yes, it is in large part because corporations relaxed their standards, particularly the Ford Corporation. I am no fan of the corporate structure, environment, or culture.

      You are correct that business has no right to pollute when that pollution will clearly harm other people. Yet at the same time, the government itself often isn't held to the same pollution standards...

      Someone has to design, manufacture, install, and maintain the smokestack scrubbers. Someone has to design, manufacture, and upkeep new and more efficient engines. Or solar panels, or hydroelectric power stations, or whatever. All creating jobs, all being done at profit.
      There's a whole green industry waiting in the wings to do these things. How on earth is it anti-capitalist, anti-business, or anti-"The Man" to see a need for better and more efficient service, and provide that need at profit?!

      Um, I don't think capitalists are capitalists merely for capitalism's own sake, which is what that argument seems to imply... they maintain that some of those industries are unnecessary and thus a waste of resources. Capitalists are not capitalists simply because they like the idea of people working for business for money.

      As for child labor, it usually exists as a byproduct of economic conditions. Many people go on crusades to avoid or ban products that were made with child labor but with no thought as to why that child was working in the first place. There's some evidence to indicate that banning child-made goods may cause a rise in child prostitution, as the children as working to survive and thus may have to turn to worse means. Most child labor is, though, as I understand it, not an exported goods.

      Finally, I don't see how anyone can argue that we can continue to take billions of tons of carbon-based fuel, set it on fire, release whatever combustion byproducts into the atmosphere.. and absolutely nothing bad will happen. So, again, even if it's not having any actual effect on the

    2. Re:Why is this even an issue? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      But as a practical matter I don't see why anyone has a problem with cleaning up our act.

      Because "cleaning up our act" is going to cost tens of trillions of dollars, possibly represent significant dislocations in lifestyles, and will have unknown environmental effects in and of itself.

    3. Re:Why is this even an issue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But as a practical matter I don't see why anyone has a problem with cleaning up our act.

      This is not being proposed. The politics of cap'n'trade is about creating winners and losers. If your bank account doesn't already have 8 figures, you are likely in the loser camp. If we hobble the US, we should hobble imports too. I know the good arguments in favor of free trade, but erection of barriers to domestic productivity is turning us into a debt-ridden consumer nation. Don't be surprised when we walk away from that debt. If I were a politician, I'd propose canceling all social security and US-funded pensions. They are unconstitutional, Congress critters should only be permitted to spend money they have now or reasonably within its terms (I guess that means the Senate could tackle longer term proposals). If you want evidence of cap'n'trades BS just look to all the subsidies they wish to give the "poor" (under 6 figure incomes). In essense, they won't take from this special group of retards without the means to pay significant income tax. I.e., if cap'n'trade will cost average Joe $500, there is $500 credit so average Joes doesn't have to change his ways. And they won't take from those with multi-billion fortunes who will ensure the are on the winning end or receiving caps. The fucked are 6-figure to 8-figure folk. You can laugh but they have no representation and likely have the means, desire, time, and wherewithall to introduce, promote, and exploit green technologies. Who bought those $1500 washers that are now half the price?

    4. Re:Why is this even an issue? by rmushkatblat · · Score: 1

      Very few people who may doubt AGW would have any problem with replacing fossil fuels with nuclear power. It's just that, you know, politicians are pansies and don't want to build nuclear power plants. (hint: it won't make them rich).

    5. Re:Why is this even an issue? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      --"But as a practical matter I don't see why anyone has a problem with cleaning up our act."

      Because they're trying to panic us into spending trillions of dollars. Ever since this first started, there has been a "We need to fix it NOW!" chant going on. This particular tactic has been getting more an more common in US politics lately, you may have noticed, but I think the IPCC politicization was part of what brought it into such use (compare the actual report, flawed as it is, to the summary).

      I'm all in favor of more nuclear power, especially getting to work on fast breeder reactors again. I have no problem with wanting to reduce CO2 emissions. Not for AGW reasons, but for ocean acidification reasons. Reducing oil usage? Heck, it saves me money, so I do it.

      Setting up a government agency that will pass out carbon credits to the politically connected and place massive burdens on everyone else (seriously, research who stands to make money off of these)? Not so much a fan.

      And none of the above addresses the problem that is, over the long term, even worse, which is concentration of power. The last few decades have had power concentrating to a disgusting degree in the US. Whatever the party in power at the moment, politicians are people. People are fallible and corrupt. Giving any small group the kind of control the alarmists are demanding is a really bad idea. The shouting down of dissent is a bad sign on where this is going.

    6. Re:Why is this even an issue? by Troed · · Score: 1

      The big difference between AGW and "being nice to the environment" is with CO2. With AGW CO2 is a dangerous pollutant, without AGW it is plant food and the earth is better off with MORE of it in the atmosphere (as has been the case through of most of earth's history!) since it would increase crop yields and thus support more animals and humans.

      Yes, really. It's that important to not do the wrong thing "just because".

      http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2000/08/000811062434.htm

      http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/06/08/surprise-earths-biosphere-is-booming-co2-the-cause/

    7. Re:Why is this even an issue? by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Okay, from a purely scientific standpoint it would be interesting to know whether or not humans are having an effect on the climate. But as a practical matter I don't see why anyone has a problem with cleaning up our act. The basic goal is "Hey guys, maybe we'd all be better off if we found better ways of producing energy than by burning stuff and letting the smoke into the atmosphere."

      We have limited resources, and there are other problems besides the climate that threaten our survival. If we waste vast resources on something that we might not even have any meaningful effect on, we are making our situation worse, because we could have been using these resources to solve problems we're sure exist and that we can have a significant effect on. To argue to do something very costly, even though it might not have any effect, just because it's the socially right thing to do, is irresponsible in the extreme.

    8. Re:Why is this even an issue? by lennier · · Score: 1

      "Because "cleaning up our act" is going to cost tens of trillions of dollars"

      Yes, and? How much funny money did we just lose to the banking fiasco?

      We've known since the 1950s that our current form of industry has bad effects on the environment. Is industry still psychologically unable to understand the idea of pollution?

      "We shouldn't do something we know we ought to do which will save human lives because it will oh noes! cost MONEY! MONEY!!! THINK OF THE DOLLARS!!!!!111!" is one of the worst arguments ever.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    9. Re:Why is this even an issue? by lennier · · Score: 1

      "We have limited resources, and there are other problems besides the climate that threaten our survival. "

      Okay, I understand this argument, and I'm a little boggled myself as to why CO2 has risen to Problem #1 when many other grave environmental and resource limitation problems (deforestation, fish stock depletion, freshwater depletion, peak oil, peak copper, peak uranium) are not being addressed.

      But can't we do a threat/scenario matrix and prioritise the changes we can make which will make our ecology and society more robust in all likely scenarios? There are certain technologies like permaculture organics and (sensible) biofuels which make sense on both the climate change and peak oil axes: both reducing our dependence on expensive foreign petroleum and offsetting CO2 production. Basic energy efficiency pays off everywhere: less money, less fuel use, more distribution in the grind, Whereas, for example, big flashy 'climate change only' or 'peak oil only' tools like carbon sequestration and expanding fission power don't do anything to solve the larger eco-problems of toxicity and species loss.

      Why can't we all agree to push 'dual use' eco-friendly technologies and help move our culture to a more bio-integrated and less brute-force energy-demanding future?

      It's not like the eco catastrophe has crept up on us over even one generation. It was the 1950s when the first conservationists started drawing attention to the downside of runaway industrialisation and the mass extinctions it was starting to cause. Now that we're well into the process of building a planetary death machine and calling it 'civilisation', why are we surprised?

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    10. Re:Why is this even an issue? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      As an example, say we want to reduce emissions and stop using coal, so let's use nuclear.

      Right, but how many 'environmentalists' are pro-nuclear? 1%? Real ones, e.g. Patrick Moore, are, but the label has been nearly conquered by global socialists who find industrial society untolerable and the Earth's human population in need of a trim.

      This is the most influential (self-styled) environmentalist at the UN:

      "Isn't the only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilizations collapse? Isn't it our responsibility to bring that about?" - Maurice Strong

      I've been told by Sierra Club members that anti-nuke is one of their platform planks, yet it's the only technology that can provide enough clean power to bring the 3rd world up to modern standards.

      Unfortunately the science isn't divorced from the policy. And the politicians know that debunking the science is the shortest path to defeating the policy.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    11. Re:Why is this even an issue? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Or, translating what you say into a simpler form: "I don't have an actual intelligent reply to your statement, so I'll just bullshit, handwave, and smokescreen".

  73. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "And why would that matter? If we believe the climate will change to reduce our living space thorough riding sea levels then we should do something about that, regardless of the root cause." The illogic of you statement is staggering. If the cause is not human what makes you think human behavior can stop a natural trend?

  74. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this is unprecedented, then what evidence is there that the Earth's systems can't adapt to these changes quickly enough?

  75. To quote Fark by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    THIS.

    Having something published in a journal is not the be-all, end-all, it does not mean that a theory is now correct one and for all time. It means it is time to start wider discussion and testing. The way science works is by trying to prove things wrong. You see phenomena in nature, and you come up with what you think is an explanation for them. You refine said explanation to the point that it makes testable predictions, the sort of thing like "If X occurs, Y will also occur," or whatever. You then set out to try and prove your theory wrong. You test those predictions. You say "Ok, well then let's try making X and see what happens, if we don't get Y, we know that we are wrong." Each time you fail to falsify your theory, you are more sure it is true.

    Others join in, they re-try your experiments, make sure you didn't fuck up. They find alternate explanations and test those (well maybe Z could also cause Y, not just X). The more times that everyone tries and fails to falsify your theory, the more sure you are it is the right one. Only by repeated testing by yourself and others, only by actively trying to figure out what is wrong with your theory can you reach one that you are certain (or at least as certain as we can be) is right.

    So publishing an article is NOT the last step in that, it is the first. You do some work, your write it up, you publish it. Some reviewers look at it to make sure there is nothing obviously wrong, and it then goes out to the larger community. That's when things start.

    1. Re:To quote Fark by williamhb · · Score: 1

      Having something published in a journal is not the be-all, end-all, it does not mean that a theory is now correct one and for all time. It means it is time to start wider discussion and testing. The way science works is by trying to prove things wrong. You see phenomena in nature, and you come up with what you think is an explanation for them. You refine said explanation to the point that it makes testable predictions, the sort of thing like "If X occurs, Y will also occur," or whatever. You then set out to try and prove your theory wrong. You test those predictions. You say "Ok, well then let's try making X and see what happens, if we don't get Y, we know that we are wrong." Each time you fail to falsify your theory, you are more sure it is true.

      Ahem...

      Failing to prove yourself wrong does nothing to prove yourself right. "I have a new theory about quantum mechanics. I went to the pub for five hours and didn't prove myself wrong, now I'm really confident!" It is very easy to fail to prove yourself wrong.

      Publication is not the preferred route for untested theories -- the proportion of experiments that are ever independently reproduced is pretty much zero. Publish crap, people will cite crap, and we have a nice crap-producing machine.

    2. Re:To quote Fark by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      If you don't understand what I mean by trying and failing to prove yourself wrong, your probably need a better understanding of strong inference. I suggest reading The Logic of Scientific Discovery, as it is an excellent book, but there are more cliff note versions available. What it comes down to is that we can't prove things true. We cannot devise a test (or at least nobody has figured out how yet) to prove, 100%, for sure, no questions, that something is true. What we instead to is try to prove things false, we try to falsify theories. We test their predictive ability, trying to find a situation where it fails. If we can't, it's probably a good theory.

      It's an extremely important aspect of science, and explains why things like creationism aren't scientific theories: They aren't falsifiable. Since if god exists, he/she/it exists outside of normal reality and outside the physical laws of the universe, there's no way to test for god. As such you can't falsify certaionalist claims and thus they aren't scientific theories. Also, it explains the one and only thing they'd need to become a theory: Make falsifiable claims. If your idea makes claims that can be falsified, then congratulations, you got yourself a theory. Doesn't mean it is right, but if it can be tested it is now in the realm science can deal with. If it can't be tested, well then sorry it isn't science.

    3. Re:To quote Fark by noidentity · · Score: 1

      To quote Fark

      THIS.

      Having something published in a journal is not the be-all, end-all, it does not mean that a theory is now correct one and for all time. It means it is time to start wider discussion and testing. [...]

      WHAT? Please help me out. I keep seeing the above idiom, a paragraph with the single word "this", but have not figured out what it means. Can you express the above without using this idiom? Or are you literally quoting someone on Fark who said "this"? If so, quoting it makes no sense to me.

    4. Re:To quote Fark by williamhb · · Score: 1

      If you don't understand what I mean by trying and failing to prove yourself wrong, your probably need a better understanding of strong inference. I suggest reading The Logic of Scientific Discovery, as it is an excellent book, but there are more cliff note versions available. What it comes down to is that we can't prove things true. We cannot devise a test (or at least nobody has figured out how yet) to prove, 100%, for sure, no questions, that something is true. What we instead to is try to prove things false, we try to falsify theories. We test their predictive ability, trying to find a situation where it fails. If we can't, it's probably a good theory.

      That is not actually how most scientific experiments happen -- most experiments really are motivated to seek "evidence for" not "lack of evidence against", because it is "evidence for" that drives citations and impact factor. For instance, consider the standard double-blind clinical trial. The experimental design is looking for a positive effect; it is only the statistical check applied to the result that attempts to disprove a negative (specifically, trying to disprove that it was a chance result). But the experimental design seeking a positive effect actually comes first. If you actually think the scientist writing the paper wanted to prove himself wrong, you are delusional. He wants to provide evidence of an effect that will be cited, and his motivation for disproving sampling bias, gender bias, etc is merely to rebut the predictable complaints of the reviewers. Nobody gets a Nobel prize for saying "bugger, my own unpublished theory doesn't work."

      For a more extreme case, consider the question of extraterrestrial life. If the theory is that life can only exist where there is water, then to "try but fail to disprove that theory", NASA should be examining waterless planets hoping to find life that will disprove their theory. But in practice science works by finding evidence for (that's what gets you cited), not lack of evidence against, so NASA would naturally prefer to look at the watery worlds to find evidence to add weight to their theory. Odd as it seems, science in practice is more driven by abduction than induction.

    5. Re:To quote Fark by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      The whole "prove the negative" came about because that is the only way to "prove" historical evolution - if you can't find something that says it didn't happen, then it must have...versus, finding the evidence to show that it did happen the way they want it to. Proving the negative is the impossible in many situations; and as such bad science.

      Actual science is done very much as you describe - prove the most likely cause through repeatability; verifying that what you say is happening is happening by trying to show it.

      It's like debugging a program - first you have to understand the bug; then you have to repeatably reproduce it. Only then can you suggest a fix since only then can you implement a fix and be able to verify with certainty that you actually fixed it, not just masked it so it comes out as something else later.

      This basically translates to: first you have to understand the scientific problem/principle in the hypothesis; then you have to be able to repeatably reproduce it so you can show you know how to make it happen; then and only then can you hypothesize on how not to make it happen to show with certainty that you are right, not just pulling it out of your butt.

      Sadly, today we are more in for the pull-it-out-of-your-butt conclusions than the prove-it conclusions. Of course, the prove-it conclusions take more time and money to make happen - it's just not economically or politically expedient.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    6. Re:To quote Fark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole "prove the negative" came about because that is the only way to "prove" historical evolution - if you can't find something that says it didn't happen, then it must have...versus, finding the evidence to show that it did happen the way they want it to.

      Evolution is an interesting one -- in that it is not a theory of science but also a claim of historicity. Proving that evolution as a process takes place is pretty straightforward, and science is very well-accepted at proving what processes are ongoing in the universe even by the lay public. The claim "scientific process X is the only cause of our current state" however is a question of historicity not just science. When we take science out of the science classroom and put it into the history classroom, it's quite reasonable for people to raise "out-of-field" questions such as "what about the possibility of an unseen cause", "but apart from claims of 'it must have' do we have sufficient evidence the process scales", "what about philosophical claims to the contrary", etc.

      Science itself is built on a particular philosophical foundation of materialism; with origins science (evolution, big bang, etc), we often try to take the science and then claim it lets us conclude that a materialist version of existential philosophy is correct -- forgetting that we are only concluding our own initial assumption, and that along the way we've been dismissing all counter-arguments on the grounds that they don't fit with our materialist initial assumptions, and thus philosophically/mathematically speaking we haven't actually proved anything: proving A->A does not prove A.

    7. Re:To quote Fark by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      It basically means "This post is correct, this post nails it," and so on. Why did it get started that way? I don't know, why does anything on the Internet get started? Basically it is just a way of saying you agree with a post.

    8. Re:To quote Fark by noidentity · · Score: 1

      I'm still confused. He's saying his own post is correct? There's no link to any other post. I'm not feigning ignorance here, trying to question the legitimacy of some idiom; I sincerely don't understand it, and am always at a total loss when I see it, as I am still in this case. Thanks for any help.

  76. no credibilty on either side by mmjcon147 · · Score: 2

    Regardless of good science, or lack thereof, Climate Science has a credibility problem.

  77. And how do you get a peer reviewed AGW article? by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Well, this article would have a lot more credibility, if the "Climate Gate" issue had not just hit the press. If you didn't read them, their were these emails promising to block any skeptical papers from appearing and to not cite papers in journals that accepted skeptical papers.

    Unfortunately, no matter how you feel about Global Warming, the folks in "Climate Gate" have stuck a grievous blow to the credibility of the scientific method, the peer review process, and positions like this.

    That said, if peer review was truly working in the field of Global Warming and skeptical papers which were backed up with legitimate data and arguments were able to get into peer reviewed journals, then this article would have a lot more weight and creditability.

    1. Re:And how do you get a peer reviewed AGW article? by jordandeamattson · · Score: 0

      Excuse me? How does a valid comment on a situation get rated a troll? Seems someone has an ax to grind and is doing it with mod points. First time I have ever had a post moderated as a troll.

    2. Re:And how do you get a peer reviewed AGW article? by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

      While I don't agree with your argument, your post certainly wasn't a troll - someone is mis-using mod points.
      So - in the real world how can peer review be made to work - especially in a field where such a stunning amount of money and political pressure is involved? I'll agree that there is a problem - but how to fix it.

  78. Re:does not publish bylines by glodime · · Score: 2, Interesting

    For those of you not familiar with that particular publication, one of its distinguishing traits is that it does not publish bylines. Ever. Editorials in The Economist are backed by the reputation of the editorial staff of The Economist, not of any individual writer.

    This is a convenient way to pass off work done by someone recently out of business school as the result of years of experience in writing about a particular subject area (not to be confused with years of research and/or work in a subject area or industry).

  79. 2004 C-SPAN Senate Debate by CranberryKing · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Obama & Alan Keyes: Keyes points out that Obama was born in Kenya to which Obama replies, "So what? I'm running for Senate, not President."

  80. PS by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Your link is broken but it does contain the highly amusing message; "Sorry, but you are looking for something that is not here".

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  81. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've driven to work along the same route everyday for the last 15 years, no accidents, no problems. This morning for the first time I try the high co2 blend gasoline. 5 miles down the road bam I get hit by a semi. Damn that co2.

  82. Re: Open the data. by glodime · · Score: 0

    The data is not what needs to be open in science. Only the methods need to be revealed so that the experiment can be repeated and results verified or contradicted. Having the data from someone's experiment can help you analyze the conclusion drawn based on that data but will not verify the experiment's results.

  83. Solving GW for $100M a year... by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

    If our goal is truly to reduce global temperature increases - for the moment let's concede they exist - then we should be looking for the most cost effective solution. Given that CO2 is not the number one global warming gas by far (it is actually methane and most of it comes from cows and other ruminates) and the contribution of CO2 to global warming lessens based on the amount in the atmosphere, curbing carbon emissions at a cost of billions per year, this isn't the best way to do it.

    As outlined in Super Freakanomics, there are various geo-engineering approaches to address global warming being developed by people like Nathan Myhold and his Intellectual Ventures, which can do it at a much lower cost. The most promising is based on the Pinatubo Effect - sulfur in the upper atmosphere - and can be accomplished for under $100M per year (less than .30 cents per American per year). It also has the benefit of having been proven to be effective and safe.

    So, think about that the next time a major push is on for a cap and trade system or carbon tax. And by the way, Al Gore, is opposed to doing this. He would much rather go the less effective, more expensive, and unproven way of reducing CO2 emissions.

    1. Re:Solving GW for $100M a year... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The most promising is based on the Pinatubo Effect - sulfur in the upper atmosphere - and can be accomplished for under $100M per year (less than .30 cents per American per year). It also has the benefit of having been proven to be effective and safe."

      That's the first time I have ever heard someone call sulfuric acid effective and safe. We spent a significant amount of money to remove sulfur from coal plants to prevent acid rain. Now you suggest we add it back!?!

      Let me the first to nominate you for the "2009 Moron of the Year Award". Unfortunately, competition is really stiff.

    2. Re:Solving GW for $100M a year... by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      If folks are actually interested in learning more about this - rather than taking cheap shots as anonymous cowards - take a look at what Intellectual Ventures have on their web site:

      http://intellectualventureslab.com/?page_id=258

    3. Re:Solving GW for $100M a year... by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      A extremely detailed overview on this topic is available at the Intellectual Ventures web site (see http://intellectualventureslab.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Stratoshield-white-paper-300dpi.pdf).

      But to answer some of the questions, raised below, the necessary SO2 ranges - depending on scenario - from 200K (enough to offset Arctic Warming and establish a positive albedo feedback loop for cooling) to 2M tons per year (for a full on global cooling process.

      This works out to from 2/10s of one percent to 2 percent of current SO2 emissions world wide (half of which come from man made sources). Current SO2 emissions are well below those we saw during the worse of acid rain.

      To put it in perspective, Mt. Pinatubo kicked 20M tons of sulfur into the atmosphere in the course of a few days.

      There have been studies on the impact of an additional 2M tons of SO2 in the atmosphere and they show miniscule impact.

      It should be noted that any geo-engineering scheme is short term and designed to buy us the time to make the switch to more efficient and lower foot print energy systems.

      The folks proposing these plans accept that AGW is real, but believe the measures being proposed are Too Little, Too Late, and Too Expensive.

  84. impending American Cultural Revolution by heli_flyer · · Score: 1

    I think this is just one facet of a larger problem, which I call the "impeding American Cultural Revolution" aka "The rise of the idiocracy". If you look at conditions today, they are similar to the start of the Chinese Cultural Revolution: disrespect for the science and facts (climate change deniers, creationists, birthers, teabaggers, health care death panelers, etc) and the glorification of the common man (Joe the Plumber, Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, Michele Bachmann, Gretchen Carlson dumbing herself down, etc). The scenario which scares me is: the idiots vote Sarah Palin into office, and she prevents control of greenhouse gases until a massive global catastrophe (where we lose a significant portion of the world's arable land) that makes the Three Years of Natural Disasters look like a minor problem...

    1. Re:impending American Cultural Revolution by bnenning · · Score: 1

      The scenario which scares me is: the idiots vote Sarah Palin into office, and she prevents control of greenhouse gases until a massive global catastrophe

      Unlike the Obama administration, Sarah Palin supports nuclear power, which is currently the best way we have to reduce greenhouse gases.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    2. Re:impending American Cultural Revolution by azaris · · Score: 1

      The scenario which scares me is: the idiots vote Sarah Palin into office, and she prevents control of greenhouse gases until a massive global catastrophe

      Unlike the Obama administration, Sarah Palin supports nuclear power, which is currently the best way we have to reduce greenhouse gases.

      I doubt Sarah Palin supports anything, she will playback any tape inserted into her drive by the conservative thinktanks (as long as it doesn't interfere with her down-to-earth common sense mavericky image). Government bad, businesses good...

  85. hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have. It's not very convincing. In fact, based on your dogmatic certainty, I suspect it is YOU who has not read the research carefully. ....

    so, you've read the research and came to the conclusion that there's adequate information to analyze a chaotic system with enough certainty to put 2/3 of the world's population on the brink of starvation. The consequences of the knee jerk reaction to AGW are worse then ignoring it.

  86. the author also doesn't understand peer review by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The author raises good points about the dangers of over-reliance on the peer review system. It's a good system but it is not doesn't always work - crap gets through and good articles aren't published.

    And neither of you understand the peer review system. It's actually a very complex system, and one full of competition on many levels.

    First, there are many scientists trying to get their work published. Second, there are many journals. Third, each journal has a journal impact factor. Fourth, papers mention other papers. Fifth, journals and papers are not the only means for how scientists communicate their work or collaborate. There are conferences, groups invite speakers, etc.

    A journal impact factor is a simple calculation. On average, a paper published in Nature gets X number of mentions in other journal's papers. A paper published just about anywhere else gets much less. So people want to get published in Nature, obviously. But people are also realistic, and their PIs help them with finding the right places to get published. And if you don't, you can try again. Sound research is likely to be resubmitted, often times elsewhere.

    When a paper is submitted, you don't just get a "we're publishing it!" or a "DENIED!". You get questions from the reviewers, sometimes requests for more data. If it's rejected, often times it's rejected with some helpful, useful suggestions on how the reviewers feel the paper could be improved, and sometimes it's said between the lines that if you resubmit after taking some of those suggestions, you'll get the thumbs up from that reviewer.

    Yes, Nature and the like are the holy grail. But many, many people don't look only in Nature. They read the journals dedicated to their little niche, because they know that sometimes good, fresh thinking doesn't make it into Nature just because so many people submit. And guess what? So are all their true colleagues. So while you don't get your name in the newspaper or a mention on the nightly news, your research still sees the light of day, and often times, with more 'useful' eyeballs. And if it's good, you impress people, they collaborate with you, present your paper at their group's internal meetings, or hell, just toss the paper across the lunchtable and say to their colleages, "you should give this a glance." It's extremely common for labs/groups to have two weekly presentations- one presentation is the work of someone inside the group, and often someone in the same group presents research OUTSIDE the group. And often, it's presented regardless of how sound it is; it's meaningful to say "here is what so-and-so found" and then show why they were wrong, or what they did badly.

    Now, I'm on the outside of all of this as an IT person, but I've made many scientist-friends and their lives revolve around this stuff. "Willis" clearly doesn't understand it. The peer-reviewed journal system is complex, but also remarkably free of collusion. After all, if someone presents solid research that something widely believed to be true is not, it helps the journal because controversy sells copies, generates debate and discussion, generates mentions in other papers in other journals (hellooooo impact factor!), etc. The primary concern of a journal is not looking stupid by publishing something that isn't sound and well supported, not suppressing controversial research.

    Show me a scientist who bitches and moans publicly about his anti-global-warming research not being published, and I'll show you someone whose science wasn't sound enough to cut the mustard. Every day thousands of papers are submitted to journals and rejected partially or fully, and it's not a conspiracy. It's people doing research that isn't supported enough. There is certainly a dark side, namely, reviewers who don't recuse themselves or aren't qualified to evaluate a particular paper, but that's one reason multiple reviewers are involved, and you can always submit your work to another journal.

    1. Re:the author also doesn't understand peer review by jasonwc · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the information. I really should have reserved judgment. Oh well, at least I learned something about how the process actually works. Anyways - back to learning about networking.

    2. Re:the author also doesn't understand peer review by invisiblerhino · · Score: 1

      For a wonderful introduction to peer review, you could do worse than read this:

      http://www.cgoakley.demon.co.uk/qft/corres.pdf
      It is an exchange, carried out over several years, between a man who believes he has solved quantum field theory, and the reviewers who carefully look through his papers when he tries to publish. They come up with good points and ways to improve the paper, but he resubmits and resubmits until he finds somewhere that accepts it. Along the way, he gets increasingly rude and angry, while the reviewers remain polite and engage carefully with him.

      My favourite part is that it's published on the guy's personal website, although he really doesn't come out of it well.

      --
      xterm -n 8
    3. Re:the author also doesn't understand peer review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The primary concern of a journal is not looking stupid by publishing something that isn't sound and well supported, not suppressing controversial research.

      Agreed. How do they do that? Politics and peer pressure have a lot to do with it. Scientists may be involved, but they are fallible humans like the rest of us, equally concerned with their own individual reputations.

      If scientific journals have a hard time with this, imagine what it's like for the MSM. At least most journals have some actual scientists on hand to help. Who does CNN have? Their reporting goes whichever way the wind blows. Most folks don't get their information from scientific journals, they get it from the MSM. Popular sentiments have almost nothing at all to do with any actual science. Most folks know a couple of data points - glaciers are retreating, CO2 emissions are up - but have no ability what so ever to put any of that in the context of historical trends; nor can they even begin to explain all the of the other inter-related factors. The earth's climate is enormously complex, yet popular discussions distill the entire debate into a small handful of talking points that may or may not have any relevance at all.

    4. Re:the author also doesn't understand peer review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You get questions from the reviewers, sometimes requests for more data."

      Well, apparently some people don't.

    5. Re:the author also doesn't understand peer review by roju · · Score: 1

      Sometimes there can be systemic groupthink that somehow suppresses non-mainstream research. For example, in The Trouble with Physics, Lee Smolin writes about how for a while with fundamental physics it was either string theory or nothing. I'm not saying that's the case with climate research, I have no idea. But it appears that temporary systemic bias can affect the scope of discussion in a field, at least for a while.

    6. Re:the author also doesn't understand peer review by azaris · · Score: 1

      For a wonderful introduction to peer review, you could do worse than read this:

      http://www.cgoakley.demon.co.uk/qft/corres.pdf It is an exchange, carried out over several years, between a man who believes he has solved quantum field theory, and the reviewers who carefully look through his papers when he tries to publish. They come up with good points and ways to improve the paper, but he resubmits and resubmits until he finds somewhere that accepts it. Along the way, he gets increasingly rude and angry, while the reviewers remain polite and engage carefully with him.

      My favourite part is that it's published on the guy's personal website, although he really doesn't come out of it well.

      Some of the reviewers don't seem too polite:

      In spite of its pompous language, this paper is, in fact, less rigorous, from the mathematical point of view, than ordinary perturbation theory which can be found in any good textbook or review article.

      No relevant problems of contemporary QFT are considered in this paper. I recommend its rejection.

      Anyone who has attempted to get a scientific paper published has run into these guys - rude, opinionated, and lazy reviewers. It's not just cranks who get these responses, either.

  87. Skepticism never ends by simonbp · · Score: 1

    There is never an end to skepticism, especially regarding extraordinary predictions about the future.

  88. a common myth by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isn't this precisely the risk of overreliance on the peer review system? Unpopular opinions get silenced.

    That's a common myth. You see, there are many journals. All want to grow their subscribership, increase their impact factor (the scientific journal measurement of notoriety.) They do that by publishing the most interesting research they can.

    Doing research that mirrors what's already been done isn't very popular; grad students and postdocs, for example, have to clear what they're doing with their PIs. That's not likely to happen unless they've got some angle. This isn't apparent to the layman- or even someone who has "PhD" in their title, but even a minor difference in premise can be a big deal.

    Identical research also doesn't get published. New, fresh, interesting research is what journals want. So while Willis thinks there's a massive groupthink, there's actually little of the kind. It may LOOK like groupthink, because on the surface, yes, there's the gross layer of widely-accepted-fact. The devil is in the details, and that's where research is taking place.

    It's a special kind of arrogance to think that you can just stroll in and understand, much less analyze, a field where people dedicate years, if not decades, to their research.

    1. Re:a common myth by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      It's a special kind of arrogance to think that you can just stroll in and understand, much less analyze, a field where people dedicate years, if not decades, to their research.

      Eh, all knowledge was at one time or another specialized. In Plato's day not anyone could learn geometry. Now we teach it to fourth graders. It took Darwin years to come up with his theory of natural selection, and yet his explanation was so clear that anyone can read Origin of Species and see that he's right. The fact is, in many fields doing original research is hard, but understanding that research is not.

      In this case, we have a situation where some scientists did statistical interpolation and averaging of some thermometer data using standard mathematical techniques. You don't need specialized knowledge to average temperatures around the globe, anyone with reasonable statistics ability should be able to understand it. Frankly I would be surprised if there weren't mistakes, given the size of the data set, so I'm not willing to call one weather-station a smoking gun. If we find that it's been happening all over the data set, though, that is something worth noticing.

      --
      Qxe4
    2. Re:a common myth by mc6809e · · Score: 1

      ...All want to grow their subscribership, increase their impact factor (the scientific journal measurement of notoriety.) They do that by publishing the most interesting research they can... ...Identical research also doesn't get published. New, fresh, interesting research is what journals want. So while Willis thinks there's a massive groupthink, there's actually little of the kind...

      Wishful thinking.

      I've seen the process first hand. What journals want first are subscribers. That usually means universities with money to pay big$$$/issue.

      Universities spend money on those journals that are desired by current faculty. Faculty decide what journals the university will pay for.

      And just what does faculty consider desirable? Journals that confirm and publish work that interests the current faculty. Faculty are not going to approve money for journals that upset the world-view of faculty or damage their careers.

      The same thing goes on when it comes to hiring new faculty. Faculty usually has a big say in who gets hired and who does not.

      The entire system is setup to preserve the power and authority of current faculty. "Exciting new ideas" will generally keep you unemployed if they're any threat to the reputation of those of the establishment.

    3. Re:a common myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That's a common myth. You see, there are many journals. All want to grow their subscribership, increase their impact factor (the scientific journal measurement of notoriety.) They do that by publishing the most interesting research they can."

      That's just fucking great science. This is interesting so we'll just ignore opposing views because they won't increase our number of subscribers.
      That's a great reason to bankrupt the US economy. Politics has no place in science!
       

    4. Re:a common myth by UBfusion · · Score: 1

      >Identical research also doesn't get published.

      I think you have hit an important issue here - one of the paradoxes of the modern way of doing science. In the past centuries, a significant or a breakthrough result had to be reproduced in all major research labs of the globe and the journals were more than happy to publish such validation studies. A corpus of such publications was necessary and sufficient to establish what we call a "scientific paradigm" or a "theory". Nowadays, if a respected research establishment declares a new "phenomenon", all the rest will certainly try to replicate, but the replication studies do not really interest the journals. Therefore all we see is a pile of papers all citing the "grand parent" paper which has first expressed the grand truth. Journals coordinate the game of credits and citations, their only dream being to cry "First!!!111" in each case they sense that might make the headlines of science blogs.

      You'd think that this situation would be much more aggravated in research areas where you cannot actually replicate the phenomena. However, in e.g. astronomy, you have often the case of a single set of supernova explosion data and hundreds of papers analyzing it. Papers get published because it's both interesting and valuable, since we won't see such a supernova in a 100 years and most importantly because there is no political/economical agenda involved, just simple speculations on how the universe works.

      Now, climate studies are a different beast. There are literally floods of data (not always relevant or significant) and both political and economical agendas. It's clearly a war and I guess no journal would ever consider to either pour oil on it or publish the view of a minority. The show must and will go on, heads must and will fall and lonely (non-PhD holder) scientists will again get burned on the bonfire of political correctness.

    5. Re:a common myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a special kind of arrogance to think that you can just stroll in and understand, much less analyze, a field where people dedicate years, if not decades, to their research.

      On the contrary, in my experience the best view of a problem is often given by the outsider. The outsider doesn't have the intellectual baggage of the "experts". To quote Warren S. Carey:

       

      "Really new trails are rarely blazed in the great academies. The confining walls of conformist dogma are too dominating."

    6. Re:a common myth by mpe · · Score: 1

      In this case, we have a situation where some scientists did statistical interpolation and averaging of some thermometer data using standard mathematical techniques. You don't need specialized knowledge to average temperatures around the globe, anyone with reasonable statistics ability should be able to understand it. Frankly I would be surprised if there weren't mistakes, given the size of the data set, so I'm not willing to call one weather-station a smoking gun.

      Since the data for this weather station shows some strange manipulations and "corrections" whilst the choice to examine it was effectivly made at random it would appear to be reasonable to not accept the data set until proper independent analysis has been done.

    7. Re:a common myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Trust me. I'm a scientist."

    8. Re:a common myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While agreed every layman has an opinion, you can't just say that all laymen are ignorant. Some of us are aware of the process...and think the process is flawed. But this isn't through willful or otherwise ignorance. Academics are called academics for a reason...they seldom understand realty. Or vice versa.

    9. Re:a common myth by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Really? It didn't seem the choice was made at random to me, it looked like he was searching through the data until he found something obviously wrong. In any case I am willing to give the benefit of the doubt to the original scientists: at the most the average is not going to be off by more than a couple degrees anyway. Given the difficulties of actually calculating a global average, I've never trusted it to that degree of accuracy anyway.

      --
      Qxe4
  89. Manfred by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The mathematical skills of many of those scientists responsible for historic data records have already been assessed indepedently by a high profile team of statisticians (the Wegman commission) a few years ago:

    http://climateaudit.org/2007/11/06/the-wegman-and-north-reports-for-newbies/

    Referring to the criticism of McIntyre and McKitrick of hockey-stick reconstructions, those professional scientists "tended to dismiss their results as being developed by biased amateurs".

    The Wegman commission, however, concluded differently:

    "While the work of Michael Mann and colleagues presents what appears to be compelling evidence of global temperature change, the criticisms of McIntyre and McKitrick, as well as those of other authors mentioned are indeed valid."

    Their judgement about the quality of the professional scientist's work was quite revealing:

    "The papers of Mann et al. in themselves are written in a confusing manner, making it difficult for the reader to discern the actual methodology and what uncertainty is actually associated with these reconstructions.
    It is not clear that Dr. Mann and his associates even realized that their methodology was faulty at the time of writing the [Mann] paper."

    "I am baffled by the claim that the incorrect method doesn’t matter because the answer is correct anyway.
    Method Wrong + Answer Correct = Bad Science."

    "It is important to note the isolation of the paleoclimate community; even though they rely heavily on statistical methods they do not seem to be interacting with the statistical community."

    "A cardinal rule of statistical inference is that the method of analysis must be decided before looking at the data. The rules and strategy of analysis cannot be changed in order to obtain the desired result. Such a strategy carries no statistical integrity and cannot be used as a basis for drawing sound inferential conclusions."

    If you still think, that was just an "exception", but at least their algorithms to compute the global temperature data have somehow been elaborated and implemented much more skillful and careful, have a look at their computer code and particularly the inline commments:

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/11/25/climategate-hide-the-decline-codified/

    "OH FUCK THIS. It's Sunday evening, I've worked all weekend, and just when I thought it was done I'm
    hitting yet another problem that's based on the hopeless state of our databases. There is no uniform
    data integrity, it's just a catalogue of issues that continues to grow as they're found."

    "Here, the expected 1990-2003 period is MISSING - so the correlations aren't so hot! Yet
    the WMO codes and station names /locations are identical (or close). What the hell is
    supposed to happen here? Oh yeah - there is no 'supposed', I can make it up. So I have :-)"

    "getting seriously fed up with the state of the Australian data. so many new stations have been
    introduced, so many false references.. so many changes that aren't documented. Every time a
    cloud forms I'm presented with a bewildering selection of similar-sounding sites, some with
    references, some with WMO codes, and some with both. And if I look up the station metadata with
    one of the local references, chances are the WMO code will be wrong (another station will have
    it) and the lat/lon will be wrong too."

    "I am very sorry to report that the rest of the databases seem to be in nearly as poor a state as
    Australia was. There are hundreds if not thousands of pairs of dummy stations, one with no WMO
    and one with, usually overlapping and with the same station name and very similar coordinates. I
    know it could be old and new stations, but why such large overlaps if that's the case? Aarrggghhh!
    There truly is no end in sight."

    "Wrote 'makedtr.for' to tackle the thorny problem of the tmin and tmax databases not
    being kept in step. Sounds familiar, if worrying. am I the first person to attempt
    to get the CRU databases in working order?!!"

    and many more...

  90. There is one simple reason that I... by mark-t · · Score: 1

    .. remain skeptical of AGW... or at the very least skeptical of the concerns by most proponents of AGW.

    We have been collecting climate data for what now... a hundred years in detail? And perhaps a few hundred in total in a more general sense.

    And just how long has the earth been around? Compare those numbers in terms of order of magnitude. We don't know diddly.

    An AGW proponent is often quick to point out "how quickly" it's all happening the warming is happening these days and how it couldn't have happened before the industrial revolution, except that sort of statement can only be verifiably backed by the data that we've actually collected, not by climate data from before we started recording it, let alone before humans walked the face of this earth... and we *KNOW* that when dinosaurs were around, the earth was considerably warmer than it is today. This planet, and the life upon it, survived it before... it will do so again... even if we somehow actually were the cause of it (which as I said, I doubt).

    1. Re:There is one simple reason that I... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This planet, and the life upon it, survived it before... it will do so again... even if we somehow actually were the cause of it (which as I said, I doubt).

      Umm, no one is arguing that. There is not one single AGW proponent out there that would claim that global warming is going to destroy all live as we know it.

      What it *will* do is alter the earth's climate such that it deviates from that which humanity is adapted to. Rising ocean levels due to polar melting and simple heat expansion of ocean water will result in coastline destruction, displacing millions, if not billions, of people. Meanwhile, changing weather will mean movements in fertile regions, destroying valuable cropland. I could go on, but I'm hoping you're starting to see the point.

      And if not, let me spell it out for you: Humanity is adapted to the climate as it exists today. Change that climate and, regardless of the nature of that change, the result will almost certainly be negative. So, will AGW destroy all life on the planet? No, of course not. That's absurd. But it could seriously fuck us up.

    2. Re:There is one simple reason that I... by luzr · · Score: 1

      Umm, no one is arguing that. There is not one single AGW proponent out there that would claim that global warming is going to destroy all live as we know it.

      Really?

    3. Re:There is one simple reason that I... by Bartles · · Score: 1

      Sure everything you are saying could be true...if it happened overnight. If the coastline recedes by a mile over the course of a day or week, big problems. If the coastline recedes by a mile over the course of a year, problematic but less so. If the coastline recedes by a mile over the course of 100 years, no big deal. Secondly, it is true that humanity has adapted to the current climate. But humanity has also adapted to many other climates over the course of the last 100,000 years and has thrived. And in truth humanity has adapted to the many different climates of the present. If it's possible for someone who grew up Sudan to live in Alaska, I would say we have nothing to worry about if global temperatures change by 4-6 degrees over the next 100 years.

    4. Re:There is one simple reason that I... by dwguenther · · Score: 1

      You just proved the author's point.

    5. Re:There is one simple reason that I... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Rising ocean levels due to polar melting and simple heat expansion of ocean water will result in coastline destruction, displacing millions, if not billions, of people.

      Woah, woah. You've bought into the propaganda there. Where are you getting this information? It's not in any scientific journal. In fact, sea levels are projected by the IPCC (they have a whole chapter on it in their report) to continue rising at around 3 millimeters a year, which is at a pace slower than geological effects, like plate tectonics. We're talking about less than a foot difference in a century. That's not going to displace millions and billions of people. Make sure to get your facts right.

      --
      Qxe4
    6. Re:There is one simple reason that I... by ReedYoung · · Score: 1

      There is not one single AGW proponent out there that would claim that global warming is going to destroy all live as we know it.

      Well, not directly, but our own best military men are treating it as a problem that has the potential to be the end of all civilized life on Earth. And they're right. Millions of people are not going to just "die off" because we like dinosaur SUVs, without a serious fucking fight.

      --
      "I can't imagine how things could get any worse!" (some guy) "That could just be failure of imaginatioÂn on your p
  91. right... by arclyte · · Score: 1

    i doubt that.

  92. Watts up with that rebuttal to Skepticsm article by michaelwigle · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, the blogger replied to the response and addressed each point. He admitted to 2 minor mistakes that didn't affect his main point. Here's a link to his reply here. It's worth a read-through. He's a bit more than just a random blogger. He studies and focuses specifically on climate change. It's only unfortunate that so many folks seem to pick their side instead of reading both sides of the discussion. Depending on others to do your thinking for you is dangerous.

  93. Re:Australian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia."

    Well phoo-hee-doo! North Idaho and Eastern Washington states had RECORD snowfalls last year. So who cares about one place getting a little warmer when a few other places got much colder. Climate data should not be reduced to headlines-as-if-they-were-ultimate-facts.

  94. KGB truth? by redelm · · Score: 1
    OK, OK, FIS pravda. The UEA CRU emails were hosted on a server in Tomsk known to be used by the Russian intelligence services. Could the crack have been from them too? In what level of chess does this benefit the Rodina? They're still going to export the same at the same prices. Energy is less priced in the old or new worlds and more in the third, where more marginal volume sits. Or have they been listening to known capitalist running dogs like GoldmanSachs (vampire squid) and JPMorgan?

    Maybe some siloviki is just mad some Carbon credits might expire worthless? Hammer everyone.

  95. Re: Open the data. by jmerlin · · Score: 1

    I agree to a point of course. When the final product of a report or study heavily relies on THE data, then it becomes important. If it's data agnostic (such as where data is merely the tool which is used to test a hypothesis), then the data presented might serve to motivate the original hypothesis, but it is generally unnecessary.

  96. Hottest month in Darwin.. by jnbszabo · · Score: 1

    " October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia." -it's always the hottest/coldest week/day/month year somewhere, a more meaningful measure is the ratio of hottest-s yo coldest-s

  97. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or perhaps because (according to wikipedia) the DO effect is is fast only in the Northern hemisphere? Unlike GLOBAL warming?

  98. undo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Accidentally modded a good post bad (slip of fingers) posting here to undo.

  99. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by calidoscope · · Score: 1
    What you're saying is that there is a correlation between CO2/Methane levels and temperature. Question is: did the temperature rise in the past because of rising CO2/methane or did the CO2/methane rise because of rising temperatures.

    Yeah, I know that increasing levels of CO2 and methane will increase the sky temperature (all else being equal). My contention is that climate change (precipitation as well as temperature) is affected by far more than CO2/methane (think other GHG's, particulates, land use, etc.).

    --
    A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  100. If you Need a PHD to understand it - its a Secret by gadlaw · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The argument that you need a PH.D to understand the climate models you folks have created means you've simply created a magic language like the religions of past - Latin for example being the official language of the Church which conveniently was not understandable by the common man. By creating a complicated language and set of mysterious rituals (like the 'Trick' of the one guy everyone on the Sky is Falling Brigade uses to pump up their numbers) you don't manage to be convincing. People aren't at the point any more when some guy in a robe speaking in a indecipherable tongue is enough to be convincing. So pronouncing that you'll cease to answer critics if they don't rise to your level is counterproductive. But if you want to climb on your high horse, feel free. That's sure to convince reasonable people that you and your fellows aren't full of it.

    --
    Enjoy your Karma, after all you earned it. Feel your Karma Joe, feel it burn.
  101. The stakes are too high. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    It's kind of tough for someone in Ohio and Michigan to swallow the pill of higher energy costs and a further reduced lifestyle to save the very port cities that blithly ignored the total social destruction brought about the port cities forcing free trade and international finance down the rest of the nation's throat. I mean, its very hard to care about San Francisco being under 20 feet of water when the people of San Francisco had no problem unload millions of Japanese and Korean cars to the destruction of half of the jobs in the Cleveland, Akron, Detroit, and more. After decades of being told to accept a reduced lifestyle and adjust due to change brought on by the shipping of massive goods by the coast, suddenly the coast wants even further cuts in the interior's way of life to continue? It seems to me that if you look at the map and see Japan, Korea, and half of China underwater, that all looks pretty good if you just got laid off from GM Detroit.

    --
    This is my sig.
  102. Sulfure has a deep problem. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    The problem with injecting sulfur into the atmosphere is acid rain. Were it not for acid rain, we could use readily available stones of various kinds as a building material and make long lasting, beautiful buildings and homes for ourselves. We could have fresh water and abundant lakes and have plentiful foul.

    I'm sorry, but I grew up in the rustbelt and I've seen just how much acid rain really screws up everything, and I really have no desire to make a bad problem that much worse. If we're going to try and monkey with the global temperature, then the answer has to be to come up with a cheap way to get carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Sulfure has a deep problem. by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      My understanding, from an admittedly cursory reading of the material, is that when the injection occurs in the upper atmosphere the issues with acid rain are not what they are with emissions from smoke stacks, etc. We are talking about injection at 70K feet or so.

    2. Re:Sulfure has a deep problem. by tjstork · · Score: 1

      My understanding, from an admittedly cursory reading of the material

      My understanding is that the every time a scientist has given us an invention with "few harmful side effects", they've usually been wrong. So pretty much any plan they come with up is probably going to suck.

      --
      This is my sig.
  103. Denialist != Skeptic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really agree that the labeling here is problematic. A skeptic is one who does not believe for lack of evidence, a denialist is one who refuses to believe even with the evidence. There are true believers on both sides of this issue politicized by assholes on the left and right.
     
    I know that the earth goes through cycles, that we're pumping billions of tons of greenhouse gasses into the air, but I don't know how much we are actually affecting things, nor do I believe GW is teh end of the world, nor do I know if it is worth it destroy the economy, turn the reigns over to Al Gore ect, or throw technological life into the can. I think we should instead focus keep society modern, something we should do anyway. Use clear power like nuclear. Develop an efficient biofuel creation process, like with algae. Improve our agriculture with GMO crops to reduce how much input we need to feed ourselves. If AGW is real, this helps fight it. If it is not, so what, we just make civilization better.
     
    So, does this make me a denialist or a skeptic? I'm perfectly willing to change my mind, I used to be a young earth creationist for crying out loud, but I still haven't seen the evidence to convince me that the end is neigh unless we hand the world over to the greenies. With that evidence I'll change my tune, but until then, I largely don't buy into all this global warming, or climate change, or whatever it's called now stuff, and you're right, calling me an ignorant denialist isn't going to change my mind.
     
    I'm posting AC because I've got modding to do here, but this is a tough one to know who to mod up because there is so much bullshit in the water around this topic, but it is pretty easy to tell who needs knocked down a peg.

  104. Oligopolies by copponex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The issue you run into is that there is little incentive for the highly centralized players in fossil fuels to change their ways. It's an oligopoly and they all play by the same rules to ensure they are properly compensated for their massive capital investments. Shell and Exxon would ride our economy to the brink of failure in order to extract more profit. Good for them, not so good for us.

    Of course, the government can't just sit on the taxes. They have to use those taxes to invest in new technology to compensate for the damage to the economy for overtaxing the old technology. There's no use risking the entire future of our economy by being afraid of being "too early" to come up with alternatives for something as vital as energy production.

    1. Re:Oligopolies by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      It's an oligopoly and they all play by the same rules to ensure they are properly compensated for their massive capital investments. Shell and Exxon would ride our economy to the brink of failure in order to extract more profit

      Does this really surprise you? Shell and Exxon are oil companies. That's what they do. That's where their expertise lies. I would no more expect them to come up with a green breakthrough than I would expect Dell to start building airliners.

      If there is a breakthrough to be made in green energy it will come from somewhere else. We didn't stop using whale oil because the whaling outfits discovered something better -- we stopped using it because someone else discovered something better.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  105. Link seems insufficiently "sticky" by PCM2 · · Score: 1

    Earlier URL notwithstanding, the link to Willis's rebuttal seems to have moved here.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  106. How Scientific by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Oh, and by the way: October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia.

    So to prove AGW wrong, no place may be warmer than it has ever been before? So it's not falsifiable? How useful...

  107. Scientific Research by hackus · · Score: 1

    Very simple.

    Scientific Research should be published and available freely to the public, and transparent.

    This is not what is happening with the Climate Research.

    Why is this not a simple thing?

    The reason why is because these people are not interested in Climate Research, that is why.

    They want to set a precedent to tax all nations on earth, they don't care what the topic is....if it is to make believe we can control the climate on Earth, so be it.

    Science always goes wrong when people close it. I know they come up with all sorts of excuses....Well, we cannot have THEM looking at our research, they aren't qualified!

    Oh, we can't have the public look at it, they are too stupid to understand the papers WE write.

    Oh, our data is PROPRIETARY, we are sorry, you can't look at it.

    I have read and seen every single line and its CRAP.

    Give you another example how insidious this is. I got a Email from a prof, here at UW-Madison soliciting work on a cool wireless project, with new cutting edge hardware. I wrote back and said I am interested to learn about the hardware as long as I don't have to sign a non disclosure agreement and it wasn't a broadcom device which if it was no need to reply.

    Haven't heard anything.

    Wireless is a sticking point with me. Everyone knows what goes on with wireless stuff. Especially when dealing with Broadcom devices on linux. Closure of the hardware gets me very angry, and I started shouting about the crap that happens behind the scenes between Microsoft's licensing of wireless and companies that provide or even hint at opening their drivers. Essentially Microsoft will threaten or imply the drivers API may or may not change and arbitrarily not including them in the installation process for Windows out of the box.

    The second thing I do not like about not sharing information, whether it is to lock in markets like broadcom and microsoft alliance tries to do, or why wireless N took 5 years to approve, or JUST PLAIN F'IN GOOD OLE AMERICAN CORPORATE GREED, you basically end up with bad products.

    So is it not anyones surprise, that just like trying to use a closed wireless hardware device and be all secretive and crap, you get crappy working devices, likewise you close climate research or research in general, you get crappy research.

    In this case, research with a purpose to keep scientists busy by buying their silence, while you use the results of the work to establish a nefarious world wide governmental bureaucracy, to make trillions.

    Meanwhile, people will die by the millions, which I sometimes wonder if Copenhagen meetings real issue they discuss is population control.

    -Hack

    --
    Got Geometrodynamics? Awe, too hard to figure out? Too bad.
    1. Re:Scientific Research by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      And as slashdotters, we will take that exact logic as proof anyone not doing Open Source must be nefarious. (Except you Windows geeks)

      Yet, with Climate, it is ok. We don't give the same baleful eye to closed source research.

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
  108. Re:The answer is yes ... just one minor point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The moment you demand all skeptics believe "just because", it stops being science. global warming is a perfect example of something with questionable science reaching the point it's being treated as a religion, and anyone questioning it is a heretic.

    If you *know* it's questionable, then send your explanation to a peer-reviewed journal for all of us to see.

    You can't? pity, but chances are then you're no different from the thousands of other "armchair scientists" making outrageous claims with no actual backing, as the guy analyzed in TFA. And making actual scientists try and reason with all of you is an utter waste of their time, which we'd rather they spent doing their actual job.

    Unfortunately, both those "actual scientists" and the "denialists" have no choice but to try to reason with the "armchair scientists" of which you speak ... because they happen to be voters.

    At least, you do in most democratic nations.

    Alternatively, you can just issue a bunch of propaganda that you hope can convince a large number of people of your point of view without actually reasoning with any of them. If you're lucky, the majority of the electorate will be dumb enough to let you get away with that.

  109. Re: Open the data. by aevans · · Score: 0

    Okay, then let's wait another 10,000 years before jumping to conclusions about climate change while we gather another data set and duplicate the results.

  110. Choice Quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "In an ideal world," Mr Trewin said, "we would like to have a good range of stations that haven't moved, haven't had changes in their local environment. But if we want to get any information with regard to the climate over the long term, we have to make the most of what data we have."

    They have to turn bad data into a "good" study. Their jobs' depend upon it.

  111. Global warming != everyplace will get hotter by unity100 · · Score: 1

    global warming means 1 to 3 degrees celsius rise in AVERAGE world temperature. it does NOT mean that every single place will get warmer. the AVERAGE temperature will rise.

    what global warming means for us is that, for this average temperature rise to happen, there will be a lot of temperature changes in innumerable places around the world. some places will get extremely hotter, some will get extremely colder. in some places, temperature will hardly change, or in some places it wont change at all.

    the thing is that, ALL of these extreme and minimal changes all around the world is going to get averaged into a 1 to 3 degrees rise in AVERAGE world temperature.

    in layman's terms it will be disaster. because we cant know and calculate which place will get what kind of temperature change. greenland can get noticeably hotter. japan may get extremely colder. or ocean currents can dampen japan's extreme cold and make it a mild place, but carry the cold to some other place. mega floods may hit some places, droughts may hit others. actually some of these are already happening.

    world climate is chaotic. we cant calculate what will happen where, when and how. this is the point here. not your average temperature getting hotter so its a good thing (TM).

    1. Re:Global warming != everyplace will get hotter by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      the thing is that, ALL of these extreme and minimal changes all around the world is going to get averaged into a 1 to 3 degrees rise in AVERAGE world temperature.

      in layman's terms it will be disaster.

      I don't have a problem with anything but this last little bit. Yes, that 1-3C increase is an average. Yes, some places will get hotter, some cooler, some stay the same. Yes, we don't know which places will do which.

      All that said, it doesn't follow from that that "it will be a disaster". Maybe it will. Maybe we'll get lucky and all the changes will be either non-issues or favourable changes - we just don't know.

      Asserting in one paragraph that we won't know the result, then in the next that we, well, DO know the result makes you look disingenuous, at best.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  112. Economist's reputation .... trash. by unity100 · · Score: 1

    economist is a publication that publishes whatever is needed by the industries and private interests it backs at that point. it can even impliedly support radical islamicization of 3rd world countries and the erosion of civil freedoms and liberties in those countries, if the radical islamicization appears to be good for business in those countries.

    in short, economist is a publication that can easily sell its mother if there is profit to be made in there. dont give us any shit about reputation of the Economist.

  113. Re:If you Need a PHD to understand it - its a Secr by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

    The argument that you need a PH.D to understand the climate models you folks have created means you've simply created a magic language like the religions of past

    Uhuh.

    So, what, quantum mechanics is just "magic"? How about higher mathematics? Computing science? Law? Medicine? Because all of these fields have a specialized language of their own, and contain within them concepts that will simply be incomprehensible to a layman.

  114. Reminds me of this Jonova pic... by evil9000 · · Score: 1

    The unknown author reminds me of this Jonova pic posted recently.

    http://joannenova.com.au/globalwarming/skeptics-handbook-ii/web-pics/circular-journo-flat-web.gif

  115. Counter-question: by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

    Does the spirit of scientific scepticism really require that I remain forever open-minded to denialist humbug until it's shown to be wrong?

    Counter-question: How do you know that it’s “denialist humbug”? Maybe it is. But: How do you know ?

    See. There’s your answer.

    ————————————————————

    Truthiness (“gut feeling”) is not knowing. And that’s exactly why we forever keep open minded. (So if you are skeptical of others, by the same philosophy, you also have to always stay skeptical of your own “beliefs”. [Really “beliefs” don’t belong here at all.])
    Because sometimes there is something that we call denialist humbug, and that turns out to be true. (I bet we can come up with numerous examples, where something completely contradicted the “known” beliefs of that time.)

    But the nice thing is, that you can just calibrate how hard it is to accept certain new things, based on how sure you are of what you (think you) know. You can train yourself to balance it properly. And most likely that’s what you’re doing already.
    So something that does not fit, will have a hard time convincing you, for a good reason.

    ————————————————————

    See, with truth and knowing, we often think in a very automatic way. And not about what that all means, and what we really know. Or what is a real fact.

    If you think about it, before ending up in your brain, all information went trough thousand filters, modulators, and other things that created “bias”. Else it wouldn’t even be useful to you.
    It all went at least trough your senses. Which themselves have a huge natual bias.
    And even worse: Because we are social lifeforms, most of it came from other people. So how do you know that anything of what they told you has any relationship with what you call “truth”?

    What is truth / what are facts anyway? We can’t even prove, that anything except for ourselves exists at all. Or that it just is made up by the brain.

    But what we know is, that we humans only accept things, if they fit into our mental model of the world. If not, even if it’s true and we know it, we can’t fit it in there. But we have to fit it in there, because humans only can know things by associating them with other things. No fitting in, no association, no knowing. Period.
    That’s a big problem. Because often, what would be best of us, or seen as “truth”, just does not fit. And gets dismissed. We’re all doing it constantly. At least every second comment here contains something like that.

    And the worst thing: We can’t even say if things are absolute facts. Is the sun yellow? Well, depends on how you look at it. What color does it really have?
    You can got down that path, with logic. But it will be a looong way, until yo have linked it all back to quantum physics and mathematics. If we would try to guarantee that our beliefs are all facts, we wouldn’t get anything done at all.

    But even then, we end up at some paradigms and axioms. Things that we can’t explain further. Like the big bang. Like the basic “why?” and “from where?”. (Some put a “god” behind that all, and ignore/forbid that that god also would have to come from somewhere, to prevent themselves from going crazy over that ultimate problem.)

    What happens if we have multiple of those basic paradigms, which conflict, but where none of them can be proven to be right or wrong. That’s really bad. Luckily, basic physics are relatively clean from those.

    But in practice, since we can’t walk that ro

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  116. Don't look at the tree look at the FOREST by aepervius · · Score: 1

    Firstly truly shows us an example of peer review NOT working, that is something we all now take for wrong, but peer review shows as true. I am doubtful you will find tons of those, you may probably only cite a few scandal SPARSELY distributed in a few fields. But as a whole, peer review WORKS, for every example of peer review working SLOWLY toward pruning the fraud, you have tons over tons over tons of peer review properly edging our knowledge toward an increase and not s atgnation/dcrease a fraud is.

    Furthermore even if you can make the case of a few paper not being shown for the fraud they were for a long time, the OVERWHELMING number of paper in climate science is really improbably all wrong. That stretch the imagination.

    At some point you have to draw a line in sand as layman (expert is different, they should always be skeptic and try to falsify the previous results) and say , everything BEFORE that line is skepticism, and after that line it is DENIALISM. COE ? We are long past that point. Thermodynamic ? Ditto. Climate Change ? IMHO we have been at the line for some time. People are not SKPETIC of the scientist results. Cliamte scientist have had an hypothese, they went by the calculation, falsification, peer review process. Thousand of times. As a LAYMAN, past that point it isn't skepticism, it is DENIALISM. Just like those PMM building guy with magnet which keep beeing skeptic of COE, without even a basic understanding on magnetism. Elitist ? Maybe but then again if I go to a doctor, an expert, and he says me I need an op, then I go to a few other doctors for a a confirmation, if after I have been to half a dozen doctor I am still "skeptic" I need an Op, then I am not anymore in search fo a second opinion, I am cherry picking until I find a doctor which says I don't need an Op, *IN DENIAL*. And that is exactly what climate change denialist are doing, catching on any single misplaced detail to deny the FULL BODY OF EVIDENCE.


    By the way : bad science on climate denialist

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:Don't look at the tree look at the FOREST by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      IMHO we have been at the line for some time.

      Yes, it's pretty obvious that you have a strong opinion on this. It's not clear why exactly you have this opinion, but it's not because you've read real scientific reports since they don't back you up. Go read the IPCC report and be enlightened; don't base yourself on something you read in New Scientist or Scientific American.

      --
      Qxe4
  117. Debate? What debate? by emmenjay · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Whether you agree or disagree with AGW, there seems to be little debate, just name-calling. From my own (probably biased) view, I'd say the pro-AGW crowd have done a rotten job at explaining their side of the argument. At least the anti-AGW crowd seem to be prepared for a bit of transparency. The pro-AGW might well turn out to be right, but when issues are raised they tend to take offence rather than defending their position.

    Problem one is that we are talking about data gathered in various ways from various sources. There must, of course, be some numerical filtering to try to compare data from different sources. However much of the filtering appears (from the outside) to be poorly explained. We are estimating temperature from tree-rings, ice cores and antique thermometers and making decisions on variations of a couple of degrees or sometimes much less. In a day when it might be 50 degrees Celsius in outback Australia 20C in Tasmania and -120C in Canada, we try to produce an average.

    Now this data may be accurate enough to support the analysis, but it doesn't look that way to the uninitiated. Somebody needs to convince us.

    Second, much of the (mass-media) published information derives from Drs Jones and Mann and their colleagues. The recent revelations have raised *serious* doubts about their data integrity. Never mind the emails, the widely discussed "harry-readme" file chronicles the efforts of a researcher to identify correct data and understand the filtering source code. It tells a tale of confusion and some suspected sharp practises. Perhaps "Harry" is out of his depth and Dr Jones et. al. have immaculate data and source code. However Dr Jones' refusal to honour Freedom of Information requests leave us all with great suspicions. If we cannot trust Dr Jones and Dr Mann, can we trust any of the IPCC and related material? Maybe, but it has not been well explained.

    Third and perhaps worst is the number of morons who trumpet AGW concerns without any understanding what they mean. Mr Gore, for example, consistently makes impossible claims. It is too easy to look at these stumbling fools and think that their silly words represent the "scientific" view. When they are shown to lack credibility, by association the science seems to lose credibility. Why have serious scientists never told the buffoons to "sit down and be quiet"? Or have they? The media have seldom reported such.

    I don't know if AGW is real. I do know that most of what I hear about is gobbledegook. I'd like to be treated like a "grown up" and have the science explained in clear terms, without the black magic and the "oh, you couldn't understand this". I'd particularly like this before we destroy the world economy implementing schemes that probably won't even fix the problem, if AGW is real.

    OK, flame away.

    Michael J Smith

  118. Open by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    Yes, you should ALWAYS remain open about everything.

    That doesn't mean you have to give the same value to everything.

    You can "take sides" if you want, but if you're no longer open to the other side, it becomes like a religion. When something becomes like a religion, it usually ends up in a lot of people dying.

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
  119. The outer limits by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    "It is amazingly difficult to get believers to reevaluate new data

    I disagree but rather than repeat myself ad-nausem I will just point to my earlier post explaining why I think Watts has gone well beyond any limits of skepticisim or decency.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    1. Re:The outer limits by Troed · · Score: 1

      Shall we debate again? ;) A quick read through of your linked post tells me it contains at least two factual errors.

      (Watt's income and whether NOAA really did evaluate the raw or adjusted data of those stations)
       

    2. Re:The outer limits by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      No, my past experience tells me you enjoy wasting my time.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    3. Re:The outer limits by Troed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes. Facts, those pesky things standing in the way of your agenda! :)

      (I saw you linked to the same, factually incorrect, post several times in this Slashdot article alone)

      Anyway. Watt's lost a lot of money on his surfacestation-work - but since the end result is a better quality network I think it's important no matter what the actual conclusion might be. It can't be bad to know the actual siting locations and quality - can it? Thus, I'm one of many people who've donated money to surfacestations.org.

      Regarding the NOAA study on the 70 stations, they didn't do what they claimed - they instead studied the homogenized datasets which, of course, will show the same thing as the full dataset since they're ... homogenized with all those stations.

      Now, will you change your opinion based on facts - or do you go by dogma? ;)

    4. Re:The outer limits by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      The data was not homogonized with the other stations. If it was homogenised in the way you subtley suggest then it would be a flat line. Again, stop wasting my time.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    5. Re:The outer limits by Troed · · Score: 1

      No - why on earth would you post something so completely false?

    6. Re:The outer limits by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Congrats, after 10yrs on slashdot you are the first person I have tagged as a foe.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    7. Re:The outer limits by Troed · · Score: 1

      I see you once again had no support whatsoever for your original statement ;)

  120. check your sources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    besides being a climate-change-is-a-hoax campaigner, the guy behind that site (Arthur Robinson) also campaigns against the acceptance of Darwin's theory of evolution.

    take that as you will.

    1. Re:check your sources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but wait, there's more!

      "OISM also markets a home-schooling kit for "parents concerned about socialism in the public schools" and publishes books on how to survive nuclear war."

      "Yet even though the OISM credentials 8 persons as "Faculty", it has no classrooms, or student body."

      http://sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Oregon_Institute_of_Science_and_Medicine

    2. Re:check your sources by arminw · · Score: 1

      ...Darwin's theory of evolution...

      Like any other scientific theory, may be challenged. That is how science works. Just because a majority of people, including scientists, believed at one time that the earth is flat, doesn't make it so. Just because a majority of scientists believe that Darwin's theory of evolution is correct, doesn't mean it should never be challenged. There are good scientists with just as many degrees and qualifications, that doubt some of the current theories, including Darwin's.

      --
      All theory is gray
  121. It Won't Resolve by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sadly science does not possess truth. What science does is to constantly update its beliefs so that science is less wrong perpetually.
                    Throw in Arthur C. Clark's remark that the universe is stranger than we can ever imagine.
                    Take the above and toss it to a person who has some sort of agenda and is loaded with numerous false beliefs and is emotionally way out there. He also can point out that science has no real grasp on the ultimate truth and that logic and science are some kind of strange variable in themselves.
                      Now take that individual and have him running about teaching and declaring his false beliefs and passing them to a population that is in no way equipped to discern the nature and problems involved when false information invades every little corner of their minds.
                      That sets up a condition in which social disaster is a certainty. A population that does not or can not understand is a population that will turn to violence and overthrow of governments.

  122. Re:If you Need a PHD to understand it - its a Secr by emmenjay · · Score: 1

    > So, what, quantum mechanics is just "magic"? How about higher mathematics?
    > Computing science? Law? Medicine?

    In most fields, explaining the "what" is generally not too hard, but sometimes the "why" gets tricky.

    > Because all of these fields have a specialized language of their own, and
    > contain within them concepts that will simply be incomprehensible to a layman.

    Not necessarily a "laymen", but they should probably be comprehensible to an educated man (or woman) with a reasonable understanding of science and maths but no specific expertise in that field.

    I have a B.Sc. in Computer Science and Maths (from 20 years ago). I haven't tried to understand string theory (it doesn't interest me) but I have a working grasp of most of Einstein and Newton. I have a fair grasp of basic anatomy and chemistry and my doctors have never had trouble explaining my (many) medical problems.

    Maybe if people tried to explain AGW instead of just saying "trust us" I'd be happier to ruin the economy to prevent it.

    Michael J Smith

  123. Re:Watts up with that rebuttal to Skepticsm articl by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    "It's worth a read-through."

    No it isn't, and here's why.

    "It's only unfortunate that so many folks seem to pick their side instead of reading both sides of the discussion. Depending on others to do your thinking for you is dangerous"

    Yes it is, see my link above for reasons why.

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  124. Arrogant NONSENSE by omb · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    This is utter nonsense, Climate data, unlike say Quantum string theory, does not require more than school mathematics and some (scientific) and other common sense.

    The data, and lack of it, and the unreliability of proxies eg tree rings and ice cores is clear. The effects of poor experimental methods on modern data and the fact that, even then, recent data does not, in a statistically significant sense, support a warming hypothesis is obvious. If you plot, say, the last 10 years data it fits a slowly DECLINING line, not a Hockey Stick.

    The mathematical models used by Climatologists have never been demonstrated to work, and almost always demonstrably fail, exactly as Chaos theory predicts, ie instability of the solutions of differential manifolds with respect to small variations of initial conditions.

    UK climate scientists have been at this for fifty years, especially at the Met Office and have NEVER got it to work.

    You need no PhD to conclude that AGW is populist un-scientific Bullshit, and is no more than a media scare story eg Flu Pandemic. It is also a symptom of the group-think here to label opponents as "deniers".

    1. Re:Arrogant NONSENSE by TopSpin · · Score: 1

      This is utter nonsense, Climate data, unlike say Quantum string theory, does not require more than school mathematics and some (scientific) and other common sense.

      Well, not as long as your goal is simply reporting the basic trends in an unbiased manner. If, however, you have a lucrative agenda you will need a Ph.D. to perform the sort of statistical gymnastics necessary to produce the intended result and later protect that result from scrutiny. Do such agendas exist outside of the minds of "deniers"? Let us look at the record:

      Keith Briffa, 1999, while contributing to the IPCC report, responding to Michael E. Mann's complaints about discrepancies between dendrochronological analysis and other temperature reconstructions.

      I know there is pressure to present a nice tidy story as regards 'apparent unprecedented warming in a thousand years or more in the proxy data' but in reality the situation is not quite so simple.

      How does Mann respond?

      we don't have to resolve everything now. Just the big picture and the important details

      That is just the sort of weasel word bullshit I have heard my entire life from people that want some inconvenient result papered over. Every "entrepreneur", every "manager", every authority I have ever encountered plays the same game; BEND IT UNTIL IT FITS. No Ph.D. is required to see clean through this obvious agenda driven bias.

      --
      Lurking at the bottom of the gravity well, getting old
  125. Not really by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You don't have to provide an alternate explanation to falsify a theory, you simply have to show that it doesn't do a good job of explaining what is going on. The "You can't explain it!" crap is precisely what the religious nuts try to pull. They say "Science can't explain everything about this, thus you have to accept our explanation." No, sorry, not how it works. Just because there isn't a scientific explanation at this point doesn't mean you are right.

    Well same deal here. You don't have to provide a perfect climate model to falsify an existing one, you only need to show how the existing one is wrong.

    Science isn't about being fair, it isn't a case of "Well YOU explain it better than me, or accept I'm right." It is a processes for learning about the natural world, and for separating what works from what doesn't. Showing something doesn't work is an important part of science. Ideally you'd be able to present a theory that doesn't but that's not always the case.

    Cold fusion was a good example. Group claimed to do cold fusion, other labs falsified their research, since their experiments were not repeatable. None of those labs provided a theory for working cold fusion, none had to. All they did was show that this particular theory was wrong.

    1. Re:Not really by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      It sounds to me like deniers are saying "You can't explain this to my satisfaction so I'm not going to believe a single thing you say".

      Every model in science is wrong in the sense that Newtons Laws of Motion are wrong. The question is are they better than random guessing and they are much better.

      I suspect the level of proof you're asking for is not achievable before it's too late. Well it's never too late to start doing something but the later you wait the more drastic the cure.

    2. Re:Not really by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Science is about providing predictive power. Yes you can publish an article that shows the existing model fails to provide an explanation of xyz if you want, but that is not the same thing as refuting the model if that model continues to explain abcdefghijklmonpprstuvw and you don't have an alternative that explains even a as a replacement candidate.

      This is the situation we see in physics all the time. OK so Newton couldn't explain the precession of Mercury. Does that mean we state that Newton's work was wrong and can't be used to predict anything? Hardly. What we do is wait for the model that subsumes all of Newton PLUS explains the precession of Mercury. That turned out to be General Relativity.

      So the anti-AGW guys can carp about the holes in AGW all they want, but until they come up with a model that has greater predictive power they are not doing anything to advance the anti-AGW view.

      It is a quite different situation than cold fusion. Cold fusion was a claim of an observed data point that contradicted the standard model. This data point could not be reproduced, and as a result the standard model is not in contradiction with observation.

  126. Re:If you Need a PHD to understand it - its a Secr by Improv · · Score: 1

    After all, if an 8 year old can't understand it, we know it's elitist nonsense :P

    --
    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  127. THIS is why AGW skeptics cannot be trusted by mangu · · Score: 1

    Why did the dentist use a UV light on your teeth?

    to kill bacteria

    BZZZT, wrong! UV is used to polymerize the plastic material used on your teeth.

    If your common knowledge about chemistry and dentistry is wrong, then how can you be so sure about your knowledge of climatology?

    1. Re:THIS is why AGW skeptics cannot be trusted by budgenator · · Score: 1

      BZZZT, wrong! the curing light isn't UV, but deep blue, sometime UV light is used to active dental bleaches.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  128. Re:does not publish bylines by u38cg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or, it is a convenient way to allow published material to stand or fall by its own merit and not be interpreted through the prism of its author. I believe it also has the practical advantage that there is no article "ownership" at the Economist, and hence there is no ego about getting contributions or suggestions for changes from other staff members. Lastly, it passes the experience test: I've been reading it for ~6 years now and the quality of writing and journalism is far in excess of any other mainstream publication. Oh, and their staff list is online. You can check out their credentials if you really feel the need.

    --
    [FUCK BETA]
  129. Can you say "hypocrite"? Sure. I knew you could. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    Since the author insists on peer review, an article in The Economist, by an unnamed author, should not have any credibility.

    The author him (her?) self is saying that we should not believe what he or she has written. Okay. I'll buy that.

  130. Insightful? WTF? by mangu · · Score: 1

    It's pretty damn freezing. Tell me when I can wear shorts and a muscle T in December and I'll believe in AGW.

    I'm wearing shorts and the air conditioning is on at full blast. I live in Brazil.

    Why does the tree-ring data end specifically in 1960 when the plotted temps dive downward?

    Because there were better measurement methods available in 1960. You *could* keep using tree-ring data after 1960, but the result would be noisier.
    How do you think tree-ring data is calibrated? They compare tree-ring with thermometer data for the period after reliable thermometers were available.

    Why, at the end of the tree ring series, are there only a few trees selected at all rather than the entire set?

    To eliminate extraneous factors. There are other influences than temperature that affect tree rings and one must select the cases where we are reasonably sure that those other influences did not play a major part.

    Why universally the raw data adjusted in precisely the same way. Earlier temperatures are adjusted downward, later temperatures are adjusted upwards.

    Not universally, the data is adjusted case by case, depending on the particular circumstances. It's *you* who are looking just at those particular cases where earlier data was adjusted downwards.

    Why is the Medieval Warming Period completely eliminated by AGW "proofs"? Are you suggesting that documented colonization of Greenland by the vikings during the MWP followed by the gradual destruction of the colony during the Little Ice Age ... didn't happen?

    Are you suggesting the documented colonization of Uganda by the British during the nineteenth century followed by gradual destruction of the colony in the second half of the twentieth century didn't happen?
    I have some news for you, the part of Greenland for which the country was named is still green today.

    Curiously in most areas of science it is the proponents of a theory that are responsible for proving it. Only in AGW is the onus on the detractors.

    AGW has been *amply* proved. I have seen a demonstration of this personally, I have a photo of myself at the end of a glacier in 1967, where today there's only bare rock. It's up to the AGW skeptics to prove the ice isn't melting.

  131. Not the Warmest Month in Darwin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    October is the hottest on record at the Darwin Airport (at a mean monthly max of 34.8). Earlier, the local weather station was at the post office, and recorded several higher mean monthly maxes.

    http://www.bom.gov.au/jsp/ncc/cdio/weatherData/av?p_nccObsCode=36&p_display_type=dataFile&p_startYear=&p_stn_num=14016

  132. Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? No by Cwix · · Score: 1

    If everyone who currently doesnt believe in global warming, believes so because they A)Want to stick with the status quo, B)Believe the government is out to get them or, C) Believe the liberal elitist secret organization is out to get them. Is a denier. If they believe the GW isn't happening due to mis-truths, lies, and blatant falsehoods that have been foisted onto them, then they are just sheep. BUT we are all but sheep. I just trust doctors, and scientists more then politicians.

    --
    You are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts.
  133. wake up & smell the CO, this is what we wanted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the head in the sand approach to consideration for others/the future is definitely going to be costly.

    water will be the next 'commodity' used to control our behaviours, as we suffocate ourselves.

    meanwhile, go jump into your CO factory & go for a spin. you may be right in that it may not matter anymore. we've heard though, that where there's life, there's hope.

    the lights are coming up all over now. get ready to join the creators' wwwildly popular newclear powered planet/population rescue initiative/mandate. it's way user friendly (foolproof), & there's never any liesense fees.

  134. well yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Keep an open mind, but not so open that your brain falls out

  135. Re:Clever Concept... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder what genius thought that one up?

  136. Disagree, but labelling betrays your intent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When a person or group labels anther person or group with a moniker intended to undermine the opposition without addressing the issues they have raised, it betrays the true intent of the labeller: to push through their agenda without the bother of having to deal with the issues which have been raised.

    Calling someone a "denialist" is just such a tactic.

    We have a label for the people who use such tactics. They are mudslingers, and their views (whatever they are) are not worth a fig.

  137. Scientific skepticism by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    one one hand you have to have an open mind for the theory and data that it could be true, but remember that it has to be falsifiable to fit with the scientific method. Anything that cannot be proven true or false or has a hard time being proven true or false possibly might not be falsifiable and thus not subject to the scientific method.

    In order to get a true scientific skeptical mind you have to remove all bias, be it religious or political or both it could even be a non-religious bias or personal bias or the scientist just wants grant money and is biased in the report. You have to look for bias, anything that has a bias cannot follow the scientific method. When following the scientific method you have to be neutral and use logic, reason, and critical thinking, something most people don't do these days.

    Any modern spreadsheet, Excel, Openoffice.Org Calc, Lotus Symphony, iWork, etc have statistics functions to calculate the margin of error and correlation so you can import the raw data into a row or column and then use the build in statistical functions to check the data. I use that to check a lot of "peer reviewed" reports when I was in college and I found a lot of them didn't even bother to do these things and when I checked them the margin of error was high and the correlation was low. Obvious the reports I reviewed were cherry picked or something was wrong and it wasn't a random sample and the hypothesis checking was done wrong.

    More people will criticize religion and politics, but forget that religion and politics can corrupt science as can many other things corrupt science. Modern Science has turned into a secular religion that worships nature and the environment, Science isn't supposed to be a religion or like a religion, and it isn't the answer to everything and cannot be used for many things such as art, humanities, emotion, writing, relationships, etc. While it is good to use logic and reason, it is just as important to use emotions and imagination and balance the right and left sides of the human brain. Sometimes science skeptics tend to forget that.

    Science like religion and politics needs major reform and seems to be a hybrid of politics and religion instead of what science used to be.

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  138. Simple Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay I have found a way we could settle this once and for all. Just do a double blind test.

    Step1:
    Person A gathers all the relevant climate data form 1950 till 2009.

    Step2:
    Person B now gathers a large goup of renowned climate experts(e.g. those that wrote the IPCC report) and locks them in a room without contact to the outside world, only providing them with everything they need in order to generate a wolrd climate model(e.g. Access to some supercomputers, while restricting internet access like china does all the time)

    Step3:
    Person A gives person B all the data from the year 1950 to 1999 teling person B that this is all the data from the past 49 years. Person B now forwards this data to the group in the room

    Step 4:
    Person C now compares the predictions for the next 10 years of the Climate model that was generatet by the group in the room to the actual data that was recorded from 1999 till 2009. He can now tell how reliable a climate modell ,generatet by this group, will most likely be in predicting the climate from 2009 onwards.

    If the predictions of the model are within one standard deviation of the recorded data, AGW wins, if not the skeptics win.

    Now I call this a James Randi like experiment really worth doing, even spending a million dollars in order to finance it.

  139. Well, I'm convinced... by slicerwizard · · Score: 1

    "October was the hottest month on record in Darwin, Australia". Yeah, and it's been what, -40 to -50 in parts of western Canada - in early December? So what's his point?

  140. The author's claims are idiotic by pkphilip · · Score: 2, Insightful

    For one thing, if you are given a data set with temperatures for various dates for various locations around the globe, you don't need a PhD to plot a simple chart showing temperatures along one axis and dates along another axis. A chart like that can be used to determine if the trend if towards higher temperatures or not.

    A second chart which maps CO2 levels for those same dates can be used to arrive at a simple correlation between temperature and CO2 levels. Again, I don't see why someone with even rudimentary understanding of statistics can't do this.

    And oh, if we are only going to be believing PhDs, allow me to point out that Gavin Schmidt's PhD is in Mathematics while IPCC head Pachauri's PhD is in mechanical engineering.

    Also, may I point out the simple fact that many of the skeptics have PhDs in climatology and atmospheric sciences (Dr.Roy Spencer, Dr. John Christy).

    And if the author is going to be making a big deal about peer-review process (completely ignoring the fact that the peer review process being used was completely flawed because of lack of data to do this peer review), may I point out this article from BBC which points out that IPCC got the dates wrong for the melting of Himalayan Glaciers by 300 years?! and it took their "peer-review" process only 2 years to figure this out.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/8387737.stm

    Also, IPCC now acknowledges that many of the papers they referenced for their reports didn't go through peer review at all.

    1. Re:The author's claims are idiotic by Whitemice · · Score: 1

      And I don't need a PhD, I do enough data analysis to know that -

      Quote: plot a simple chart showing temperatures along one axis and dates along another axis. A chart like that can be used to determine if the trend if towards higher temperatures or not.

      - won't prove anything either way. Interpreting data takes work and lots of background knowledge. If whatever you did took less than at least a few hours - your analysis is worthless.

      --
      Using "Common Sense" is being either to arrogant or to ignorant to ask people who know more about something than you.
    2. Re:The author's claims are idiotic by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      - won't prove anything either way. Interpreting data takes work and lots of background knowledge. If whatever you did took less than at least a few hours - your analysis is worthless.

      Bullshit. If the temperature at a location tends to increase, it will be readily apparent in a chart which maps temperature against dates.

      Please note that the climatologists aren't the only group of people using charts and statistics. Many of us utilise statistics for our work quite extensively.

      A simple chart which maps two sets of data points is absolutely trivial to map.

      Example: consider two data sets like this
      {(3.0, 200909120012:00), (5.0, 200909120013:00), (4.6, 200909120014:00)} etc where the first element in each tuple refers to the temperature and the second one refers to the datetime.

      Can you please explain why this should be difficult to display in a chart? Also, can you please explain why I would need a PhD to do this.

      If interpreting a chart is so difficult, how is that Al Gore (a non-PhD mortal) was able to interpret the chart? and how is that other non-PhD mortals could understand Al Gore's chart?

    3. Re:The author's claims are idiotic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi, I'm truly interested in a citation about the IPCC referencing non-peer reviewed papers for their report.

    4. Re:The author's claims are idiotic by mrcaseyj · · Score: 1

      To determine if the temperature has risen you have to take into account various other things, like what type of enclosure the thermometer is in and what time of day the readings were taken. The older enclosures were warmer, so if the station switched to a newer cooler enclosure, it's easy to see a cooling trend in the data even if the real trend is upward.

      However, I think that most of the global warming research is accessible to anyone who knows statistics and takes the time to learn the various important details.

      And it doesn't take a whole lot of education to realize that tree ring data that doesn't match recent temperatures can't be trusted to match temperatures a thousand years ago. The fact that a large portion of the climate science community has and continues to defend tree ring reconstruction of past climate, is a severe blow to their credibility.

  141. "...usual denier blogs" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thus speaks a zealot.

  142. Well if it's too wrong for you .... by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

    don't ever cross a bridge because bridge designers never take special or general relativity into account. Only good ole' Newton.

  143. Weather != Climate by Poingggg · · Score: 1

    Calling it "Climate Change" does nothing to increase clarity.

    The climate changes at least four times per year for much of the world. The climate changes twice a day for much more of the world.

    Wrong! The climate does not change, the weather does. Climate is the long term average of the weather in a certain area. Weather is what is happening at defined moment in a certain area.
    My trust in your ability to judge the issues in Global Warming is not really helped by the fact you can't distinguish between these two.

    On the other hand, I agree with your statement that not everything should be measured only in economics and we should put human values in more often.

    --
    What person will donate an airborne act of love?
    1. Re:Weather != Climate by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      Climate change is responsible for the presence of fossil fuels in the first place through displacement of non-suitable biomes for the physical parameters of particular locales. This is (in part) why we find former swamps and lakebeds in the middle of forests and deserts, and why river valleys are available for human habitation. The plant fossil evidence is rich with examples of adaptations to varying atmospheric gas content, temperature, etc. through leaf physiology and size. The mammalian metabolism would not be well sustained in the period before plants.

      More broadly, the difference between weather and climate appears to depend on how the system box is drawn. For humans, drawing a box around the system known to living memory results in surprise when a place named "High River" gets flooded. For your gut flora, a complete weather season probably lasts 24 hours with 3-5 intermediate large fluctuations in weather per day. For the 2,000 year old giant redwood, the once every 100 years fires might have the selection effect of weather or climate (or both!) as you've defined them.

      Since most of nature by volume or numbers does not make the distinction between weather and climate, I personally choose not to privilege the anthro-centric perspective with respect to drawing the system box. Even within our own lifetimes, we've discovered cycles of environmental variation such as El Nino/La Nina which certainly affect conditions over a longer term than seasons and years, but perhaps not over centuries.

      But as I am a scientist, but not a geophysicist, the best I can do for now is to spot and point out inconsistencies within arguments presented. In your case, tracking an arbitrary coordinate on the earth's surface over any 100 million years (my arbitrary choice since "long-term" is ill-defined) would result in either a series of periods where that point is alternatively ocean, plains, icebergs mountains, etc with drastic climate variations over that time passing through several stable equilibria; or one climate with an average altitude of 0 ft (+/- 20,000 ft), 10 degrees Celsius (+/- 25 degrees C) but remarkably consistent sunlight.

      If you want to define earth's climate as the average or all measurable features over the last 4.5 billion years, then yes, you would be correct since by definition, the climate has not changed because the system would expand to encompass everything, sampled exactly once. I do not find that to be an analytically compelling definition since that data setup makes AGW untestable as a hypothesis. If weather is not at least a function of climate (howsoever climate is defined) then measuring weather would tell us nothing at all about climate, let alone any changes to it over any time period.

      And that was my point: "Climate change" happens every time we raze or fertilize a field or erect a building, but is mostly uninteresting to me with respect to the human and environmental issues raised. We already know that it sucks (displacement/death/extinction) when one's local environment ceases to support the desired or required activities, and that other stuff often moves in to exploit the opportunity. (This broadly defined problem may be solved by implementing the broadly defined solution specified in the Bruntland report 20 years ago, namely conduct your activities in the strong sense of "sustainable" by leaving the condition with better opportunities than you found it.) "Global warming" at least posits a relationship between the rise in non-sustainable human practices (e.g. around deforestation and fossil fuel use) and the rise in temperatures, and defines a manageable problem to be addressed.

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    2. Re:Weather != Climate by Poingggg · · Score: 1

      I must admit that my remark that 'climate does not change' was ill-formulated. It should have been 'climate does not change four times a year'. I think human caused global warming is true, so IMHO global climate does change. And I also believe sustainability should be an important factor in everything we do, so I think all in all we both agree.

      --
      What person will donate an airborne act of love?
  144. Oh, by the way... by amightywind · · Score: 0

    Oh, by the way, October 2009 was the 3rd coldest on record in the US northern plains. Arguing global warming by anecdote is so discredited and self-defeating one wonders why the global warming hysterics still use it.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  145. Funny to find this here! by Whitemice · · Score: 1

    If average-totally-unqualified guy felt some restraint about commenting on topics he knows nothing about.... that would end something like 90% of the comments posted on Slashdot?

    I know this is the first time I pulled up Slashdot it awhile - the troll factor makes in not work reading and who picks the stories these days? - and seeing this story right there.... Funny.

    --
    Using "Common Sense" is being either to arrogant or to ignorant to ask people who know more about something than you.
  146. IPCC [Re:like trying to offer proof to a Birther] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    have you actually ever read the report? Assessment report: The physical science basis

    I have actually.

    Really? Ok, you're you're ahead of 99 of the people making comments. I will memorize your user name and put you on my mental "people who actually know what they're talking about" list.

    The IPCC "physical basis" report is, indeed, non-technical, but i's probably as good an overview of the science at a non-technical level as you're likely to find-- you can start chasing down the references if you want the details.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  147. Red Herring by quadelirus · · Score: 1

    This is just a side note, and I'm not arguing about wether or not global warming is happening here, I just don't like the methods of the poster:

    The point that October was the hottest month on record for Australia is a red herring. October was also the third coldest month on record for the US. A single month tells us nothing about global climate change even when it falls on an extreme. The slashdot mods should have removed this extraneous comment before posting.

  148. Yes. by HiThere · · Score: 1

    A true spirit of science requires that you remain open minded. Period. Forever. And never reach certainty.

    This means that all actions are taken against a background of uncertainty. That's the way the world is, and lying about it doesn't make it any better. All you can say is that one interpretation of the perceived facts is more probable than another. And *NOW* is when action is possible. You can't act in either the past or the future, but only in the now.

    Being open minded doesn't mean being indecisive. It just means accepting that any action you take might not be the correct one. You can only make your best guess.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  149. There is no requirement to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come up with an alternate model if the point of a paper is to point out flaws in others' work.

  150. Re:does not publish bylines by glodime · · Score: 1

    But the magazine is, at best, equal in quality to other publications like Harvard Business Review, Harper's Magazine, The Atlantic, Foreign Affairs, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, all of which publish bylines. I would argue, after reading many articles in each of these publications (including the Economist) over the past ~6 years, that the Economist is somewhere near the bottom of this list when it comes to quality due to the oftentimes bizarre conclusions and predictions the Economist authors come up with based on what I can only explain as amateur-level knowledge of economic theory or myopic perspective on current events.

  151. Who watches the watchers? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, you are very lucky to have scientists to think for you. Thats our job.

    That's one of the dumbest things I've heard in a while. Scientists don't think for anyone but themselves, they are there to provide testable theories which fit testable facts.

    and so shouldn't be complaining when those specialists consider each others (peer reviewed) conclusions to be inherently more valuable

    The problem with this is that scientists who are skeptical are excluded and you end up with little cliques of self reinforcing dogma. Religion, if you will.

    The words "Fuck that" spring to mind.

    --
    Deleted
  152. Re:Watts up with that rebuttal to Skepticsm articl by michaelwigle · · Score: 1

    "It's worth a read-through." No it isn't, and here's why.

    I'm sorry you feel that way. I did take the time to read the link you provided and the written testimony to the oversight committee. Here are some excerpts worth noting.

    Even less confidence can be placed in the original conclusions by Mann et al. (1999) that “the 1990s are likely the warmest decade, and 1998 the warmest year, in at least a millennium” because the uncertainties inherent in temperature reconstructions for individual years and decades are larger than those for longer time periods, and because not all of the available proxies record temperature information on such short timescales.

    ...

    The scientific consensus regarding human-induced global warming would not be substantively altered if, for example, the global mean surface temperature 1,000 years ago was found to be as warm as it is today. This is because reconstructions of surface temperature do not tell us why the climate is changing.

    I find it interesting that the conclusion was that the claim that it's the hottest in a millenium was a bit of a stretch scientifically speaking and that even if they find out it was warmer in the past they will still conclude that humans are the cause of the recent increase in temperature. Which, I find ironic since humans were the reason for the coming ice age in the 70's as well.

  153. Re:Can we please stop with the "denialist" crap? N by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

    If everyone who currently doesnt believe in global warming, believes so because they A)Want to stick with the status quo, B)Believe the government is out to get them or, C) Believe the liberal elitist secret organization is out to get them. Is a denier.

    My wager is that that's an extremely small percentage of the people currently being described as "deniers".

    If they believe the GW isn't happening due to mis-truths, lies, and blatant falsehoods that have been foisted onto them, then they are just sheep.

    Again! You go back to the old language!

    Anybody rational isn't going to believe that GW isn't happening. They might believe that it's not happening due to human activity. They might believe that it's happening but it's not harmful to our way of life. Don't you see how many hundreds of possibilities you're grouping in with the one label?

    It's not a black and white issue!

    Every individual you talk to has their own opinion for their own reason. Talk to them. Find out what it is. If it's something clearly wrong, then address it. If not, well, then maybe you have to take a long look at yourself.

    BUT we are all but sheep. I just trust doctors, and scientists more then politicians.

    The only one of those groups who have demonstrated positive change in my personal life has been doctors. I don't know any scientists, and I don't know any politicians, and so I have no particular reason to trust or distrust them.

    I definitely don't have enough insight into the scientific process, as applied to GW research, to judge whether it is being abused to make data mislead the public, which is the claim of many people here.

  154. Weather = Climate in the long run by DuBois · · Score: 1

    Hmmm.... If climate isn't weather, then clearly hurricanes and tornadoes and sea level rises and cold weather in Copenhagen can't be attributed to climate. They are merely weather, and cannot be climate in any real sense.

    Unless, well, weather really is climate in the long run? If so, perhaps the last decade of declining temperatures have finally left the realm of weather and entered the realm of climate. And perhaps the frigid weather in Copenhagen really reflects the current climate of colder weather.

    --
    The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
    1. Re:Weather = Climate in the long run by Poingggg · · Score: 1

      As said in a reply to another answer, 'climate does not change' was ill-formulated and should have been 'climate does not change 4 times a year'. So, indeed, climate is the total of all weather in the long run.
      And IPCC is NOT a fraud, the guys paid bij Big Oil to hack mails, pull some selected bits out of thousands of mails totally out of context and publish them are.

      --
      What person will donate an airborne act of love?
    2. Re:Weather = Climate in the long run by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      Climate changes four times in a lifetime if you're a butterfly.

      To claim that either the IPCC or the climategate email exposer is, or is not, meaningfully manipulating the research or the data to achieve a specific policy outcome implies that someone has an understanding of the mechanisms between an action on the local landscape or environment, and some change in the global climate.

      At this point, our understanding of human-constructed global-scale systems, in which the number of kinds of variables is finite and their relationships are relatively well understood. Yet, we routinely see disruptions in parts of the Internet and telecom systems, contaminated food supplies, and volatile manufactured commodities prices, which are all managed according to our supposedly comprehensive understandings of those systems.

      I'm not personally convinced that we have the intellectual sophistication to throughly understand such complex systems, even though we're able to see broad and sometimes very specific correlations among some inputs and outputs. Let's certainly make policy to minimize the local damage and negative impacts of our activities (and hope that the effects add up in the way we would like), but perhaps assume less that we know enough about the relevant systems to make policy specifically achieving a specific state in the system. The Western electrical and health systems are both policyed to a great extent, and yet they do not consistently achieve the desired policy outcomes.

      (If I had sufficient knowledge to make the global climate do adverse thing X and had the backing of a global-scale cartel, I would consider making a device to do X, and also offering a range of products and services at extortionate prices to mitigate the effects of X, all instead of defending massively long, capital- and labour- intensive, and fragile supply chains against angry dudes with improvised sabotage tools.)

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
  155. What a whiner by Xenophon+Fenderson, · · Score: 1

    Here's the deal: Science is skepticism. No theory is 100% correct, and long-held axioms tend to be disproved by new evidence (just ask Aristotle or Newton). By saying, "I am a scientist", you acknowledge that whatever you believe to be true today can easily be demonstrated as being false by some new datum tomorrow. And I say "tough toenails" to anyone who wants the title of "scientist" but isn't willing to be intellectually rigorous in this regard. That's right - every belief, every axiom, every hypothesis, every theory, every rule, every "law" must be, in a scientist's mind, tagged with a confidence factor that never, ever hits 100%.

    Now, this is just what I believe. I could very well be wrong.

    --
    I'm proud of my Northern Tibetian Heritage
  156. the link changed by zerosomething · · Score: 1
    --
    It all starts at 0
  157. Warming or..... Cooling? by DuBois · · Score: 1

    Humanity is adapted to the climate as it exists today.

    Exactly. And what if the current lack of sunspot activity is precursor to a climate that is changing to colder weather rather than warmer?

    Doesn't it make more sense to prepare for cold, which actually kills far more people than warmth?

    --
    The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
  158. Overweight, or too much CO2? by DuBois · · Score: 1

    'This man is too heavy,' said the doctor who had been called in to see a patient in the Land of Fools, 'and his ailment will undoubtedly become worse unless something is done about it.'

    He went home, leaving his knowledge and expected some action to be taken.

    When he returned to see the patient, he was met by sorrowing relatives.

    'Doctor,' they said, 'the man was sicker than we knew. Even after his weight had been reduced, he died.'

    'Perhaps he did not get his weight down fast enough.'

    'No, it couldn't have been that. We decided that the best way to take off weight was to cut his head off. We had that done in five minutes.'

    —Idries Shah, "Reflections"

    --
    The IPCC has purposely engineered a massive scientific fraud.
  159. Re:Requires a PHD .... HAHAHAH by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

    Human behavior can stop all kinds of natural trends. Bush Fires and floods, for example.

  160. Re:Watts up with that rebuttal to Skepticsm articl by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    Your mention of the 70's ice age is enough to tell me where you are coming from. Did you look up the follow up paper I mentioned or did you just grep the testimony for "Mann" and then post what you thought were the juicy bits?

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  161. Too strong, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the view that anything that is not in a peer-reviewed journal is by a "crank" is ridiculous. HOWEVER, just because someone puts some data up on some blog doesn't make it noteworthy either -- a lot of them ARE cranks. The thing is, though, they get weeded out -- look at the very example the article covers (a claim that climate data was faked via adding arbitrary "adjustment" factors). At first glance the graphs look convincing but they were demonstrated to not be statistically significant. I think, quite simply, the popular press should not try to cover science issues they do not understand (at least to the extent that they should not overstate uncertain results as certainties.)

  162. criticism of Willis by jwhitener · · Score: 1

    http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2009/12/willis_eschenbach_caught_lying.php
    http://scienceblogs.com/deltoid/2006/08/climate_fraudit.php

    For just about every blog post you find being skeptical, anyone can find one countering it. It really isn't a game anyone can win.

    The best we can do is keep the scientific journals, method, and research as transparent as possible. And then, since none of us has the expertise to evaluate the actual science, and for every "pro" blog there is a "con" blog, we have to trust the judgement of the actual scientists and the reviews of them by other independent scientists.

  163. Show me one real anti AGW paper by jwhitener · · Score: 1

    Can anyone provide a link to one single anti AGW paper that has solid, unbiased scientists behind it?

    I googled a bit trying to find one and could not. The best I could find was lists like this:
    http://www.populartechnology.net/2009/10/peer-reviewed-papers-supporting.html

    But going down the list, and searching the history of the authors, their connections and business associations, every one of them is questionable. And each paper had numerous papers refuting it, or the original authors had later changed their mind.

    Before I hit submit I found one more
    http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Minority.Blogs&ContentRecord_id=84E9E44A-802A-23AD-493A-B35D0842FED8
    But was from 2007 and seems to be largely refuted.
    http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2007/09/climate-insensitivity/

    Is there one single anti AGW paper that most climate scientists say "yes, this is a pretty valid counter argument and we need to study if further"?

  164. A visual response to aggressive skepticism by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1
    Skepticism is good. However, when fundamentalist or conspiracy theory nuts who start with a predetermined answer and even go so far as to distort what you say to make it seem the opposite, then this is the only valid response. It is one thing to be skeptical. It is another to have an agenda, cherry pick details that fit that agenda, and even outright lie and distort the science/facts behind, say, AGW, the Apollo moon landings, evolution, and so on.

    I wish I could remember the source, but I remember reading about how creationist groups will take the words of someone like Steph(v?)en J. Gould out of context and basically make them say the exact opposite of what they actually say in context. The writer concluded that there are "liars, damn liars, and creationists".

  165. Re:Watts up with that rebuttal to Skepticsm articl by michaelwigle · · Score: 1

    No, I read everything you linked to. I think you misunderstand my reference though. I'm not saying there was a 70's ice age. I'm referring to popular belief in that time that there was the beginnings of a cooling trend (which there was, if short-lived). But during that time there was suddenly a growing concern in larger circles that we were causing global cooling.

    My point simply being that we need to be careful of jumping to conclusions based on even a 30 year trend when it refers to the ebb and flow of global weather patterns that may span 100's of years. Especially when there is a growing spread in results such as the last 30 years of tree ring data not matching the recorded temps.

    For the ferocity that the global warming (now called climate change) groups defend the "fact" that humans are about to destroy the planet if we don't stop polluting today, it would be nice to see more fact. In truth, there are too many factors involved in temperature change to be certain what is causing what. I'm not saying we don't have an impact. That would be naive. But I also think there are some short-sighted solutions being brought to the table.

  166. Sacred Cow by lucm · · Score: 1

    The Church of the Self-Righteous has its own concept of Trinity:

    1) Global warming
    2) Darwin's theory of evolution
    3) Apple products

    Suggesting that any of these three sacred cows is not infaillible is a blasphemy; worse, a mortal sin.

    As with any dogma, rebellion only leads to excommunication:
    1) Raise an issue about Global Warming: you are an agent of Big Oil, evil and corrupt.
    2) Discuss flaws in Darwin's theory of evolution: you are a fundamentalist christian, a bigot and a fool.
    3) Disagree with pricing or superiority of Apple products: you are paid by Microsoft, or plain stupid.

    It must be really, really awesome to be on the side of Truth all the time.

    --
    lucm, indeed.
  167. Once more by symbolset · · Score: 1

    The cumulative effect of all adjustments is approximately a one-half degree Fahrenheit warming in the annual time series over a 50-year period from the 1940's until the last decade of the century.

    link.

    .5C is the AGW signal over that time span. Their adjustments are the cause for alarm.

    This document used to be linked from their climate page only two weeks ago. Now it's not. I wonder why. I'm sure it has nothing to do with what's going on in Copenhagen.

    Of course I expect you to reply that this is regional data (it isn't) or that NOAA isn't reliable. I don't expect you to get your head around the idea that if your corrections to the underlying data are the indica that are your report, you have scientifical issues. Maybe there's something good on TV.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
    1. Re:Once more by joocemann · · Score: 1

      A recent publication in the Journal of Climate, Oct 2009 (Vol22, Issue 19, p5175-5204) titled "Probabilistic Forecast for Twenty-First-Century Climate Based on Uncertainties in Emissions (Without Policy) and Climate Parameters." May be of interest to you. MIT has developed a much more robust and comprehensive prediction model that is more encompassing than IPCC models. Please access this resource.

      From their projections, by 2100, the 5/95% flanking temperatures to the mean are about 3.5-7.4 deg C. And though their data is from a different set of measurement and such, this would be worth noting when, for example, you feel a need to decrease a given value by 0.5... 3 deg C is still a big number.

      From your USHCN link, I was able to deduce that their adjustments for specific changes in local measurement environments accounts for .5 deg C. Lets assume that those adjustments were unnecessary (though it appeared they had well rationalized them). Even if we were to assume we could apply a reduction of all projected models (not the USHCN, whose actual projections are not mentioned in your link, only the difference), it would still not reduce the value to zero. In the articles I skimmed even just today, the current warming effects are estimated to be 0.8-1.4 degrees C. Subtract 0.5 and you've still got warming. Like I said, though, the adjustments were actually noted on your link for reasonable purposes, and the actual projections of the USHCN are not mentioned, only the difference.

      I think it is clearly rational to adjust for differences that are caused by altered measurement conditions. It is always important to account for as many impacting variables and changes in science.

      I just dug around some more on ncdc.noaa.gov and they are reporting that the last decade 2000-2010 (nearly done) shows a 0.54 deg C increase over the 20th century average (which itself has a value that is higher than expected due to the latter half of the century). And so even if we can assume (i don't think we can, though) that it is ok to discard all those rationalized adjustments, there is still an increase.

      What say ye?

    2. Re:Once more by symbolset · · Score: 1

      I say that if you take out the adjustments you get an observed rise in global temperatures on the order of 0.2C per century - a number not out of line for an interglacial age. In addition, you get no AGW signal at all - but trends in the data reflect historic events: periods of drought, etc, that are not identifiable in the corrected data.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Once more by joocemann · · Score: 1

      So wait... This is what you've told me

      -There is no difference it is all in adjustments.
      -There is a difference, 0.2 deg C
      -The reasons for adjustments, though well made and to most people understandable, are not valid and thus no adjustment or account for measurement changes is necessary.
      ------
      And yet you've only, and quite selectively (called cherry picking) addressed one major resource, the USHCN. And in your own analysis of that data you contradict your previous assumption based on that selective acknowledgement of data.

      You're also, unlike most people, somehow compelled to believe that all of those adjustments were not necessary and have no reasonable use. While I will disagree with you outright, and that the adjustments are well reasoned on the site you linked me to, even if that whole adjustment is made, there is still a positive value.

      You're just full of it. You cherry pick data sources, you misrepresent the information that is IN those sources, and then you, without your own reasoning, dismiss widely explained and understandable rationale for adjustment of data.

      I suggested another resource of relative information. In your reply you're clearly ignoring that. This is why you should not trust your own beliefs in this and why nobody else should, either.

      GTFO. And you wonder why skeptics like you get labeled as pseudo-scientists. YOU ARE!

      (By the way, I am a scientist and I appreciate your bringing the adjustment values to light in my own view of the related information. This will key in on my own skepticism to make sure adjustments are well rationalized and, if anything, do not synthesize an exacerbation of the fact)

    4. Re:Once more by symbolset · · Score: 1

      I thought this was clear. The AGW is made up. All of the authorities except the CRU show you where they put the AGW in, and the CRU is stonewalling. If you find in your analysis an alarming curve that you put in there yourself, you're not entitled to expect other people to become alarmed. The sky is not falling. 0.2C per century, in addition to being a reasonable expectation for the climate of the age, is also outside the precision of the measurements.

      Perhaps I'm frustrating you because I don't bow and scrape to your dendro-sciency authority. Excuse me, but you're going to have to come with something more convincing.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    5. Re:Once more by joocemann · · Score: 1

      It isn't clear. I just told you why, and reasoned my analysis of your poor argument.

      Me come with something? It was you who was required to provide evidence of your claims. In review of even your own resources it was clear you are confused. I even provided the evidence from your own links that is contradictory to your false analysis.

      If it isn't convincing, already, that your analysis of your cherry-picked data is, in itself, cherry-picked and obviously wrong --- well then I can't really destroy your poor argument any further and you'll just have to keep staring into space wondering why everyone thinks you're nuts.

      Bye nutjob.

  168. What limits are those? by REALMAN · · Score: 1

    The real point is being overlooked here. The unnamed author puts forth 2 claims.

    1. Those without PhD's cannot prove to him/her that the data was manipulated. The "I'm smarter than you argument".

    2. If it's not "peer reviewed" then I'm not listening. The "Convince my friends first argument".

    We'll start with number 2.

    Peer review is meaningless when the emails SHOW that the peer review process is tainted by scientists eager to exclude those who do not share the same conclusions from reviewing their data.

    The first argument can be dismissed entirely due to the fact that the knowledge of a subject is irrelevant if the process of reviewing the data has been corrupted by Scientists eager to get the next grant for their research. Scientists live on grants. The Universities that employ scientists also live on those grants and your tenure with those schools is directly related to the amount of grant money you bring in. Those that follow the government line get grants. Those who don't are denied grants. Therefore any conclusion against AGW results in a lack of grants which results in a loss of work from the University. Scientists know how to cover their ass.

    In closing, knowledge restrained by job security is not knowledge, it's propaganda. Fixed peer review is worthless.

                                           

    --
    - A Frog in a pond utters an azure cry. -
  169. something stinks, sort of by gustavius · · Score: 1

    "AGW denialist"? At least this PR droid has half a brain.

  170. Expert and Government Review by Sumtingwong · · Score: 1

    I am a bit confused as to the "Expert and Government Review" as shown by the IPCC here:

    http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/publications_and_data.htm

    Can anybody please explain what the government has to do with this? Is this a valid peer review process?

    --
    Word!
  171. YouTube.com vs peer-reviewed journals by ReedYoung · · Score: 1, Troll

    Pretty much fucking sums up the "debate": climate science vs. propaganda, hosted on zero-standards websites. Seriously, check the publication standards on the places that host denier material, versus the original sources of legitimate climatology information. Scientific legitimacy, publication in Science or Nature is significantly more challenging than submitting an e-mail address and creating a unique user ID.

    --
    "I can't imagine how things could get any worse!" (some guy) "That could just be failure of imaginatioÂn on your p
  172. Who the fuck modded that "Insightful"? by ReedYoung · · Score: 1

    The research unit has deleted less than 5 percent of its original station data from its database because the stations had several discontinuities or were affected by urbanization trends, Jones said. "When you're looking at climate data, you don't want stations that are showing urban warming trends," Jones said, "so we've taken them out." Most of the stations for which data was removed are located in areas where there were already dense monitoring networks, he added. "We rarely removed a station in a data-sparse region of the world."

    Only the data that should be destroyed, because it was wrong, was destroyed. It was not "Insightful" of Anonymous Coward to recommend keeping known-bad data. Fuck. This is why I last logged in months ago.

    --
    "I can't imagine how things could get any worse!" (some guy) "That could just be failure of imaginatioÂn on your p
  173. Scientific proof is possible. Common, even. by ReedYoung · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it's time to once again point out that "scientific proof" is a red herring.

    Even after Quantum Mechanics and Einstein's Theory of Invariance, Newton's Laws of Motion and Kepler's Law of Planetary Orbits apply fully to all the conditions on which they were first based. No planet travels close enough to light speed for relativity to invalidate those theories as they apply to the observations on which they were based. These 20th century discoveries are often trumpeted in light reading for non-scientists, and some lower quality textbooks, as "overturning" classical mechanics or the like, but in fact they only extended what was previously known and proven, with modifications that really only apply to entirely new classes of observations. The conditions that require relativity or QM, nobody had thought they understood before that, so nothing was disproved by those extensions of human understanding.

    And while LIGO searches for the wave or particle responsible for gravity, nobody suspects we might find it has a repulsive component we never noticed before, or that the value of the universal gravitational constant will be radically altered. Gravity is attractive, and its magnitude is known to a high degree of certainty, and it is the same value measured hundreds of years ago for most scenarios in which we calculate gravity. So I am not discounting the occasional dramatic leap in the expansion of knowledge in any way, but it is false of you to claim that in science we can never accurately use the words "prove" and "proof".

    There was legitimate doubt about the ability of carbon dioxide to significantly impact global mean temperature, but there is not now, since its emission spectrum was proven to not overlap water's, by the identification of well-defined bands, rather than a blur -- in the 1950s. No legitimate scientist doubts it because it is proven beyond a shadow of reasonable doubt by things that are absolutely known about physical optics. Plenty of ignoramuses can be persuaded otherwise by overpaid charlatans, but that is not part of the scientific process. It is part of social and political processes we all ought to outgrow, post haste.

    --
    "I can't imagine how things could get any worse!" (some guy) "That could just be failure of imaginatioÂn on your p
  174. You make a Valid point, BUTT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the so called smoking gun emails make mention of jerry meandering of said peer reviewed process by the total blocking or stonewall of those either opposed to the science as the have claimed in the emails to have done, the question becomes not when do I quit being a skeptic but rather when should I start. The problem is when you talk openly about rigging the peer review system you openly revert to mysticism, you know, a belief based on a gut feeling not on a proven mathematical model.

  175. Global Warming is a science problem, not the debat by josephcmiller2 · · Score: 1

    AGW is a scientific problem that climatologists can work on. But the effect on our economic, social, geographical, pschological, etc. aspects are not climate issues. Therefore regardless of the result of any global climate study, the climatologist is not in a position to claim what that means for us. If they do make claims without the proper "credentials" as some of you point out, they are acting advocates, not scientists. They must involve those who can interpret what these climate changes will mean for us, the people. Otherwise, they are engaging in the same kind of baseless-claim-making that they accuse their opponents of.

    Not to even mention the fact that these studies are as much an exercise at statistics as they are in the scientific measuring, etc. Some of these guys are demonstrably not very good at the statistics portion of their science.

  176. Statistical Tools by gryf · · Score: 1
    The very problem the original author Eschenbach describes, is what the Economist author ( also of unknown background, there's no evidence to assume related statistics expertise ) considers a feature. Given the supposed problems with the temperature record at Darwin, some scientist used a 'statistical tool' to 'homogenize' it. The result became the mirror image of the actual raw data. The yardstick by which the 'homogenized' data was validated was also homogenized data that we now know was 'fixed' using several 'tricks' that an anonymous contributor described as 'botch after botch after botch'.

    Further, it's surprising to describe 'cherry picking' in a contributor's work without mentioning, at least contrasting against, the recent Briffa controversy wherein the history of global climate was measured by three trees in an entire valley in Siberia. Maybe it was valid, but if so why did Briffa suppress the source data for a decade?

    Since the obvious trend in the Darwin data is a cooling trend, the question remains, what changes to the screen or siting produce /consistent/ cooling even as global temperatures are supposed to be rising? This is supposed to be the hottest October in record so the raw data should illustrate that somehow.

    The Economist author also appears to miss the controversial disclosures regarding peer review. With a collection of scientists working to change who reviews peers, who accepts papers, and even redefining what 'peer review' itself is supposed to mean, the final appeal to authority near the end of the piece undermines his thesis by grabbing for a rhetorical stanchion that has rusted through.

    --

    #-#
    Ad Astra Per Aspera
    A rough road leads to the stars
  177. Skeptic vs bigot. by ResidentSourcerer · · Score: 1

    Bigot :== Someone who's mind is made up, and is impervious to discussion.

    Skeptic :== someone willing to examine new information.

    A useful touchstone is to ask "What would you consider good evidence for X"

    Thus, if I ask a global warming doubter what he would consider good evidence for global warming, if he replies "It's all a conspiracy" then there is little point in talking to him. On the other hand if says, "A good climate model should match with good accuracy the past -- including things like the Little Ice Age."

    Or "I'd like to see the data sets, and on the processing see explanations why they adjusted the data the way they did"

    Or "Good models should show large regional effects such as the El Nino / La Nina oscillation, the periodic drought pattern in the Palliser triangle on the Canadian prairies. While I don't expect the data to match year by year, I do expect it to show the patterns."

    This is a person that may be open to discussion.

    E.g.
    If you ask a creationist what evidence he would find convincing for evolution, and he answers "I want to see a whole new species with the intermediate steps produced by evolution" I then ask him how different they need to be: Are horses and donkeys sufficiently different? They can cross breed, but the progeny are sterile. How about Dachshunds and St. Bernards? They can't breed without assistance"

    If I get answers to these without much foaming at the mouth, then perhaps we can have a discussion. If he asks me to breed dogs starting with cats, I'll have to ask him for more time.

    e.g. I have friends who believe in Astrology.

    I proposed the following experiment:

    Pull a bunch of hospital records for a given hospital. Pick 12 days -- one from each sign. Pick 20 kids from each day.

    20 years later. Get a bio from each individual describing the influences on their life, or alternately, provide a questionaire.

    Now ask the astrologer to match up the birthdates to the people based on their life story or questionaire results.

    IF astrology has as much insight as astrologers claim, they should be able to do a pretty good job of matching. I'd be convinced at levels better than 80% assuming that the data set hadn't been compromised.

    (Check -- do it backward as a double blind. Give out the questionaire, let the astrologers make the prediction, THEN ask them for their birthday.)

    (Alternate: The astrologer interviews the person, but certain questions aren't allowed -- e.g. what is your birthdate -- were you the oldest, youngest or in the middle of your grade regarding relative age? When the astrologer is fairly certain, they record the sign, and move on to the next interview.)

    --
    Third Career: Tree Farmer Second Career: Computer Geek First Career: Teacher, Outdoor Instructor, Photographer.
  178. I AM YOUR WORST NIGHTMARE ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DO YOU KNOW that CO2 is a TRACE GAS, that means there is MUCH less then 1% of CO2 in the atmosphere !!!!!!

    There is more ARGON then there is CO2.

    I am NOT a Global Warming Sceptic or Climate Change Denier ... ... I AM a person who did very well in college, 2 BS degrees, one agriculture the other information systems, sometimes on the Dens list, did BEST in science courses also took years of Karate, and I have done very well over the years in knowing what information designs would rise to the top, what was good and bad features in software, made MANY GOOD suggestions to engineers as to how to solve problems efficiently, and knew which sciences were REAL IN THE LONG RUN !!!

    And I can tell you this, THERE IS NO GLOBAL WARMING IT IS TOTAL NONSENSE !!!

    THE CASE HAS NEVER BEEN MADE THAT WARMING IS BAD !!

    THERE IS NO CONFIRMED CURRENTLY EXISTING PROOF OF GLOBAL WARMING OR OUT OF CONTROL SEA LEVEL CHANGES IT IS ALL WITHIN NORMAL VARIATIONS !

    IF IT DID EXIST IT WOULD BE GOOD.

    And the fossil record DEBUNKS EVOLUTION !!!!!!

    YOU DON'T HAVE THE GUTS TO RESEARCH THESE TOPICS WITH AN OPEN MIND AND FIND THE TRUTH !!!

    If you read the real latest scientific articles on both of these subjects they are riddled with PROOF AGAINST THE CAUSE, EXCUSES, GUESS WORK, DENIAL, FALSE HOPE -- THEY KNOW ONLY ONE TRUTH, THAT THEY DO NOT KNOW WHAT IS GOING ON AND THEIR FAVORITE THEORIES HAVE BEEN ROYALLY DISPROVED BY THEIR OWN STUDIES !!!

  179. Economist bias by ResidentSourcerer · · Score: 1

    I've been a subscriber to several email alerts from the Economist for three years now. I usually read about 1/3 to 1/2 the articles referenced.

    In general I have found that the Economist:

    1. Reports stories in a very shallow manner. They are short, lack details, lack references.

    2. Have a consistent bias..

    3. Don't do a good job of separating opinion from fact.

    4. Often don't talk about anything related to economy.

    --
    Third Career: Tree Farmer Second Career: Computer Geek First Career: Teacher, Outdoor Instructor, Photographer.
  180. Link rot by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 1

    The link you posted has been replaced by
    this one.

  181. "symbolNOBODY": Step inside... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SymbolNOBODY:

    You said what's quoted below from you, here -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&cid=30428430

    "It's tolerated (perhaps encouraged) in part because these annoying actors are otherwised engaged in improving Linux. Major Debian and BSD contributors, for example, use slashdot as a workspace for their human-machine interaction side experiments, of which APK is probably one. In addition many of these trolls post links which, if you follow them, will completely hose a Windows machine. This is part of the game. - by symbolset (646467) on Monday December 14, @01:15AM (#30428430) Journal

    I took offense to the BOLDED part... so, my reply in the URL below was simple (and logical):

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&threshold=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=30428430#30430244

    Additionally, "symbolNOBODY"? Well - the day you can make something like this (& that got you PAID for it, & that has done as well for others online):

    http://www.tcmagazine.com/forums/index.php?s=b861a743aa23c4568b7d73e07ef7ecec&showtopic=2662

    That's also gone over 250.000 views worldwide in 1++ yrs.' time online, & across 15 forums where that guide for Windows Security has been made either an:

    1.) "Sticky/Pinned" thread
    2.) An "Essential Guide"
    3.) Rates 5/5 stars (etc.)

    AND, gets "feedback" like this from users that have applied it:

    ----

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28430

    PERTINENT QUOTE/EXCERPT:

    "...recently, months ago when you finally got this guide done, had authorization to try this on simple work station for kids. My client, who paid me an ungodly amount of money to do this, has been PROBLEM FREE FOR MONTHS! I haven't even had a follow up call which is unusual. Now I don't recommend this for the average joe, but it if can work for a kids PC it can work for anything! Now, i substituted OpenDNS and activated the Adult Content filter with them for this kids computer. I know its not perfect, but will catch over 99.5% of said sites."

    and

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=10f9ba9ad5ff990aaae1e7ec91f593a2&t=28430&page=3

    "Its 2009 - still trouble free! I was told last week by a co worker who does active directory administration, and he said I was doing overkill. I told him yes, but I just eliminated the half life in windows that you usually get. He said good point. So from 2008 till 2009. No speed decreases, its been to a lan party, moved around in a move, and it still NEVER has had the OS reinstalled besides the fact I imaged the drive over in 2008. Great stuff! My client STILL Hasn't called me back in regards to that one machine to get it locked down for the kid. I am glad it worked and I am sure her wallet is appreciated too now that it works. Speaking of which, I need to call her to see if I can get some leads. APK - I will say it again, the guide is FANTASTIC! Its made my PC experience much easier. Sandboxing was great. Getting my host file updated, setting services to system service, rather than system local. (except AVG updater, needed system local)"

    Thronka - forums member @ xtremepccentral.com

    ----

    THEN, when you have done so, on THAT account? THEN, you can talk!

    Also?

    When you have done all of this as I have over time in this Art & Science of computing:

    "My Name is Ozymandias: King of Kings - Look upon my works, ye mighty

  182. SymbolNOBODY, step inside... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SymbolNOBODY:

    You said what's quoted below from you, here -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&cid=30428430

    "It's tolerated (perhaps encouraged) in part because these annoying actors are otherwised engaged in improving Linux. Major Debian and BSD contributors, for example, use slashdot as a workspace for their human-machine interaction side experiments, of which APK is probably one. In addition many of these trolls post links which, if you follow them, will completely hose a Windows machine. This is part of the game. - by symbolset (646467) on Monday December 14, @01:15AM (#30428430) Journal

    I took offense to the BOLDED part... so, my reply in the URL below was simple (and logical):

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&threshold=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=30428430#30430244

    Additionally, "symbolNOBODY"? Well - the day you can make something like this (& that got you PAID for it, & that has done as well for others online):

    http://www.tcmagazine.com/forums/index.php?s=b861a743aa23c4568b7d73e07ef7ecec&showtopic=2662

    That's also gone over 250.000 views worldwide in 1++ yrs.' time online, & across 15 forums where that guide for Windows Security has been made either an:

    1.) "Sticky/Pinned" thread
    2.) An "Essential Guide"
    3.) Rates 5/5 stars (etc.)

    AND, gets "feedback" like this from users that have applied it:

    ----

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28430

    PERTINENT QUOTE/EXCERPT:

    "...recently, months ago when you finally got this guide done, had authorization to try this on simple work station for kids. My client, who paid me an ungodly amount of money to do this, has been PROBLEM FREE FOR MONTHS! I haven't even had a follow up call which is unusual. Now I don't recommend this for the average joe, but it if can work for a kids PC it can work for anything! Now, i substituted OpenDNS and activated the Adult Content filter with them for this kids computer. I know its not perfect, but will catch over 99.5% of said sites."

    and

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=10f9ba9ad5ff990aaae1e7ec91f593a2&t=28430&page=3

    "Its 2009 - still trouble free! I was told last week by a co worker who does active directory administration, and he said I was doing overkill. I told him yes, but I just eliminated the half life in windows that you usually get. He said good point. So from 2008 till 2009. No speed decreases, its been to a lan party, moved around in a move, and it still NEVER has had the OS reinstalled besides the fact I imaged the drive over in 2008. Great stuff! My client STILL Hasn't called me back in regards to that one machine to get it locked down for the kid. I am glad it worked and I am sure her wallet is appreciated too now that it works. Speaking of which, I need to call her to see if I can get some leads. APK - I will say it again, the guide is FANTASTIC! Its made my PC experience much easier. Sandboxing was great. Getting my host file updated, setting services to system service, rather than system local. (except AVG updater, needed system local)"

    Thronka - forums member @ xtremepccentral.com

    ----

    THEN, when you have done so, on THAT account? THEN, you can talk!

    Also?

    When you have done all of this as I have over time in this Art & Science of computing:

    "My Name is Ozymandias: King of Kings - Look upon my works, ye mighty

  183. You NEVER have proofs, proof of that? Inside... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SymbolNOBODY:

    You said what's quoted below from you, here -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&cid=30428430

    "It's tolerated (perhaps encouraged) in part because these annoying actors are otherwised engaged in improving Linux. Major Debian and BSD contributors, for example, use slashdot as a workspace for their human-machine interaction side experiments, of which APK is probably one. In addition many of these trolls post links which, if you follow them, will completely hose a Windows machine. This is part of the game. - by symbolset (646467) on Monday December 14, @01:15AM (#30428430) Journal

    I took offense to the BOLDED part... & ALL you EVER seem to have is "ad hominem" based attacks on people, not the points they make. So, my reply in the URL below was simple (and logical):

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&threshold=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=30428430#30430244

    Additionally, "symbolNOBODY"? Well - the day you can make something like this (& that got you PAID for it, & that has done as well for others online):

    http://www.tcmagazine.com/forums/index.php?s=b861a743aa23c4568b7d73e07ef7ecec&showtopic=2662

    That's also gone over 250.000 views worldwide in 1++ yrs.' time online, & across 15 forums where that guide for Windows Security has been made either an:

    1.) "Sticky/Pinned" thread
    2.) An "Essential Guide"
    3.) Rates 5/5 stars (etc.)

    AND, gets "feedback" like this from users that have applied it:

    ----

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28430

    PERTINENT QUOTE/EXCERPT:

    "...recently, months ago when you finally got this guide done, had authorization to try this on simple work station for kids. My client, who paid me an ungodly amount of money to do this, has been PROBLEM FREE FOR MONTHS! I haven't even had a follow up call which is unusual. Now I don't recommend this for the average joe, but it if can work for a kids PC it can work for anything! Now, i substituted OpenDNS and activated the Adult Content filter with them for this kids computer. I know its not perfect, but will catch over 99.5% of said sites."

    and

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=10f9ba9ad5ff990aaae1e7ec91f593a2&t=28430&page=3

    "Its 2009 - still trouble free! I was told last week by a co worker who does active directory administration, and he said I was doing overkill. I told him yes, but I just eliminated the half life in windows that you usually get. He said good point. So from 2008 till 2009. No speed decreases, its been to a lan party, moved around in a move, and it still NEVER has had the OS reinstalled besides the fact I imaged the drive over in 2008. Great stuff! My client STILL Hasn't called me back in regards to that one machine to get it locked down for the kid. I am glad it worked and I am sure her wallet is appreciated too now that it works. Speaking of which, I need to call her to see if I can get some leads. APK - I will say it again, the guide is FANTASTIC! Its made my PC experience much easier. Sandboxing was great. Getting my host file updated, setting services to system service, rather than system local. (except AVG updater, needed system local)"

    Thronka - forums member @ xtremepccentral.com

    ----

    THEN, when you have done so, on THAT account? THEN, you can talk!

    Also?

    When you have done all of this as I have over time in this Art & S

  184. An inconvenient truth by symbolset · · Score: 1
    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  185. symbolNOBODY= an adhominem using nobody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SymbolNOBODY:

    You said what's quoted below from you, here -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&cid=30428430

    "It's tolerated (perhaps encouraged) in part because these annoying actors are otherwised engaged in improving Linux. Major Debian and BSD contributors, for example, use slashdot as a workspace for their human-machine interaction side experiments, of which APK is probably one. In addition many of these trolls post links which, if you follow them, will completely hose a Windows machine. This is part of the game. - by symbolset (646467) on Monday December 14, @01:15AM (#30428430) Journal

    I took offense to the BOLDED part... & ALL you EVER seem to have is "ad hominem" based attacks on people, not the points they make. So, my reply in the URL below was simple (and logical):

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&threshold=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=30428430#30430244

    Additionally, "symbolNOBODY"? Well - the day you can make something like this (& that got you PAID for it, & that has done as well for others online):

    http://www.tcmagazine.com/forums/index.php?s=b861a743aa23c4568b7d73e07ef7ecec&showtopic=2662

    That's also gone over 250.000 views worldwide in 1++ yrs.' time online, & across 15 forums where that guide for Windows Security has been made either an:

    1.) "Sticky/Pinned" thread
    2.) An "Essential Guide"
    3.) Rates 5/5 stars (etc.)

    AND, gets "feedback" like this from users that have applied it:

    ----

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28430

    PERTINENT QUOTE/EXCERPT:

    "...recently, months ago when you finally got this guide done, had authorization to try this on simple work station for kids. My client, who paid me an ungodly amount of money to do this, has been PROBLEM FREE FOR MONTHS! I haven't even had a follow up call which is unusual. Now I don't recommend this for the average joe, but it if can work for a kids PC it can work for anything! Now, i substituted OpenDNS and activated the Adult Content filter with them for this kids computer. I know its not perfect, but will catch over 99.5% of said sites."

    and

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=10f9ba9ad5ff990aaae1e7ec91f593a2&t=28430&page=3

    "Its 2009 - still trouble free! I was told last week by a co worker who does active directory administration, and he said I was doing overkill. I told him yes, but I just eliminated the half life in windows that you usually get. He said good point. So from 2008 till 2009. No speed decreases, its been to a lan party, moved around in a move, and it still NEVER has had the OS reinstalled besides the fact I imaged the drive over in 2008. Great stuff! My client STILL Hasn't called me back in regards to that one machine to get it locked down for the kid. I am glad it worked and I am sure her wallet is appreciated too now that it works. Speaking of which, I need to call her to see if I can get some leads. APK - I will say it again, the guide is FANTASTIC! Its made my PC experience much easier. Sandboxing was great. Getting my host file updated, setting services to system service, rather than system local. (except AVG updater, needed system local)"

    Thronka - forums member @ xtremepccentral.com

    ----

    THEN, when you have done so, on THAT account? THEN, you can talk!

    Also?

    When you have done all of this as I have over time in this Art & S

  186. Re:An inconvenient truth YES, inside here... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SymbolNOBODY:

    You said what's quoted below from you, here -> http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&cid=30428430

    "It's tolerated (perhaps encouraged) in part because these annoying actors are otherwised engaged in improving Linux. Major Debian and BSD contributors, for example, use slashdot as a workspace for their human-machine interaction side experiments, of which APK is probably one. In addition many of these trolls post links which, if you follow them, will completely hose a Windows machine. This is part of the game. - by symbolset (646467) on Monday December 14, @01:15AM (#30428430) Journal

    I took offense to the BOLDED part... & ALL you EVER seem to have is "ad hominem" based attacks on people, not the points they make. So, my reply in the URL below was simple (and logical):

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1476008&threshold=-1&commentsort=0&mode=thread&pid=30428430#30430244

    Additionally, "symbolNOBODY"? Well - the day you can make something like this (& that got you PAID for it, & that has done as well for others online):

    http://www.tcmagazine.com/forums/index.php?s=b861a743aa23c4568b7d73e07ef7ecec&showtopic=2662

    That's also gone over 250.000 views worldwide in 1++ yrs.' time online, & across 15 forums where that guide for Windows Security has been made either an:

    1.) "Sticky/Pinned" thread
    2.) An "Essential Guide"
    3.) Rates 5/5 stars (etc.)

    AND, gets "feedback" like this from users that have applied it:

    ----

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28430

    PERTINENT QUOTE/EXCERPT:

    "...recently, months ago when you finally got this guide done, had authorization to try this on simple work station for kids. My client, who paid me an ungodly amount of money to do this, has been PROBLEM FREE FOR MONTHS! I haven't even had a follow up call which is unusual. Now I don't recommend this for the average joe, but it if can work for a kids PC it can work for anything! Now, i substituted OpenDNS and activated the Adult Content filter with them for this kids computer. I know its not perfect, but will catch over 99.5% of said sites."

    and

    http://www.xtremepccentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=10f9ba9ad5ff990aaae1e7ec91f593a2&t=28430&page=3

    "Its 2009 - still trouble free! I was told last week by a co worker who does active directory administration, and he said I was doing overkill. I told him yes, but I just eliminated the half life in windows that you usually get. He said good point. So from 2008 till 2009. No speed decreases, its been to a lan party, moved around in a move, and it still NEVER has had the OS reinstalled besides the fact I imaged the drive over in 2008. Great stuff! My client STILL Hasn't called me back in regards to that one machine to get it locked down for the kid. I am glad it worked and I am sure her wallet is appreciated too now that it works. Speaking of which, I need to call her to see if I can get some leads. APK - I will say it again, the guide is FANTASTIC! Its made my PC experience much easier. Sandboxing was great. Getting my host file updated, setting services to system service, rather than system local. (except AVG updater, needed system local)"

    Thronka - forums member @ xtremepccentral.com

    ----

    THEN, when you have done so, on THAT account? THEN, you can talk!

    Also?

    When you have done all of this as I have over time in this Art & S

  187. Re:Watts up with that rebuttal to Skepticsm articl by riverat1 · · Score: 1

    There was a cooling trend from the mid 1940s to the 1970s. It it attributed to unrestricted pollution and increasing industrialization releasing SO2 and other aerosols. We started cleaning those up in the 1970s when the temperatures started rising again. "The coming ice age" got sensationalized by a couple of articles in Newsweek and Time but it was never a consensus in the climate community. A study showed from 1965 to 1979 there were 7 papers about global cooling published and 42 papers about global warming.

    Humans are not about to destroy the planet in the long view. But we might make it difficult or impossible to support the level of population we have. If that's true it probably won't be pretty how we get to that lower population level.

  188. Peer reviewed does not mean reliable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What makes anyone think that a peer review process inside of closed environment of like minded thinkers is any less likely to produce skewed results than just publishing the report? I can produce, going back over the decades, all kinds of "peer reviewed" reports that were proven totally wrong. The AGW "scientist" know which side their bread is buttered on, just like everyone else.

    Perhaps the AGW scientist should just start up an inquisition, burning unbelievers at the stake in order to consolidate their own power... or has that been done already?

  189. Portrait of a local climate skeptic by bootz15 · · Score: 0

    Retired mining analyst Stephen McIntyre isn't a warming denier. He's merely a stickler http://www.thestar.com/news/insight/article/737357--portrait-of-a-local-climate-skeptic

  190. bravo by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    n/t

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.