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Skeptics Would Like Media To Stop Calling Science Deniers 'Skeptics'

Layzej writes: Prominent scientists, science communicators, and skeptic activists, are calling on the news media to stop using the word "skeptic" when referring to those who refuse to accept the reality of climate change, and instead refer to them by what they really are: science deniers. "Not all individuals who call themselves climate change skeptics are deniers. But virtually all deniers have falsely branded themselves as skeptics. By perpetrating this misnomer, journalists have granted undeserved credibility to those who reject science and scientific inquiry."

719 comments

  1. News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And hackers would like the media to stop calling computer criminals hackers.

    1. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Don't get me started on pirates.

    2. Re:News at 11.. by Megol · · Score: 1

      Why? Excepting the script kiddies they are in most cases hackers.

    3. Re:News at 11.. by Culture20 · · Score: 5, Funny

      And hot dogs contain only 0.01% dog. They would prefer to be called something different, but they're not sentient.

    4. Re:News at 11.. by tiberus · · Score: 3, Informative

      While you can find the following on Wikipedia, the first definition from the world of computer security is somewhat of a late comer. Hacker culture was well established before before the term began to be used for the ilk who break things. The term Cracker is much more descriptive, draws a distinction between the two but, just never seemed to catch the ear of the media darlings the put on the news.

    5. Re:News at 11.. by Le+Marteau · · Score: 5, Informative

      Oh look! An advertisement from 1906 calling copyright infringers "pirates".

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Using teh term "pirates" to refer to copyright infringers is nothing new.

      Bitching about it, however, is.

      --
      Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
    6. Re:News at 11.. by jellomizer · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well people want their opinions to be stated in a positive light, while those with opposing opinions should be worded negatively.
      Why do you think for Abortion they are Pro-Choice and Pro-Life while the other side calls them Anti-Life and Anti-Choice.
      You are not going to convince someone who will not believe in man made global climate change to call themselfs climate deniers. In their mind they are right, and those who think otherwise are just mindless sheep following all the liberal dribble that comes out of the internets.

      I am sure if the media starts calling them Climate Deniers, the media (**Cough**FOX NEWS**Cough**) who support the other side will then probably calling climate scientist. Liberal Communist Hippies.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    7. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hot tails...
      Hot snouts...
      Hot entrails...
      Hot pigs...
      Hot scum...

      Somehow hotdogs sounds more appetizing.

    8. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      > Why? Excepting the script kiddies they are in most cases hackers.

      You can't do that. Please use your brain.

      You can call a thief a poor, though probably most thieves are poor (hence their chosen way of life). Also, you don't call all scientists criminals though there were some involved with WWII (enemy) weapons.

      Don't generalize when the generalization is not proper. Besides being wrong, that qualifies you (and us, because related to you) as non-reasoning.
      Now, on the topic, "skeptic" is a proper term, me thinks. Everyone who doesn't accept something _is_ a skeptic. Often considered a virtue, I do not hold it as such. Instead, IMHO it's a mere state.

      People who didn't believe a platypus could exist were skeptics. And they were wrong. OTOH, skepticism is a powerful tool, but you really can call some skeptic person a denier -- after the tons of proofs which have been shown about man's role in the sinking of Earth. Just read about an expert's opinion about mass deaths arising from climate change (~6 billion!) and I really would like to be able to say he's wrong, but I'm not.

      The bad thing about predictions is that they are always uncertain (for they _are_ predictions). And if one works out a solution, they'll never come to be, which prompt idiots to say "see, I told you it was not gonna happen".

      I guess people who are deniers are not very cautious persons: not only because they aren't afraid of a public backlash in case they're proved wrong, but because they're not properly considering the implications for everyone if they are wrong. I've crosse a desert road a thousand times -- yet I will pay attention if someone shouts "watch out for the car".

      There's a principle of taking into account the seriousness of potential consequences, even with a low risk probability.

    9. Re:News at 11.. by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 2

      I am sure if the media starts calling them Climate Deniers, the media (**Cough**FOX NEWS**Cough**) who support the other side will then probably calling climate scientist. Liberal Communist Hippies.

      Too late.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    10. Re:News at 11.. by Drethon · · Score: 1

      Code ninjas is more appropriate.

    11. Re:News at 11.. by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 5, Funny

      And hot dogs contain only 0.01% dog.

      Yes, but hot dogs are homeopathic food . . . so the lower percentage of dog, the stronger it tastes of doggy.

      Or something like that.

      I'm actually quite surprised that PETA hasn't thrown a hissy fit over the name "hot dog".

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    12. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Using teh term "pirates" to refer to copyright infringers is nothing new.

      The big difference is that then everyone was well aware of the hyperbole in doing that.
      These days armed robbery on the seas gives you about the same prison time as copyright infringement.

    13. Re:News at 11.. by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 0

      The term Cracker is much more descriptive, draws a distinction between the two but, just never seemed to catch the ear of the media darlings the put on the news.

      Maybe that's because of it's alternate meaning...

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    14. Re:News at 11.. by bzipitidoo · · Score: 0

      Who's bitching? We like being called pirates. Everyone is a pirate. Sadly, some people are still ashamed of it, or afraid of copyright enforcement, but that will change. Sharing was the old normal, and will be, or already is, the new normal.

      Everyone will eventually realize that the copyright extremists were controlling, tyrannical, hypocritical, propagandizing, rent-seeking scum. They twist meanings to equate copying with theft, and moralize to us about theft while they commit the very "thefts" they complain we do. They will take their place in history as bad guys akin to the Inquisition.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    15. Re:News at 11.. by Megol · · Score: 2

      The thing is that most "crackers" are very skilled and as much hackers as those who don't do illegal things.
      If one person with a certain level of skills choose to apply those skills on illegal stuff they still have those skills.
      A math genius using math to swindle people is still a math genius.
      A soldier using his training to murder people still have military training.

    16. Re:News at 11.. by Translation+Error · · Score: 2

      I believe that even as we speak, they're busy putting together a massive 'Bun Kittens' advertising campaign.

      --
      When someone says, "Any fool can see ..." they're usually exactly right.
    17. Re:News at 11.. by tiberus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A math genius using math to swindle people is still a math genius.

      And would be referred to as a swindler, not primarily as a math genius.

      A soldier using his training to murder people still have military training.

      And would be referred to as a murderer, not primarily as a soldier.

      If you asked members of the general public what a hacker is, you are most likely to get the definition of a cracker.

    18. Re:News at 11.. by slimshady76 · · Score: 1

      Arrrrr mate!

    19. Re:News at 11.. by slimshady76 · · Score: 1

      Might Code Siths apply?

    20. Re:News at 11.. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Sure enough, they have National Hot Dog day, where they serve veggie hot dogs in Washington wearing bikinis.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    21. Re:News at 11.. by meta-monkey · · Score: 5, Informative

      Doesn't matter. I hear they had words in 1906 they routinely called black people that today are "frowned upon."

      "Piracy" a pejorative meant to associate copyright infringement with theft, which it is not. Also murder, scurvy, and parrots.

      On the flip side, I also don't like the term "sharing." It's an attempt to associate copyright infringement with an innocuous or altruistic endeavor. It's not.

      Words mean things, and I wish people would use them correctly.

      Copyright infringement: the illegal copying of a work protected by copyright.

      Theft: The unlawful taking of someone's belongings with the intent to deprive them of their use.

      Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions to another, denying you use or benefit thereof.

      Copyright infringement is not theft, because the copyright holder is not denied their property. They still have it. (Assuming no trespass or theft of physical property was required to obtain the source material)

      Copyright infringement is not sharing. If I share my cake with you, I have given up a portion of my delicious cake I can no longer eat. If I share a ride with you, I've given up my personal space and privacy. But if you copy my file, I haven't given up anything. We both have full use of the file.

      Let's just call things what they are, and leave the emotionally loaded words out of it.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    22. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And men would like the news to stop referring to victims of crimes as "people" unless some of them are women, or "children" unless some of them are girls. Not erasing male victims EVERY time a news organization reports about war victims, crime victims, and so on would be *fantastic*. Also, just ignoring stories where only boys or men are victims while reporting every story where a woman gets a hangnail? It'd be nice if they could stop doing that, too.

    23. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And hot dogs contain only 0.01% dog. They would prefer to be called something different, but they're not sentient.

      I think I have some in the back of my fridge that are.

    24. Re:News at 11.. by DerekLyons · · Score: 0

      Words mean things, and I wish people would use them the way I wish them to be used

      TFTFY.
       
      Because you don't actually want them used correctly or with the meanings they've long possessed, but rather in the manner you've rather narrowly redefined as "correctly".

    25. Re:News at 11.. by meta-monkey · · Score: 2

      No, those are dictionary definitions. I didn't write webster's.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    26. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      u can also haz flexible exercise ball?

    27. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.merriam-webster.com...

      pirate
      noun \p-rt\

      : someone who attacks and steals from a ship at sea

      : someone who illegally copies a product or invention without permission

      : a person or organization that illegally makes television or radio broadcasts

    28. Re:News at 11.. by TimboJones · · Score: 0

      Webster's doesn't prescribe how words must be used. They catalog how words are used, and that changes all the time. Otherwise they wouldn't need to publish new editions.

    29. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions to another, denying you use or benefit thereof.

      Copyright infringement is not theft, because the copyright holder is not denied their property. They still have it. (Assuming no trespass or theft of physical property was required to obtain the source material)

      Copyright infringement is not sharing. If I share my cake with you, I have given up a portion of my delicious cake I can no longer eat. If I share a ride with you, I've given up my personal space and privacy. But if you copy my file, I haven't given up anything. We both have full use of the file.

      Let's just call things what they are, and leave the emotionally loaded words out of it.

      Different words mean different things to different people. The same words have different meanings and values to different people or even the same person depending on context and place. So your wish of people using word 'correctly' is just a fantasy of yours to control how other people understand things and behave.
      So what would you still call it sharing if it was information/knowledge? You do not lose what is imparted, in fact you probably even know it better as a result of sharing it.

    30. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No man - you're the one making up word definitions. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/steal?s=t

      Definition 2. Couldn't be more obvious. Don't pretend your definitions are the right ones and everyone else is wrong now.

    31. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are completely wrong about sharing. I just shared my opinion with you. My opinion is not like matter, it can be created and destroyed. I have not denied myself the use of it nor the benefit of it.

      Sharing is exactly what you do when you make a copy of digital content for a friend. Of course this will have an impact on a business that wants to sell content in the same way if you want to share a bed with me tonight it will impact a hotel business.

    32. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Copyright infringement is not theft, ..., Copyright infringement is not sharing.

      Copyright infringement == freeloading. Now get of my lawn you wordy fuck.

    33. Re:News at 11.. by orgelspieler · · Score: 2

      If I share my cake with you, I have given up a portion of my delicious cake I can no longer eat.

      The cake is a lie!

    34. Re:News at 11.. by turning+in+circles · · Score: 0

      Copyright infringement is theft because it denies a copyright owner the ability to sell the product for which they have the copyright and thus they lose money. If I sell a knock-off Louis Vuitton bag that looks like a real one to Madame A, I am depriving Louis Vuitton the right to sell a real bag to Madame A. This is copyright infringement; you lose money and I go to jail. If I give away a knock-off Louis Vuitton bag to Madame A, I am still depriving Louis Vuitton the ability to sell the bag. I suffer monetary loss from your actions. Copyright infringement with no physical handbag is completely equivalent - except worse, because at least the knock-off Louis Vuitton bags are lower quality than the real deal and for digital copyright infringement, the copy is as good as the original. Many have posted on this issue: it is the settled law of the land.

      --
      Might as well face it I'm addicted to data.
    35. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Words mean things, and I wish people would use them correctly.

      Words are merely 1, inefficient, error prone, and constantly changing, method of communication. If we could just telepathically transfer our thoughts to each other, we'd be better off. Until that is possible though, we have to interpret what people are saying.

      If you understand people when they say "pirate", then the word is appropriate and correct. If you don't, then it was not. The specific word(s) chosen are irrelevant as long as they get the point across. You could say "the n word", or nigger, either way I'll hear nigger and understand what you're saying.

      By the way, copyright infringement is not "the illegal copying of work" as "illegal" normally refers to criminal actions, not civil.

      And while copyright infringement is not theft of the item in question it does devalue the item in the possession of the victim at the same time as enriching the perpetrator, so it is theft of an intangible asset. Furthermore, in the legal world, theft includes the taking of services. By your flawed definition, there is no such thing as "theft of services" because a service is not an item that was removed from the possession of the victim.

      I think what you're leaving out of a lot of your rant on infringement is the fact that we live in a capitalist society governed by supply & demand. As an item is duplicated and becomes more prevalent, the value of that item goes down. Copyright infringement is theft. Sharing copyrighted material is sharing.

    36. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions to another, denying you use or benefit thereof.

      I'm not sure where you got that definition, but I don't think it's accurate. Sharing means mutual or non-exclusive use or ownership.

      There's no reason I have to give up use or benefit of something just because someone else is also using or benefiting from it, we just have to have a non-exclusive arrangement.

      For example, say I buy an e-book and read it on my Nook, then lend my Nook to a friend so he can read it. That's sharing. Now, if I make a copy of the e-book and he puts it on his Nook, that's copyright infringement, but it's effectively the same arrangement as long as we're not both reading the book at the same time. Book publishers would prefer that everyone buy a copy of the book and nobody ever read someone else's book.

    37. Re:News at 11.. by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Or we could just use a new name for them....I don't know, maybe:

      idiots
      stupid people
      morons

      Pick one of the above for a name and that's what we will use.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    38. Re:News at 11.. by davester666 · · Score: 1

      referring to skeptics, not hackers...

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    39. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "On the flip side, I also don't like the term "sharing." It's an attempt to associate copyright infringement with an innocuous or altruistic endeavor. It's not."

          Except sharing often is for altruistic and beneficial reasons and copyrighted material is often(practically always) shared for altruistic reasons just because that sharing doesn't necessarily benefit the registered owner(whatever that truly means) doesn't mean it isn't beneficial. Copyright was deemed necessary to encourage development in the early days but we are an adult country now be done with it already.

      "Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions to another, denying you use or benefit thereof."
      "Copyright infringement is not sharing. If I share my cake with you, I have given up a portion of my delicious cake I can no longer eat. If I share a ride with you, I've given up my personal space and privacy. But if you copy my file, I haven't given up anything. We both have full use of the file."

          If I share my car doesn't mean I'm being deprived of anything as I may be driving the same way. Your definition is skewed.

    40. Re:News at 11.. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions

      Bzzt. I can share hugs, music, friendship, laughter, pain, and joy with others, but I wouldn't call any of those "possessions".

      to another, denying you use or benefit thereof.

      That presumes scarcity. If I share your post on Twitter, you are not deprived of it. Neither would I be.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    41. Re:News at 11.. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2

      Copyright infringement is theft because it denies a copyright owner the ability to sell the product for which they have the copyright and thus they lose money.

      Thanks for the nostalgia! I remember when people tried to claim that with a straight face back in the 80s, but no one believed it even then. Can you imagine that someone actually said that ridiculous crap in seriousness once? I'm glad we've moved past those ludicrously mind-bending contortions and can laugh about them now, knowing full well that no one actually thinks that way anymore.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    42. Re:News at 11.. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Please note, as in the article, call them climate science deniers, not climate deniers. I think the distinction is important.

    43. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Copyright infringement is not sharing. If I share my cake with you, I have given up a portion of my delicious cake I can no longer eat. If I share a ride with you, I've given up my personal space and privacy. But if you copy my file, I haven't given up anything. We both have full use of the file.

      Let's just call things what they are, and leave the emotionally loaded words out of it.

      Right. But we don't have a word for "the act of allowing someone to copy one's possessions".

    44. Re:News at 11.. by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I prefer the name Pro-Murder for the Pro-Choice people. It makes the Pro-Life argument more obvious.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    45. Re:News at 11.. by Prien715 · · Score: 1

      Crackers are white people who brag. As William Shakespeare wrote:
      "What cracker is this same that deafs our ears with this abundance of superfluous breath?" [from King John]

      In that sense, I suppose, given the demographics of the hacker community and its outsize ego, maybe "cracker" is appropriate?

      --
      -- Political fascism requires a Fuhrer.
    46. Re:News at 11.. by Quasimodem · · Score: 2

      Neither are science deniers. Sentient, I mean. .

    47. Re:News at 11.. by Quasimodem · · Score: 1

      They could have been called Wiener Dogs, but that was already taken.

    48. Re:News at 11.. by Chelloveck · · Score: 2

      "And hillbillies want to be called 'Sons of the Soil,' but it ain't gonna happen."

      --
      Chelloveck
      I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
    49. Re:News at 11.. by newcastlejon · · Score: 0

      Allow me to share a thought with you...

      Oh. Sorry, I can't seem to remember what it was.

      --
      If God forks the Universe every time you roll a die, he'd better have a damned good memory.
    50. Re:News at 11.. by Cederic · · Score: 1

      I'm pro-life. I support the right for women to dispose of parasites that put their lives in jeopardy.

      That's what you meant, yeah?

    51. Re:News at 11.. by jfengel · · Score: 0

      Thanks for that. I find myself increasingly bugged by this kind of argument by misleading analogy. "X is like Y. You agree with me about Y. Therefore you must agree with me about X." It basically frames the entire argument around the differences between X and Y, rather than taking X on its own terms.

      It's kind of galling, since it basically assumes that I'll agree that X is identical to Y. Therefore, either I'm stupid for not realizing that X and Y are identical, or you're stupid for not recognizing that there are meaningful differences. I'm betting it's the latter, but even without that assumption, it's hard to see how we proceed from the demonstration that at least one of the parties to the conversation is stupid.

    52. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Let's just call things what they are, and leave the emotionally loaded words out of it.
      And that would never happen. Language is a strong tool, and people will always use it for their own benefit.
      The only way to deal with it is to learn to see the real things behind the words, whatever they would be

    53. Re:News at 11.. by dean.cubed9947 · · Score: 1

      Who makes bikinis for weiners?

    54. Re:News at 11.. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Who makes bikinis for weiners?

      Who else but PETA?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    55. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Theft: The unlawful taking of someone's belongings with the intent to deprive them of their use.

      This definition bothers me, especially when talking about the widespread copyright infringement on the Internet.

      How many thefts are about depriving someone else of use?

      How many thefts are about only gaining use of something?

      What portion of those stealing really care that you still have shiny item X if I can get shiny item X?

      In my opinion theft that is really about deprivation is just antisocial pathology. Life is a game of repeated prisoner's dilemma. Selfish strategies without large philanthropic populations to parasite don't dominate in that game. The thief is working to harm others around them in a way that won't benefit them-self if ever discovered. People will turn on the thief.

      Furthermore if the goal is merely to harm others a paradigm around protecting ownership is not adequate. If theft is just about item acquisition, well would you download a sandwich? Could a post-scarcity society have theft? As humans are happier is they are better of than their neighbors more than anything else (to trust the relative house quality happiness studies) would we still find a way to steal from someone?

      If all I care about is depriving someone of something then destruction is the easier option. Once destroyed I no longer have to maintain possession of an item, idea or thing. I no longer have to support it or do any maintenance. But that is not stealing. That is vandalism by displacement. In a world with perfect cheap copies, like the virtual world inside our digital computers, vandalism requires deletion. In fact, use in our digital computers requires constant copying and destruction so denial really requires more work than acquisition. How do you know you got all the backup copies?

      But that still leaves open the question: is theft about denial or acquisition?

      And most importantly, in a Copyright regime controlled by the Disney corporation, where copyright is eternal for mere mortals, can you steal something - using this denial definition - from everyone just by putting a (c) next to it?

    56. Re:News at 11.. by antdude · · Score: 1

      Don't forget corndogs, weiner dogs, etc. ;)

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    57. Re:News at 11.. by IMightB · · Score: 1

      And if I give a legit $20 bag from KMart to Madame A, am I still depriving Louie Vitton of the ability to sell a bag to Madame A?

    58. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you heard the term colloquialism? They're as old as the hills. After all, when trying to communicate there's more than one way to skin a cat.

    59. Re:News at 11.. by Cabriel · · Score: 1

      Someone who jumps to action when their friends leave their facebook logged in and unattended?

    60. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions to another, denying you use or benefit thereof.

      Thanks for sharing that...unique definition with us.

    61. Re:News at 11.. by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      No, those are dictionary definitions. I didn't write webster's.

      When you copied the definitions into your post, was that copyright infringement, theft, or sharing? Consider that some potential ad revenue moved from the dictionary site to Slashdot with that paste.

    62. Re:News at 11.. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Well, actually, copyright infringement is the illegal distribution of copyrighted content. You can legally make a million backup copies as long as you don't distribute more than one 'available' at time. Backups of the licensed content you own is completely legal as is also the replacement of damaged content media with new media. There is also a huge distinction between free and for profit distribution of that content. The distortion now comes it as to whether this is of value to society or whether it now just causes more harm than good and of course attempting to feed insatiable greed is never a good idea. Knowledge of course as being essential to any functioning society and especially with regard to democracies should always be freely accessible.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    63. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      During the Depression one half of a hot dog was filled with sawdust. Back then it was hard to make both ends meat.

    64. Re:News at 11.. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      For sure, stop using that term for politicians as it is demeaning to actual pirates.

    65. Re:News at 11.. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      The new hipster food is quinoa dogs.

    66. Re:News at 11.. by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      Copyright infringement is theft because it denies a copyright owner the ability to sell the product for which they have the copyright

      There is an easy solution. Take away this thing you refer to as "copyright". Afaik such a thing does not exist in nature. In fact it is highly unlikely that the thing an owner asserts the 'rights' to is not even original. It itself is derived from other people's ideas. You cannot own an idea. You cannot own information. Information just is. The best you can do is keep it secret. That is just the nature of reality.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    67. Re: News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The copy is not "as good as" the original. It is better than the original - no DRM, no ads, no unskippable "piracy is bad mmmkay" warnings, and the ability to choose to have it in better formats if desired (lossless, open formats)

      Give me high quality, DRM free open formats free from ads and I wouldn't pirate.

    68. Re:News at 11.. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Words mean things, and I wish people would use them correctly.

      Maybe you should become the change you want to see?

      Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions to another, denying you use or benefit thereof.

      "Sharing is the joint use of a resource or space."

      Copyright infringement is not sharing. If I share my cake with you, I have given up a portion of my delicious cake I can no longer eat. If I share a ride with you, I've given up my personal space and privacy. But if you copy my file, I haven't given up anything. We both have full use of the file.

      "In a broader sense, it can also include free granting of use rights to goods that can be treated as nonrival goods, such as information."

      This begs the question: do you simply not have a good grasp on the English language, or do you have some bizarre political motivation?

      --

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

    69. Re:News at 11.. by ultranova · · Score: 2

      Copyright infringement is theft because it denies a copyright owner the ability to sell the product for which they have the copyright and thus they lose money. If I sell a knock-off Louis Vuitton bag that looks like a real one to Madame A, I am depriving Louis Vuitton the right to sell a real bag to Madame A.

      And since setting up a competing brand does the exact same thing, it follows that competition is theft. Why do you hate freedom so much, comrade?

      --

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

    70. Re:News at 11.. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Please note, as in the article, call them climate science deniers, not climate deniers. I think the distinction is important.

      To be fair, not many people deny the Earth has an atmosphere.

      --

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

    71. Re: News at 11.. by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Says the guy who doesn't know what "begging the question" means...

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    72. Re:News at 11.. by 14erCleaner · · Score: 3, Funny

      If you asked members of the general public what a hacker is, you are most likely to get the definition of a cracker.

      That ship has sailed. Note that ships almost never have sails anymore, either, so that term has been hijacked also. And don't get me started about "hijack" being applied to word meaning...

      --
      Have you read my blog lately?
    73. Re:News at 11.. by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      Let's simply rebrand freedom as tyranny and be done with it.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    74. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the way, copyright infringement is not "the illegal copying of work" as "illegal" normally refers to criminal actions, not civil.

      Copyright infringement is also a crime in some instances, and therefore illegal.

      And while copyright infringement is not theft of the item in question it does devalue the item in the possession of the victim at the same time as enriching the perpetrator, so it is theft of an intangible asset.

      I'm not sure how you can steal an "intangible asset," but the only thing you take from the copyright owner is the opportunity to sell the thing you just copied, i.e. you are asserting a right that you don't have, which is assigned by law exclusively to the copyright holder. They don't naturally have that right to prevent copying of their work; it has to be decreed by law. So call it "theft" all you want, but it really is a violation of someone's right and that's all.

    75. Re: News at 11.. by romons · · Score: 1

      Copyright infringement (aka piracy) is theft of the profits that artists and investors in artists and those involved in distribution are owed. Without those profit, investors won't invest, and artists won't art, and distributors won't distribute. They will spend their time and money on other things.

      --
      Go to Heaven for the climate, Hell for the company -- Mark Twain
    76. Re: News at 11.. by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Says the guy who doesn't know what "begging the question" means...

      "Begging the question" has multiple meanings: the literal meaning, similar to "rising the question", and another: "assuming the conclusion" which originated from a particularly bad translation of a latin phrase. You, on the other hand, confused the concept of sharing with its exact opposite, "exclusive use".

      --

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

    77. Re:News at 11.. by davydagger · · Score: 1

      "Piracy" a pejorative meant to associate copyright infringement with theft

      It just so happened, that just as the "piracy" debate was gaining traction, so was the cartoonized image of a "pirate" depicted in media in the "pirates vs ninjas", a send up over two hilariously carcatured media stereotypes about brigands from the past of two seperate civilizations. Both were seen as virtuous, and the "pirate" gained a fun, safe positive conotation.

    78. Re:News at 11.. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Theft: The unlawful taking of someone's belongings with the intent to deprive them of their use.

      I know copyright infringers like to throw this definition around as if the more the say the more it might become true, but as someone who use to break into cars and steal stuff, stealing (or theft) is not about the intent to deprive the owner their use, it's about taking something that doesn't belong to you, and getting stuff which normally cost money, for free.

    79. Re:News at 11.. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      When I first read this I thought it said "code niggers".
      I always thought the best way to de-power a phrase is not by prohibiting it, but by overusing and re-using it so it loses any negative connotation. eg imagine if all programmers called themselves code niggers? After all the initial fury died down, within a generation, people would associate the word nigger with a computer programmer rather than pejorative term for black people, and there'd be one less reason for people to be angry. Of course it will never happen because people like to have reasons to get angry rather than solve problems.

    80. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And while copyright infringement is not theft of the item in question it does devalue the item in the possession of the victim

      Prove it. I make an unauthorised copy of X, which I would never have paid for. How precisely does that devalue X?

      at the same time as enriching the perpetrator,

      This is true.

      so it is theft of an intangible asset.

      No, because you haven't caused any harm at all to the person with copy right. They're in the same position as if you hadn't copied.

      Furthermore, in the legal world, theft includes the taking of services. By your flawed definition, there is no such thing as "theft of services" because a service is not an item that was removed from the possession of the victim.

      Nonsense. Theft of services involves actually costing money to the person you're taking services from, e.g. modifying an electricity meter so you can take advantage of the work done generating and transferring electricity without paying for it.

    81. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe tomorrow hackers will be considered for what they are instead of being considered criminals, almost the same way many ancient scientists and researchers and intellectuals and free thinkers were often considered criminals by the majority of the people of the time. Mastering and sharing of knowledge is important yet dangerous as Prometheus myth demonstrates

    82. Re:News at 11.. by RockDoctor · · Score: 1
      Kitty Buns - sounds delish! I could just imagine squirting some of my thick creamy sauce over a one of them, then biting down hard.

      Go, PETA!

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    83. Re:News at 11.. by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      No. Every state statute has slightly different wording, but in order for something to be "theft" you must deprive the legitimate owner of the property. Copyright infringement cannot ever be theft, because the owner is deprived of no property. A copy is made and the original owner still has his copy. No matter how many times you call copyright infringement "theft" it never will be. And the Supreme Court agrees. You lose. Good day.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    84. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent "+500 fucking brilliant"

    85. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once I built a house; do they refer to me as Joe the Builder? No. Once I shot a bear; do they refer to me as Joe the Hunter? No. But fuck one sheep.....

    86. Re:News at 11.. by gzuckier · · Score: 1

      Literally!

      --
      Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
    87. Re: News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if you repeat an error enough, it becomes common and ceases to be an error?

    88. Re:News at 11.. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      I don't call it theft. If you read my post I called it copyright infringement. I was arguing that the definition of theft is not only the one you described, as many dictionaries and lawyers will happily point out to you. Taking someone's stuff, using it and then giving it back is still considered theft, yet you haven't deprived anyone of anything.

    89. Re:News at 11.. by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Yes, because the person was deprived of it while you took it. Theft requires deprivation.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    90. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I feel your sentiment here, but recently have had to start coming to terms with the fluidity of language. Words do mean things, but the things in question are in such a state of flux that even a few individuals using them *correctly* - at the time - will not stop. To me, this is irritating, on what i suppose is an aesthetic level, and I'll continue to try to use language in what I, subjectively, think is appropriate... but really, if one is about to get into an argument / conversation with another entity, it's best to agree on the terms ahead of time.

    91. Re: News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the person who specifically wanted a Louis Vuitton bag is not going to buy another brand, but can be tempted/conned in buying the counterfeit one. Are you retarded or just making up useless non-arguments just to feel important. Hint: next time you feel like justifying breaking the law, picture yourself in a court room and guess where your stupidity would get you.

    92. Re: News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since a post-scarcity society is never going to happen, any argument that is based on that premise is worthless. If anything we're headed towards a society of absolute scarcity with all riches hoarded by a selected few. The 99% will starve and die off, the 1% will inherit the Earth. And this is how it ends.

    93. Re: News at 11.. by turning+in+circles · · Score: 1

      The fact that it is trivially easy to break a law is not, actually, a defense. The fact that you believe a law to be wrong does give you the right to break the law and turn yourself in and argue the law is wrong in court. It does not give you the moral authority to argue that it is right to break the law and just get away with it for free. Would Ghandi be a freedom fighter if he stole salt and didn't go to jail for it? Another option is to run for office or support those running for office to change the law. Stealing and patting yourself on the back is still stealing.

      --
      Might as well face it I'm addicted to data.
    94. Re:News at 11.. by nobodie · · Score: 1

      The voice of reason speaks.
      [watch your back, mate]

      --
      Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
    95. Re:News at 11.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Copyright infringement is not sharing. If I share my cake with you, I have given up a portion of my delicious cake I can no longer eat. If I share a ride with you, I've given up my personal space and privacy. But if you copy my file, I haven't given up anything. We both have full use of the file.

      It stems from the confusion of "owning" an idea or information (having it in your head), and owning a physical thing (having it in your hand). We use the word "share" to cover both cases, and probably shouldn't... but there's nothing wrong with saying "share your secrets with me," since they can belong to both of us.

      "If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange these apples then you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and I have an idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will have two ideas." -- Charles F. Brannan

  2. Obviously no slant to this article... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean - this is a fair and balanced request!

    1. Re:Obviously no slant to this article... by fche · · Score: 1

      "skeptics would like [to own the term skeptic]"

      And the people's front of judea would like the splitters to call themselves the front of judean people.

    2. Re: Obviously no slant to this article... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Skeptic? I prefer the term "debunker".

    3. Re:Obviously no slant to this article... by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Don't you oppress me.

  3. Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by NotDrWho · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Funny, because the science that I learned about in college was ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned.

    --
    SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    1. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by NotDrWho · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In thinking further, I do seem to recall also learning back in college of a system of established dogma that cannot be questioned. I believe it was called "religion."

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    2. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by BlindRobin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes constant questioning is at the heart of scientific inquiry however deliberate obfuscation of established science for political and economic objectives is not scepticism but subterfuge.

    3. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Hardhead_7 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Constantly questioning is running experiments, taking measurements, and trying to model the future and see how well it lines up with reality. Scientists are doing that all the time, and the result keeps being that climate scientists are as sure the Earth is warming as biologists are that animals are evolving.

      When you deny the evidence, slander the scientists, buy into conspiracy theories, you're not honestly asking questions. You're "questioning" climate science the same way creationists "question" evolution.

    4. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can be questioned, but in this case the costs of giving anything up to the denialists is too great. The fate of the human race is at stake. It's like suspension the constitution during a war.

    5. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Tx · · Score: 5, Informative

      The whole point of emphasising the difference between an actual sceptic and a denier is that the sceptic questions the science, whereas the denier ignores it entirely. The scientists and others referred to in the article have no problem with the actual sceptics. Questioning the science is fine, disregarding it is not.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    6. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Drethon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes constant questioning is at the heart of scientific inquiry however deliberate obfuscation of established science for political and economic objectives is not scepticism but subterfuge.

      I'm not sure which side you are arguing for.

    7. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes that's what scientists do. Deniers OTOH are the credulous fools who buy every evidence that global warming doesn't exist, no matter how tenuous or ludicrous, and no matter in what editorial page it was published.

    8. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by fche · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "the denier ignores [science] entirely"

      Do such people actually exist? (e.g., "scientist X, Y, Z don't have credibility with me" is not "ignoring science entirely".)

    9. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But they DO have problems with actual skeptics. Look how people like Richard Lidzen are treated. How can you even say this with a straight face?

    10. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by NotDrWho · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's rather arrogant to assume that all skeptics of global warming have a political/economic agenda. Many do, certainly. But I'm sure there are also plenty of legitimate scientists who would also question the conclusions and data, many of whom are no-doubt cowered into silence by the fervent majority.

      And, on the other side of the coin, there are also plenty of global warming proponents who have their own economic/political agendas. The vast majority of the loudest global warming proponents are certainly not scientists. Most of them are environmental activists, with their own agenda to advance.

      The bottom line is that you can't have legitimate science being conducted in an environment where you declare certain ideas sacrosanct and unquestionable. When the next Copernicus or Einstein comes along, do you really want to tell them that they're not allowed to question a fundamental idea that WE JUST KNOW IS TRUE!

      --
      SJW's don't eliminate discrimination. They just expropriate it for themselves.
    11. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dave420 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Precisely - question the science and listen to the answers given. That's where this 'denialism' ceases to be skepticism and becomes cynicism - if one asks a question in order to learn, then that is skepticism. To ask the question and then ignore the demonstrated answer, or claim it's nonsense (without evidence), is not skepticism, even if it uses the same words and starts off looking identical.

    12. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 5, Informative

      Creationists, anti-vaxxers, anti-HIV causes AIDS guys, and anti-AGWers can hardly be considered to be utilizing the scientific process honestly, let alone correctly. Hence why actual skeptics want to be distanced from them.

    13. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      Funny, I remember when people used to read thr article instead of pulling something out of their ass and posting it.

      FTA: "Skepticism is all about critical examination, evidence-based scientific inquiry, and the use of reason in examining controversial claims. Those who flatly deny the results of climate science do not partake in any of the above. "

    14. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Xest · · Score: 2

      You don't question the science by simply asking arbitrary nonsensical questions or pushing long debunked theories though. You have to actually do science and come up with some results that bring into question the pre-existing science.

      If you believe your college taught you that you can defeat an established scientific theory by repeatedly asking arbitrary questions about it then you either weren't listening or your college was shit and you need a refund.

      I know it's hard, I know it means that to question the science means you'd have to actually put some effort into investigating it to come up with a question that actually has some merit to it rather than sitting as a little armchair troll that simply detests the idea that humanity might not be perfect and may in fact cause some problems in the world after all, but tough shit, it is what it is.

    15. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      When you ignore the scientific evidence the true skeptics put forward (ex: NIPCC reports) and brush it off as big oil propaganda, you are the true science denier.

    16. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by danbob999 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "the denier ignores [science] entirely"

      Do such people actually exist?

      Yes they do. Mostly in countries such as Russia, Saudi Arabia or the US. Many people still think, despite the evidence, that human activities have no impact on climate change. It's not scientist X, Y and Z that they do not trust. It's all scientists except X, Y and Z. And only because these 3 still deny climate change.

    17. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by TechnoCore · · Score: 1

      Yeah... No. To keep denying despite actual evidence to the contrary is not science. That being a moron.

    18. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dywolf · · Score: 1

      questioned by rational people with rational doubts who are willing to listen to evidence, or have evidence of their own.
      not cranks with no evidence and no willingness to listen.

      which you would understand is the point of the article, if you had bothered to read them.

      their point is best summed up like this (from TFA):

      Skepticism is all about critical examination, evidence-based scientific inquiry, and the use of reason in examining controversial claims. Those who flatly deny the results of climate science do not partake in any of the above. They base their conclusions on a priori convictions. Theirs is an ideological conviction—the opposite of skepticism.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    19. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MightyYar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Funny, because the science that I learned about in college was ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned.

      But surely, then, you remember that science doesn't stop at the question. You need to actually do research. In climate science, that means collecting data and building a model. I think it is noteworthy that no AGW opponent has built a model.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    20. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been looking into these holy cows on and off. I could not find satisfactory answers to the following:

      anti-vaxxers: Find a blinded RCT for any measles vaccine. Find a paper where they account for changes in behavior over time as well, rather than assuming differences over time are due to the vaccine. I could find no good evidence any of those ever worked. Other vaccines (eg polio) appear to have similar issues.

      anti-HIV->Aids: Explain the arrow in figure 3 of Barre-Sinoussi 1983 supposedly showing purified HIV that actually points to nothing. Why does HIV mutate so often as to result in a wide diversity of variants within any one individual but then when a new person is infected they start with a single (or at least very few) variants?

      anti-AGWers: Explain why the temp on Venus is 1.176 that of earth at the same pressure. Same ratio as expected for two black bodies.

    21. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The fate of the human race is at stake.

      No, actually it's not. This is the kind of hyperbolic nonsense that makes it so hard to take the alarmist crowd seriously. It also gives ammunition to the deniers/skeptics/whatever-you-want-to-call-them. Project the worst case scenario for climate change and the human race survives. People in developing countries don't do so well and even the developed world takes a hit (higher food prices, greater frequency of natural disasters, and so on) but the human race isn't going anywhere. Homo sapiens quite probably survived a super-volcanic eruption, without the benefit of modern technology and scientific understanding. You think you can kill them off with melting ice caps, stronger hurricanes, and rising sea levels? Best of luck with that.

      I'm in the crowd that believes the climate is changing and that homo sapiens are a contributory factor to that change. I get off the bus when the green crowd starts talking about pie in the sky solutions that sound great on paper but invariably result in a lower standard of living and greater Governmental control over our lives. Unless you're willing wholly embrace nuclear power (to their credit a few greens actually are) there's no way you can generate enough energy to maintain our current standard of living without sourcing some of that energy from carbon based sources.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    22. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Tx · · Score: 3, Informative

      Of course such people exist. There is no science whatsoever that says that the earth is only 6000 years old, for example, so creationists who believe that are simply denying the science. They don't question the science, they reject it; there's a difference.

      I use that as an example because it is more clear-cut than the climate issue, where there are a lot of people who hold a spectrum of views which are probably somewhere between being very skeptical and being outright deniers, but for sure there are those who pretty clearly aren't interested in any science that says man-made climate change might be real.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    23. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=22bo6CKJcJM

    24. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Jawnn · · Score: 2

      Funny, because the science that I learned about in college was ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned.

      Hence the desire to honor true skepticism. Science deniers are nothing of the sort. No, they are not.

    25. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

      It can be questioned, but in this case the costs of giving anything up to the denialists is too great. The fate of the human race is at stake. It's like suspension the constitution during a war.

      I believe that is the justification used to imprison the Japanese during WWII and Germans in WW1 and communists during the cold war.

    26. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Entrope · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Lots of people believe in ghosts. Lots of people also believe in people who "think[] that human activities have no impact on climate change". There's about as much hard evidence in one of these beliefs as in the other.

      When climate alarmists stop pretending that the dispute is over the degree of human influence on climate, and how much different countries should spend to mitigate anthropogenic climate change (or other kinds!), they might start to get traction with skeptics. Also when they start acting like the situation is as bad as they claim it is.

      I know that when I used an electric sous vide cooker to make pork chops for dinner last night, it was worse for the climate than if I ate raw vegetables, and better than if I grilled a slab of steak over a bonfire. I know that living in the suburbs emits more greenhouse gases than living in a tiny apartment in a big city. I am thoroughly unconvinced that forcing most people to live like the alarmists claim we should (but usually don't live themselves) will yield the claimed benefits, or be worth the costs even if the benefits would be as claimed.

    27. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by rnws · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Therein lies a big part of the problem, why should their be a "side". Science is about the finding of fact and facts don't care what side you're on. You might want to deny that a certain type of virus won't affect you because of your religious belief for example. Problem is, the virus doesn't care, don't have a "side" and will kill you just as well as everyone on the other "side". People can deny all kinds of things as much as they like, but in the final measure, it doesn't matter squat, the climate will change, you will get lung cancer, HPV will infect you, whatever...

    28. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by JWW · · Score: 5, Insightful

      My stance in AGW is that you can bitch all you want about climate change, but if you're not willing to build a bunch of nuclear power plants and shut down a bunch of coal plants, then yes you ARE arguing global warming to advance a political agenda and nothing more.

      If you don't back real solutions that can yield real results then I am going to call bullshit on your advocacy.

    29. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the sense that I keep hearing incredible prognostications about what was first called global warming and was then called climate change, I could be called a skeptic. I don't think I need to deny evidence to raise questions about climate change. Think about the following:
      - I've been told for about 14 years the world will end if we don't make change now
      - Climate change models keep being wrong. We are now in a hiatus no model predicted
      - At one point, many of these same scientists were convinced it wasn't warming that would kill us but rather cooling
      - The USA decreased it's CO2 output more than many nations who signed up for the Kyoto protocol. Yes a lot of that had to do with recession but that doesn't explain why we decreased our % output more than other Kyoto members.
      - Some of the scientists have chosen not to share key data and models on how they got to their conclusions. (think hockey stick). Some others have revealed a not very scientific tendency to silence any other scientists who questions their findings. (think emails from a couple years ago that were revealed and caused not a little egg on their face.
      - Because of said hiatus, many scientists have revised their estimates about total increase in temperature and I've seen 1-2C. Is that really all that much to get concerned about? Wasn't it hotter on the earth before?
      - I'm really getting tired of being told that climate change is the root cause of population explosions, population decreases, my puppy's aching teeth, a hurricane in a lower than normal hurricane season etc. Seems to me there's a little unscientific work going on here.

      In short, the science seems to need a little more work. Silencing anyone who questions it seems more than a little big brother to me. How about the scientists continue to work on it and get their models right and then we can start slinging mud at skeptics......

    30. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by AchilleTalon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not only the data and the conclusions, the models themselves. If you use a model to analyze the data and draw some conclusions from it and this model is unable to predict phenomena correctly you can certainly become skeptic about the conclusions you drawn from it. Recently, many models were put exactly in that position. Calling everyone a denier because he/she express some doubts about the conclusions of a model without any decent prediction capability is certainly an abuse of language and even bullying toward legitimate skepticism.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    31. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by HangingChad · · Score: 1

      Are you still questioning gravity?

      --
      That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    32. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Shoten · · Score: 1

      Funny, because the science that I learned about in college was ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned.

      Only when appropriate. Questioning the discovery of the Higgs-Boson, if you know what you're talking about? Valid. Questioning gravity as a way of holding up your science teacher and keeping him from teaching anything important because you're forcing him to repeat the already well-validated science to prove that gravity is indeed real? Bullshit.

      At some point, you have to accept that something is proven, and move on, unless you have something compelling to introduce real doubt. At the end of the day there has to be some agreement, to quote Lewis Black, as to "what the fuck reality is."

      --

      For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice.
    33. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And scientists who are skeptical and want to test their theories or provide reasonable explanations for existing data are welcome to do it. They are skeptics, not deniers. If a scientist decides that all existing data is wrong because it doesn't fit their worldview they aren't doing legitimate science. They are deniers.

      That's what this article is about. People who are legitimately skeptical, people who question every aspect of everything to be absolutely certain, want to distance themselves from the crazies who are just flat out rejecting science.

    34. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sometimes, doing something without proper analysis is worse than not doing something. I call bullshit on your entire premise.

    35. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you simultaneously accept X while questioning X? Seems illogical.
      Skeptical has synonyms such as :distrustfull, suspicious, unconvinced. These would all describe a person who is either a "denier" or a skeptic. So then what you are saying in reality is that anyone not accepting your way of thinking is a "denier" and that "You are either with us, or you are against us!"

      Established science can and has been and should be questioned as that is how we advance scientific knowledge and processes - or should we go back to the science of the stone age?

      Lets lose the religious fervor here and be realistic and reasonable.

    36. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by fche · · Score: 1

      "utilizing the scientific process honestly, let alone correctly"

      Well ok, mistakes happen ... but these don't meet the suggested criterion of "ignoring science entirely".

    37. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Right. Exactly what the skeptics are pointing out is that being skeptical is good! Denying radioactive physics however is not skepticism. "Not all individuals who call themselves climate change skeptics are deniers. But virtually all deniers have falsely branded themselves as skeptics."

    38. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Hardhead_7 · · Score: 3, Informative
      Wow, this is just a long list of completely false claims.
      • You've been told for 14 years it's going to end? No, it's just going to get really hot, and the truly bad stuff is at least 50 years away. Maybe a century. No one is predicting the world ending in 14 years.
      • Climate change models are pretty damned good. If anything, they've been underestimating sea level and temperature rise. You're confusing long-term global trends with local weather.
      • There was a Time magazine article in the 70s about some climate scientists that believed in cooling, and while it wasn't crackpock then, it wasn't the mainstream. Most scientists believed the Earth was warming even then. It was just with a 70% certainty instead of 97%. But man, conspiracy theorists love to trot out that one article and pretend it represented some kind of consensus. Try checking actual literature.
      • The hockey stick graph has been super acurate. In fact, we're trending along it's "worse case" line.
      • There's no hiatus, unless you mean that every year doesn't set a new record. Things are getting generally hotter as a trend, though.
    39. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      When climate alarmists stop pretending that the dispute is over the degree of human influence on climate, and how much different countries should spend to mitigate anthropogenic climate change (or other kinds!), they might start to get traction with skeptics.

      This has been tried all over again (see the Stern Review, for instance). There are two problems with this:

      1. There is (unfortunately) still a debate (not within the scientific community, but within the general population in some countries) over the degree of human influence on climate change. Some people still believe human activity has little or no impact. Why would they want to fix something they don't even think is broken in the first place? They are deniers. Their answer is and will always be $0.

      2. How much different countries should spend is not a scientific debate. It's a political one. Life on earth isn't threatened by climate change. It's our current way of live that is. Doing nothing will end up costing more than if we act. But how much should we value the saving of pacific island nations is not a scientific debate. There is no "truth" to find there. It's a political debate and like all political debate, it depends on values.

    40. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can question it sure. Of course you can question it.

      You can publish your critique in peer-reviewed journals like all the other scientists, and provide evidence for your assertions.

      The next Einstein or Copernicus will not spout nonsense about conspiracy theories without offering any evidence to back up his ideas.

    41. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Hence why actual skeptics want to be distanced from them.

      What constitutes an "actual" skeptic?

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    42. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "In thinking further, I do seem to recall also learning back in college of a system of established dogma that cannot be questioned. I believe it was called "religion.""

      That was long ago. Now its known as "Political Science" or "Philosophy" or "Gender Studies".

    43. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      The NIPCC reports have not been ignored, they have been considered repeatedly and in detail, and thoroughly discredited. A little bit of Googling will prove my point. Even if you disagree with my assessment that these things have been "thoroughly discredited," I think you will have to admit that to claim they have been ignored is flatly false. These arguments have been taken up, and answered, repeatedly. When you ignore that fact, it's not skepticism, it's denial.

    44. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by lq_x_pl · · Score: 0

      Somebody mod this up.

      --
      An internal system operation returned the error "The operation completed successfully.".
    45. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't Richard Feynman call models a cancer.

    46. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you still questioning gravity?

      I think you've actually made a unintended joke there, because Albert Einstein did exactly that. Newton's model of gravity was the accepted model of gravity for centuries until Einstein came along and showed a new model.

    47. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Drethon · · Score: 1

      Well when far more have died from coal pollution than radiation, I don't really care about AGW, give me nukes. Of course politics and financial issue interfere.

    48. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by fche · · Score: 1

      Sorry, that was certainly not the intent. Of course "the" (this particular topic: AGW) was implied, and everyone else understood it that way.

    49. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 0

      The people you describe are not the mainstream environmental movement, and focusing on them is just distracting people from from what actually needs to be done. Few people are suggesting we reduce our quality of life or return to an agrarian society in order to fix climate change. In fact, the push is for a better quality of life with less pollution, better buildings, less of our income spent on energy and heating/cooling etc.

      All I ever see from US media and commentators is screaming and ranting in both directions. What it boils down to is extreme frustration that the US is incapable of doing what other countries are doing for political reasons (mainly hatred of anything remotely socialist) and FUD from those who are making vast amount of money by polluting and releasing CO2. It's all corrupted by money and each side keeps upping the ante, taking more and more extreme measures to further their goals.

      Meanwhile Europe is getting on with it. Well, parts of it, anyway.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    50. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so since all of the questions have already been asked - and all the answers given - there can be no true Skeptik(tm) left.
      That means everyone not getting with the program is a "denier"

      Right? That IS what you are saying.

      Its impossible that people may question the quality or validity or evidentiary value of your Evidence(tm)

    51. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dywolf · · Score: 1

      so you obviously dont actually know anything about the NIPCC.

      the NIPCC are not actual scientists, and they have not put forward evidence capable of withstanding scientific scrutiny.
      the NIPCC cherry picks data that supports them, rather than presenting all the data.
      When TFA talks about "conclusions based on a priori convictions"...the NIPCC is one of the groups they are talking about.

      The sole purpose of the NIPCC is not to present any evidence, nor even survey and report on on the sum body of all the research.
      Rather it's sole purpose is to poke holes in the IPCC, something its members are paid to do:

      On the other hand, according to the Heartland 2012 budget plan, the purpose of the NIPCC report is to critique the IPCC report. According to the Heartland 2012 Fundraising Plan, its purpose is to create a rebuttal to the IPCC report.

      In short, the purpose of the IPCC report is to accurately summarize the most up-to-date state of climate science research and understanding, whereas the purpose of the NIPCC report is to try and poke holes in the IPCC report (unsuccessfully, as we will see below).

      Second, unlike the IPCC report, the scientists contributing to the NIPCC report are paid for their efforts. The overall Heartland budget for the NIPCC reports from 2010 to 2013 is nearly $1.6 million ($388,000 in both 2011 and 2012), with $460,000 going to the lead authors and contributors ($140,000 in both 2011 and 2012). The 2011 Interim NIPCC report has 3 lead authors (Craig Idso, Fred Singer, and Robert Carter) and 8 contributors (Susan Crockford, Joe D'Aleo, Indur Goklany, Sherwood Idso, Anthony Lupo, Willie Soon, Mitch Taylor, and Madhav Khandekar), most of whom also receive a monthly salary from the Heartland Institute.

      Note that Heartland is not the only think tank contributing to the NIPCC report; the Centre for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change (CSCDGC) and Science and Environmental Policy Project (SEPP) are both listed as contributors on the document's front cover.

      Basically these scientists are paid with the specific goal of arguing against the scientific evidence in the IPCC report, whereas the only goal of the IPCC authors is to produce an accurate, comprehensive review of the climate science literature. Indeed, this represents the biggest difference between the IPCC and NIPCC: the former is a comprehensive literature review, while the latter is a very select literature review.

      The NIPCC cherry picks data, chiefly that of "skeptics" that support their already made conclusions and goals:

      The NIPCC report exclusively examines the literature published by climate "skeptics," whereas the IPCC report examines the work of both "skeptics" and mainstream climate scientists.

      The NIPCC repeats and perpetuates bad science and myths, including cliamte myths that contradict each other:

      Climate scientists Michael Mann and Gavin Schmidt have also documented a number of the long-debunked climate myths propagated in previous NIPCC reports, which we have rebutted by examining the full body of scientific literature at Skeptical Science (click the links below for the myth debunkings):

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    52. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot those who denied plate tectonics for nearly 50 years.

    53. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by ACE209 · · Score: 1
      Actually yes.
      There is this theory to account for the difference in the observed and expected rotational curves of spiral galaxies without the need for dark matter.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M...

      Though dark matter seems to be the favored model today, this is not totally out of the window.

      --
      "we are all atheists about most of the gods that societies have ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further."
    54. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anon-Admin · · Score: 0

      I wish I had mod points, I would mod this up!

    55. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      It's rather arrogant to assume that all skeptics of global warming have a political/economic agenda. Many do, certainly. But I'm sure there are also plenty of legitimate scientists who would also question the conclusions and data, many of whom are no-doubt cowered into silence by the fervent majority.

      You tip your hand with your "fervent" and other emotionally laden terms.

      Having worked with scientists most of my career, none of them come close to your conception of them as cowards. Most of them do consider AGW correct on the face of the data.

      But here's the rub. Why do not the people who have a vested interest in AGW not being true fund the research to prove it, instead of using political means? Certainly enough money has gone to lobbyists and politicians that would fund the research that would once and for all prove them right?

      The scientist that proves that AGW is a lot of HooHaw (technical term) will win a Nobel prize. It should be simple to do really, and the Koch Brothers should be able to provide for his or her future so they don't have to worry one iota about the mean scientists at Universities "cowing" them. Simply shifting that money should do the trick.

      As far as it goes, I would love the proof of AGW as Hoohaw. It would mean a whole lot economically. But the credible science says otherwise. I suspect that since the vested interests are choosing the political attack route, they probably do know it is credible, they just don't care.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    56. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some who flatly deny the results may have already gone through those steps and used reason to see that the controversial claims are not agreeable to truth and that the evidence has been manipulated and/or made up

      Conversely some true Believers(tm) have looked at all the same claims and asserted evidence and came to a different conclusion.

      Does this make one group less human than the other? No - but dehumanizing people makes you less humane and a really awful human being.

    57. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Layzej · · Score: 5, Informative

      From the statement: "As Fellows of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, we are concerned that the words “skeptic” and “denier” have been conflated by the popular media. Proper skepticism promotes scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims. It is foundational to the scientific method. Denial, on the other hand, is the a priori rejection of ideas without objective consideration."

    58. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt that.

    59. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because I seriously do not know...
      People throw out the petition project all the time when you're trying to support climate change, citing 30-ish thousand scientists in opposition to man-made or man-influenced climate change. What is the actual information on this?

    60. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you consider computer modeling to be a "proper analysis"?

    61. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Caligostro · · Score: 1

      well, nuclear power is one option, but there are ... less dangerous ones. Take a mix of solar, wind, water power (not just dammed rivers and such, also tidal). If I look at the risks and costs (you also have to park the nuclear waste, reliably, for several 1000 years, you do *not* want that to get into the wrong hands, and if you look at the destruction necessary for getting the fuel ...), using nuclear to replace coal doesn't seem like the optimal solution. But generally you are right, of course. we can't bitch about climate change and continue to burn coal and oil as if there was no tomorrow.

    62. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can publish your critique in peer-reviewed journals like all the other scientists

      LOL, yeah right! Good luck with doing that when almost all of your peers are cheerleaders for global warming and would blackball any article criticizing it.

    63. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No you havent. If youd been looking you wouldnt have said the stupid things you did.

      Changes in behaviour are all but irrelevent for measles, polio, or smallpox. Its so contagious that if an infected person walks through a room, that room is contagious for as much as 4 hours after the person left. Ppeople were forcibly quarentined in their homes by law enforcement to prevent its spread, and even so it infected 3 to 4 million people each year in the United States. Of those people, 400 to 500 died, 48,000 were hospitalized, and 4,000 developed encephalitis (brain swelling) from measles.

      Yet within a couples year of the vaccine being introduced and a widespread vaccination program start measles cases plumetted, from millions per year to fewer than 20k. By the 1990s it was declared eliminated from the US, even though our population had doubled and more people lived in closer quarters in cities.

      "at the same pressure"

      You do realize that in order to be at "the same pressure" you have to be more than 50 km (50,000 meters, or >160,000 ft) above the surface of Venus?
      that on the surface pressure is more than 90x greater than earths? and temperature is greater than 850F ?
      what you said is an invalid comparison, a misdirection that relies on ignorance, and that is ultimately irrelevent.
      (im not even sure its true, as im quite sure from the venus article earlier this week, that we established that even at the same pressure, the temperature is signifcantly higher)

      If you cant find satisfactory answers, its either because you havent been lookng hard enough, or you simply lack the intellect.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    64. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nice try, but you're simply a textbook example of projection.
      the articles are about deniers trying to co-opt the word "skeptic" and perverting meaning.
      the "liberals" here are trying to preserve the word's meaning.

    65. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When the list of scientists who don't have any credibility with you is the list of scientists whose work opposes your beliefs, that's exactly what it is.

    66. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, no. Except for Germany most European countries "paused" their programs during the financial crisis and haven't restarted. Germany didn't, but will increase it's greenhouse gas emissions because it is returning to coal out of fear of nuclear. Meanwhile the US has actually reduced greenhouse gas emissions over the last several years, in part due to the falling price of natural gas and in part due to the Obama administration's war on coal. Just because we do it differently doesn't mean we don't get it done.

    67. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The climate is changing. True.

      The climate will continue to change if no actions are taken. True.

      I will get lung cancer. Arguable. Not enough information. Non-smokers get lung cancer. Some smokers never develop lung cancer.

      Smoking increases the risk of lung cancer and decreases your life expectancy. True

      HPV will infect me. False. I have only had sex with my partner. My partner has only had sex with myself. Unless that changes, then HPV will not infect me.

      HPV will infect my children. Arguable. Not enough information - though statistically there is evidence leaning towards that they will.

      Not everybody exposed to a virus is affected by it. The percentages depend upon the virus.

      You are part of the problem. You have good intentions but your concise phrasing has exposed that you still bear a "side." Science has no sides. State the facts. Don't use science to jump to unjustified (though perhaps statistically correlated) conclusions.

    68. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Entrope · · Score: 2

      Which people do you think I am describing? There certainly are a lot of weirdo extremists in the environmental-activist camp, but I wasn't really thinking about them. If you want me to ignore the weirdo extremists on that side, will you ignore the weirdo extremists on the other side? More significantly, will media and activists stop focusing on the (conveniently distracting) anti-AGW weirdo extremists so that we can pay more attention to what actually can and should be done?

      What specific steps do the reasoned thinkers recommend as "what actually needs to be done"? Last I heard, European countries were revising or just rolling back climate agreements because (a) they realized they couldn't achieve their goals without reducing their quality of life, (b) they realized the system was being gamed, and/or (c) they wanted to keep up with the countries who didn't sign up to those agreements.

    69. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so that's how climate science works!

      Step 1: Have a conclusion
      Step 2: Look for the data that supports your conclusion
      Step 3: Build a hypothesis (your hypothesis is that the future will follow the model you created, as obviously something you control could only be data if the subject was 'you' not the climate)
      Step 4: Claim Success (but don't say what % of accuracy of the model means success, or even how accurate your model was, there is a model so success!)

    70. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, Science should be questioned... by SCIENTIFIC METHODS, not by fools without a case.

    71. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. There is (unfortunately) still a debate (not within the scientific community, but within the general population in some countries) over the degree of human influence on climate change. Some people still believe human activity has little or no impact. Why would they want to fix something they don't even think is broken in the first place? They are deniers. Their answer is and will always be $0.

      This wouldn't be an issue if the environmental movement weren't full of hippies that believes that everything that is natural is good and that only accepts solutions that involves less interaction with nature.
      Why would it matter what the cause is? We are way beyond the point where just reducing carbon emission would solve the issue anyway.
      It shouldn't matter if the climate is different than before or what the reason for it is, the important thing is if the current climate is good or bad for us and what the cost/benefits for changing it would be. A naturally occurring undesirable climate is just as bad as a human created one.

      2. How much different countries should spend is not a scientific debate. It's a political one. Life on earth isn't threatened by climate change. It's our current way of live that is. Doing nothing will end up costing more than if we act. But how much should we value the saving of pacific island nations is not a scientific debate. There is no "truth" to find there. It's a political debate and like all political debate, it depends on values.

      If it was just a matter of reducing emissions it would be better to shift the debate to a health issue. High emissions in your country hurts your health.

    72. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      1. Who told you the world was going to end? I call BS 2. All models are wrong, some are useful. The climate models used by climate scientists have done a much better job of predicting how the climate would evolve than anyone else's models--and any prediction or guess is based on some sort of model...usually a mental one. Saying that a given model is wrong is not useful. Developing a model that performs better is useful. Go for it. Also, I think you underestimate how well some of the models have done, and you definitely overestimate the evidence for a "hiatus." There is no statistically significant evidence that the accumulation of energy in the climate has slowed down at all. 3. BS, BS, BS. The inclusion of "that would kill us" makes your comment senseless. But even if replaced by "that would eventually cause significant problems," you're still wrong. In the 70s, a prediction about very long-term cooling got into the popular press and got some play. Virtually no-one currently working in climate science is on record as ever predicting a problem from cooling at all, and certainly not in the next few hundred years. 4. OK. Yes, it did have a lot to do with the recession. But to the extent that we can sustain it while the economy improves...great! I'm not sure how this one fits in with the point you seemed to be trying to make. 5. The "hockey stick" analysis is public, and can be reproduced with a variety of methods. It's a very robust finding. MacIntyre and McKittrick had to cherry pick a few examples from an enormous set of simulated data to imply that Mann's analysis was a statistical artifact, and subsequent studies have demonstrated over and over again, using different source material to reconstruct the temperature record, that Mann was right. Also, you clearly misunderstood what was being said in those emails, which at this point has to be considered willful ignorance since the full context has been discussed ad nauseam. And even with the original spin that the denial camp tried to put on the emails out-of-context, wtf are you talking about with the "tendency to silence any other scientists who question their findings?" I think you're inventing a narrative consistent with your pre-existing beliefs. 6. It's not clear here what you're talking about. Do you mean the climate sensitivity, usually expressed as a change in global average temperature per doubling of CO2? Because the temperature is always going to change as the inputs change, it's not like there's a cap, whether at 1-2C or any other value. And yes, even at that sensitivity (which is on the low end of the estimates I've seen, 2-4C seems more standard), we are likely to see significant problems. Not "we're all gonna die" problems, more like "there's not a Bangladesh anymore and all those people have to go somewhere" problems. Or, here in the states, "a lot of our coastal cities don't have a reliable fresh water supply anymore" problems. Not good. Also, increased drought in some areas that are already strained, increased flooding in other areas, etc. 7. No climate scientist has ever told you any of those things, so that's just a straw man. The closest you get is with the hurricane thing, but you're still completely misrepresenting anything that a climate scientist would actually say. Go look up what actual climate scientists have actually said regarding hurricanes, and if you still have a problem with it, bring that back. Your conclusion is what needs more work. Climate scientists are constantly working to improve their models, and they already work a lot better than you seem to think. And unless you've got something that works better, they're the best information about the future of the climate we have. What would you propose basing our plans on, if not on the best source of information about the future we currently have available? And no one is trying to silence anyone, stop repeating that ridiculous crap. Saying "denial =/ skepticism" is not big brother shutting anyone up. It is countering inaccurate speech with accurate speech, which is exactly how free speech is supposed to work.

    73. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I'm sure there are also plenty of legitimate scientists who would also question the conclusions and data, many of whom are no-doubt cowered into silence by the fervent majority.

      I assume part of your career does not require publishing in scientific literature, because you're wrong. There's pressure to publish, and it's hard to get accepted into journals publishing the same thing everyone knows is true. If you can make a case -- a scientific, well-founded case -- that shows some of our accepted knowledge is incorrect, you are more likely to have your paper accepted. If you can prove that all those climate scientists are wrong and climate change is not happening -- with actual evidence, not conjecture -- you'll win the goddamn Nobel Prize.

      No scientists are "cowered into silence".

    74. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by stevew · · Score: 1

      This is actually a standard tactic to belittle your opponent in a debate. It is called an ad hominem attack. When someone argues in this fashion - they have actually lost the debate!

      QED: Climate change is false ;-)

      --
      Have you compiled your kernel today??
    75. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this funny "I don't understand anything" joke modded as insightful? Is Slashdot really so mentally challenged that they don't understand the difference between questioning and denying?

    76. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      Proper skepticism promotes scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims. It is foundational to the scientific method. Denial, on the other hand, is the a priori rejection of ideas without objective consideration.

      That's funny. The first definition on Google states "a person inclined to question or doubt all accepted opinions.", which seems to be a good fit for those who are denying global warming. If anything, it seems as though the Fellows of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry should call themselves something different.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    77. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by BergZ · · Score: 2

      I find it even more interesting that the skeptics that have collected data and built models ended up convinced that the Climatologists are correct:
      "CALL me a converted skeptic. Three years ago I identified problems in previous climate studies that, in my mind, threw doubt on the very existence of global warming. Last year, following an intensive research effort involving a dozen scientists, I concluded that global warming was real and that the prior estimates of the rate of warming were correct. I’m now going a step further: Humans are almost entirely the cause."
      ~Dr. Richard A. Muller
      http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07...

      --
      Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
    78. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      Sometimes, doing something without proper analysis is worse than not doing something.

      Yeah, if only there were a well-funded organization sponsored by the UN that's spent three decades doing proper analysis of the problem.
      I guess we don't have that so we can't propose proper solutions. Oh well.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    79. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Informative

      Constantly questioning is running experiments, taking measurements, and trying to model the future and see how well it lines up with reality. Scientists are doing that all the time, and the result

      And the result is that for decades we've overestimated the effect of CO2 and that all the computer models are wrong. If you deny that after the multiple studies have shown it, then you're the denier.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    80. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by thedonger · · Score: 2

      Proper skepticism promotes scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims. It is foundational to the scientific method. Denial, on the other hand, is the a priori rejection of ideas without objective consideration.

      That's funny. The first definition on Google states "a person inclined to question or doubt all accepted opinions.", which seems to be a good fit for those who are denying global warming. If anything, it seems as though the Fellows of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry should call themselves something different.

      The Fellows of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry are Google Deniers.

      --
      Help fight poverty: Punch a poor person.
    81. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by cyberchondriac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're really broadly generalizing though. Denying one controversial subject doesn't mean someone denies all science.
      Skepticism is a healthy attribute, it indicates critical thinking, and an open mind.

      I have no problem with evolution or Darwin whatsoever, believe solar power will be a fantastic resource when it matures, would like to eventually see an end to use of fossil fuels as soon as it becomes economically feasible to do so, am skeptical of religion (IMO religion is conveniently pre-packaged cereal box spirituality /philosophy at best); and think creationism is a fairy tale; but whereas AGW is concerned, I'm skeptical (but open minded) because of all the politics and hypocrisy that surrounds it. Al Gore and friends drone on and on about the dangers of carbon dioxide and man's apocalyptic effect on the planet, then all go fly their fuel-hog private personal jets to a summit to discuss it. Same is true of Gore's personal practices (i.e. his house), he seems very unconcerned in practice about those things which he champions in print or video. Such a strong proponent is expected to lead by example. The UN says AGW is critical to address, yet China hasn't had to abide by any accords, being probably the worst pollution offender currently on the planet.
      Additionally, all climate and weather forecasts, whether next weekend or 100 years from now, despite the differences, are based on computer models, which are far from infallible. For these reasons, I'm still skeptical; however, I'm not unable to be swayed, given further evidence that isn't dressed up with carbon taxes and other political aspects; additionally, it sure would help if all the celebrities endorsing the tenant of AGW actually practiced what they preached.
      Science is a process, a living, dynamic, self-correcting process. It must never be wielded as dogma.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    82. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why does HIV mutate so often as to result in a wide diversity of variants within any one individual but then when a new person is infected they start with a single (or at least very few) variants?

      Why expect every mutation to be equally infectious? This is typical virus behavior. It results both in the much lower infectiousness and lethality of viruses we actually see as well as creating a couple of evolutionary advantages. A swarm of mutated viruses means that the host's immune system can't easily target the viruses that are actually infectious. And killing the host slower or not at all means the virus has better long term propagation prospects.

      anti-AGWers: Explain why the temp on Venus is 1.176 that of earth at the same pressure. Same ratio as expected for two black bodies.

      So we should expect no change in temperature with a piling on of CO2 on Earth? Because they're black bodies? How again does that matter to "anti-AGWers" except as apparent confirmation of their opinions?

    83. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well you can start by ignoring and rejecting anything produced by, advocated by, or spread by any Koch brothers owned organ.

      you know...like the Cato Institute.

    84. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 2

      And for those keeping count, the measles vaccine was addressed too and not just "kind of".

    85. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0, Troll

      mistakes happen

      Which is why we should NEVER ever stop questioning "science". Newtonian Physics is wrong, but close enough to be functional in many circumstances.

      Science should be about continuous improvement, which requires ongoing skepticism.

      AGW or "climate change" is one of those things I simply do not believe is "settled science", mainly because of the huge number of variables, and the models and advocate predictions have completely been falsified. It is the modern version of Piltdown Man (once "settled science", taught at university, and people even got PhD's based on it)

      Call me a denier all you want. I'm not denying the "Science" part of this (CO2). I am denying the predictive hyperbole from the likes of Al Gore, who keeps making ridiculous claims, while having a huge Carbon Footprint (carbon offsets not withstanding).

      And if you are going to make fun of Fox News, great, but the real person you should make fun of is the stupid chicken littles who have been proven wrong, but continue to spew their idiocy and the climate lapdogs keep licking up.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    86. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Dragonslicer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's funny. The first definition on Google states "a person inclined to question or doubt all accepted opinions.", which seems to be a good fit for those who are denying global warming.

      No, it isn't a good fit at all. There's a huge difference between "Hey, your models aren't making perfect predictions. It's possibly that you're incorrect about something." and "Climate Change is a liberal conspiracy to turn the fine God-fearing people of the United States into a bunch of commies."

    87. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The consensus from scientists who build models is 'not dangerous. And it IS noteworthy that the models are known to over-estimate the effects of CO2.

      If you're going to choose which scientist to 'believe,' then believe the ones who actually collect data, like John Christy. He wanted to know if the AGW hypothesis was correct, so what did he do? He went out and created a dataset from California's central valley, to compare temperatures in settled areas to non-settled areas. He wondered about the accuracy of the global temperature record, so what did he do? He created an alternate way of measuring temperature using satellites. He went to Africa to create datasets, to measure and see what is really happening, while other scientists were creating models (which we now know were inaccurate).

      That is how you do science, by collecting data to verify or disprove your hypothesis. You don't beg the press to demonize people you don't like, that's not science.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    88. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by fche · · Score: 1

      We reject [this] false choice.

    89. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind also unrealistic economic assumptions. For example, the Stern report used an unrealistically low measure for time value of money that as I recall lead to future costs being greatly overstated relative to current costs. Despite their claim that it is "immoral" to use the more accurate and higher measure of GDP deflator as an estimate of time value, it remains that an artificially low time value results in decisions which front load costs at the expense of future prosperity.

    90. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Hardhead_7 · · Score: 1

      Fate is not the same as survival. Global warming will seriously impact how humanity lives in 100 or 200 years.

    91. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

      Proper skepticism promotes scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims. It is foundational to the scientific method. Denial, on the other hand, is the a priori rejection of ideas without objective consideration.

      That's funny. The first definition on Google states "a person inclined to question or doubt all accepted opinions.", which seems to be a good fit for those who are denying global warming.

      Nope. "Questioning" implies that they'd pay attention to answers. "Denying" means that that they have no interest in answers; only in denying that it's real.

      That's the difference between skeptics and deniers right there.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    92. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      In fact, the push is for a better quality of life with less pollution, better buildings, less of our income spent on energy and heating/cooling etc.

      I too push for have cake and eat it too.

      The key problem here is why should we expect that mitigating carbon dioxide emissions now will have a net positive impact over waiting until fossil fuels are naturally too expensive to compete with renewable energy alternatives at some future time?

    93. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by hoffmanjon · · Score: 1

      You're "questioning" climate science the same way creationists "question" evolution.

      Or questioning climate science the same way people use to question that the world was round.

    94. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Yes, unless you can offer evidence to the contrary, and publish your method and findings in a reputable journal. That's how science works. Cherry-picking some numbers or misunderstanding findings do not constitute research, no matter how easy it is.

    95. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      Nope. "Questioning" implies that they'd pay attention to answers. "Denying" means that that they have no interest in answers; only in denying that it's real.

      It says question *or* doubt. They doubt AGW is real.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    96. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      In other words, one group of "skeptics" has appointed themselves to be the gatekeepers of the definition of skepticism, and is now throwing a tantrum because there are other people using term that don't match the definition that this group came up with.

      If this "Committee for Skeptical Inquiry" is worried that they'll be confused with the climate-change skeptics, then they need to come up with another term for themselves. Demanding that the English language change to suit their own preferences is stupid, and the only reason why it's getting any support here on Slashdot is because of the personal animosity that most of us have towards the climate-change skeptics.

      And yes, I'm going to purposefully use the term "climate-change skeptics" from now on.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    97. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by spads · · Score: 1

      The function for reccommending caution contains more than just a member for truth vs falsehood. It also contains a member for risk. If the coefficient of truth is high, but the coefficient of risk remains low, the reccommendation for caution still might be low. However, if the truth is moderate and the risk is very high, caution well might be reccommended.

      --
      Bukowski said it. I believe it. That settles it.
    98. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by eheldreth · · Score: 1

      Not to argue your point but just to clarify. Radiation is one of the ways that coal plants do kill people. Burning coal releases radioactive isotopes directly into the atmosphere. Assuming of course that a containment and scribing system capable of removing it has not been installed. Even in that case you are left with the coal ash, which in and of it's self is radioactive. http://www.scientificamerican....

      --
      The perversity of the Universe tends towards a maximum. - O'Toole's Corollary
    99. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure you could not find satisfactory answers to those 3 questions.
      So what.

      Seriously, so what. Like these 3 questions and your inability to use your brain has any meaningful relationship to the volumes of science done on all three of these topics.

    100. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The suburban lifestyle doesn't scale. We don't have the resources to support 7 billion mcmansions without accelerating climate change. We can only support 100 million or so,

      The problem is explaining to 6.5 billion people why they need to live in a small urban efficiency because we're out of carbon credits. Previously, we just told them they were too poor, which was true. Now a bunch of them have money, and huge houses are much cheaper. What's our excuse now for why they can't also have what we have?

    101. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or more likely you just don't give a crap and like to rationalize why you don't give a crap so you can feel good about yourself.

    102. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      I use that as an example because it is more clear-cut than the climate issue, where there are a lot of people who hold a spectrum of views which are probably somewhere between being very skeptical and being outright deniers, but for sure there are those who pretty clearly aren't interested in any science that says man-made climate change might be real.

      Nobody with any sense denies that such people (those who completely ignore science) exist. The problem is that a lot of people, almost all of which should know better, wants to lump everyone who questions the dogma of climate change in with that minority. Which doesn't actually surprise me, as practically all religions behave that way - dividing the world into Us and Them. And make no mistake, nowadays science *is* a religion, a fetish brandished by many to mark themselves part of the tribe. Like the most fervent bible thumper, they don't really understand the world around them - but the Gospel according to Jaime and the Gospel of St. Niel assures them they are among the smartest and thus among the righteous and the saved.

    103. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone who has inspected the literature knows that, before lab tests were available, measles diagnosis was not straight forward at all. Many things share symptoms. Also people used to purposefully spread measles (like chicken pox today), this stopped at around the same time and we have essentially no data on it (that I could find). "drywolf" doesn't know what he/she is talking about or they wouldn't have made such a lame argument.

    104. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't.

    105. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm skeptical there is a substantial distinction between the “skeptic” and “denier”. I'm not denying the possibility...I just think we need more research.

    106. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why do not the people who have a vested interest in AGW not being true fund the research to prove it, instead of using political means? " Gee, why don't "Fill in the Blank" do the research and prove "X" doesn't exist? Sorry, not up to the skeptic to prove anything. It is up to the person making the positive argument to prove that it is true. The AGW crowd have failed to do that. Only when they can create model(s) which take real world data and accurately predicts the future from said data can they claim AGW is real and not just some politically motivated theory. Claiming the skeptics need to prove a negative, is, well, evidence of a political and not a scientific motivation...

    107. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      This wouldn't be an issue if the environmental movement weren't full of hippies that believes that everything that is natural is good and that only accepts solutions that involves less interaction with nature.

      That an idea is supported by losers or hippies doesn't make it any less true (or any less false). If you think we shouldn't do anything against climate change because hippies want to act, you have a problem.

      Why would it matter what the cause is? We are way beyond the point where just reducing carbon emission would solve the issue anyway.

      If humans have an impact on the climate, then it also means we can do something to prevent AGW. If reducing CO2 emissions has no impact then I agree we shouldn't waste any money on it (except for other reasons such as air pollution in cities). You are presenting a false dichotomy here. It's not either we solve it or we don't. Solving half of the problem is better than not solving it at all.

    108. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      So the climate scientists' responses to the poor temperature prediction has been to improve the models and look for why there is a discrepancy. That is scientific. The unscientific thing to do is mine Google for items which reinforce your opinion on the matter.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    109. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Yeah, if only there were a well-funded organization sponsored by the UN that's spent three decades doing proper analysis of the problem. I guess we don't have that so we can't propose proper solutions. Oh well.

      The IPCC is just a giant argument from authority fallacy. It doesn't attempt to provide an unbiased summary of climatology research or of the economic cost of various strategies that could be employed. Instead, there has been a consistent three decade old tendency to exaggerate the degree of global warming (particularly the predictions of catastrophic and near future effects) and the costs of unrestrained global warming while simultaneously downplaying the costs of addressing global warming in the near future.

    110. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Questioning is not the same as idiocy. You see, when you question something it's because you have actual reasons and not just because you don't like it. And you question things using reason, not stupidity. If you don't see the difference or the difference it's too thin to you, it's because you're just another idiot who thinks people should listen to them.

    111. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by holmstar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I can't help but notice that the reasons you give for being skeptical of AGW are the character of some prominent people pushing for actions to counter AGW, the cost of said actions, the fact that other countries aren't being forced to take action, and that our current weather models aren't perfect.

      NONE of that has anything to do with whether humans are responsible for climate change. All of your skepticism is around what do to about it and the extant of the warming.

    112. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 2

      Why do not the people who have a vested interest in AGW not being true fund the research to prove it,

      I'm sorry, but you have it exactly backwards. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. AWG proponents have made some huge claims that simply have not even come close to happening. Some, have actually been proven to be false on their own face (drowning polar bears).

      One cannot prove a negative. This is the basis for "Innocent until proven guilty". What you've asked for is assume guilt, and prove innocence.

      As for AGW, the only thing you can prove is increase in CO2. Everything else is conjecture based on simplistic models that have been consistently proven inaccurate. Scare tactics of "by the time we prove it, it will be too late" is like religious people saying "By the time I prove to you there is a god, you're already dead and it is too late". Basically, AGW proponents are arguing Pascal's wager.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    113. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      Wake me up when the US reaches per capita emissions comparable to Europe.

    114. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      were I to show data that average temps on Mars increased during generally about the same time range, I could point to the cause being external (ie, something with the Sun). Thus it wouldn't be anything humans were doing. That (were there facts to back it up) would be an example of actual skepticism. Covering your eyes and yelling "I CAN'T HEAR YOU LALALALALA" is not.

    115. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by itzly · · Score: 1

      The doubt comes from working backwards from the conclusions they don't like.

    116. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by sexconker · · Score: 1

      The only one you kind of addressed was the AGW issue. There you just declared it irrelevant... Why did you bother?

      He wanted to show you what true denialism was all about.

    117. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Who gets to decide the branding is false? For example, there's this ludicrous expectation that recycling old fallacies many times is good enough to label someone a "denier".

    118. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why expect every mutation to be equally infectious? This is typical virus behavior. It results both in the much lower infectiousness and lethality of viruses we actually see as well as creating a couple of evolutionary advantages. A swarm of mutated viruses means that the host's immune system can't easily target the viruses that are actually infectious. And killing the host slower or not at all means the virus has better long term propagation prospects.

      Who said anything about equally infectious? HIV is nearly impossible to transmit, it is very strange for a virus.

    119. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm not american and I'm one of the few people in my country who knows who Al Gore actually is. Denying AGW is like denying evolution or the big bang theory. There's plenty of evidence supporting it and not a single challenging hypothesis. Still, most of the developed world knows what's the origin of climate change: it's us. And the science is actually pretty simple. It's not like we're talking quantum physics here, it's all pretty understandable for a 16 year old with a basic understanding of physics. Seriously, it's 2+2. Only those who refuse to look at the evidence can believe we're not responsible, because you don't need to be that smart to understand the science. I used to be "skeptical", then I looked at the data and understood the science behind climate change. It's us, it's definitely and indubitably us. Don't let your political preference get in the middle of your reasoning.

    120. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      Depending on your point of view, that's actually either a better analogy than you thought, or the complete opposite of what you intended to mean. While no reasonable person would question the existence of gravity, there still isn't a satisfactory explanation for how gravity works.

    121. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      Are there really any of them around any more? I was sticking to topics that are currently controversial among the public but no longer among scientists.

    122. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      In this context, skeptics would be actual scientists publishing contrary research and so on. Jenny McCarthy isn't a skeptic in a scientific sense, for example.

    123. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      So we are both in agreement that focusing on extremists isn't helpful.

      As to specific steps, you could look at what European countries are actually doing. You seem to be mis-informed, the EU is moving forwards quite rapidly on these issues. For example, the EU noticed that consumers have been suckered in to thinking that moar power = better when buying vacuum cleaners, when actually the best ones are fairly low power and efficient. To fix that they introduced limits on wattage and a rating system where they independently test every model and put the results on the box. Similar measures will be introduced for other appliances, and limits will be tightened to keep manufacturers improving things.

      You may think that more efficient vacuum cleaners isn't a big deal, but it really is when you look at the amount of energy they use.

      Germany is leading all other countries by re-building its grid and moving to renewable energy on a very large scale. There is a lot of FUD about high prices (they are not the highest in the EU, and unlike other countries that just give that money to shareholders at least Germany is investing it in improving their infrastructure and making electricity into a public utility again) and outright lies about massive increases in coal use. The real end result is going to be very significant and beneficial to Germans though, and keep in mind that they are only about 1/3rd the way through their plan (end date is around 2023).

      Also note that quality of life in Germany is going up at the same time. Better houses that cost less to run, less reliance on imported gas and Russia, lots of new jobs and opportunities in the renewables industry, less pollution. In the end their energy will be cheaper too. German industry is still a powerhouse as well, with more exports than China.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    124. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by holmstar · · Score: 1

      So, AGW is false if the people that advocate for doing something about it don't want to build nuclear power plants? How is that logical? They are two completely different things. One of them is the reality of whether humans are having an effect on the climate. The other one is what to do about that. The vast majority of "deniers" seem to have a problem with the latter, not the former, but have a difficulty separating the two.

    125. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by itzly · · Score: 1

      You don't need to prove a negative. Just come up with a reasonable model that explains the temperature rise of the past century.

    126. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      You don't have to look at historical data about measles, you can look at epidemiology data where there are outbreaks amongst communities with low vaccination rates. It ought to be pretty understandable for a layman.

    127. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by nuonguy · · Score: 1

      Are you talking about http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R... ?

      If so, you are invalidating what seems to be your point. He may well be right that our models are inadequate. If his models ever turn out to be better than the ones everyone else uses, your would-be point still would not be demonstrated at all.

      Keep posting anonymously though. You don't want to be hounded everywhere else like you're being hounded here on /. for your unique and brilliant insights that nobody else understands, man.

      BTW, you're not a skeptic if you're simply passing around the copypasta you get from infowars.

    128. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if the science is against you, question the facts

      if the facts are against you, question the scientist

      if both are against you, lobby Congress

    129. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately I am not a layman, I require convincing evidence. There are outbreaks all the time amongst the vaccinated, that why they keep adding on booster shots.

    130. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by itzly · · Score: 2

      The inconsistency between observed and simulated global warming is even more striking for temperature trends computed over the past fifteen years (1998–2012)

      Anybody adjusting their periods to start at an extreme outlier year has been picking too much cherries. Here's 1998 in context: https://tamino.files.wordpress... and anybody can see we haven't really broken any trend.

    131. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You're exactly the kind of idiot that doesn't deserve the title skeptic.

    132. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      interestingly, the drop in infected persons was well underway *before* the vaccine was introduced. But don't that get in the way of your vaccination love fest

    133. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by nwaack · · Score: 1

      The easiest, least creative way to get modded up on Slashdot: Bash religion in a post that has nothing to do with religion.

    134. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      Sure you are, these aren't questions from someone within a biological science field that you're asking, they're layman's questions barely better than "what's the difference between a virus and a bacteria?" The whole bit about not understanding viral mutation in HIV is a pretty big giveaway. An expert might be interested in why the titer drops off at the rate it does that requires boosting, whether it is better to generate IgG versus IgM mediated immunity under difference circumstances, etc etc. I could take a blood draw and tell you what you're immune to and what you need a booster for if needed. Even your physician could. The science is that robust.

    135. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gavrielkay · · Score: 1

      If you educate yourself on the issue, read the papers and have questions about the methods or conclusions reached then you are a skeptic.

      If you fail to understand the science and just "can't imagine it's true" or "can't believe humans can have so much impact" or just plain don't want to have to think about changing your lifestyle and therefore must deny anything that implies you really should... then you're a denier.

      The science can always be questioned - by understanding the methods, data and calculations and making a scientific evaluation about their merits. Could different experiments have been run? Was the data gathered accurately and completely? Was the data evaluated properly and does it support the conclusions drawn?

      The problem in America these days is that people think that having no understanding at all about the science still qualifies them to be skeptics rather than deniers.

    136. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dryeo · · Score: 2

      The scientist that proves that AGW is a lot of HooHaw (technical term) will win a Nobel prize. It should be simple to do really, and the Koch Brothers should be able to provide for his or her future so they don't have to worry one iota about the mean scientists at Universities "cowing" them. Simply shifting that money should do the trick.

      They have and all that happens is another skeptical scientist gets turned into a non-skeptic.
      The best example is Richard A. Muller, Professor if Physics at Berkley who was very critical of climate science and was sponsored by the Koch brothers to do exhaustive research on climate science and ended up convinced it is real, humans are mostly responsible and that prior estimates of global warming are correct. Not very good results for the deniers.
      Use Google for lots of results or start here with a fairly reputable publication, http://www.csmonitor.com/Scien...

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    137. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Climate change models are pretty damned good. If anything, they've been underestimating sea level and temperature rise.

      Except that is wrong.

      It was just with a 70% certainty instead of 97%.

      It's more like 85-90% using the same numbers and weak degree of belief that the original 97% research used, but in a way that wasn't heavily biased.

      There's no hiatus, unless you mean that every year doesn't set a new record.

      Keep in mind that the overestimate of global warming comes from extrapolating a period where the rate of global warming rose faster than the average over this century.

    138. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All antibodies are cross-reactive. Without knowing specifically what method you are referring to I know your overconfidence is unwarranted. Real science is hard and fraught with confounds, procedural artifacts, and other sources of uncertainty. That is why back in the day precise prediction and multiple independent replications were required.

    139. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can be questioned, but in this case the costs of giving anything up to the denialists is too great. The fate of the human race is at stake. It's like suspension the constitution during a war.

      Ironically, your argument is Pascal's Wager in a different guise.

      This is what true skeptics have real problems with when debating with global warming proponents.

    140. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by ilparatzo · · Score: 1

      But one of the problems inherent in starting to say "well, these people are deniers and should be ignored, not skeptics" is that then everyone who questions, be they a "skeptic" or a "denier" depending on your definition, will simply be called a denier so that they can be ignored.

      Historically, scientists have fought those who challenge them with ... well ... science. If we start to say that "science" is protected, we defeat the entire basis for how we have gotten to where we are. Another commenter said it perfectly in my opinion ... we can't turn science into religion, where questioning or even "denying" turns into something you can and should be tarred and feathered for.

      If science cannot stand on it's own to the arguments against it, however stupid they may be, and we begin to enshrine it such that it's rejection is tantamount to heresy we might as well start calling it a religion. Because 1000 years from now that's all it will probably be. Only then, the "scientists" will be putting to the guillotine the future equivalent of Einstein, or Copernicus for rejecting the truth of their science.

    141. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no need for AGW opponents to build a model, every model and prediction produced by AGW scientists has proven to be not accurate.

    142. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by danbob999 · · Score: 1

      You're really broadly generalizing though. Denying one controversial subject doesn't mean someone denies all science.

      Of course. One can be a denier by denying results of the climate science while still acknowledging other, unrelated science such as the theory of evolution. And by the way, AGW isn't controversial. At least not in the scientific community. It is in the mainstream American media, but that's it. Denying part of science is enough to label someone as a denier. That's the problem with climate change skeptics. There are very few of them. Most are deniers.

    143. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But he's also exactly the type of person targeted with the denier label.

    144. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      Oh even something relatively old like ELISA is good enough. Controlling for background cross-reactivity is straightforward. It is one of the first things you do when developing an ELISA. You see how this conversation has reduced to that between an evolutionary biologist and a creationist? Your barriers to your personal credulity outstrip your ability to understand the answer to your query if it is given with sufficient scientific depth when you're doing your Google research. So you have to be told the cartoon version which doesn't sate you because you recognize it to be diluted. I can't get you a bachelor's degree in biology via Slashdot.

    145. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      The "we shouldn't even attempt science" argument.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    146. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      "Germany is leading all other countries by re-building its grid and moving to renewable energy on a very large scale."

      Germany is also digging the world's largest strip mine, and for lignite, an energy source not fit for cavemen. And its push for renewable sources has run into a wall of eco-maniac opposition to the new transmission lines required to wheel power from sunny and windy places to urban users (like our envisioned "Smart Grid")

    147. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Xyrus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Which is why we should NEVER ever stop questioning "science". Newtonian Physics is wrong, but close enough to be functional in many circumstances. Science should be about continuous improvement, which requires ongoing skepticism.

      Agreed, and this is what happens. Anyone who tries to publish a paper can tell you how much fun it is, even for papers that follow the current thinking in a particular field. I work with a couple scientists that published a paper in regards to climate change, and it took two years of sometimes colorfully worded review comments and re-submissions before it as accepted.

      AGW or "climate change" is one of those things I simply do not believe is "settled science", mainly because of the huge number of variables, and the models and advocate predictions have completely been falsified.

      And this is where you turn stupid and destroy whatever argument you were trying to make. Global warming as a result of increased greenhouse gases was discovered well over a century ago, and falls out quite readily as a result using some basic high school level chemistry and physics. The equation for determining the atmospheric forcing of CO2 was developed by Svante Arrhenius (a.k.a the father of modern chemistry) back in the 1890's, and it is still used today.

      A much more difficult problem (and where the vast majority of research is going) is what will the effects on the climate will be. That requires advanced coupled models across multiple science domains.

      Call me a denier all you want. I'm not denying the "Science" part of this (CO2).

      Yes you are. You made unsubstantiated claims that all the results from current as well as historical climate research has been nothing but BS. You claim that global warming isn't "settled science" when it is a direct result of fundamental chemistry and physics that have been around for a century or more, the same chemistry and physics that are used in many other applications today. This is the very definition of a science denier.

      I am denying the predictive hyperbole from the likes of Al Gore, who keeps making ridiculous claims, while having a huge Carbon Footprint (carbon offsets not withstanding).

      AL GORE IS NOT A FUCKING CLIMATE SCIENTIST. Stop using him as a pariah for the climate science community, because he has NOTHING to do with climate science research. He does not publish papers. He does not perform climate research. He has no credentials for doing so, nor does he have any credentials in any related field. He is an activist for a cause he believes in, nothing more.

      Using Al Gore as an EXCUSE for your ignorance would be like someone using Michele Bachman's claims as the reason why they don't get their kids vaccinated.

      And if you are going to make fun of Fox News, great, but the real person you should make fun of is the stupid chicken littles who have been proven wrong, but continue to spew their idiocy and the climate lapdogs keep licking up.

      Again, this is pure denier speak. Fox News has a documented history of misrepresenting science (among other things), especially climate science. The science has not been proven wrong. Not even remotely. That is, at best, willful ignorance on your part.

      --
      ~X~
    148. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The most recent paper I could find in a quick search was this one:
      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17308917

      I see that the ELISA results cover essentially the entire range of possible values for the same "Neutralization Test" result, which the authors refer to as the "gold standard". Amusingly, they draw conclusions by fitting lines to that data.

    149. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'll take an article from Nature over your crappy wordpress site.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    150. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1
      Well, I didn't expect actual studies in actual journals to sway your opinion.

      The unscientific thing to do is mine Google for items which reinforce your opinion on the matter.

      According to this story, the thing 'scientists' do is try to get the press to label anyone who disagrees with them as 'deniers.'

      Meanwhile real scientists have determined there's no imminent danger from climate change. Once again though, I expect you are too far committed to your opinion to let facts change it.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    151. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by BergZ · · Score: 1

      "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."

      A quip popularly attributed to Carl Sagan.

      You know what Carl Sagan had to say about climate change?
      "For our own world the peril is more subtle. Since this series [Cosmos] was first broadcast the dangers of the increasing greenhouse effect have become much more clear. We burn fossil fuels like coal, and gas, and petroleum putting more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and thereby heating the earth. The hellish conditions on Venus are a reminder that this is serious business. Computer models that successfully explain the climates of other planets predict the deaths of forests, parched crop lands, the flooding of coastal cities, environmental refugees; wide spread disasters in the next century, unless we change our ways. What do we have to do? Four things:
      (1) Much more efficient use of fossil fuels. Why not cars that get 70 miles-per-gallon instead of 25?
      (2) Research and development on safe alternative energy sources, especially solar power.
      (3) Reforestation on a grand scale.
      and (4) Helping to bring the billion poorest people on the planet to self-sufficiency, which is the key step in curbing world population growth.
      Every one of these steps makes sense apart from greenhouse warming! Now, no one has proposed that the trouble with Venus is that there once was Venusians who drove fuel inefficient cars, but our nearest neighbour nevertheless is a stark warning on the possible fate of an earth-like world."

      ~Carl Sagan, Cosmos (episode 4: Heaven and Hell (update - 10 years later))

      Dr. Sagan clearly believed that the "extraordinary claims" of climate science were backed up by extraordinary evidence.

      --
      Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
    152. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our data demonstrate that regression analysis shows only limited correlation between NT results and the ELISA values. This is in agreement with other reports [4]. Similar limitations in the correlation were also reported for other viruses like Cytomegalovirus (CMV) [10]. In case of the gamma globulin samples, the low correlation might reXect the wider spectrum and heterogeneity of the involved or measured measles antibodies.

      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17308917

    153. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      Evaluating model output is not a binary right/wrong, good/bad. No model is going to be perfect. As I have often read, and don't know to whom to attribute the quote: "all models are wrong; some are useful." Scientific climate models have done a much better job of predicting the changes of the last couple of decades than anyone or anything else has. So you can snipe, but unless you can do better, they're still our best means of predicting what happens next.

    154. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about equally infectious? HIV is nearly impossible to transmit, it is very strange for a virus.

      Let us review what actually written:

      Why does HIV mutate so often as to result in a wide diversity of variants within any one individual but then when a new person is infected they start with a single (or at least very few) variants?

      The inferred claim is that we should see a wide diversity of HIV variants in a new infection. That implicitly assumes that a lot of variants are near equally infectious to the variants that actually cause new infections in order that they appear at all in the new infection.

    155. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Convincing evidence of what? Even if you bother to continue with the claim that it wasn't actually measles in the past which was diagnosed as measles, whatever that was has vanished and the decline correlates with the administering of the measles vaccine. Further, we actually do know that measles is highly infectious among susceptible populations and current measles-vaccinated populations aren't for some reason susceptible populations.

    156. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      Yes, a neutralization test and an ELISA are measuring different aspects of the antibody action. Your homework question is now: what aspects of antibody/antigen interaction would cause neutralization and antibody titer not to correlate? Next go read up on avidity.

    157. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > It says question *or* doubt. They doubt AGW is real.

      Except they don't doubt it; they disbelieve it. Difference.

    158. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by itzly · · Score: 1

      I see you have no better argument than attacking the messenger, since the data is clearly labelled as coming from the NASA GISS database. And your linked piece is not a peer reviewed Nature main article, but a commentary/opinion piece.

    159. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would niavely assume at least a sizeable minority were active (~10%). Not a single virus. Here is the paper I was thinking of when I wrote that:

      As illustrated in Figure 4A and 4B, there was strikingly little codon diversity present in the viral population during peak viremia, with less than 2% and 5% of all positions exhibiting detectable diversity at day 0 and day 3, respectively, and of those positions that did vary the majority varied by less than 2%. The low genetic diversity of the viral quasispecies during early acute infection, which would not have been discernable using traditional bulk sequencing approaches, confirms that infection in this subject was founded by a single genetic lineage, in line with recent reports suggesting that most sexually transmitted HIV-1 infections arise from a single founder virus [15,16,30–33].

      http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.ppat.1002529

      Check out figure 4.

    160. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      John Christy by no means represents the consensus among scientists studying climate. By all means, read his stuff. But also read Richard Muller, Gavin Schmidt, Michael Mann, Stefan Rahmstorf, Eric Stieg, etc. etc. etc. And also read the copious critiques of Christy's interpretations of the data. He's like a doctor promoting the idea that HIV is not the cause of AIDS. Yes, you can find those people, and yes, they're actual doctors, but no, they don't represent the medical profession as a whole, and even though I'm not medically trained, I'm fairly comfortable dismissing them and going with the medical consensus. I submit that the only reason such an analogy feels exaggerated or unfair to Christy is that there's no gigantically wealthy vested interest trying to convince people that HIV is unrelated to AIDS. People like Christy get a bigger megaphone than the quality of their work and thought merits because they're saying something that some very wealthy people desperately want you to believe.

    161. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Xyrus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're really broadly generalizing though. Denying one controversial subject doesn't mean someone denies all science. Skepticism is a healthy attribute, it indicates critical thinking, and an open mind.

      A skeptic may be ignorant, but is willing to learn. A real skeptic, upon gaining knowledge, will be able to more effectively question and argue the subject.

      A denier is willfully ignorant and will never learn as a result. They can never effectively question or argue the subject because they are always arguing from a point of ignorance. You also can not convince them no matter how much evidence you have since they automatically dismiss anything that contradicts their ignorant views.

      I have no problem with evolution or Darwin whatsoever, believe solar power will be a fantastic resource when it matures, would like to eventually see an end to use of fossil fuels as soon as it becomes economically feasible to do so, am skeptical of religion (IMO religion is conveniently pre-packaged cereal box spirituality /philosophy at best); and think creationism is a fairy tale;

      All good and logical, but...

      but whereas AGW is concerned, I'm skeptical (but open minded) because of all the politics and hypocrisy that surrounds it. Al Gore and friends drone on and on about the dangers of carbon dioxide and man's apocalyptic effect on the planet, then all go fly their fuel-hog private personal jets to a summit to discuss it.

      And just like that, you go from skeptic to denier. Instead of ignoring the talking heads and cheer leaders and going right to the science (thousands of papers, petabytes of research), you latch on to it and then paint the entire scientific community (which has absolutely nothing to do with the politics or Al Gore) with the same brush.

      Al Gore is not a climate scientist. Neither is Leonardo DiCaprio. They aren't. They don't have degrees in climate science. They've never published peer reviewed research on the subject.

      As for the politics, that's policy makers. That's congress. Again, this has nothing to do with the science community. Congress does not approve papers, and the science community does not approve policy decisions.

      The average rank and file climate scientist makes around $70K a year. Most programmer pull down more than that, and they don't need a Ph. D to do it. This "fly all over the place in private jets" bullshit is just that, bullshit. When I was working at NASA, the parking lots weren't full of shiny new Jags and BMWs. They were full of 10 year old Toyotas and Hondas. You don't become a climate scientists to get rich.

      No respectable climate science I know of is predicting the end of the world, nor am I aware of any published research (including the IPCC reports) making any claims that global warming will kill of humanity. Again, that is simply more denial bullshit dredged up as an excuse to not listen to the science.

      Same is true of Gore's personal practices (i.e. his house), he seems very unconcerned in practice about those things which he champions in print or video. Such a strong proponent is expected to lead by example. The UN says AGW is critical to address, yet China hasn't had to abide by any accords, being probably the worst pollution offender currently on the planet.

      "They're not doing it so why do we have to?" This is a really poor excuse, again often used by deniers for some twisted justification for their thinking.

      Additionally, all climate and weather forecasts, whether next weekend or 100 years from now, despite the differences, are based on computer models, which are far from infallible.

      Another denier argument. All models are far from infallible. They're models; an imperfect representation and they always will be since, at least in this universe, since it is impossible to obtain perfect information about a system. The aerodynamic models for jet airc

      --
      ~X~
    162. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Socguy · · Score: 1

      I'm with you man! We need to keep questioning all these fundamentally unsound 'scientific' theories. I mean take Newton and his THEORY of gravity... Call me a denier all you want. I'm not denying the "Science" part of this (Things fall). I am denying the predictive hyperbole from the likes of Issac Newton, who keeps making ridiculous claims, while having a huge gravity footprint (apple diet not withstanding).

    163. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by cbeaudry · · Score: 0

      @Xyrus

      You are being an disingenious bastard.

      You turn stupid and destroy whatever argument you were trying to make (see, 2 can play that game) when you bring the whole climate science is settled argument down to the "basic highschool level science". This just shows how "Bill Nye" the science guy you are. CO2 and the greenhouse gas effect are known parts of the science, that is accepted by skeptics. The guy you are replying too, didint even refute that, you just put those words in his mouth like a good little alarmist you are, all the while playing the "reasonable" card.

      Forcing from CO2, an approcimation of 1.2C per doubling. if I'm not mistaken (or close to it), is accepted. We have pretty much observed so much, if not less.
      That number does not take into account negative forcings or positive ones though.

      The CAGW crowd of disfunctional scientists, are trying to make us believe that there are no negative forcings and only positive ones and that they will cause runaway global warming until the planet will melt (yes, exageration on my part).

      1.2C per doubling, is nothing all that worrisome. But models arent based on that, they are based on water vapour being increase in a runway manner by increased CO2. Thats where at all falls appart.

      Not to mention that ALL the models are WAY above actual observations for the last 24 years. That there has been no statisticaly relevant warming for 18 years, thus no one can attribute MORE of anything now, compared to the 1990's (as in droughts, tornadoes, extreme weather, etc...) Which also have been fairly well tracked and have shown no increase either, if you look at the actual data, not what some idiots say in the media or some blog.

      BTW, quoting Arrhenius doesnt make you look smart, it makes you look like an idiot when you think that ALL of climate science can be reduced to only his formulas.

      You put words in the mouth of the person you replied to, and then ripped him a new one for it. I think you know that doesnt fly.

      Al Gore is the talking piece of the political agenda driven AGW scare. People listen to him. Maybe not scientists, but for fucks sake, dont come saying they dont listen to him, they FUCKING GAVE HIM A NOBEL PRIZE. You can say (please pretend he doesnt exist) all you want, but he does..

      But lets forget clown 1 and move on to clown 2 and 3. You want scientists that are also chicken little alarmists, Mann and Hansen.

      You are the denier my friend. You deny that hundreds of billions have been spent over the last 30 years on climate science to come to the same conclusions they where "looking" to find in the late 80's. Current climate science is research looking to prove that men need to be controlled and money given to a new world governement to control us. This is not conspiracy theory, its right there in the fucking documents at every climate summit. Its what they failed to sign in Copenhagen. No need for a tin foil hat when its written down in black on white paper.

      The scary science HAS been proven wrong. There is nothing left of climate science that can claim for a certainty that the slight warming over the past 100 year is worrisome at all.

    164. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I already know from my experience with the medical literature that theory will be incapable of predicting anything beyond up/down, which will not be convincing. If you want to cite a specific paper I will inspect it, I am near 100% sure I am correct on that though. Researcher's have lowered and lowered their standards of evidence and "reliability" so that two tests can vary over the entire range of possible outcomes vs each other and still be called reliable. All the bad habits from psych have been infecting medical research.

    165. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      John Christy by no means represents the consensus among scientists studying climate. By all means, read his stuff. But also read Richard Muller, Gavin Schmidt, Michael Mann, Stefan Rahmstorf, Eric Stieg, etc. etc. etc. And also read the copious critiques of Christy's interpretations of the data.

      Sure, I have. Once again, Christy is the kind of scientist who literally goes out into the field to collect data. He follows the data, and is willing to change his opinion if the data changes.

      What about you? Are you willing to keep an open mind when it is shown that the models over-estimate global warming? Or will you continue to try to slander scientists who disagree with you as AIDS deniers?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    166. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      I would niavely assume at least a sizeable minority were active (~10%).

      Welp. Guess you're wrong then.

    167. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
      Sory dear fellow, if you have the claim, it is not up to everyone else to disprove it. It is up to you to prove it. You are trying to take the political route, the "Have you quit beating your wife yet?" approach.

      That is not at all how science works. Otherwise, nothing is ever proven until it gets 100 percent acceptance. And thet will never happen.

      There are still people who believe the world is flat, people that believe that crystals have special powers. If scientists have to drop everything to prove things to people who won't ever accept their science anyhow, nothing will ever get done. Because the next person says "I don't believe it." So it will start all over again. Science doesn't need to disprove Crystal powers, or the very basic fundamental principle that the so called Greenhouse gases have an effect upon energy retention in the atmosphere.

      If someone thinks it doesn't, they have two tasks. Show how something other than greenhouse gases retain the energy in the atmosphere, and why if the greenhouse effect exists, it stops at some point.

      I eagerly await the refutation of the Greenhouse effect, or at least the keys to why it eventually fails.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    168. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we actually do know that measles is highly infectious among susceptible populations and current measles-vaccinated populations aren't for some reason susceptible populations.

      Oh yea? How? If doctors aren't blinded when they diagnose measles or choose to call for the lab test, how do you distinguish their bias from vaccine effectiveness?

    169. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Why do not the people who have a vested interest in AGW not being true fund the research to prove it,

      I'm sorry, but you have it exactly backwards. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. AWG proponents have made some huge claims that simply have not even come close to happening.

      Cite the extraordinary claims, and why they are extraordinary.

      Now give me the citations of the peer accepted research that proves that there is either no greenhouse effect, or that it fails.

      I'll wait....... I'll check in on this thread. Be aware I'll be skeptical of your next claims that the scientists are scared, or that their opionions are squeezed. Under your "rules," that is an extraordinary claim, so you will be asked to give the legal citations. You're asking scientists to prove a negative. You really have no idea of how science works.

      Consider this an exercise in you learning how. Which of course you won't, but hey, accept or deny the challenge.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    170. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So even the basic way this virus works remains mysterious after 30 years of study.

    171. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      What would you label Al Gore "the polar caps will be gone in twenty years!!!" and the people who believed in drowning polar bears?

      What do you call people who said weather would be extreme and unbearable within a few years, but it never happened.

      These are extraordinary claims, yet they are proven false time and time again. THE only thing Science has proven, is CO2 levels rising. The rest of the predictive outcomes have been largely falsified.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    172. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by surd1618 · · Score: 1

      The sceptic system is already clogged up, we can't handle any more!

    173. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Dr. Sagan clearly believed that the "extraordinary claims" of climate science were backed up by extraordinary evidence.

      It was. Sad to say, the people we are arguing with won't accept any evidence, extraordinary or not. They get their science education from politicians - and the owners and handlers of the politicians - who are the most scrupulously honest and trustworthy people. If a politician tells you something, you can take it to the bank.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    174. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I follow what you're trying to say. The correct answer is that the epitope being bound is important to whether or not the antigen is inactivated fully. In any case, my point was that you're setting the bar too high when it gets to the point where the technical nuance exceeds your grasp. It'd be like if I decided to declare plate tectonics was false and a geologist tried to set me straight. I'm not going to understand the literature as well as I think I do and eventually may remain unconvinced by him because I don't realize the borders of my own ignorance.

    175. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I see you have no better argument than attacking the messenger, since the data is clearly labelled as coming from the NASA GISS database.

      The article takes that data into consideration. Clearly you didn't read it, and me repeating it won't help you.

      And your linked piece is not a peer reviewed Nature main article, but a commentary/opinion piece.

      It's not the only paper. If you pay attention to scientific consensus, it's become clear that the models are wrong, and scientists are trying to explain why.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    176. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Call me a denier all you want. I'm not denying the "Science" part of this (CO2). I am denying the predictive hyperbole from the likes of Al Gore, who keeps making ridiculous claims, while having a huge Carbon Footprint (carbon offsets not withstanding).

      If you're letting your dislike of people like Al Gore color your attitude toward the science then you're not being properly scientifically skeptical. On top of that if you don't seek out what Gore actually said instead of just believing what others say he said you're just letting yourself be duped. I don't pay much attention to Gore but when I've looking into the claims about what he said from the denier side they're most often taken out of context ignoring the qualifying statements he's made.

    177. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Dadoo · · Score: 1

      if you're not willing to build a bunch of nuclear power plants and shut down a bunch of coal plants, then yes you ARE arguing global warming to advance a political agenda

      Some of the most prominent AGW scientists are strongly in favor of nuclear power: http://www.scientificamerican....

      Others are a little more cautious, but still think nuclear is an important part of an overall strategy to reduce global warming: http://www.ucsusa.org/our-work...

      --
      Sit, Ubuntu, sit. Good dog.
    178. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by itzly · · Score: 1

      Clearly you didn't read it, and me repeating it won't help you.

      No, repeating bullshit arguments rarely helps.

      It's not the only paper.

      It's the one you linked to, so it's probably the best one you have.

    179. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      The Anti-vax people really have an issue with something that doesn't exist anymore. Mercury in some form was used as a stabilizer in older vaccines. This is where the behavioral/brain problems came from, and has been addressed in all current vaccines.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    180. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      If I linked to another one, would it change your mind?
      You didn't even read the first one, why should I link to a second?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    181. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by fche · · Score: 1

      bravo

    182. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by leaen · · Score: 1

      well, nuclear power is one option, but there are ... less dangerous ones. Take a mix of solar, wind, water power (not just dammed rivers and such, also tidal).

      That does not work yet, take Germany as counterexample. With its green energy policy it in 2013 managed in to increase its CO2 emissions while most of europe decreased its emissions, only Denmark, Estonia, Portugal have bigger increase. http://phys.org/news/2014-05-g... Also electricity become 60% more expensive, GDP fallen and industries are migrating from Germany and will become worse as it will add more renewables. Why do you think it will work elsewhere?

    183. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What would you label Al Gore "the polar caps will be gone in twenty years!!!""

      Nonexistent.

      As in Al Gore never said that.

      "and the people who believed in drowning polar bears?"

      Are you someone who thinks bears can breathe underwater?

    184. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      I once heard a phrase that clearly sums up most of your argument.

      If the waste is hot enough to hurt you, it is hot enough to produce power.

      If we would stop the silly refusal to reprocess waste, and start reprocessing all the waste we have, we could stop mining Uranium for 1000s of years.

      It is also much easier to deal with the waste when it takes up much less volume, and is only dangerous for a short time.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    185. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Coren22 · · Score: 2

      I suspect that since the vested interests are choosing the political attack route, they probably do know it is credible, they just don't care.

      The problem is who are the vested interests? The AGW scientists attack anything skeptical of AGW, and prevent everything being published. What science do you consider credible when it cannot be published in the journals?

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    186. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by geekpowa · · Score: 1

      That would be all well and good if people were to scrupulously stick to a reasonable definition of 'denier' vs 'skeptic'. But this doesn't happen, denier is mud to be flung around and it is flung far and wide and all that is happening here is to try and legitimise this practice of use de-legitimising snarling at people that one disagrees with.

      Consider this wiki: http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/S.... "Steve McIntyre is a former statistician and minerals prospector and currently a prominent global warming denier.". Just a hateful little snarl directed at someone who most certainly doesn't merit it. McIntyre has never made his view on AGW public, he has gone to great pains to emphasize this. I personally suspect he is somewhere between 'jury is out' and a lukewarmer; but who knows. His focus is mainly on peleoclimate statistics. By your definition he is in no way a denier.

      But it is so typical of this whole AGW issue, people play fast and loose with definitions, data, evidence. A massive lack of imprecision, anyone who comes along want precision is also a denier apparently. Amongst climate skeptics community they self identify with two broad camps, lukewarmers and sky dragons. The two terms are well defined, it is quite clear what is what. Consensus community could co-opt these definitions too, but that would risk legitimising the lukewarmers, better and easier to tar them all as deniers.

    187. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      You said you had a misconception about how the virus worked. That doesn't strike me as very mysterious.

    188. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Oh yea? How? If doctors aren't blinded when they diagnose measles or choose to call for the lab test, how do you distinguish their bias from vaccine effectiveness?

      "IF". What's the point of your argument? If doctors' bias really is that relevant and I doubt it is, then use the allegedly less biased lab test for testing your hypothesis.

    189. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Man, if someone says (as the GP did), "we can't do anything because no one has come up with a plan," well, the IPCC's puts that excuse out the door anyway. You might disagree that it's a good plan (and I do), but at least it's something.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    190. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Argument to authority. Peer review isn't part of the scientific method, it's part of the orthodoxy in the religion of science that has appeared in recent decades. It used to be that scientists would actually try to repeat each others experiments to verify the results. That wasn't mere peer review that was peer verification. Now days most things put forward are hypothesis for which a proper controlled experiment was not performed by the author(s) and may never be performed by anyone (possibly because its possible to do so).

      The only thing actionable about a hypothesis is to either refine it to a new hypotheses or test it with a proper experiment to see if it can be falsified. If enough proper experiments are done by independent parties that fail to falsify a hypothesis it can be upgraded to a theory and then you've got something that is generally actionable.

    191. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anything that can be verified independently by experiment is credible regardless of being published in journals. Anything that can not be verified independently by experiment is not credible regardless of being published in journals. Note how credibility has nothing to with being published in journals.

    192. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make no mistake, someone who shouts loudly "All science is a religion" is a moron who believes that merely making shit up that makes science "wrong" means they can ignore the bloody science.

      You can't.

      Hence you ARE in the class of denier. You've never shown anything other than your refusal to accept that AGW exists, with NO EVIDENCE OR REASON. YOU *ARE* A DENIER.

    193. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am thoroughly unconvinced that forcing most people to live like the alarmists claim we should (but usually don't live themselves) will yield the claimed benefits, or be worth the costs even if the benefits would be as claimed.

      If by "thoroughly unconvinced," you mean that's what you believe, then it sounds like you're a denier than, and not a skeptic. Where are your numbers? Where is your evidence? Have you taken an objective look at this question? Can you prove that you have?

    194. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it isn't noteworthy. Models are just hypothesis expressed in software form. Just running the model is not an experiment. We do not have the technology necessary to run the experiments necessary to verify the models. What is the point of producing yet another model that can't be verified?

    195. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Note how there is no way to do experiments in climate science. Now, you can run models, and they can be closer or farther from the actual, but actually running an experiment...nope.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    196. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly you don't follow theoretical physics. Exactly what gravity is and how it works is certainly being questioned. Just like 'solid' matter is actually mostly empty space, gravity may not be the distinct 'force' that we commonly think of it as.

    197. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      So will a million other factors, most of which can't be foreseen or predicted. Would your Grandparents have foreseen the day that you could access the entirety of human knowledge on a device that fits into the palm of your hand?

      The Earth and humanity have never been and never will be static entities. The climate has changed a great deal during the geologically insignificant amount of time that humans have been around. Most of those changes occurred before we started digging carbon out of the ground. Changes will continue long after we've moved past carbon based energy supplies. The notion that the climate was "ideal" during some specific period would be laughable if there wasn't a serious movement trying to use it to make public policy.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    198. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's someone who undermines a claim using reason, as opposed to using sentiment against reason.

      Sentimental doubters are actually believers. They don't like doubt. They don't really doubt, they deny. They believe in some Truth and deny everything that contradicts it.

      Skeptic does not mean him who doubts, but him who investigates or researches as opposed to him who asserts and thinks that he has found. --Unamuno

    199. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your reasoning seems suspect.

      The UN says AGW is critical to address, yet China hasn't had to abide by any accords, being probably the worst pollution offender currently on the planet.

      So one person in the room refusing to play reasonably means you should be skeptical of global warming?

      Al Gore and friends drone on and on about the dangers of carbon dioxide and man's apocalyptic effect on the planet, then all go fly their fuel-hog private personal jets to a summit to discuss it.

      Again, what does this have to do with global warming? It would be dangerous to be "skeptical" (as you put it) of global warming based on one persons hypocrisy. Why not ignore the hypocrisy, and listen to all the scientists (who don't fly fuel-hog personal jets) if that makes you feel better? Else, you are only confusing your irritations about specific individuals with a process that might be occurring no matter what.

    200. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by KeensMustard · · Score: 1

      Not only the data and the conclusions, the models themselves. If you use a model to analyze the data and draw some conclusions from it and this model is unable to predict phenomena correctly you can certainly become skeptic about the conclusions you drawn from it.

      What phenomena?

      Recently, many models were put exactly in that position.

      Which models?

      Calling everyone a denier because he/she express some doubts about the conclusions of a model without any decent prediction capability is certainly an abuse of language and even bullying toward legitimate skepticism.

      That is not the denier position. The denier position is that a (pre-supposed) lack of correlation between model predictions and observed climate means that we can continue dumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and nothing significant will happen. The deniers would have us accept their predictions about climate sensitivity whilst simultaneously claiming that science is insufficient to make predictions. The denier claim (that adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere will not cause significant warming) is something that ought to be handled with healthy scepticism.

      Because what a lack of correlation actually means is that we can't predict what will happen if we continue our buildup of atmospheric CO2. We know there will be some effect (by thermodynamics) but can't predict the scope of it. The only logical conclusion is that to avoid potential disaster we need to stop doing that. Right Now.

      If the model deniers are right and there is no correlation then what they are really saying is that we must take immediate action to mitigate the risk of disastrous warming.

    201. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People in developing countries don't do so well and even the developed world takes a hit (higher food prices, greater frequency of natural disasters, and so on) [...]

      I'm in the crowd that believes the climate is changing and that homo sapiens are a contributory factor to that change. I get off the bus when the green crowd starts talking about pie in the sky solutions that sound great on paper but invariably result in a lower standard of living and greater Governmental control over our lives. Unless you're willing wholly embrace nuclear power (to their credit a few greens actually are) there's no way you can generate enough energy to maintain our current standard of living without sourcing some of that energy from carbon based sources.

      Conclusion: you are fine with people in developed countries potentially taking a hit (with "higher food prices, greater frequency of natural disasters, and so on"), in return for "maintaining your current standard of living" ? Meaning, you prefer maintaining your current standard of living right now, in return for a lowered standard of living later. Hmmm....

    202. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The AGW scientists attack anything skeptical of AGW, and prevent everything being published.

      That's the most insane conspiracy theory I've heard all day and I read most of this thread!

    203. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed science is ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned and that is what scientist do. The problem is the deniers keep trying to say that 2+2=-1 and say you are trying to kill them when you insist that di-hydrogen monoxide is good for them. They would much rather believe that the value of pi is 3 (1 Kings 7:23 ) because the bible must be read literally and it is the only book you need to read.

    204. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

      This is not the issue. The problem is that climate change denialists don't question honestly. They lie. They fabricate data. They ignore other data. And, by and large, are bankrolled by the fossil fuel industry.

      Science is settled in the sense that we know climate change is happening, and humans are causing it, not because of any sort of dogma, but because the evidence is so strong. If the deniers actually engaged in reasoned debate, scientists wouldn't be so incensed.

    205. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      I suspect that since the vested interests are choosing the political attack route, they probably do know it is credible, they just don't care.

      The problem is who are the vested interests? The AGW scientists attack anything skeptical of AGW, and prevent everything being published. What science do you consider credible when it cannot be published in the journals?

      Much of the money comes form "Dark sources", like DonorsTrust, and DonorsCapital, meaning they won't tell us, Kind of like legal money laundering. Koch Industries and ExxonMobil money has in large part gone away. It might not be unlikely that they have gone to the untraceable route.

      Whic is all very convenient, doing this in secret. How many scientific reports have you see that have no names, because the scientists are too big of pussies to put their name on it?

      http://www.scientificamerican....

      Regardless, some reseach has shown that from 2003 to 2010:

      DonersTrust / DonorsCapital 14%

      Sciafe Affiliated Foundations 7%

      Lyle and Harry Bradley Foundation 5 %

      Koch Affiliated Foundations 5 %

      Howard Charitible Foundation 4% John William Pope Foundation 4%

      John William Pope Foundation 4%

      Searle Freedom Trust 4%

      John Templeton Foundation 4%

      Dunn's Foundation for the Advancement of Right Thinking 2%

      SMith Richardson Foundation 2%

      Vanguard CharitableEndowment Program 2%

      THe Kovener Foundation 2%

      Annenberg Foundation 2%

      Lilly Endowmwnt Inc 2%

      Richard and Helen DeVos Foundation 2%

      Exxon Mobiil Foundation 1%

      Brady Education Foundation 1%

      The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation 1%

      Coors Affiliated Foundation 1%

      Lakeside Foundation 1%

      Herrick Foundation 1%

      A number of others at less than 1 percent

      The source of this information

      http://phys.org/news/2013-12-k...

      Unfortunately, there will be less and less information as these defenders of freedom move to untraceable donorship, which is almost always a sure sign of standing by your principles.

      What science do you consider credible when it cannot be published in the journals?

      Perhaps it might be better explained what I do not consider credible

      http://retractionwatch.com/201...

      or this: http://retractionwatch.com/201...

      This one was pretty egregious on many levels.

      Anyhow, before you put Retrsction watch on your hitlist of liberal organizations, they also hae published retractions of pro AGW papers.

      Part of self policing and transparency, rather different than what has become "secret contributors" of the Deniers movement.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    206. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The science has not been prover right or wrong asshole! Everything i have searched for is inconclusive and only summarized for me. They will not allow you to look at the data and make your own conclusions!

    207. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Agreed, and this is what happens. Anyone who tries to publish a paper can tell you how much fun it is, even for papers that follow the current thinking in a particular field. I work with a couple scientists that published a paper in regards to climate change, and it took two years of sometimes colorfully worded review comments and re-submissions before it as accepted.

      Other times, complete gibberish is accepted into a journal. Getting published is by no means a guarantee of the quality of the work; all it indicates is that the work fits within the world-view of the publisher. The quality of the work depends upon the data and the methods/algorithms used, and the transparency of both. When data or the process is hidden (or both, as the case with much of the early AGW work), then the quality should immediately be suspect.

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    208. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      polar bears swim rather well!

    209. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by KeensMustard · · Score: 1

      When climate alarmists stop pretending that the dispute is over the degree of human influence on climate, and how much different countries should spend to mitigate anthropogenic climate change (or other kinds!), they might start to get traction with skeptics. Also when they start acting like the situation is as bad as they claim it is.

      Funny how the view of 'the dispute' is so inconsistent. You say the dispute is not about the science, yet there are denialists posting in this very thread who say that it IS: this guy , or this guy or this guy. You guys need to sit down and nut and what it is, exactly, that you have against the more commonly held position on climate. At the moment, you look like clowns.

      I know that when I used an electric sous vide cooker to make pork chops for dinner last night, it was worse for the climate than if I ate raw vegetables, and better than if I grilled a slab of steak over a bonfire. I know that living in the suburbs emits more greenhouse gases than living in a tiny apartment in a big city. I am thoroughly unconvinced that forcing most people to live like the alarmists claim we should (but usually don't live themselves) will yield the claimed benefits, or be worth the costs even if the benefits would be as claimed.

      If I wanted to classify your position I would call it "superstition". It is, essentially a belief that climate change is about good people and bad people. Various (curiously unnamed) people you claim are "alarmists" and are hyprocritical, and therefore the scientific basis of their position is wrong. One would think that if the science of mitigation were actually wrong, if the economic model was wrong, that you could find and demonstrate those flaws, rather than engage in bone pointing ceremonies.

    210. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      If you link to that same editorial one more time, then I'll believe it.

      As persuasive a source as an article by a British politician is, I'd like to hear from someone who actually does this for a living.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    211. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Then look at the link in Nature earlier.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    212. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Nobody with any sense denies that such people (those who completely ignore science) exist. The problem is that a lot of people, almost all of which should know better, wants to lump everyone who questions the dogma of climate change in with that minority.

      When you start throwing words like "dogma" around it's obvious where you stand. It's perfectly valid to question the science of climate change but it has to be done in a scientific manner. When people start throwing around arguments about who's making the claims (Al Gore anyone?) how much it's going to cost or how people are trying to control us it's not longer a scientific argument that has anything to do with the science. When people bring up old arguments that have long since been debunked it's just wasting scientist's time. There has been the occasional argument from the anti side that caused scientists to reexamine their science (Anthony Watts Surfacestations.org being a notable example) but what mostly happens is it strengthens the science making it even more solid.

      So while you might think it sounds like dogma it's mostly scientists and others getting tired of having to repeat themselves over and over and over again to people who won't listen to them.

    213. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by KeensMustard · · Score: 1

      Funny, because the science that I learned about in college was ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned.

      Presumably they mentioned at your place of learning that to question science you need to use science, not superstition: e.g. "I don't trust this science because that scientists has a beard and he might be a hippy"

    214. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I'm sure the points in there are good, but I need to point out that while it is a "peer reviewed journal", you linked to something from the "Opinion & Comment" section. There is quite a bit of work being done to understand where all of the heat is going, but that has been discussed on here before.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    215. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Current climate science is research looking to prove that men need to be controlled and money given to a new world governement to control us. This is not conspiracy theory, its right there in the fucking documents at every climate summit.

       
      You turned stupid and destroyed whatever argument you were trying to make when you boil down the argument to "I'm not saying it's not a conspiracy, but it's not a conspiracy." There's a common thread amongst you deniers: You invariably claim conspiracy and then deny it is actually a conspiracy lest you look retarded. But we all know that you know deep down, all of this is the Illuminati's fault. Denying is kind of your thing ya know?

    216. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      When you start throwing words like "dogma" around it's obvious where you stand.

      It's only obvious to the terminally ignorant - folks exactly like you. who ignore the balance of what I wrote so that they have stones to throw.

    217. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Germany is no paragon here. They are reducing their current levels of gas emissions to offset all of the various gasses they emitted back in the '40s. They aren't leaping ahead at all, they're merely bringing their accounts back to "normal". This is also the case regarding highly efficient shower equipment.

    218. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't help but notice that the reasons you give for being skeptical of AGW are the character of some prominent people pushing for actions to counter AGW, the cost of said actions, the fact that other countries aren't being forced to take action, and that our current weather models aren't perfect.

      Character is an issue ONLY if one is a denier or "skepic"? For the true believers this is not the issue, their sins are forgiven...

      NONE of that has anything to do with whether humans are responsible for climate change. All of your skepticism is around what do to about it and the extant of the warming.

      If you care about solving the problem, you might stop limiting character assassination to just one side of the debate. But you won't, because you don't care about solving any problems.

    219. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Oh, I read all of what you wrote. Your notion that science is a religion is absurd. Science is empirically tested against objective reality. In the long run it can't be perverted because sooner or later that objective reality will overtake any errors or purposeful misrepresentation. Any Us and Them involves those who accept objective reality as it comes and those who aren't willing to for one reason or another. I'm firmly on the side of accepting reality.

    220. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If doctors' bias really is that relevant and I doubt it is

      It is a well known issue.

      “A likely reason for this is that the case may have been misdiagnosed as a non-specific viral illness. Measles has become relatively uncommon in Singapore with two decades of widespread measles vaccination, and especially after the second dose policy was implemented in 1998. Many primary care doctors may not even see a single case of measles in a year. This makes diagnosis more difficult.”

      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17609829

    221. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't understand why that it is odd then I cannot help you further. I am sure any competent people who come across this thread will note the info in the back of their mind, which is all I hoped to achieve.

    222. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to put any effort into justifying your beliefs here are a few places to start:

      “This was not a blind study, since the investigators knew which children had received measles vaccineIt seems probable that the occurrence of so much ‘measles-like’ illness in the vaccinated children was a reflexion of the difficulty in making a firm diagnosis of measles in the African child at one visit.”
      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2134550/

      “As only approximately 7% of the clinically-diagnosed cases of measles reported locally turned out to be measles by laboratory testing, there is a need for laboratory confirmation of measles to avoid misidentification of cases and improve disease surveillance.(2)”
      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17609829

      “Before the introduction of measles vaccines, measles virus infected 95%–98% of children by age 18 years [1–4], and measles was considered an inevitable rite of passage. Exposure was often actively sought for children in early school years because of the greater severity of measles in adults.”
      http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/189/Supplement_1/S4.full

      "“It is evident from Table IV that many children in all three groups were unwell and that the proportion was greatest in the live-vaccine group (61 %), less in the killed/live-vaccine group (54%), and least in the unvaccinated group (38%)...
      Table VI shows the cases of measles reported by the parents and those seen and diagnosed by the doctor. Of the total cases reported the doctor saw about 60%, and, of these, confirmed the parents' diagnosis in 93 % in the control group, 64% in the killed/live-vaccine group, and 70% in the live vaccine group."
      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1843609/

      "Measles
      Evidence from cohort studies
      Effectiveness against measles was investigated in three cohort studies (Marin 2006; Marolla 1998; Ong 2007)...
      There was a lack of adequate description of exposure (vaccine content and schedules) in all cohort studies. Another recurring problem was the failure of any study to provide descriptions of all outcomes monitored. A lack of clarity in reporting and systematic bias made comparability across studies and quantitative synthesis of data impossible."
      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22336803

    223. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I back real solutions, but they are not the same as the solutions you propose. I think the risks of nuclear energy are unacceptably high.
      Here are my solutions:
      1. greatly decrease energy use.
      a. greatly restrict travel
      b. greatly restrict transport of good.
      2. # 1 above argues for: greatly decrease wealth to bare bone necessity
      a. example: humans lived without recorded music for a long time. We don't "need' it. We *need* food clothing and shelter. We can make our own music, which used to be the way it was done.
      3. In a planned way, without killing people or allowing them to die through inaction, decrease the human population. As the population decreases the amount of wealth per individual that does not harm the environment will increase.

      I could go on, but here is what I believe will actually happen. In 100 years global warming, having continued with little human effort to stop it, will have raised sea level enough to cover, say most of Florida, and maybe even a lot more. Many coastal areas and cities will be flooded. Weather patterns will have greater extremes. As populations are displaced from coastal areas, great migrations of refugees will result in violence. Crop failures. Possible wars, famine, pestilence. Your 401k will be worth shit. The company that makes Twinkies will be history. A fair percent of the worlds' population in the next 100-200 years will die not from old age, but disease, war, famine, or even being drowned from rising water levels. Some people may continue in our modern way of life, but what will China, Inc. look like? Who will make things? Will globalization still be around? Will International shipping be viable if the oceans have more storms and giant waves? What ever happened to Scully and Mulder?
      My life span is probably another 20-25 years, so I won't be around to say, "I told you so."

    224. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      I see. So only scientists are allowed to be skeptical of ideas and theories. That is good to know. Thank you. I hope you do not deny the existence of God. You have no right to do that unless you are a priest. Only priests are qualified.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    225. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      If you can prove that all those climate scientists are wrong and climate change is not happening

      IOW proving a negative. You do realize that is impossible right? How convenient for you.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    226. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      You might disagree that it's a good plan (and I do), but at least it's something.

      Doing nothing (well, continuing climate research, but not acting on it) is also doing something. You have to show that your something is better than nothing.

    227. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      It's about the idea that a "skeptic" leaves the door open to all possibilities, but "deniers" have already closed the door.

      From what I have seen of the people who question that AGW is 100% proven and undeniably going to cause the end of all mammalian life in less than a century or so at least on slashdot you are beating on a strawman.

      I do not consider AGW theory to be even remotely proven and yes I have looked at the so called "evidence". However I would never argue that AGW is impossible. That would be silly. The basic mechanism is sound, but it might take 10,000 years or 100,000 years or the small effect may be overwhelmed by other factors.

      The climate of an entire planet is extremely complex and cannot be accurately 'modeled' with a naive computer program. Just like we cannot build a model of the universe in a computer and use it as a substitute for testing our hypothesis in meatspace to see what happens. Science is about testing hypothesis by actually trying stuff out to see what happens. Testing ideas against nature itself. Testing ideas against naive assumptions inherent to computer simulations is not science. When it comes to climate "science" this would mean waiting to see what happens.

      At least so far the effect does not seem extraordinarily great. In a few hundred years we can again take measurements to see how things are going. Or however long it takes to see a noticeable and arguably dangerous warming effect. So far the rise has not been dangerous. There is nothing inherently bad about a rise of 1 degree over a century. Just as there is nothing inherently good about a drop of 1 degree over a century. Nor is a 100% perfectly stable temperature inherently good.

      The theory is plausible. The effect is plausible. Now AGW just needs to be actually demonstrated in meatspace. It's just a matter of being patient. There is no shortcut when trying to test long term theories. You have to wait. Writing a computer program to accurately mimic a natural process is not a shortcut. At the very least first you would have to demonstrate that your model is 100% accurate and again that requires waiting many years to compare the model's predictions against observations.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    228. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      Or questioning climate science the same way people use to question that the world was round.

      From the perspective of the scientific method there was nothing wrong with being skeptical of the earth being round. In fact it isn't round. It's not flat, but neither is it mathematically circular or spherical. Science is all about asking questions and being suspicious of any easy answers.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    229. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only then, the "scientists" will be putting to the guillotine the future equivalent of Einstein, or Copernicus for rejecting the truth of their science.

      I would have gone with future equivalent of Lavoisier.

    230. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      "IF". I see nothing once again to indicate that I have a problem of insufficient understanding or that you noticed anything mysterious.

    231. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      The perception of insufficient rigor is not the same as being wrong.

    232. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      So we have a situation where measles is uncommon due to vaccination - as expected.

    233. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The perception of insufficient rigor is not the same as being wrong.

      Who said anything about someone being wrong?

      So we have a situation where measles is uncommon due to vaccination - as expected.

      Science 101: Could there be any other explanation for that? If so how do we rule it out?

      Those questions appear to not have been asked and answered with regards to measles vaccines. As I said originally, show me one blinded RCT, which would really only be meeting the minimum criteria for convincing evidence. We need independent replication yielding similar results (not just effects in the same direction with p0.05) and then some theory making precise (not just that something is higher/lower or goes up/down) predictions to increase our confidence further.

      If you don't require that, people will sham you, often inadvertently due to personal biases. An important difference between science and scholasticism is the ability to distinguish between evidence and assumptions. It is required that you learn that skill if you want to make informed decisions. Read "Gilgarons" posts to see a scholasticist. He/she thinks that if two tests for measles are totally uncorrelated they can be called reliable because someone wrote some words on a page supposedly explaining why. What a joke!

    234. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Politicians that question agw are stupid and should be kept out of hving any say about what to do about it. Thank god the UN, the most political group on the planet, by definition, has got our backs funding groups to prove something they promoted politically before the majority of the "proven" science. Not like tobacco lobbyists' scientists that "proved" tobacco was safe. That was bad this is righteous science!

    235. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously. They failed to follow the proper ritual and dogma, and must be ejected from the priesthood.

    236. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      No, No, No you just don't get it!!! The TRUTH is what WE SAY IT IS and it's only valid for TODAY!!! We will not be tricked into discussing the TRUTH of YESTERDAY it does not exist...

      The "deniers" of the TRUTH of TODAY - they aren't simply intelligent people offering viewpoints in an open exchange of ideas, they are evil, pure evil, ignorant hayseeds who are radical and dangerous for America. They must be ridiculed, and removed from the discourse entirely dare they question the TRUTH that is Today's Truth.

      But the people telling the TRUTH they are the most tolerant, understanding, open people on earth! Just ask them, and they will tell you. Unless, of course, you deny the TRUTH of TODAY.

      How dare you question the superior intellect of the people in charge of dispensing the truth of today?

      I really wish I was making this up, but it's how the comments on this thread read to me.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    237. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Science 101: Could there be any other explanation for that? If so how do we rule it out?

      When are you going to present this other explanation? There's been a several orders of magnitude reduction in the incident of measles in areas that widely use a measles vaccine. The observation doesn't have to be made in a very particular format in order to be observed.

    238. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I provided you with quotes from 4 papers showing that is well known amongst researchers of measles vaccines that inaccurate diagnoses is common, occurring in up to 90% of cases, further that it is influenced by the physicians knowledge of vaccination state and perception of the prevalence of measles. Yet there is no blinded RCT! I also provided a link to peer reviewed literature stating that people used to purposefully spread measles but have now stopped (although that paper does not reference any evidence, it is apparently considered common knowledge by that author).

      If you choose to respond further, please answer the following questions:
      What aspect of this has been confusing you? What exactly has convinced you that a measles vaccine is effective?

    239. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      90% is insignificant compared to the actual several orders of magnitude reduction in cases observed. I think it's instructive to compare measles vaccination to current climate research.

      In the latter case, it's a study of a rather subtle effect by people who have biases large enough to easily swamp the observation and a huge degree of uncertainty that is ignored and downplayed (a notable example is the large error in the temperature forcing due to carbon dioxide concentration). While in the former case, there's no accounting of systemic biases that can explain the huge drop in incident of measles.

    240. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doctors don't see measles if they aren't thinking measles. Add on top that people stopped purposefully spreading it. That is all you need. If a doctor has never heard of measles can they diagnose it? No. If it is something they need to look up in a history book are they likely to? No. If they are barraged by claims that "measles is eradicated" will they be just as likely to diagnose it? No.

      It is a totally plausible pair of explanations even for 100% reduction. Are they correct? We don't know, because no one has done the studies. Sloppy science raises assumptions to the level of evidence, that is what we have here.

    241. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by dl_sledding · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear. Well stated!

      I find it quite interesting that the only group of scientists involved here is the climate change group. This move sounds suspiciously of getting the media to discredit any and every attempt at questioning the "science" of CC.

      Eugenics was once accepted by EVERYONE (or so the proponents of the time wanted the public to believe). It was a "proven" science. It was accepted by many scientists, by elite society, by politicians. It's a black stain on science history now, and very few wish to discuss it, but it is nonetheless there.

      Science needs to be questioned, results need to be doubted and tested. It's doubly more important for the individual scientist to question and doubt his or her own work, to prove it time and time again, to ensure that what they are learning is true and real, not tainted. Once a researcher begins to quell that and tries to stop others from disproving it, they are no longer scientists.

      As far as CC science goes, I also don't deny the idea of CO2 affecting the climate. I don't know that I believe that it is the armageddon that it is being made out to be. I don't believe it's science's place to attempt to social engineer the populace through FUD either. Which is what this move by the climate science community is.

    242. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Again, show systemic errors large enough to explain the effect. You still have not.

    243. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think it is up to me (random internet dude) to prove a drug doesn't work, not up to promoters of the drug to fund and perform studies that provide convincing evidence that it does? Good luck!

    244. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's in your court now. I've already pointed out that your systemic biases don't account for the observed decline in measles cases.

    245. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've clearly made some assumptions/estimations different than mine to come to that conclusion, which is fair enough. To move forward, you'll need to fund a blinded RCT of a measles vaccine. If absence of evidence is convincing evidence to you, you should have said so at the beginning.

    246. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "scientist X, Y, Z don't have credibility with me" is not "ignoring science entirely"

      It is, however, an implied ad hominem if it isn't accompanied by a reference to that scientist having done some incredibly bad or biased "research". Usually accusations like that are tossed out on the basis of something which does nothing to discredit the research. A scientist might at the same time be brilliant in his field and also a child molester that should be locked up. However, the latter would make most people say that the science is not credible because it's made by a horrible person.

      So if you exclude research by certain scientists when forming your own opinion of a scientific question, you should pay attention to the reason why you exclude them. Now, in the particular case of antropomorphic climate change, the consensus is overwhelming so you can't use any sane criteria for exclusion. Attempts by deniers to gather signatures by scientists that doubt climate change have been less successful than similar attempts by creatards gathering signatures by scientists doubting evolution. Of course, in both cases the tactics have been dishonest and most of the scientists signing have not been ones within the field so their opinion doesn't matter more than a layman's.

    247. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      heretic

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    248. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      polar bears breathe air, not water, therefore they can drown. How well they swim notwithstanding.

    249. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ;)

    250. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by John+Allsup · · Score: 1

      The inspired free rational thinking of one generation becomes the dogma of a later generation. That's already happened with spiritual teachings in the form of what we call 'religion'. It is happening again with science. The cause is human nature and psychology (maintaining understanding is much harder than merely copying words and appearing charismatic and learned to a naive audience, and so evolutionary pressure tends to favour the latter as a strategy for being successful -- the only problem is when one of those pesky individuals who actually understands what the stuff is supposed to be about comes along and tries to explain it -- then they nail him to a lump of wood and build a new religion around his teachings.) Science needs to learn about its future from religion, because religion is what modern science will become unless people are far more careful than they are these days.

      --
      John_Chalisque
    251. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      To move forward, you'll need to fund a blinded RCT of a measles vaccine.

      And as I already noted, absence of rigor is not proof something is wrong. Your p=0.05 standard is rather weak too. Even from a frequentist (holding to certain "large data" statistical assumptions) viewpoint, that's still a large 1 in 20 chance of being wrong. Empiricism can't deal in absolute certainty. Sure, you might be right.

      But I find it interesting that what you use as evidence is also evidence of the great drop in prevalence of measles. After all, measles doesn't suddenly stop becoming highly infectious just because people don't try to be deliberately infected as children. We should be seeing most adults infected by measles, if they don't have some sort of immunity (it's been a while since the measles vaccine was introduced). Similarly, doctors don't suddenly start misdiagnosing measles just because there is a vaccine out there. These changes indicate a sudden large drop in the infectiousness of measles which can be readily explained by the widespread use of the measles vaccine (which according to Wikipedia was first available in 1963 and became part of the MMR vaccine package in 1971). Where's the vast number of infections of people under the age of 40 in the developed world?

    252. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      What would you label Al Gore "the polar caps will be gone in twenty years!!!"

      One of the things that makes you an idiot, not a sceptic is the belief you can just invent a quote based on something you half remember from a denier site.

      Another thing that makes you an idiot is the complete lack of knowledge that the north polar ice cap is indeed shrinking every year.

      A third thing that makes you an idiot is believing that the truth or falseness of AGW depends in any way on what Al Gore says, even if you hadn't invented the quote.

    253. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe that's why over 9000 scientists call the theory of man-made climate change a load of crap.....

      I have a funny feeling it's NOT because they deny science, but rather because they embrace it.

    254. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Your p=0.05 standard is rather weak to"

      My p=0.05? I don't think I am able to communicate effectively to you.
      Here are some keywords, understand these terms and you will understand why you are wrong: Affirming the consequent, transposing the conditional, alternative explanation.

    255. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      There is quite a bit of work being done to understand where all of the heat is going, but that has been discussed on here before.

      That's one way to describe it, and certainly some scientists are inventing some complex hypotheses for that purpose.

      A more simple scenario is that the earth isn't heating as much as expected (which mainly means that the feedbacks aren't as significant as some scientists hoped).

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    256. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I welcome your questioning of the law of gravity, vis a vis your body, your roof, and the distance from there to the ground

    257. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      And here's some keywords: you are ignoring evidence.

    258. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No I am treating evidence as evidence and assumptions as assumptions. This is appropriate, you are elevating assumption ("nothing else could possibly explain such a large effect") to the level of evidence. If you want to use that heuristic, fine, I won't stop you. I am telling you that it is weak.

      Perhaps you are not familiar with the "evidence-based medicine" movement which calls blinded RCTs the "gold-standard" of evidence when testing a treatment. While I disagree with them (observational data can be good if there is a strong theory, making precise predictions, to go along with it), it is a GIANT RED FLAG that no blinded RCT exists for any measles vaccine. The evidence for measles vaccine effectiveness does not even meet the minimum criteria set by those working in that field, which is a much weaker criteria than I personally use.

    259. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where's the vast number of infections of people under the age of 40 in the developed world?

      Possibly somewhere here:
      “This was not a blind study, since the investigators knew which children had received measles vaccineIt seems probable that the occurrence of so much ‘measles-like’ illness in the vaccinated children was a reflexion of the difficulty in making a firm diagnosis of measles in the African child at one visit.”
      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2134550/

      “As only approximately 7% of the clinically-diagnosed cases of measles reported locally turned out to be measles by laboratory testing, there is a need for laboratory confirmation of measles to avoid misidentification of cases and improve disease surveillance.(2)”
      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17609829

      Once again, it is not up to me to fund the studies looking for alternative explanations, it is up to the proponents of the vaccines. If you don't require that of them, they will easily sham you.

    260. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Constantly questioning is running experiments, taking measurements, and trying to model the future and see how well it lines up with reality. Scientists are doing that all the time, and the result

      And the result is that for decades we've overestimated the effect of CO2 and that all the computer models are wrong. If you deny that after the multiple studies have shown it, then you're the denier.

      Well, apart from the rather convenient starting year of 1998:

      Another possible driver of the difference between observed and simulated global warming is increasing stratospheric aerosol concentrations. Results from several independent datasets show that stratospheric aerosol abundance has increased since the late 1990s, owing to a series of comparatively small tropical volcanic eruptions 8 . Although none of the CMIP5 simulations take this into account, two independent sets of model simulations estimate that increasing stratospheric aerosols have had a surface cooling impact of about 0.07 C per decade since 1998 8,9 . If the CMIP5 models had accounted for increasing stratospheric aerosol, and had responded with the same surface cooling impact, the simulations and observations would be in closer agreement

      IOW the article itself points out that the reason for the overestimation was unpredictable high volcano activity. Feel free to create models that either predict the unpredictable, or always predicts high volcanic activity, resulting in underestimated temperature rise for almost all years where that doesn't come true.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    261. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Well, I didn't expect actual studies in actual journals to sway your opinion.

      Errm, he merely isn't swayed by what Tony Wuzzup told you what the studies say - maybe you should actually read them.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    262. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1
      Here is evidence. In 2014, the US had 610 reported cases through mid-November this year. In most of the previous years, reported cases were under 100. Even if we took this high as an annual average, underreported by a factor of ten, and a human lifespan of a century, we get a life time risk of catching measles at 0.2% in the US. Meanwhile let's look at the related disease, chicken pox.

      Note this has a graph showing chicken pox cases consistently over 140,000 per year in the US for two decades prior to 1995, when a vaccine for that was introduced. Since 1999, no year has experienced over 50,000 reported cases and most years exhibit far fewer cases. Eyeballing the graph, I believe I would get roughly 50% of the population experiencing a reported case of chicken pox using the same calculation as above for the pre-vaccination years. This would roughly be the average annual rate of measles, were it not being severely curbed by something.

      Note also that the decline in reported measles cases and the decline in chicken pox cases do not correlate, meaning that it probably isn't a change in human behavior responsible. Similarly, they experience a huge, sharp decline immediately following introduce of the respective vaccines.

      Note also the reported number of cases of measles peaks at almost 800,000 cases in 1958! We have more than three orders of magnitude reduction of reported measles cases in 56 years with a growing population which doesn't correlate with human behavior.

      Perhaps you are not familiar with the "evidence-based medicine" movement which calls blinded RCTs the "gold-standard" of evidence when testing a treatment.

      Again, absence of a blind RCT study doesn't mean the observation is wrong.

      A more than three orders of magnitude change doesn't require blinded RCTs to be observed. The "gold standard" is sufficient, but it is not necessary, to confirm observations that are orders of magnitude in strength. Finally, a blind RCT requires that some people get exposed to measles without the protection of the vaccine (the "controls"). That creates significant suffering and risk of death or major injury in order to confirm a strong signal. What is there to gain scientifically that justifies that price in suffering? I see no justification for it.

    263. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We have more than three orders of magnitude reduction of reported measles cases in 56 years with a growing population which doesn't correlate with human behavior."

      I think we are getting somewhere. Where is the evidence for this statement? That is what I ask for. Show me one paper studying peoples behaviour purposefully spreading measles. Show me another studying how unblinded vs blinded doctors diagnose measles. I have provided quotes indicating it is plausible one of these behavioral effects account for up to 90% of the effect, the effect due to the second is essentially unknown but I find it plausible (assumption in the absence of data, that I looked for, have you?) that such an effect may be very large. Also you realize that percentages scale with order of magnitude right? I.e. 90% of 800k is much larger than 90% of 8k, etc?

      I don't really want to get into chickpox since I have not studied that literature, I will only note that. according to that page, reported cases were dropping before the vaccine was introduced. In 1995 when that page claims 0.6% coverage it was already the lowest ever reported value. I also find it implausible there were only 100-200k cases of chicken pox in the united states per year when nearly everyone I know had it.

    264. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I don't want to oversimplify, but it is quite reasonable - and to me not overly "complex" - to postulate that the models do not properly account for ocean dynamics. It is entirely possible that every single model has it all completely wrong - we've been here before with "global cooling". But back then the models weren't very robust, and you actually had competing models with wildly different predictions.

      Perhaps I'm more comfortable rolling with the science because the science doesn't threaten my ideology. I fully accept that we are probably warming the planet, but I also don't think that humanity will stop burning easy energy resources. As a result, I'd like to see the models applied to planning for the inevitable instead of a Quotidian quest to stop using fossil fuels. We're going to need to do a cost-benefit on things like seawalls for major coastal cities, flood control, and irrigation systems, and I think the models can provide valuable insight.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    265. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Nah, the results have been demonstrated in more than one paper. If you follow that sort of thing, climate science has moved on from saying the models were correct and is now trying to explain why they were wrong.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    266. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      I think we are getting somewhere. Where is the evidence for this statement? That is what I ask for. Show me one paper studying peoples behaviour purposefully spreading measles.

      And what would the point of that paper be, aside from causing a considerable amount of human suffering? You have yet to explain why we should do that. I don't see the point of having a tiny bit more confidence in our vaccine by having a somewhat more rigorous test at such a cost.

      I have provided quotes indicating it is plausible one of these behavioral effects account for up to 90% of the effect

      No. 90% is just one order of magnitude. You have provided quotes that indicate up to one order of magnitude out of more than three orders of magnitude might be due to such effects.

      I also find it implausible there were only 100-200k cases of chicken pox in the united states per year when nearly everyone I know had it.

      Reported cases of chicken pox.

    267. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And what would the point of that paper be, aside from causing a considerable amount of human suffering? You have yet to explain why we should do that. I don't see the point of having a tiny bit more confidence in our vaccine by having a somewhat more rigorous test at such a cost."

      So no one does the blinded RCT to begin with (ie collects reliable evidence), then once weak, possibly confounded, evidence is available it becomes unethical to get the good evidence... Great plan to filter out worthless drugs before deciding to recommend them to 100% of the population!

      "Reported cases of chicken pox."

      So those numbers are off by an order of magnitude or two? There you go, same for measles. There is missing data from the other 3-6 million people who had measles each year during the 800k reported cases/year era. Also you continue to ignore the possible effect of people stopping purposefully spreading measles, which no one has bothered to publish data on but may be very large. More and more as we look into this we find additional reasons the data is simply swamped by possible systematic error that has failed to be addressed.

      Anyway, you will seemingly accept any measles vaccine with very little evidence (we have also ignored the differences between various vaccines). That's your prerogative, but don't pass off your strategy of assumptions = evidence (apparently justified because it was too unethical to get good evidence even when no evidence was available to being with) as good science.

    268. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      So no one does the blinded RCT to begin with (ie collects reliable evidence), then once weak, possibly confounded, evidence is available it becomes unethical to get the good evidence... Great plan to filter out worthless drugs before deciding to recommend them to 100% of the population!

      Where is this weak, possibly confounded evidence? Just because you assert something doesn't make it true. There are too many orders of magnitude of difference to explain with such platitudes.

      At this point, I really don't see the point of continuing this argument. Ignoring a several orders of magnitude bit of evidence just because it doesn't complete a certain ritual is disingenuous.

    269. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just because you assert something doesn't make it true."

      Correct. Just because you assert that people stopping spreading measles could not account for a drastic decrease in reported cases, it does not make it true. We require evidence on this to make an informed decision.

    270. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      He said "One study estimated that it could be completely gone during summer in less than 22 years"

      Yes, he is promoting the idea that the ice caps are going to be gone.

      You can see him claim 5-7 years here (from 2009) :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MsioIw4bvzI

      BTW, it is now 5 years later and there was still ice this summer.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    271. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

      Yes, heaven forbid we actually do research into sustainable nuclear options that aren't 50 years old and managed like tinker toys.

      China and India in race to harness the full nuclear power of thorium

      Chinese scientists urged to develop new thorium nuclear reactors by 2024

    272. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      He said "One study estimated that it could be completely gone during summer in less than 22 years"

      Right, so you admit you're full of shit. We have the additions to your made oup quote of:
      a) "One study".
      b) "estimates" rather than "will be".
      c) "during summer" rather than at all.
      c) 22 years rather than 20.
      d) and now, given the exact quote we have a starting date. 2007. Which means you;re 15 years too early to say it's not going to happen.

      You can see him claim 5-7 years here (from 2009) :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MsioIw4bvzI

      That video shows Al Gore being as conscientious as ever, quoting the science as best he can in a way understandable to the layman.
      Again:
      a) Quoting a study.
      b) In summer.
      c) 75% change.

      Again you are full of shit, claiming things that are not true because you grossly misstate them.

      This is why you're an idiot and not a skeptic. Real skeptics argue with facts. They don't try to deceive. You could learn a lot from Al Gore, not just about AGW, but about integrity.

    273. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Modeling != observation; it's easy to say no AGW opponent has built a model, but that doesn't make it true, when they have built many models that predict more accurately than AGW supporters. The whole crisis is caused by science != post-modern science (or post-normal science). I want my REAL science back!

    274. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      Just because you assert that people stopping spreading measles could not account for a drastic decrease in reported cases

      Yes. Because it's quite clear that people didn't stop spreading measles. The parts of the world that don't have universal immunizations still have serious problems with the disease.

      We require evidence on this to make an informed decision.

      And we have that information. You insist on a particular testing ritual which is not justified in this case due the strength of the observation.

    275. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Nah, the results have been demonstrated in more than one paper.

      Which results? That when you start in 1998, you get less warming? Gee, yes, that is the point of cherry picking that year.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    276. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Which results?

      That the models overestimate warming.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    277. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      ANd the "models" (aka baseless claims) of the deniers underestimate warming. Even in hindsight.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    278. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That doesn't even make sense. If you're interested in science and finding out what is true and accurate, then stick around. If you just want to insult people when facts don't go your way, please leave.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    279. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Agreed, and this is what happens. Anyone who tries to publish a paper can tell you how much fun it is, even for papers that follow the current thinking in a particular field. I work with a couple scientists that published a paper in regards to climate change, and it took two years of sometimes colorfully worded review comments and re-submissions before it as accepted.

      Other times, complete gibberish is accepted into a journal. Getting published is by no means a guarantee of the quality of the work; all it indicates is that the work fits within the world-view of the publisher.

      Exactly - and notice how there are respectable journals, and not so respected journals, the former publish good papers, the other publish complete gibberish - or the stuff that gets widely quoted by deniers.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    280. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      That doesn't even make sense. If you're interested in science and finding out what is true and accurate, then stick around. If you just want to insult people when facts don't go your way, please leave.

      Yeah, like you could teach me about science, you denialist. And no, I'm not going to fucking spout nonsense, if you don't wanna be insulted, stop being stupid.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    281. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The parts of the world that don't have universal immunizations still have serious problems with the disease."

      Go back to those quotes again...Is it the disease or is it misdiagnosis of "measles-like illness"? Has anyone run the experiments to distinguish the two or have they made some assumptions? If it is assumptions, fine, but lets recognize the limitations of the evidence and call a spade a spade.

      I don't know why you are so convinced that something can't matter just because the data is missing .Perhaps you just don't understand how easy it is to get apparently-convincing results like this due to lack of experience. It is not as effective as personal experience getting burned, but check out this page: http://www.tylervigen.com/

      That's probably the real reason a blinded RCT is conspicuously missing. A lot of people/organizations will look like fools if it doesn't work won't they? So no one wants to fund it. And no, it is not an arbitrary ritual to attempt ruling out bias when you can find multiple quotes in the literature claiming bias can have large effects on diagnosis. You accept weak evidence for vaccines.

    282. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      well, nuclear power is one option, but there are ... less dangerous ones. Take a mix of solar, wind, water power (not just dammed rivers and such, also tidal).

      That does not work yet, take Germany as counterexample. With its green energy policy it in 2013 managed in to increase its CO2 emissions while most of europe decreased its emissions, only Denmark, Estonia, Portugal have bigger increase. http://phys.org/news/2014-05-g...

      Of course that is ignoring that in 2013 Germany still emitted less CO2 than any year up to 2008 (for several decades) - when all NPPs still were running at full power.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    283. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      I don't know why you are so convinced that something can't matter just because the data is missing .

      Data is not "missing". It just is of a slightly lesser quality than you would like.

    284. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by leaen · · Score: 1

      [quote] [quote] [qoute] well, nuclear power is one option, but there are ... less dangerous ones. Take a mix of solar, wind, water power (not just dammed rivers and such, also tidal). [/quote] That does not work yet, take Germany as counterexample. With its green energy policy it in 2013 managed in to increase its CO2 emissions while most of europe decreased its emissions, only Denmark, Estonia, Portugal have bigger increase. http://phys.org/news/2014-05-g... [/quote] Of course that is ignoring that in 2013 Germany still emitted less CO2 than any year up to 2008 (for several decades) - when all NPPs still were running at full power. [/quote] Which is again misleading as emissions decreased everywhere in developed world. That drop could be explained by better insulation and other improvements in efficiency.
      If you compare germany with rest of europe then between 2007 and 2012 germany dropped just by 3% while EU average is 12% drop and even USA dropped more. http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/t... Germany does two steps forward, one step back. It could do much better if it had sensible energy policy.

    285. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Are you still questioning gravity?

      I think you've actually made a unintended joke there, because Albert Einstein did exactly that. Newton's model of gravity was the accepted model of gravity for centuries until Einstein came along and showed a new model.

      Only your questioning of climate science isn't akin to Einstein questioning Gravity, but to somebody who flaps his arms and jumps off a roof.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    286. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was trying to find one of those charts of measles-like illness over time to compare to the measles chart. I found more people talking about how unreliable clinical diagnosis is (what that 800k # is based on):

      " Indeed, an average of only 100 cases of measles are confirmed annually [32], despite the fact that >20,000 tests are conducted [28], directly suggesting the low predictive value of clinical suspicion alone. "
      http://jid.oxfordjournals.org/content/189/Supplement_1/S185.full

      So up to 99.5% of clinically diagnosed cases of measles may be something else. They never seem to make the connection that this means the old data is unreliable though... strange. Anyway, lets end this, godspeed.

    287. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I don't care if you insult me.

      But if you don't accept what science says, you're a denialist. And if you don't know what science says, then you're ignorant.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    288. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      If you compare germany with rest of europe then between 2007 and 2012 germany dropped just by 3% while EU average is 12% drop and even USA dropped more. http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/t... Germany does two steps forward, one step back. It could do much better if it had sensible energy policy.

      And if you begin at a date that isn't cherry picked for your argument...

      E.g. http://appsso.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/nui/submitViewTableAction.do?switchdimensions=true, comparing 1990 with 2012, you'll get a drop of 24.76%, with only the UK, Denmark and a couple of East Block states better, the "old" EU at 15% less, and the USA a plus of 26%

      Not to mention that Germany is still a net exporter of energy. IOW you ignored the many steps forward, and only looked at the last three.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    289. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1
      Yeah, why not put yet another couple of trillions into prepping up nuclear power, instead of wasting a couple of millions into the improvement of renewables.

      In Germany, the nuclear power companies are now demanding billions of Euros just to shut down their plants which have operated for decades (long past the original planned running time), and have already cost the tax payers tens of billions to build.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    290. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, you just keep remembering that as Europe gobbles Russian oil to make up the difference in needed energy.

    291. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't help myself... I need to let you know that I don't think the most plausible explanation is that doctors were misdiagnosing measles 90+% of the time in the past. You hit on my preferred explanation much earlier (and no its not that the vaccine is effective), check my assumptions.

    292. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Another denier argument. All models are far from infallible. They're models; an imperfect representation and they always will be since, at least in this universe, since it is impossible to obtain perfect information about a system. The aerodynamic models for jet aircraft are wrong. The models for bridge and building stability are wrong. Every single one of them are wrong. However, just because a model is wrong doesn't mean it isn't useful. All models have errors, and by accounting for those errors a model will still yield predictive skill. Error analysis is very important in modeling and is used constantly to establish everything from structural integrity limits to likelihoods of future droughts. It's a fundamental component of numerical analysis.

      That's not a denier argument. It's perfectly valid to question the models. Just because our "best available evidence" leans one way doesn't make it 100% infallible proof. Not too long ago, scientists figured out they were vastly overstating temperatures over time because they didn't fully understand the heat sinking capability of the oceans (the whole "where's the missing heat?" debate). That variable alone completely rewrote the book on future projections of climate based on current CO2 numbers. Denying global warming may be dumb, but questioning the suppositions and conclusions drawn from the current level of "100% faith in the models" is another. I give different levels of credence to "string theory" and "quantum physics" and "gravity" and "evolution" for very good reasons. Some are rock solid with hoards of reproducible evidence and sustainable models. Others are borderline guesses with models changing annually. Stop pretending that the current "best guess" of scientists is infallible proof.

    293. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Oh, do tell... please name one of these "many models".

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    294. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      So up to 99.5% of clinically diagnosed cases of measles may be something else.

      Just because a test is conducted doesn't imply that there was a clinical diagnosis of measles. Another explanation in today's litigious world is that these doctors were CYA. A measles test is just another insurance-covered fee. Missing an actual case of measles could boost malpractice insurance rates or even cost the doctor their license to operate.

      And what does this have to do with your alleged current underdiagnosis of measles since it supposedly errs strongly in the overdiagnosis of measles by a couple orders of magnitude?

      And really, you are still ignoring the ethics of testing with controls. It means you're deliberately infecting people with a dangerous and infectious disease. What is the justification for this harm? Instead, it's a generally accepted practice to suspend controls in testing when the proposed cure is effective enough

    295. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Really? McKitrick, McIntyre, Don Easterbrook, many others have their papers rejected for one nonsensical reason or another. Why? They don't toe the line of "AGW is the only possible explanation"...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    296. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by leaen · · Score: 1

      If you compare germany with rest of europe then between 2007 and 2012 germany dropped just by 3% while EU average is 12% drop and even USA dropped more. http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/t... Germany does two steps forward, one step back. It could do much better if it had sensible energy policy.

      And if you begin at a date that isn't cherry picked for your argument...

      Question is if german policy of dropping nuclear energy and going all green does help or not? Then you should pick appropriate metric and minimize noise.

      E.g. http://appsso.eurostat.ec.euro..., comparing 1990 with 2012, you'll get a drop of 24.76%, with only the UK, Denmark and a couple of East Block states better, the "old" EU at 15% less, and the USA a plus of 26%

      You added lot of irrelevant noise to get result you want.
      In 1990-2007 germany with its sensible policies was leader in reducing CO2 emissions. In 2007-2012 it decided to drop nuke plants and other states fared better.
      When you combine these two you get that germany was good but that is despite its later policy as other states did not in 7 years to catched lead it made in previous 17 years. If it continued policy of previous 17 years you would get bigger decrease of emissions. BTW you link show 'Invalid session: xtDataset is null.', proof by inacessibility?

    297. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the justification for this harm?

      Not him, but profits, obviously. You said it yourself: there are malpractice insurance and licensing and other external costs involved. If infecting a few people means it'll cost you less or make you more revenue in the long run, you'd be stupid not to do it. Paraphrasing Fight Club/car analogy: if your car has a passenger-harming defect, and the cost of paying for the lawsuits and fines is less than the cost of paying for a recall, you don't do the recall.

      It just isn't the case at the moment, but you never know when things will change. There used to be a time when it's very unprofitable to run an abortion clinic. Over time, some brave entrepreneurs took the risk, and they reaped whatever consequences themselves, profits or losses. Who are the rest of us to judge?

      Maybe some aspiring entrepreneur wants to take the risk with human testing, thinking he can make it big. What any good liberty-loving American should do is either lead him (point him to where he can find human test subjects), follow him (volunteer to be a human test subject), or get out of his way (don't vote for regulations to restrain him)

    298. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by khallow · · Score: 1

      If infecting a few people means it'll cost you less or make you more revenue in the long run, you'd be stupid not to do it.

      "IF". If on the other hand, it doesn't - say because measles has been reduced to a handful of cases per year, then you wouldn't be stupid.

    299. Re: Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      If you compare germany with rest of europe then between 2007 and 2012 germany dropped just by 3% while EU average is 12% drop and even USA dropped more. http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/t... Germany does two steps forward, one step back. It could do much better if it had sensible energy policy.

      And if you begin at a date that isn't cherry picked for your argument...

      Question is if german policy of dropping nuclear energy and going all green does help or not? Then you should pick appropriate metric and minimize noise.

      Sure - but then you should start in the year "dropping nuclear energy" began, not cherry pick one years before.

      E.g. http://appsso.eurostat.ec.euro..., comparing 1990 with 2012, you'll get a drop of 24.76%, with only the UK, Denmark and a couple of East Block states better, the "old" EU at 15% less, and the USA a plus of 26%

      You added lot of irrelevant noise to get result you want. In 1990-2007 germany with its sensible policies was leader in reducing CO2 emissions. In 2007-2012 it decided to drop nuke plants and other states fared better. When you combine these two you get that germany was good but that is despite its later policy as other states did not in 7 years to catched lead it made in previous 17 years. If it continued policy of previous 17 years you would get bigger decrease of emissions. BTW you link show 'Invalid session: xtDataset is null.', proof by inacessibility?

      Nice try, but there were no new NPPs after 1990, so they can't have anything to do with CO2 reduction. Instead it was back then that more and more renewable energy was used.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    300. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 2

      Really? McKitrick, McIntyre, Don Easterbrook, many others have their papers rejected for one nonsensical claim in them or another. Why? They don't toe the line of "AGW is the only possible explanation"...

      FTFY

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    301. Re:Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "IF"

      Yeah, that's what I said.

      The point is that profits is what ultimately "justifies" action, not ethics or morals that somehow it's wrong to test on humans.

  4. Misleading title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although humorous, nothing in the articles mentions skeptics making motions to cease being called skeptics. In fact, it is the exact opposite. Perhaps "Scientists would like media to stop calling science deniers 'Skeptics'" would be a more appropriate title?

    1. Re:Misleading title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you read a different article and a different title from the rest of us.

      Title says "Skeptics would like media to stop calling science deniers "skeptics".

      Article says "As Fellows of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, we are concerned that the words “skeptic” and “denier” have been conflated by the popular media. Proper skepticism promotes scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims. It is foundational to the scientific method. Denial, on the other hand, is the a priori rejection of ideas without objective consideration."

      Title seems pretty accurate.

    2. Re:Misleading title by Layzej · · Score: 1

      The third link, and the page that the statement was published on, is by the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry . They feel that the media is giving undue credibility to the deniers by allowing them to co-opt their name. "The mission of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry is to promote scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims."

    3. Re:Misleading title by Livius · · Score: 1

      You are confusing (perhaps on purpose) the two meanings of skeptic - those with good-faith skepticism, and those who claim to be skeptics but are liars.

  5. Scandalgate! by desertrat_it · · Score: 4, Funny

    And I want all journalists to stop adding a -gate suffix to political scandals! Also, Santa, I would like...

    1. Re:Scandalgate! by rossdee · · Score: 1

      And I would like people to stop calling charity events that last 24 hours [activity]-athon
      The plain of Marathon is a place in Greece, athon is not a suffix meaning an endurance event.

    2. Re:Scandalgate! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently the suffix has existed since 1931. How old are you that this "recent" change annoys you?

      http://dictionary.reference.co...

    3. Re:Scandalgate! by itzly · · Score: 2

      Enough with the complainathon.

    4. Re:Scandalgate! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The neighborhood has been going downhill since the plants started douching up the place with all their oxygen IMO.

    5. Re:Scandalgate! by dave420 · · Score: 1

      English is a descriptive language, not prescriptive, so if a word or suffix is used in a particular fashion by enough people, that becomes the meaning. You should probably get over that, as otherwise you'll have a very annoyed life. Language evolves, as do the meanings of the words we use.

      Further reading

    6. Re:Scandalgate! by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Actually, skeptigate has a nice ring to it. "Some idiot was complaining about some conspiracy theories and I had to skeptigate him until he shut up".

  6. Skeptics should just sit down and shut up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... because - science. And we all know, the science is settled.

    1. Re:Skeptics should just sit down and shut up... by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      Of course science is never settled--not exactly--but the leading explanation for observed facts tends to have *earned its position*. And even when supplanted, it usually remains reasonably accurate as an approximation. Think Newtonian mechanics versus relativity. Relativity theory didn't make Newtonian mechanics stop working on the stuff for which it had already shown itself to be useful. The current mainstream scientific conceptualizations about climate response to various forcings and feedbacks is certainly open to, and in need of, further challenges and refinements. But it's extremely unlikely that any new information is going to make the big picture change very much. The new information will fill in details, shrink error bars, etc.

  7. Let Me Gaze Into My Crystal Ball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Still waiting for the Global Cooling... oops, Global Warming... oops, Climate Change... oops, Climate Disruption "Scientists" to reach a point where they can make a prediction. Until then, it's not a science.

    1. Re:Let Me Gaze Into My Crystal Ball by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      So you're clearly in the denier camp.

    2. Re:Let Me Gaze Into My Crystal Ball by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Global cooling: A fringe belief in the 1970s, and never the prevalent theory (but oft reported as such in media which seeks to lampoon actual scientific discovery)
      Global warming: The increased heat in the Earth's system (in the atmosphere, seas, etc.)
      Climate change: Changes to the climate, which might result from cooling or warming
      Climate disruption: The specific changes to the world's climate which cause disruption to the existing industries and societies

      You playfully confusing these terms only shows your ignorance, and does not cast dispersion on the people who use them, or on the phenomena they describe.

  8. Skeptical of Advocates =/ Skeptic of Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm not skeptical of carbon impact on climate change, and do not want to be associated with those who are.

    That said I'm VERY skeptical of anti-petroleum advocates who brandish solutions which are capitalized on by opportunistic capitalists. Save the rain forest. Don't forget, it's about the rain forest. The policy-driving "warmists" are not wrong about carbon and climate change, but they are using a straw man of anti-science deniers to taint valid arguments against their solutions.

    1. Re:Skeptical of Advocates =/ Skeptic of Science by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1

      As opposed to pro coal and pro oil proponents *eye roll* all the climate scientists are saying is the climate is warming because of our use of fossil fuels and the need to stop using them and find alternatives. Policy is left up to the politicians. However many politicians deny the climate is warming and refuse to do anything about it.

      The straw man is entirely on the side of the pro-petroleum advocates.

    2. Re: Skeptical of Advocates =/ Skeptic of Science by JWW · · Score: 1

      Yeah straw men "only" on the "deniers" side.

      Try proposing nuclear power as a solution to climate change and bask in the light of all the burning strawmen.

    3. Re: Skeptical of Advocates =/ Skeptic of Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I got it now. "nuclear power ... bask in the light of all the burning strawmen". Now
      burn the straw men to keep warm in winter.

  9. Slashdot agenda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why are there so many AGW related stories on Slashdot? This site used to be mostly about computer related topics. The owners of this site are very pro AGW theories and are really pushing it hard.

    To refute this "article", the "deniers" really are skeptics basing their skepticism on real science such as the NIPCC reports which go through the IPCC reports point by point and show how and why they are wrong. They show how the extremely politically motivated and funded IPCC and their religious followers are the real science deniers.

    1. Re:Slashdot agenda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the post count on these types of stories is always high. more peoples, more ads, mo money.

  10. Sure by Drethon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And then we can call AGW proponents the Church of Global Warming. I'm sure people agree far more when name calling is involved.

    1. Re:Sure by dbIII · · Score: 2

      It makes things easier to keep track of because it's clear that the person using such a label knows little about either churches or science so can be written off as pointless noise.

    2. Re:Sure by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      You can call them anything you want, but they are following the scientific method to the extent allowed by the nature of an observational science. They self-identify as scientists. AGW opponents do not have a single model that they can point to, and as far as I know, no prominent AGW opponent is working on a model. They can self-identify as scientists if they want, but they certainly aren't sticking to "their" philosophy.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    3. Re:Sure by khallow · · Score: 1

      AGW opponents do not have a single model that they can point to, and as far as I know, no prominent AGW opponent is working on a model.

      This is just another fallacy. It's not the non-experts' responsibility to do the work of the experts. Why are the experts continuing to come up with bad, biased models and continue to make predictions based on those bad, biased models?

    4. Re:Sure by dave420 · · Score: 1

      They're not comparable, as one side is accepting the scientific method, and the other side is ignoring it. You calling those who believe the results of the scientific method (which gave you the computer you're looking at now) a church only shows your bias, and doesn't reflect poorly on them.

    5. Re:Sure by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Why are the experts continuing to come up with bad, biased models and continue to make predictions based on those bad, biased models?

      I have a very hard time accepting your characterization of every single model ever created as "bad", with no counter-examples of a "good" model. How can you assess the non-expert's criticism if there is no way to test their assertions?

      But you nailed it with "non-experts". Non-expert's opinions are generally not worth as much as an expert's opinion. There are many, many non-experts latched onto this field for ideological reasons. It's like evolution.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    6. Re:Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      even better Church of Climate Change (CoCC) and the alarmist followers CoCC-ups

    7. Re:Sure by khallow · · Score: 1

      I have a very hard time accepting your characterization of every single model ever created as "bad", with no counter-examples of a "good" model.

      I don't have a similar problem accepting your mischaracterization of my argument because I don't accept it at all. If I were speaking of every single model ever created, then I would have said so.

    8. Re:Sure by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      Climate models (i.e., formal models used by climate scientists) have done pretty well, actually. Better than any other means of predicting how the climate will evolve. OTOH, I've heard about how "Global Warming is BS" and that we're entering a cooling phase that's going to prove it for about a decade now; a decade that has seen the record for hottest year broken at least twice, and it looks like 2014 is going to be number three. So yeah, the models continue to need improvement, but they are the best game in town. I challenge you to find a better way to anticipate the changes in the climate over time.

    9. Re:Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.livescience.com/1349-sun-blamed-warming-earth-worlds.html may be of interest to both sides.

      My stance on global warming can be summed up by this, which someone else posted on Slashdot once: http://www.gocomics.com/joelpett/2009/12/13/

      What if the sun, or something extra-solar, is causing global warming? Doesn't matter. We should do what we must (within reason) to reverse it, even if we're wrong about the true cause.

    10. Re:Sure by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Well, looking up the thread, you are an expert in talking completely past a person, I'll give you that.

      I mention that there is no such thing as a model which supports anti-AGW, and you retort that the "experts" are producing biased models. I used my highly advanced deductive reasoning to assume that you meant that the models not supporting the anti-AGW argument, which would of course be all of them. Obviously you only meant SOME of them. How silly of me. Please accept my most sincere apologies and may the Festivus spirit fill you.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    11. Re:Sure by khallow · · Score: 1

      What if the sun, or something extra-solar, is causing global warming? Doesn't matter. We should do what we must (within reason) to reverse it, even if we're wrong about the true cause.

      Nonsense. You now have a system that at best is much harder to control with human action than expected. The solutions that work for a system strongly controlled by human action fail when those conditions no longer hold.

      Nor is there such a compelling reason to do anything about the global warming. A good portion of the environmentalism argument is that global warming is human-induced and hence, should be reversed as an artificial imposition on the world. If it is not human-induced, then the moral compulsion is no longer there.

    12. Re:Sure by khallow · · Score: 1

      I mention that there is no such thing as a model which supports anti-AGW

      You mean the "there's no need to explain what doesn't exist" model? I think you are mistaken.

      I used my highly advanced deductive reasoning to assume that you meant that the models not supporting the anti-AGW argument, which would of course be all of them.

      Then let's speak of these models which actually accurately model current and future climate and stop wasting our time with those that don't.

    13. Re:Sure by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      As you SHOULD know, you cannot test future accuracy.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    14. Re:Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pollution is bad in and of itself. Or is it okay to pollute as long as it doesn't warm the average air temperature?

  11. Oh, great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On slashdot of all sites... I'm sure this is going to go down well.

    For an intelligent, scientific-minded site, there sure are a lot of fucking denialists out there.

    1. Re:Oh, great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think slashdot is full of intelligent, science-minded people, you are very mistaken.

  12. Re:Sounds Nicer by Drethon · · Score: 1

    Very convincing argument.

  13. I'm a Skeptic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Given the corruption in 'science', I'm quite a skeptic. And given the ignorance of most people, especially the kiddies in /., I'm skeptical about being called a skeptic on the interweb. Apparently, completing Intro to Science with a C average qualifies people to be experts.

  14. George Carlin by paysonwelch · · Score: 1

    This sounds like a George Carlin bit.

  15. And instead of "claiming credit" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... the deniers should "accept responsibility".

  16. Why not just call them "non-believers"... by Press2ToContinue · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...and burn them at the stake as witches? That aught to take care of those pesky people who disagree.

    Because scientific theories have always been infallible, haven't they?

    Oh, Science, please go back to the lab and transmute some gold or something.

    --
    Sent from my ENIAC
    1. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by dywolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No they havent been infallible, but when they fall, they fall as the result of evidence based science... ...not cranks with "conclusions based a priori convctions" (to quote the article).

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    2. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, Science, please go back to the lab and transmute some gold or something.

      Sure, give me an accelerator and a reactor and I shall provide thou thy precious.

    3. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. We should burn you. Because you are killing people.

    4. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by PPH · · Score: 1

      But that wouldn't be carbon neutral.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    5. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by ausekilis · · Score: 1

      ...and burn them at the stake as witches? That aught to take care of those pesky people who disagree.

      Oh I wish we could do that. We'd be able to solve many problems at once.

    6. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 0

      Nobody wants to burn anyone at the stake. The whole point is to just say it's valid to totally disregard any input from deniers and carry on with the real work, wasting no more time on pointless pathological debates with them, especially on slashdot. :)

    7. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No they havent been infallible, but when they fall, they fall as the result of evidence based science...

      This is a fascinating claim.

      The CAGW crew are claiming that We Are All Going To Die[TM] due to climate change. Kidding, but they are claiming almost that bad: they say that "forcing functions" and "feedbacks" will combine with the natural greenhouse effect of CO2 and water vapor and such, temperatures will spike up dangerously, and Very Bad Things Will Happen.

      These "forcing functions" and "feedbacks" are not the result of evidence-based science; these come from computer models. And the models from 15 years ago failed to predict the current temperatures; we are now outside the 95% confidence interval of these models.

      So yeah I am a CAGW skeptic. Show me some evidence and I will consider it.

      P.S. The "social engineering" aspects of CAGW are a big turn-off. That sordid game where they secretly colluded to keep skeptical papers out of peer-reviewed journals, and then publicly criticised the papers as not being peer-reviewed... that's not science.

    8. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      Oh I see, when person A observes that person B is not making evidence-based arguments, and suggests that they not be labelled with a term that implies they are making evidence-based arguments, that's similar to person A suggesting that person B be murdered with fire, is it?

    9. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by 0111+1110 · · Score: 1

      You are free to ignore whoever you wish to ignore. However I believe that the AGW crowd have a flawed understanding of what science actually consists of. I happen to believe that science requires comparing an idea against the real world. I "deny" that comparing ideas against a computer model is science.

      This lack of confidence in computer models is I believe a fundamental distinction between those who believe that AGW is "undeniable" and those who believe the hypothesis should be questioned as much as any other unproven idea. Unproven, that is, by comparing the idea with meatspace observations rather than computer simulations that are intended to be 100% perfect replacements for the real world.

      Has some warming occured in the last century based on temperature measurements? Yes. Probably. By a small amount. Less than 1 degree. Does that mean it will continue over the next century or accelerate? That is simply unknown at this time. The only way to know is to wait and take more measurements. Anything else is no better than guessing. It's certainly not how science is done. It is not a viable method to ascertain how closely your idea matches the reality out there in the complexity of the real world.

      --
      Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
    10. Re:Why not just call them "non-believers"... by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 1

      So... don't prepare for a disaster until after the disaster happens. Smart.

      Honestly, who are you to say that we need to wait and take MORE data? You don't know what you are talking about, and a couple vague sentences dismissing all the work of an entire field just shows how disingenuous you are. The whole point of this thread is to point out that no amount of data will convince you, your mind is made up no matter what. You're a classic denier.

      I think it's fine if you really want to "wait and see what happens" as long as you accept financial and criminal liability for the outcome. Maybe that will make you think twice since you clearly lack a moral compass in the first place.

  17. Of all the nerve... by Marginal+Coward · · Score: 2

    By perpetrating this misnomer, journalists have granted undeserved credibility to those who reject science and scientific inquiry.

    How can people who perpetrate misnomers have the nerve to call themselves "journalists"?

    1. Re:Of all the nerve... by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      This post is hilarious +5

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  18. the new word is INFIDEL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you shall be crucified and have your head cut off for questioning Climate Science Dogma!

    I KILL YOU!

    1. Re: the new word is INFIDEL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gaia is ANGRY! That is why her climate is changing ... or she's in menopause and it's just hot flashes.

  19. Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by dfenstrate · · Score: 3, Insightful

    First, pointing a finger and screeching 'DENIER' seems a lot like pointing the finger and screeching 'HERETIC', lending credence to the whole environmentalism-as-a-substitute-religion theory.
    Beyond that, these scientists might find more traction for their beliefs if they could get away from the folks who are peddling 'solutions' for AGW. You know, the activists who want to make energy so expensive that poor people will have to live in dark, cold homes, and gasoline so expensive that they have to stay in those cold, dark homes.
    I imagine, however, that any activist or scientist advocating the use of 'denier/(heritic)' has substituted Gaia for God, and would be very happy to burn their opponents at the stake.
    As for me, I'm not qualified to analyze the science. Instead, I'll consider the matter when the people who say it's a problem act like it's a problem. Until their personal conduct matches their words- buying carbon credits ('indulgences') doesn't count- then it's just a continuation of prior climate panics.

    --
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    1. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by Gilgaron · · Score: 2

      This isn't that, it is actual skeptics wanting cranks called something other than 'skeptics.' A scientist legitimately skeptical about a prevailing theory gets lumped in with creationists and Fox News anchors, which poisons the dialog.

    2. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 1, Troll

      Yeah because people claiming the world is warming because of man's influence haven't been laughed at....seriously pull the stick out of your ass.

      " Instead, I'll consider the matter when the people who say it's a problem act like it's a problem"

      You mean like scientists....how's this the military considered global warming an issue and are working on plans to account for it. Hedge Funds and investors consider global warming an issue and are developing investment strategies to account for it. Only jackasses such as yourself think it's not happening and that you don't have to do anything.

      Let me guess, you don't vaccinated either.

    3. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by dbIII · · Score: 0

      I imagine, however, that any activist or scientist advocating the use of 'denier/(heritic)' has substituted Gaia for God, and would be very happy to burn their opponents at the stake.

      That would be a very dangerous thing for a strawman to do. They may catch fire!

      Yes I get it, let's just ignore experts if it makes us feel better to do so. What a sad and patheticly cowardly "I'm not saying ..." post above. Yes, we get your cowardly dog whistle that climate scientists are useless - or is it that all scientists are useless these days? I'm losing track of the talking points for useful idiots.

    4. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by Layzej · · Score: 3, Interesting

      At some point the media should be called to task for saying something like: "The senator, a prominent round Earth skeptic...", when instead they should just say: "The senator is delusional." Keep in mind that this statement was prepared by the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. Their name is tarnished when science deniers co-opt it. It was not signed by climate scientists - rather it was signed by physicist and science communicators. (and of course the members of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry).

    5. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by Drethon · · Score: 1

      The military has plans for the zombie apocalypse...

    6. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If there's clearly a cliff looming on the horizon, and someone in the car tells us that we're drunk and driving off of it, then perhaps we should pay attention to them. Telling them THEY are the ones who are drunk, comparing them to the Spanish Inquisition, and telling them to not hold us poor folks back maaannn won't stop the cliff from approaching, and if we really do have our foot on the accelerator instead of the brake then we're the passive aggressive fools, not them.

    7. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Oh Layzej, is there anything that would cause you to have an open mind on global warming? What would convince you that it isn't really an issue? Or are you going to have true faith until the end?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    8. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      As mentioned in the article and elsewhere, in climate science like any other science, genuine skepticism is *welcome*! Strongly encouraged, even! There is no parallel here to calling someone who does not share your beliefs a "heretic." This is more a case of looking at someone who *claims* to share your beliefs (skepticism, evidence-based decision making, etc.), noticing that they're behaving in the opposite way (repeating information that has been demonstrated to be wrong, ignoring evidence, and showing extreme credulity towards ideas consistent with their preconceived notions), and suggesting that we stop calling them "one of us" (i.e., someone acting in good faith to follow the evidence wherever it leads).

    9. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      scientists might find more traction for their beliefs if they could get away from the folks who are peddling 'solutions' for AGW. You know, the activists who want to make energy so expensive that poor people will have to live in dark, cold homes, and gasoline so expensive that they have to stay in those cold, dark homes.

      Find me one of these activists for cold, dark homes and hyper-expensive energy. One that's not made out of straw.

    10. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by Layzej · · Score: 1

      It may not be an issue. It depends on how quickly we react and how high climate sensitivity is. Obviously. You seem to have dismissed all but the most optimistic projections?

    11. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Well, that's something anyway, so good job.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    12. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      First, pointing a finger and screeching 'DENIER' seems a lot like pointing the finger and screeching 'HERETIC', lending credence to the whole environmentalism-as-a-substitute-religion theory.

      We should also teach children to bully the kids who aren't vaccinated, by pointing at them and yelling UNCLEAN!

    13. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by catprog · · Score: 1

      Funny I was thinking it was the coal companies who wanted to spend millions to build a grid to get power to the poor rather then a simple solar panel + battery setup

      --
      My Transformation Website
      Kindle Books http://www.catprog.org/rev
      Interactive CYOA http://www.catprog.org/st
    14. Re:Oh boy, rewind to the Spanish Inquisition! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly; real science is not concerned with 'heresy' thats a problem that belongs to religions or political belief systems.
      The simplified messages about global warming we get from 'scientists' are that global warming is entirely man made; that the impact from global warming is entirely negative for everyone; that 'scientists' can predict what effects the warming will have on the climate and weather; that the worlds climate is otherwise unchanging and is naturally benign to humans - until we upset the balance; that reduced energy consumption is the most critical thing we should worry about.
      These dumbed down messages allow politicians to increase taxation; reduce the ammount of energy available to the poor; ignore much more severe forms of environmental pollution; throw up uneconomic wind-mills at our expense; and excuse themselves from planning sufficient power generation capacity for the growing population.
      Even if we agree that global warming is true; and probably is man made; perhaps there are other things to worry about that are more important.
      Scientists stop bringing us sky falling down problems; bring us solutions; go and work on commercial fusion power; develop 3d printers that build useful things out of all this excess carbon; do something useful - instead of telling us to drink less tea and wear three jumpers this winter.

  20. Please add this to the list by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    * That cheating script kiddy in your game is not a hacker unless they actually wrote the cheat.

  21. My suggestions by EagleRider70 · · Score: 1

    My suggestions would be "fool", "crazy", "deluded" and "zealot".

  22. Denying Catastrophism, not Science by cirby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When you actually look at the science itself, it's pretty clear. And nowhere near what the proponents claim.

    For that matter, when you look at the history of AGW catastrophism, you see a lot of, well, denial. By the people whose predictions failed miserably.

    So far we have NOT seen an increase in the number and size of hurricanes. We have also NOT seen an increase in droughts, an increase in tornado numbers or strength, a decrease in winter snow, or a number of other things. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of events that were predicted as part of CAGW that have not happened (and in many cases, the reverse has come to pass).

    We still have a fairly icy polar ice cap (the "sciency" prediction from just a few years back was that it would effectively be gone by now).

    We're also about 0.1 C below the low-end value of over 95% of predictions for global temperatures (and 0.5 C below the "most probable" number). That in itself invalidates CAGW as a scientific theory.

    Yes, the Earth has warmed. Yes, some of it has been due to CO2 increases by humans.

    But the amount - and the results - are both badly blown predictions. That means that the followers of CAGW are, by and large, denying science because it didn't give them the result they wanted.

    1. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm surprised you're on +5 at the moment. I'm a skeptic, for a few reasons, such as:

      As you say, none of the predictions have come to pass.
      I'm skeptical that we can rely on the accuracy thermometer readings from a hundred years ago, especially as the surrounding areas will have changed ( towns encroaching, etc ).
      The hockey stick graph.

      I call myself a skeptic, not a denier, because if the predictions do start coming true then I'll be open to changing my opinion. Until then, I wont.

    2. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Back to reality, we have seen more typhoons in Asia. Just because the jet stream shifted and the Eastern US hasn't gotten hit, doesn't mean that storms are weakening around the world. There have been major droughts in many places around the world, not just California & Texas. Snow levels have fallen in Europe, but the difference between snow and rain is only a few degrees. And the ice cap is still shrinking in the arctic, and it's not that it will be gone, but the northwest passage will be open and that it will continue to melt faster as the water absorbs more energy than the ice in the Summer. And the ice is only expanding in the Antarctic because fresh water freezes faster than salt water.

    3. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Scottingham · · Score: 1

      Could it be possible that the lack of increases in droughts, hurricanes, etc are due to an unforseen buffering effect (or underestimated buffering capacity)? Once the buffer is overwhelmed a whole cascade of 'bad things' could happen in relatively quick succession.

    4. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Always a buffer and never a stream.

    5. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by cirby · · Score: 1

      Actually, over the last few years, you haven't seen more typhoons, in the numbers that would be necessary to make the predictions correct. There were going to be a LOT of tropical cyclones, and a lot stronger, worldwide. They're trying to find excuses, but they were still wrong.

      The kicker is that, in "total cyclone energy," the planet as a whole is well off the peak of the 1990s - more than 1/3 lower in total energy.

      We're also well off the mark in total number of major storms - about 25% below what we saw per year in 1997, for example.

      No, North America isn't being missed because of the jet stream, that's just silly. The jet stream has been all over the place, and even the meteorologists were surprised by the lack of storms, give that we had good conditions for them in several years.

      "Many droughts around the world," yes, but not as many as there have been historically. We've actually seen a DECREASE in drought impact, worldwide, since the middle of the century. Again, the opposite of CAGW predictions.

      The ice cap is NOT shrinking. You're a few years out of date on that one.

      The Antarctic isn't gaining ice because of "fresh water" - it's gaining ice because it's COLD. Again, in the face of CAGW predictions. They "found" some warming - which, oddly enough, only showed up right next to the bases, where the thermometer readings were skewed by the humans in the area. Once you get a couple of miles away from the airfields and heated buildings, the warming isn't there.

    6. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by khallow · · Score: 1

      Have you considered applying to work for NASA, the Weather Service, Harvard or the U.N.? You single-handedly disproved tens of thousands of scientists, studies and models in mere sentences. I see high potential for you. Particularly in the field of meteorology. Or remote sensing.

      And this is typical of rebuttals - an argument from authority. Reality itself is disproving much of what has been claimed, allegedly by tens of thousands of scientists (though where's the evidence for that?).

      Maybe skeptics should be running a portion of this show. All they're missing is some domain knowledge.

    7. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're mixing science reports with media sensationalism. We had the same nonsense when it was discovered ice ages are periodic in the 70s. The media ran off with the snippet proclaiming the sky is falling as we're heading for another ice age. None of the scientific literature made any such claims. We see exactly the same thing today with climate change.

    8. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by khallow · · Score: 1

      Find the buffer then. And show that the buffer can be overwhelmed in the way you claim to generate the harmful cascade you mention.

    9. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So far we have NOT seen an increase in the number and size of hurricanes. We have also NOT seen an increase in droughts

      NY and California sure have.

    10. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of it has been due to CO2, not just some, but the majority. That is not in debate.
      All of that CO2, or other GH gases, comes from humans. That also is not in debate: humans add more than 1300x as much CO2 on a yearly basis than the natural world does. The single largest uncompensated CO2 source of the natural world is volcanoes, which produce an average of 0.3 billion tons of CO2 per year. By contrast humans emit more than 40 billion tons per year, and the number is only increasing.

      You simply cannot expect to add that much energy to the atmosphere and not expect a change.
      Temperatures have been rising, continuously. Oceanic and atmospheric energy is increasing.

      Oh, and yes, while JUST hurricanes may have been decreasing, "hurricanes" only occur in the north atlantic and only hit the US.
      but cyclonic oceanic systems as a whole (which includes all such systems worldwide) have been increasing: http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/climo/...

      Droughts: maybe you havent been paying attention, but the rate of droughts in the US has been increasing steadily. its also been increasing in europe and the mediterranean. its been increasing in central asia. and africa.

      The ice cap: yes its still cold, but that hardly proves anything. Know what does prove something? that 76% of the ice that was there in 1979, no longer is. The arctic polar ice has lost more than 75% of its mass since 1979.

      In antarctica sea ice is slightly increasing....but that would be expected if the salinity of the seawater is decreasign due to an influx of fresh water, that can freeze at higher temperatures.

      and where is that fresh water coing from? from Antacrtic land ice, which is melting at a rate many times larger than the rate of increasign sea ice. Imagine a block of ice....the size of Manhattan...and 3 miles thick. Thats how much ice is melting from Antarctica each year.

      as for predictions, the earth is actually right in between the two most likely scenarios predicted.

      Blown predictions?
      Buddy, they havent been wrong yet.
      You however havent posted a single correct thing yet.

    11. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by dywolf · · Score: 1

      not insightful.
      not factual.

      just more drivel backed by nothing but what comes out the south end of a northbound bull.

      frankly i get tired of posting the same links to the same actual facts and actual science over and over and over and over and over and over and over again, cause idiots like this, dont take the time to actually learn about what they are talking about. and then they spout more wrong nonsense. and they get modded insightful for it, because the mod system here is a joke.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    12. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by cirby · · Score: 1

      The problem is that when they first came up with CAGW as a theory, they needed big results to make it more dramatic - so they tossed out pretty much all of the negative feedbacks, and emphasized the positive ones.

      They assumed a huge positive feedback from water vapor, literally tripling the observed effect of CO2. Due to that, we should have seen a big increase in relative AND absolute humidity over the last two decades. Didn't happen.

      There's one "buffer."

      They also used a very, very weak cloud model, which would have given them a big negative feedback.

      There's another.

      Those two account for a lot of the discrepancies between models and real-world effects, but there are other "buffers" we keep finding out about.

    13. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      We still have a fairly icy polar ice cap (the "sciency" prediction from just a few years back was that it would effectively be gone by now).

      You should really provide citations for this kind of thing.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    14. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Yeah! who cares what experts say, with their data, and measurements, and observations of the real world!
      Even though theyre measuring the real world, reality totally disproves them! somehow!
      Experts! Who needs em?

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    15. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by dywolf · · Score: 1, Informative

      Nearly everything you just said is blatantly untrue.

      The Arctic ice cap IS shrinking.
      Its mass loss is an undebatable fact.
      The total volume and mass of ice is only 25% of what it was in 1979. That's not up for debate. That is a fact.
      When plotted, the trend is clearly downward. Ignorant people have been siezing on the fact that "2013 and 2014 were higher than 2012 before" while ignoring hte overall trend, or the fact that 2012 was a record low, and the past few years while higher than 2012, are still lower than the plotted average. it IS shrinking.
      http://www.skepticalscience.co...

      Actually yes.
      There is more sea is because the water is freshening. Again: not a debateable fact. The less salty water is, the higher the temperature it can freeze at.
      To say its freezing because its cold is to ingore the fact that the sea ice is increasing, EVEN AS THOSE REGIONS ARE WARMING, both air and sea temps.
      On its own warming environment cannot produce more ice, thats not how ice works. It is only by accounting for the chainging composition of the freezeing water, specifically its salinty, that we can explain how ice can increase at the same time that both air and sea temperatures in the area are rising. Its because of fresh water inputs from the melthing land ice chainging hte local salinity of the sea water.
      http://www.skepticalscience.co...
      http://www.skepticalscience.co...

      And you pulled out the same tired of myth about the "heat islands." and "the heat isnt there."
      guess what, the scientists arent dumb. they were after all the ones who first noticed the heat island effect. and its already been shown several times that even removing the data from said heat island (of which the sensors make up less than 25% of the total data; ie, most sensors arent subject to the phenonona youre referencing), the warming trend is still readily present, and it doesnt even effect the overall plotted data or trendlines. notice: not just compensating for the HIE, but wholly and completely removing those data points from the data, and it doesnt affect the overall picture.
      http://www.skepticalscience.co...

      In short: you're full of it and dont have a clue what youre talking about.
      But that doesnt stop you from spouting the same myths over and over without any scientific evidence.
      And as long as you do, I'll be there, beating you over the head with the facts drawn from actual science and observation.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    16. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Scottingham · · Score: 1

      I'm not disagreeing with your premise at all. Not even with the original shaky evidence of the models. To some degree the more dramatic statements were more from the media reporting than the research itself. Or a university press release.

      For every new bit of information we get the models get better. To assume they're perfect to start is silly. To assume that if it slightly wrong it must be completely thrown out is also silly. Incremental improvements!

      I offer no evidence to my claims. I don't even claim them as claims, just idle speculation. Personally, I don't care who or what did it or why it's going to happen, but that it will eventually happen.

    17. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by cirby · · Score: 1

      Yes. Every year or two, the models get better - because they keep lowering their predicted effects to match reality.

      By the time 2100 rolls around, we'll have a whole batch of "corrected" models showing how the in-progress ice age was caused by CO2!

      They've already pretty much had to admit that the sea level increases they predicted were made up out of whole cloth. Instead of several meters, the oceans will be about a foot deeper by 2100. Maybe. Could be less - the error bars are bigger than the observed effects so far.

    18. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those who have looked at the science prefer to be referring to those who refuse to accept the reality of climate change, and instead refer to them by what they really are: global warming alarmists.

    19. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by khallow · · Score: 1

      Yeah! who cares what experts say, with their data, and measurements, and observations of the real world!

      Maybe you should care. Especially when what the experts say is at odds with their data, measurements, and observations.

    20. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Hardhead_7 · · Score: 1

      Here's the original Hocky Stick graph (in dark blue) compared to actual temperature measurements (in red). Keep in mind, this was made in the '80s, and our models are even better now. So, I assume you're done being a skeptic now?

      Bwahahaha! Just kidding. I know you're really an ideologue pretending (how could you not be at this point?) to be "skeptical." This won't change anything.

    21. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Xyrus · · Score: 3, Informative

      When you actually look at the science itself, it's pretty clear. And nowhere near what the proponents claim.

      For that matter, when you look at the history of AGW catastrophism, you see a lot of, well, denial.

      No credible scientists is predicting the end of the world. Nor have the ever done so. Our actions have consequences. The consequences are going to cause problems. That's it.

      By the people whose predictions failed miserably. So far we have NOT seen an increase in the number and size of hurricanes.

      I guess you don't read, or have really poor comprehension skills. The latest IPCC report indicates that BY THE END OF THIS CENTURY (that is, 2100) that Atlantic hurricanes will decrease in number but increase in strength. Pacific hurricances (typhoons) are expected to increase in number and increase in strength. Seeing as how we are a long ways away from 2100 and these projections were made just few years ago, your claim is completely unsupported.

      We have also NOT seen an increase in droughts

      Again, the projections are for the END OF THIS CENTURY. Your claim is unsupported.

      an increase in tornado numbers or strength

      The climatology of tornadoes is not mentioned in any credible research I'm aware of. Mesoscale cyclone generation is far to small to be picked up with any reasonable skill in climate models. Straight from the IPCC report There is insufficient evidence to determine whether trends exist in small scale phenomena such as tornadoes, hail, lighting, and dust storms.

      a decrease in winter snow

      Actually, snow cover is supposed to increase then decrease by the end of the century. The increase in snow is a result of increased water vapor. The water vapor increase will be felt before the temperatures become warm enough to decrease overall snow cover. But again, the decrease is by 2100.

      There are dozens, if not hundreds, of events that were predicted as part of CAGW that have not happened (and in many cases, the reverse has come to pass).

      Complete bullshit. Climatological projections are for decades into the future. You're not going to see changes in span of a handful of years. Go ahead and try to find a peer reviewed research paper that we are supposed to have any statistically significant deviations on a sub decadal scale. You won't find one.

      We still have a fairly icy polar ice cap (the "sciency" prediction from just a few years back was that it would effectively be gone by now).

      Bullshit. The modelling consensus in the reviewed literature has a projection that the arctic will have an ice free summer by 2050. Some models have this happening by 2035. But not a single credible reviewed source has ever made any claim that the arctic would have an ice free summer by now.

      We're also about 0.1 C below the low-end value of over 95% of predictions for global temperatures (and 0.5 C below the "most probable" number). That in itself invalidates CAGW as a scientific theory.

      Bullshit. Your ignoring short term weather impacts on global temperatures as well as ignoring oceanic heat content and simply looking at surface temperature. Again, if you read the section in the IPCC on how the models work and what the projections actually represent.

      But of course, you're already ignoring the fact that climatological significance is measured over multi-decadal periods so I guess I shouldn't be surprised.

      Yes, the Earth has warmed. Yes, some of it has been due to CO2 increases by humans. But the amount - and the results - are both badly blown predictions.

      Only if your completely ignorant on the topic, which you have shown yourself to be.

      That means that the followers of CAGW are, by and large, denying science because it didn't give them the result they wanted.

      Why the fuck would anyone want global warming to happen?

      --
      ~X~
    22. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      No credible scientists is predicting the end of the world. Nor have the ever done so

      Well yes, actually they have. Here's one saying that the oceans will boil off. Quote: "that's it for all the species on this planet." That's James Hansen, one of the leading climate scientists in the world.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    23. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      No credible scientists is predicting the end of the world. Nor have the ever done so

      Well yes, actually they have. Here's one saying that the oceans will boil off. Quote: "that's it for all the species on this planet." That's James Hansen, one of the leading climate scientists in the world.

      Uhh. Either you are lying by massively miss-representing what he actually says, or you are actually to dumb to understand it. Either way, you should stay as far away as possible from discussions about anything, not just climate science, because you are either morally or intellectually corrupt.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    24. Re:Denying Catastrophism, not Science by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Thanks, but you're an utter moron. I don't care what you say. In fact, I'm amazed you manage to put two letters together, and congratulate you for that.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  23. Global Warming Skeptics??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2 points: 1. Why do these Global Warming studies don't take into account things outside of our environment, for example the sun goes through 11 year solar cycles which does effect our weather.

    2. Wasn't Al Gore getting paid millions upon millions of dollars from companies to promote Global Warming? There is an interesting Bloomberg article titled "Gore Is Romney-Rich With $200 Million After Bush Defeat" about all the money this guy had made.

    1. Re:Global Warming Skeptics??? by dywolf · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They dont account for the sun?
      Son, that the was among the first things they looked at.
      And theyve looked at it several times since.
      It's not the sun, son.
      If it was the sun, we would be cooling right now.

      The 11yr cycle bit is also misleading: there is some periodicity, but there is a lot of noise in that signal, as shown in this graph (which also conventiently shows that temperatures, and solar output have been moving in opposite directions for the past 35 years): http://www.skepticalscience.co...
      From: http://www.skepticalscience.co...

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    2. Re:Global Warming Skeptics??? by cirby · · Score: 2, Informative

      They dont account for the sun?
      Son, that the was among the first things they looked at.
      And theyve looked at it several times since.
      It's not the sun, son.
      If it was the sun, we would be cooling right now.

      The 11yr cycle bit is also misleading: there is some periodicity, but there is a lot of noise in that signal, as shown in this graph (which also conventiently shows that temperatures, and solar output have been moving in opposite directions for the past 35 years): http://www.skepticalscience.co...
      From: http://www.skepticalscience.co...

      It's the sun. And no, according to the guys who actually study this sort of thing, we're not far enough into the solar minimum to be in an actual cooling phase yet. Give it a couple more years.

      No, the CAGW fans didn't look at the sun "first" - and they keep looking everywhere else. I had a climate scientist angrily tell me that "insolation is a constant!" Not according to the astronomers, it isn't.

      What's even more fun is that, even if you treat total solar irradiance as a (very wobbly) constant, you have moderate variations in the frequencies of light that make up that "constant." On big variable is the amount of UV light that makes up sunlight - and (again, oddly enough), that variation has a strong match to global warming.

      Some of the CAGW folks looked at the number of sunspots (after the skeptics pointed out the Sun as a possible driver) - but that's not the cycle to look for. It's actually a combination of several cycles, and the 11 year cycle is pretty much the least of those.

      One more thing: if you're interested in following the ACTUAL debate over CAGW, stay away from skepticalscience. They're deeply dishonest, and have a strong tendency to delete any posts that argue against CAGW in any way.

    3. Re:Global Warming Skeptics??? by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 0

      Wow if only the world knew of your great intellect and important findings! You should issue a press release so that all those climate scientists (MORONS!) could stop wasting our taxpayer dollars. Boy am I relieved, you've cleared it all up in two sentences.

    4. Re:Global Warming Skeptics??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep in mind that the skepticalscience site that you're quoting is actually a warming alarmist site.

      P.S. Or is your graph showing that the temperature rise in 1910 caused the solar change in 1930, and the cooling in 1940 caused the solar change in 1960?

    5. Re:Global Warming Skeptics??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any chance you can post a few links with further information on what you're detailing here?

  24. Like watching a train wreck by Drethon · · Score: 1

    Or is it more like playing with matches around gasoline? I'm going to go make the popcorn and sit back and watch now. Anyone want to join me?

  25. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most people don't even understand what the argument/debate is about,

    Maybe that has something to do with "skeptics" constantly pointing at stuff like this and pretending it is the entire argument for AGW. There will always be some idiot promoting an idea that can be used a strawman, but countering them doesn't mean you've countered the idea, especially when there is a rather obvious pool of more serious stuff in the journals than random media and blog posts.

  26. Skeptics and Deniers by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Funny, because the science that I learned about in college was ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned.

    Exactly.

    A skeptic will ask questions, and will pay attention to the answers, open to the possibility of their views being changed by evidence. That's science.
    A denier will pretend to ask questions, but with no real interest in the answers: their opinions are already set, and won't be changed. That's not science.

    Deniers pretend to be skeptics. However, they are actually exactly the opposite: the distinguishing feature of deniers is not skepticism, but credulity-- they seen to credit pretty much anything they hear (or read on a blog somewhere)-- if it supports their pre-existing opinions.

    (Amusingly, Fred Singer wrote an article making that exact point: "Deniers are giving us skeptics a bad name.")

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by Drethon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And (according to the article) it is better to assume such questioners are deniers rather than skeptics.

    2. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by bigpat · · Score: 2

      I don't believe people are attacking climate science primarily based on their own preconceived beliefs. At this point most of the "debate" is about politics, economics and self interest. And very few people on either side seem truly motivated by what will happen 200, 100 or even 50 years from now.

      If carbon emissions are an overriding concern, then we could relatively easily replace most of our carbon emissions with a large concerted nuclear power build-out in the next twenty years. One which would give us hundreds of years of power supply without carbon emissions just based on Uranium alone. We know nuclear power is relatively safe and a workable solution compared with the more speculative technologies or draconian economic and population contractions that have been talked about.

      Or we could just wait and see what comes down the pipeline in terms of new more efficient and more workable energy production technologies, which seems to be really what we are doing de facto.

      Either way spinning our wheels in this "debate" seems like a deliberate distraction that all sides are using to distract from the fact that we don't seem close to an agreeable solution to the problem.

    3. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by Hussman32 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The issue with AGW believers (which I assume is the opposite of denier) is that they claim they have demonstrated scientific rigor in their hypothesis test when if their standards were applied to any other physical science they would be laughed out of the room. That claim can be based solely on the degrees of freedom that are assumed constant when it is clear they are not. For example, have we excluded the possibility of rising temperature changes are not affected by:

      • Undersea volcanic activity--There are about 30,000 submarine volcanoes, Each of these will introduce significant quantities of heat and sulfuric acid, both of which would cause CO2 to be liberated to the atmosphere and also raise temperatures. There isn't even an accurate accounting of all of them, so it is not possible to say this degree of freedom is constant and can be ignored.
      • Adsorption of IR by water vapor--Articles claim this is constant, but if we have had a drought in California for the last three years, undoubtedly that would arise from a local change in humidity, which would affect local attenuation and weather results.
      • Variations in fish/plantkon/seaweed population--There are significant variations in local biology populations from year to year, and each of these affects the overall carbon balance. Considering the error estimates of these large values where gigatons of carbon are produced or not, our contribution can be within these error bars.

      Note clearly that I'm not saying AGW is wrong or right, proper research is needed, but the politics involved has made it difficult to have actual scientific discussions. Comments like those proposed by TFA only make the situation worse.

      --
      "Who are you?" "No one of consequence." "I must know." "Get used to disappointment."
    4. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Deniers pretend to be skeptics. However, they are actually exactly the opposite: the distinguishing feature of deniers is not skepticism, but credulity-- they seen to credit pretty much anything they hear (or read on a blog somewhere)-- if it supports their pre-existing opinions.

      And how is that different from the True Believer? Very few people who claim to worship at the altar of science behave in any way notably differently - tell 'em it's Science and if it supports their pre-existing opinions they adopt it as Gospel. Many people who claim to respect Science as little better than cargo cultists.

    5. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 1

      Equating someone who is as you call it a "True Believer" with a denier is a logical fallacy. A True Believer believes in the scientific process, the scientific establishment, peer review, outside review, etc. There is every reason to believe in those things because they all require expertise and experience and are tested. A denier rejects all of these things outright relying on nothing except their own hubris that somehow they in their ignorance know better than everyone else who is qualified and experienced. Being a True Believer is logical and common sense. Being a denier is idiotic and illogical.

    6. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

      For example, have we excluded the possibility of rising temperature changes are not affected by:

      Yes! FFS! Yes, we have excluded those possibilities, or at least found the boundaries of the plausible effect sizes, and determined that they are not where the action is! Stop assuming that climate scientists haven't been thinking about the forces that might plausibly affect climate! That is what climate scientists do!

    7. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only the first of these "the scientific process, the scientific establishment, peer review, outside review, etc." is actual science. The rest is social and can in turn be equated with politics / religion and the associated "True Believers". With respect to the scientific process, climate science will be stuck at "Form an explanatory hypothesis" for our lifetimes as its not possible to do an experiment to test the hypothesis. An no the computer models do not count as "having done an experiment", the computer models are just the hypothesis expressed in code. It's necessary to do a experiments in the real world that show the hypothesis hasn't been falsified before it can be reasonably used for prediction.

    8. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by Hussman32 · · Score: 1

      How can those degrees of freedom be excluded when the data aren't acquired? More importantly, how can any climate model be considered rigorous when all terms of the Navier-Stokes, heat equation, diffusion/convection of mixtures, and radiation equations are non-zero, and hence unsolvable with the most complex numerical methods? I work in multi-dimensional transport modeling, and even relatively simple closed systems cannot be solved...the assumptions made for climate modeling closure negate the functionality of the model at this time. As HPC develops, it will improve.

      Note that I'm not saying don't study climate, it's a valid science. But if you are a scientist, you will listen to the criticisms of fellow scientists and address them with demonstrable facts instead of asking the media to label your peers with pejorative terms.

      --
      "Who are you?" "No one of consequence." "I must know." "Get used to disappointment."
    9. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 1

      You're likening the entire scientific establishment to some sort of conspiracy or cult of personality. It's the complete opposite. You are not some lone brave maverick who just happens to have the right answer, and all the climate scientists are suffering from self-indulgent group-think.

      I know this world is scary and complex, and things are changing so rapidly that you are scared a lot, but this sort of comforting self-delusion you wallow in doesn't just help you, it negatively affects everyone else because your denial adds to the cacophany of doubters that keep us from acting as soon as we need to, and threatens the lives of countless people in the long run. It's incumbent upon you to overcome your fear and accept that climate scientists know what they are doing, and playing dice with people's lives is not something you should do to keep yourself sane.

      Just give your quiet acquiescence and let us do the what needs to be done. It will if anything only be a minor inconvenience to you in the long run. A few more cents in tax for awhile. Isn't that worth it if you don't have to lift a finger, and any chance that something bad could happen is quashed?

    10. Re:Skeptics and Deniers by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Deniers pretend to be skeptics. However, they are actually exactly the opposite: the distinguishing feature of deniers is not skepticism, but credulity-- they seen to credit pretty much anything they hear (or read on a blog somewhere)-- if it supports their pre-existing opinions.

      And how is that different from the True Believer? Very few people who claim to worship at the altar of science behave in any way notably differently - tell 'em it's Science and if it supports their pre-existing opinions they adopt it as Gospel. Many people who claim to respect Science as little better than cargo cultists.

      Sure, whatever you say. As long as you admit that all deniers are nothing but.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  27. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    The science is on the skeptical side of the CAGW argument.

    No, it's not. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

  28. In other news...this political hit piece is b.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People who actually use the scientific method to poke holes into the GW religion get called science deniers. Meanwhile, GW fanatics don't use the scientific method or even know what that is but keep quoting random stuff on the internet.

  29. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    The science is on the skeptical side of the CAGW argument.

    I'm not sure how Citizens Against Government Waste is relevant here, but, indeed, science is always on the skeptical side. That skepticism is expressed by making calculations, making measurements, doing experiments, and learning about the physical world. Making models and testing those models is what scientists do; it is what climate scientists have been doing for a century.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  30. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wikipedia is not a scientific organization. Please see this link to 1350+ peer reviewed articles. http://www.populartechnology.net/2009/10/peer-reviewed-papers-supporting.html Once again you are not actually siting any science.

  31. the proper term by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to describe people who believe in climate change is: conspiracy theorists

  32. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

    People modded this up and called it "insightful"?!? The science is firmly on the side of the current and ongoing several decades-long (so far) warming trend being attributable entirely or very nearly entirely to human activity, mostly the burning of fossil fuels. Arguing that "skeptic" is the wrong term for someone who flatly denies science is not an emotional plea. I don't recall ever seeing anyone announce themselves to be "true believers." The use of "sheeple" makes me wonder if the parent comment is trolling, but either way the comment is wrong in almost every way, and anything but "insightful."

  33. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://media.giphy.com/media/bq8GnlpeKKkdq/giphy.gif

  34. In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Pro-Life people would like the media to call Pro-Choice people, "Selfish Baby Killers."
    Pro-Choice people would like the media to call Pro-Life people, "Bullying Woman Haters."
    PETA would like the media to call everybody else, "Animal Haters."
    Republicans would like the media to call Democrats, "asshats."
    Democrats would like the media to call Republicans, "asshats."

  35. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am sure you are being silly but just in case. CAGW = Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming.

  36. Fine then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scratch "skeptic", use "idiot" instead.

  37. Not a reasonable complaint by AlecC · · Score: 1

    I am afraid that, as I use the language, deniers are skeptics. Illogical or irrational skeptics, maybe, compared to the rational skeptics that the complainants would like to reserve the word for. Denying the evidence of your eyes is both skeptical and sometimes foolish.

    --
    Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
  38. Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    The term Cracker is much more descriptive, draws a distinction between the two but, just never seemed to catch the ear of the media darlings the put on the news.

    The problem is that the term " cracker " is already well established in use, a derogatory term referring to white people from the rural south.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    1. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by dcollins117 · · Score: 4, Funny

      The problem is that the term " cracker [npr.org] " is already well established in use, a derogatory term referring to white people from the rural south.

      We prefer to be called "Saltine-Americans".

    2. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by tiberus · · Score: 1

      I find it very difficult to be offended by someone referring to me as a cracker, I'd have to stop laughing first.

    3. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I find it very difficult to be offended by someone referring to me as a cracker, I'd have to stop laughing first.

      That's your White Privilege (TM) talking.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    4. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, its because it is just a word. I do my best to not be offended by someone using a derogatory word about me. There is just no point in getting worked up about it. Sticks and stones and all of that good stuff.

    5. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being intelligent enough to not be offended by mere word is a white privilege. Nigger have no choice but to be offended, they are unprivileged.

    6. Re: Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by jd2112 · · Score: 1

      I used to be a cracker but now I have a lot of money. Would that make me a Ritz-American?

      --
      Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
    7. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      It is derived from the sound a whip makes, not the food product. A cracker is the person who would enforce discipline and "encourage" work from the slaves.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    8. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Cracker as a term predates slavery in the US; it actually predates the whole country. See the crackers on wikipedia or The Secret History Of The Word 'Cracker' for an outline of the theories and history here. There was a large enough intersection between white slave owners and the white people called crackers that it probably helped popularize the term, but they were not the same group.

    9. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that is his SJW (TM) talking....

    10. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      #triggerwarning #microaggression

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    11. Re:Crackers and milk [Re:News at 11..] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Words do far more damage than sticks and stones. How many people did Hitler personally kill?

      Punch me and I'll probably heal. The brain is a far more vulnerable organ.

  39. It's a strange world we live in! by MagickalMyst · · Score: 0

    "Climate Deniers" is a bit of a misnomer. There are very few people who don't believe that the climate is changing. One would have to be quite an ignorant fool to believe such a thing.

    The debate is really over what's causing the change. If you've lived for 25+ years then you know that the weather patterns are very different from when you were a child.

    "Warmists" will tell you that climate change is caused by humans. Period. These are often the same people who are pushing the big 'carbon tax' scam, by suggesting that paying money to some organization is actually going to fix the problem! But in the real world, money doesn't solve problems. Solutions solve problems.

    If there is too much carbon in the world, then the first thing humans should do is stop cutting down all of the trees - or at least impose heavy restrictions on deforestation. How much rain forest has been destroyed in the last 100 years? Trees 'breathe in' CO2 and 'breathe out' oxygen, so to speak. I'm no scientist, but logic would dictate that severe deforestation is responsible for a large part of the CO2 increase. Additionally, human pollution, industrialization and the war machine contribute tremendously to global CO2 levels.

    That said, carbon is not some evil gas that suddenly appeared on earth. It is a part of the ecosystem, part of nature. It is a part of our symbiotic relationship with mother earth.

    The world may be warming a little more and the causing a change in climate in part due to CO2 levels. But the reality is that we do not live in a static world. The earth was once hot enough for dinosaurs to roam the earth. Then the ice age killed them. The ice melted, and the world began getting warmer.

    Welcome to present day.

    --
    Political correctness is really just herd psychology pushed by insecure people who desperately seek social conformity.
    1. Re:It's a strange world we live in! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A voice of reason. Thank you.

      Captcha: Inquiry

    2. Re:It's a strange world we live in! by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

      "Climate Deniers" is a bit of a misnomer. There are very few people who don't believe that the climate is changing. One would have to be quite an ignorant fool to believe such a thing.

      Quoting from what the article actually says, distinguishing deniers from skeptics:
      Skepticism is all about critical examination, evidence-based scientific inquiry, and the use of reason in examining controversial claims. Those who flatly deny the results of climate science do not partake in any of the above. They base their conclusions on a priori convictions. Theirs is an ideological conviction—the opposite of skepticism.

      "Warmists" will tell you that climate change is caused by humans. Period.

      I'm not sure what "warmists" say, and I'm not sure I care. What climate scientists say is that carbon dioxide emitted by humans has exactly the same effect as carbon dioxide produced by any other process, and that the relatively well understood effects of carbon dioxide absorption of infrared radiation can affect climate.

      However, anthropogenic climate change is not instead of natural variations in climate: it is in addition to natural variations.

      These are often the same people who are pushing the big 'carbon tax' scam,

      No. No, no, no!

      You are confusing political advocacy with science.

      What the climate scientists are saying is: here is the calculated effect of carbon dioxide emissions on the atmosphere, here are the error bars; here are the measurements showing the effect, and here are the predictions for what will happen if we do X amount of emissions in the future.

      That's the science.

      What you are talking about is essentially the invisible backward reasoning behind the denier's arguments: "If the science were true, then taxes! And big government and oppression and the end of free enterprise! But we hate taxes and big government! Therefore, the science is false."

      That's backward reasoning, and makes no sense. The science is accurate, or inaccurate, regardless of whether we like the consequences or not, and regardless of what we chose to do about it (or even whether we chose to do anything about it.) "I don't like the politics, therefore the science is wrong" is bad reasoning. Don't attack the science; go argue the politics.

      This is in some way the real bad consequence of the deniers. There should be some real discussion, and real debate, about what to do, and even whether we should do anything. But whenever somebody tries to start talking about this, the conversation is hijacked. One side says, maybe a carbon tax, or cap and trade, or incentives for "green" energy, or an international commission. And the other side says "the science is a hoax!" That's not a discussion.

      --
      http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  40. Climate "science" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And this scientist would like climate "scientists" to stop calling themselves scientists until they stop making strong claims based on confidence levels that would not be taken seriously in physics.

  41. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technically you are right. The science is on the skeptical side, in that the skeptics, literally an organization of skeptics, now accept that man made climate change is happening and want to be distanced from the crazies like you who are denying science.

  42. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am sure you are being silly but just in case. CAGW = Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming.

    Oh so AWG wasn't a silly enough abbreviation, now we have to add "Catastrophic" to it as well?

  43. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually it is not. See my comment above on 1350+ peer reviewed articles. I also challenge you to present one piece of scientific evidence of CAGW. You can't. You can only provide proof of warming which skeptics do not dispute. Or proof or carbon dioxide increases which skeptics do not dispute. You will also completely deny the fact that the work has not warmed in over 18 years, and has not warmed significantly (more than the margin of error in the reporting data set) in more than 25 years.

  44. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by AchilleTalon · · Score: 1

    On what side do you think are the physicists questioning the identity of the Higgs and believing it may be another particle while the probabilities are much more higher than 95% it is in fact the Higgs? You just don't get it. It is not a matter of probabilities. At the beginning of the XXth century, it was taken for granted (almost 100% of the scientific community) the ether exists until two skeptic guys, Michelson and Morley decided to setup an experiment to determine if it actually exists and they found it didn't. Science is not a poll.

    --
    Achille Talon
    Hop!
  45. Backfire by Spazmania · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This will backfire. The idiots driving this would associate dissent on climate change predictions with folks who reject the historical fact of the Holocaust, the only other place where the term "deniers" is routinely used.

    You can't have a brain in your head and seriously think that the modern climate change predictions have a comparable level of certainty to the historical fact of the holocaust. This sort of gross overreach is obvious even to mere mortals who can't readily follow the scientific arguments for or against global warming. It makes the speaker, and every other claim he makes, suspect.

    The media has done climate change scientists a great favor by labeling the folks who still challenge the predictions as "skeptics." That word carries connotations of government conspiracy and alien abductions. It's a gift.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    1. Re:Backfire by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      um, there can be varying degrees of something. Just because two people are attractive, for instance, doesn't mean they're equally attractive. Outright refusing to engage in honest debate however, does make someone something other than a skeptic; with so much actual data painting a relatively clear picture, if you're going to say that picture is something else then... The foundations of statistics are based on the idea that if a pattern emerges with very little deviation - very few outliers in the data - then you can be very certain (to some degree) of the conclusion. If you're going to deny the very process itself, versus the results, then we have to throw away most of what we know - not just climate change.

    2. Re:Backfire by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 0

      Strawman argument. Nobody is equating or even comparing AGW deniers to Holocaust deniers.

    3. Re:Backfire by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      Emotionally charged labels tend to obstruct honest, factual debate.

      Also I heard a neat saying once: "There are three kinds of mistruth: lies, damn lies and statistics." Statistics is an incredible valuable tool in the arsenal of science, but it's also one of the most commonly misused tools.

      Here, let me ask you an honest question. Give me a name or a link to a climate change model which meets the following criteria:

      1. The model was created at least 10 years ago.
      2. The model can be fed data about suspected human and non-human causes for global warming.
      3. When fed such data for the last 10 years twice, once including suspected human causes and once excluding them, it makes two predictions for world conditions today.
      4. The difference between those two predictions is statistically significant versus measurement error.
      5. World conditions today are consistent with the prediction made when including both suspected human and non-human causes for global warning and are not consistent with the prediction that excluded human causes.

      I'm a skeptic. Not a denier, a skeptic. When I see a model that exhibits solid predictive value year over year, I'll be a believer. Until then, what I see is a lot of scientists taking sloppy shortcuts and then trying to cover the gap with dirty politics.

      I know science. And I know politics. And the BS in TFA is pure politics.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    4. Re:Backfire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GISS Model E.

      Search "Realclimate model data comparisons" for the rest.

    5. Re:Backfire by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      Help me out here. My search for "Realclimate model data comparisons" doesn't include anything labelled as being from GISS model E.

      You know what I'm looking for. Items 3, 4 and 5. I want to read something that's on point. Essentially, a "control" prediction that excludes human causes, an "experimental" prediction that includes human causes and a comparison of the two predictions against measurements in which the "experimental" prediction is within the measurement error and the "control" prediction is not.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  46. Not Science Deniers - HERETICS by kenwd0elq · · Score: 0

    The problem with the notion of "science denier" is that is entirely too close in concept to "heretic". The AGW advocates are entirely religious in their zeal, and their religious belief is that the End Is Near, and We Must All Repent!

    Remember, before Al Gore got into politics and invented his own Church of Warmism, he had flunked out of Divinity School. Being the High Priest of Warming, he has invented his own religion - and every religion has to have heretics.

    1. Re:Not Science Deniers - HERETICS by mean+pun · · Score: 2

      This is a pretty good illustration of being a denier rather than a sceptic:

      The problem with the notion of "science denier" is that is entirely too close in concept to "heretic". The AGW advocates are entirely religious in their zeal, and their religious belief is that the End Is Near, and We Must All Repent!

      Straw man. The discussion is scientific, not religious, and you're distorting what the scientists are saying. If you have scientifically valid objections against the current state of the science you are very welcome to the debate. If you just object because you don't like what the scientists are saying, you're a science denier. Nobody will burn you at any stake, but nobody will take you serious either.

      Remember, before Al Gore got into politics and invented his own Church of Warmism, he had flunked out of Divinity School. Being the High Priest of Warming, he has invented his own religion - and every religion has to have heretics.

      Shooting the messenger. You may not like Al Gore, but that doesn't mean that his message was wrong.

      You're trying to discredit climate change based on emotional arguments, rather than on objective arguments. That makes you a denier rather than a sceptic; exactly what this discussion is about.

    2. Re:Not Science Deniers - HERETICS by kenwd0elq · · Score: 1

      I'm not the guy making the emotional "WE HAVE TO DO THIS IMMEDIATELY OR THE WORLD WILL BURN" arguments. Science isn't a thing; it's a method, a technique for discovering the truth.

      A scientist will share his raw data so that other scientists can replicate his work. Warmists have not done so. Scientists will reveal their algorithms and explain their assumptions. Warmists have not done this, either. Scientists don't invent data, or make bogus and conflicting claims about their data. Warmists have. Scientists will attempt to make predictions about the future, and if their predictions are falsified, they modify their predictions. Warmists have been predicting greatly increased tropical storms and disappearing north polar ice caps. Neither has happened.

      Warmists actively manipulate the "peer review" process, and attempt to have opposing views banned. Warmists claim that the government should hunt down and execute "deniers". OK, that's from the more hysterical faction, but it has been said.

      https://devilsneuroscientist.w...

    3. Re:Not Science Deniers - HERETICS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err - it is the proponents of the AGW theory who are doing the name calling with the label 'denier' - and if the case were strong - why the need for name calling?

  47. If the wacko conspiracy theorists hadn't been so r by raymorris · · Score: 0

    Two years ago, the intelligent, thinking people realized that the most powerful person in the US government, the president, can't even get a blow job without the whole country hearing about it. When the government a couple of guns for a hostage or two and everybody finds out about it - the US government just completely sucks at keeping secrets.

    Therefore, when people claimed that there was a massive conspiracy involving thousands of people throughout the NSA, FBI, and other agencies, covering up wholesale spying on the entire US population, they were obviously nut jobs. That was a ridiculous idea.

    Then Snowden. The nut jobs were _right_. After Snowden, I'm much less dismissive of nut jobs of all types. They just might be right.

  48. Joy, more TLA [Re:Science is on the skeptical side by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    All I can say is QBA to your TLA; you should AYA or at least TTMS. Because PWHAFI.

    QTFA, OK?

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  49. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do not deny the science I embrace it. I challenge you as well to present one piece of evidence of CAGW. Warmists have the hockey stick, which has been thoroughly debunked and climate models. Do a simple Google search for "Climate Models vs Reality" and you will quickly see that they do not match reality. When a hypothesis does not match observations is it falsified. Period. There is NO evidence of CAGW other than these things. Everything else is simply evidence of warming since about 1979 which skeptics do not dispute. There has been no warming for over 18 years, an inconvenient truth for the warmists.

  50. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    Of course it's not a poll. But you really think one day some scientists will discover that all these researches were wrong, that AGW didn't happen?

  51. Similarly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pedophiles would like the media to stop calling them pedophiles, instead they would prefer adult-only sex deniers.

  52. Believing your own propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they really said this, then they must have got stuck into the mother of all feedback loops.

    Were their next two demands that a Ministry of Truth be established to limit the spread of enemy propaganda, and that furthermore all mere mortals acknowledge that anyone donning a white lab-coat is a purveyor Objective, Unbendable Truth incarnated into human form?

    David Anderson

  53. As long as we're being more specific.... by argStyopa · · Score: 2

    I'll trade the label of 'skeptic' for 'science denier' sure, but I'd ask that people stop using the blanket term 'climate change' when they really mean 'a host of sweeping economic, societal, and governmental changes that spend $billions and $trillions to effect what we optimistically expect to be trivial changes in a dynamic system that we mostly don't really understand and have been unable to reliably predict, and which only coincidentally SEEM to conform to a leftist agenda that otherwise nobody was listening to'.

    That'd be great, thanks!

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:As long as we're being more specific.... by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      it must really bother you that the ozone layer is recovering after a global effort to fix it, huh. I mean really, it impinges on the ultra-wealthy to do whatever they want, and that's a bad thing to the likes of you...society saying enough is enough on issues that effect everyone? Horrible, it should be the 0.1% making those decisions! (misdirection is such a fun tool, eh?)

    2. Re:As long as we're being more specific.... by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Not at all? Why would it?
      I think it's great that we work to fix things that we understand and have clear, quantifiable paths forward.
      My objection to "climate change" isn't what you seem to believe.
      My objection is that it seems to have sucked all the air out of the room for the public to pursue real, tangible, projects that can materially improve life - mostly for the billions on this planet that live in squalor.

      But hey, you keep paying indulgences for your sins, er, I mean 'carbon credits' (and that $ goes where, exactly, once it's done salving your conscience?) to make yourself feel like you're "doing something".

      --
      -Styopa
    3. Re:As long as we're being more specific.... by Xyrus · · Score: 1

      Apparently physics and chemistry now have a liberal bias. You heard it here first folks.

      And this is supposed to be a site for nerds.

      --
      ~X~
    4. Re:As long as we're being more specific.... by cbeaudry · · Score: 1

      Doesnt bother us in the least, as looking at the history of the ozone layer over the last 25 years, its quite clear that the variation is natural and cyclical.

      Also, if you dont already know, the ozone layer is fine for most of the year, until you reach the end of August and September, thats when there is an actual hole, because before that, there is NO HOLE.

      Also, if you look at data over the years, 2002 had almost no hole and then boom 2003 a big hole. THERE IS NO WAY, that such an observation is possible if the problem as CFCs and not natural variation.

      You see, this is exactly why there are skeptics, because some people just plainly gobble up, everything they are told, without researching it. And our happy in their ignorance.

    5. Re:As long as we're being more specific.... by silfen · · Score: 1

      Apparently physics and chemistry now have a liberal bias. You heard it here first folks.

      "Physics and chemistry" are communities of scientists, and indeed they have political biases.

      Natural laws, of course, don't have political biases, but they do have political implications, in the sense that some policies are likely to be successful given natural laws, and others are likely to fail. US liberalism generally fails in the face of natural laws.

    6. Re:As long as we're being more specific.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think the changes are trivial, you're probably one of the "skeptics" mentioned. Either that, or woefully ignorant of the damage a couple of degrees in average global temperature can do. The fiscal debt brought about by an ill-prepared US solely on itself due to climate change will laughably dwarf the current debt, let alone any "trillions" that could be spent to mitigate the damage.

  54. Journalism Standards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We all know "science deniers" is accurate. But you can't expect journalists to adopt the term. According to the standards of their profession, they have to adopt neutral terms to avoid being perceived as having bias.

  55. Re:If the wacko conspiracy theorists hadn't been s by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

    Two years ago, the intelligent, thinking people realized that the most powerful person in the US government, the president, can't even get a blow job without the whole country hearing about it.

    Wow! I thought that was more like 1998-ish - closer to ten years ago. I know I wanted to forget about 2000 and the Bush election and a lot of Obama's terms, but I didn't want to forget it so much I traveled in time like you!

    --
    That is all.
  56. What should we call those who deny nature? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Climate Science predicted a certain rise in global temperatures due to increases in CO2 over a 100 year span.

    Over nearly 20 years none of the predictions have been born out in nature.Nature has spoken.

    Scientists held out the apple, predicted it would float, released it, and it fell. The scientists were proven wrong by nature.

    Why do some scientist continue to deny nature?

  57. Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Funny, because the science that I learned about in college was ALL ABOUT being constantly questioned."

    It's not about that. It's about the idea that a "skeptic" leaves the door open to all possibilities, but "deniers" have already closed the door. Being skeptical means your view is not written in stone. Being a denier means no matter what anybody says you're not going to believe.

  58. deniers and skeptics [Re:Established science] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Can you simultaneously accept X while questioning X? Seems illogical.

    Of course you can. Terms for this in the science community include "working hypothesis" and "the best current model" and phrases such as "subject to further analysis, we currently believe..."

    Skeptical has synonyms such as :distrustfull, suspicious, unconvinced. These would all describe a person who is either a "denier" or a skeptic.

    No. Deniers have made up their minds already; they are not "unconvinced" at all: they are firm believers. That's the difference between a denier and a skeptic.

    So then what you are saying in reality is that anyone not accepting your way of thinking is a "denier" and that "You are either with us, or you are against us!"

    No. Deniers have made up their minds already; they are not "unconvinced" at all. That's the difference between a denier and a skeptic: a skeptic can be convinced by evidence.

    Established science can and has been and should be questioned as that is how we advance scientific knowledge and processes

    There is a difference between paying attention to the science and denying the science. That difference is the difference between a skeptic and a denier.

    When you start with the conclusion that the science is wrong because you don't like it-- you're not a skeptic.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:deniers and skeptics [Re:Established science] by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      No. Deniers have made up their minds already;

      You can say the same thing about the bots that have blindly accepted "experts" opinions. The problem is, many of the proponents of the AGW don't care about the science part, because they are too fucking busy crying wolf. Drowning Polar Bears was a story, until it was proven false. YET there were so many willing to believe the story, because it fit their religious narrative. Same can be said of just about anything Al Gore says, but he still attracts crowds of worshipers listening to his sermons, WHY?

      There isn't much difference between the two religious camps, except one gets excused by the AGW proponents much more quickly. Why?

      Until you can recognize the religious fever on your own side, and dismiss it as easily as you do the other "nutjobs" you are part of the problem.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    2. Re:deniers and skeptics [Re:Established science] by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 1

      You can say the same thing about the bots that have blindly accepted "experts" opinions.

      I wouldn't call them deniers though, I would call them believers. However, just because someone simply believes what the scientists say does not actually make the scientists wrong, any more than having deniers simply deny those same scientists. The difference between the two groups is that at least the believers are in agreement with the people who spend their entire lives studying the science. Those who blindly reject expert opinion have nothing and nobody to back up their position other than other non-experts such as themselves.

      Same can be said of just about anything Al Gore says, but he still attracts crowds of worshipers listening to his sermons, WHY?

      Does he? The only time that I ever hear Al Gore mentioned is when a denier is seeking to attack AGW. If you shut up about him you would find that people are actually talking about what scientists are saying, and not what an ex-politician says.

    3. Re:deniers and skeptics [Re:Established science] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't want to hear shit from someone Claiming to be an Archangel about religion and how it's bad. Maybe we should all be sending our paychecks to IswearIwontrobyou@yahoo.com while we're at it!

  59. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Skeptics do not dispute AGW. Real scientific skeptics never have. We simply don't think our tiny contribution will actually cause dangerous warming. Observations - facts - support the skeptical side of this. This is what I meant by people not understanding the argument.

  60. I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by raymorris · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I suppose I'm a global warming denier, by the common standard here on Slashdot. The global warming alarmists and pitchmen said "San Francisco will be underwater by 2010". Unfortunately, it's still there.

    That's one of two big problems for the global warming camp. Well-known leaders of that movement have publicly admitted to organized, widespread lying and intentional exaggeration in order to "spur the public to action". I deny that they've been telling the truth, and they agree! Has the "science" gotten any better? Well, we know that a typical volcano releases a couple tons of CO2 each day. A few months ago, there was an "OMG Global Warming!" story here on Slashdot that reported atmospheric CO2 levels rising more than expected - based on measuring CO2 on a friggin a volcano! Which is kind of like reporting global average humidity based on moisture measurements taken below Niagra Falls.

    There IS some good science supporting global warming, but the alarmist stuff makes better headlines, so 90% of the "science" reported is complete junk, obviously so. I reject all claims based on this utter junk pseudo-science.

    The second problem is more recent. Every president has their slush fund, a federal program or two which they use to send tax money to their donors, who send some back as campaign donations. It just so happens that THIS president's slush funds are included in the $100 billion we're spending on "green". For example, the tax payers loaned over a half a billion dollars to Fisker to develop their electric car. Fisker turned right around and handed millions of it to Obama and other Democrats. There's nothing new about that, of course, other than the exchange of greenbacks is normally labeled "green energy" right now. That makes anything labeled "green energy" or "save the planet" inherently suspicious, just like Haliburton contracts were suspicious when Cheney was in the White House. We know that any proposal to spend "half a billion for green energy" means $10 million for the DNC, $10 million for Hillary's campaign, $10 million split between a few congress-critters, $50 million for their CEO friend's golden parachute, and $420 million to who-knows-where. Again, not new - Haliburton was the same. "Green" is the new "Haliburton".

    1. Re:I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      The global warming alarmists and pitchmen said "San Francisco will be underwater by 2010"

      When you start with outright lying about what was said or not, you do a good job of proving TFA right.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    2. Re:I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was the text of my rss feed. I like it better than the story it is commenting on! I was looking forwards to mute comments on it from global warming believers and skeptics alike!

    3. Re:I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've confused 2010 with 2100
      You've confused climate with mortgages
      You're thinking of the Federal Reserve's warning about underwater mortgages, I suspect:
      Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco | Underwater ...
      www.frbsf.org/.../2010/.../underw...
      Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
      Oct 18, 2010 - They can and will do so when house prices are increasing or flat. ... The 2010 underwater mortgage map in Figure 2 looks very different.

    4. Re:I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I suppose I'm a global warming denier, by the common standard here on Slashdot. The global warming alarmists and pitchmen said "San Francisco will be underwater by 2010".

      Do you have a reference for that? I've tried looking, but can't find one. I have trouble believing that all of San Francisco would be under water, because the altitude in a lot of the city is actually quite high for a coastal town.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by Xyrus · · Score: 2

      I suppose I'm a global warming denier, by the common standard here on Slashdot. The global warming alarmists and pitchmen said "San Francisco will be underwater by 2010". Unfortunately, it's still there.

      No, you're not a denier. You're just regular old run-of-the-mill stupid. I can't even find a denialist bullshit opinion blog where this lie comes from, let alone any credible source.

      That's one of two big problems for the global warming camp.

      You're right. Deniers are completely ignorant and just make shit up to validate their ideology. That's a big problem for actual scientists and logical people trying to determine the best course of action to take.

      Well-known leaders of that movement have publicly admitted to organized, widespread lying and intentional exaggeration in order to "spur the public to action".

      Leaders? The climate science community doesn't have "leaders". In the public space, there are activists but they are not scientists, nor do they do any scientific research. They're talking heads. Some do more fact checking than others, but none of them have credentials to objectively discuss the science, let alone judge it's merits.

      I deny that they've been telling the truth, and they agree! Has the "science" gotten any better? Well, we know that a typical volcano releases a couple tons of CO2 each day. A few months ago, there was an "OMG Global Warming!" story here on Slashdot that reported atmospheric CO2 levels rising more than expected - based on measuring CO2 on a friggin a volcano! Which is kind of like reporting global average humidity based on moisture measurements taken below Niagra Falls.

      More idiocy. You have absolutely no idea what your talking about. Regardless of the information actually posted on the how measurements are collected and used, you're just going to ignore it because the science is just to damn inconvenient to your personal beliefs.

      There IS some good science supporting global warming, but the alarmist stuff makes better headlines, so 90% of the "science" reported is complete junk, obviously so.

      The papers and research are directly available, along with the data sets and model code in most cases. News sites are probably the worst way to actually get information about what's happening in science (with the exception of stupidity strewn sites like OverUnity and WUWT).

      I reject all claims based on this utter junk pseudo-science.

      There is nothing pseudo about the science. The climate research that leads to a global warming result is nearly 200 years old, beginning with Fourier (yes THAT Fourier) back in the early 1800s. Your willful ignorance doesn't make the science go away.

      The second problem is more recent. Every president has their slush fund...

      Another conspiracy theory argument coming from a denier. Why am I not surprised?

      When you actually have some facts and evidence to back up your ludicrous claims, let us know. kthxbye Sincerely, The Climate Illuminati est. 1798

      --
      ~X~
    6. Re:I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      A few months ago, there was an "OMG Global Warming!" story here on Slashdot that reported atmospheric CO2 levels rising more than expected - based on measuring CO2 on a friggin a volcano!

      If you're talking about the Keeling Curve, it is known to be accurate, based on similar measurements taken all around the world.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    7. Re:I deny that San Francisco underwater by 2010 by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      I suppose I'm a global warming denier, by the common standard here on Slashdot. The global warming alarmists and pitchmen said "San Francisco will be underwater by 2010". Unfortunately, it's still there.

      You, like a lot of people, might be confusing media or politics with science. If you could cite the publish the science paper that made such a claim I'd lover to read it. Until I'll put you in the basket with stupid people who should probably not participate in this discussion.

  61. I don't doubt true Science, just your version... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True Science knows it is limited and needs to constantly be challenged and pressed to prove it is accurate. We all knew gravity was a fixed constant on the earth, until recently. In the 60's We all knew that the bottom of the oceans were calm and tranquil until the leading theorist took a ride in a bottom crawling submarine. The earth is warming to an extent, what is driving it is up for debate. Is it due to the fact we are cleaning up the air and allowing more light in? Are we trapping more greenhouse gasses? Is it due to Solar activity? All the models are based on lots of assumptions plugged into a super computer that spits out results based on inputs. Garbage in = Garbage out.

    Give me a complete, accurate and exact weather forecast for every day for the next 5 years and I might concur that science has comprehended terrestrial weather.

    Challenge assumptions with postulation and experimentation, that is what true science is all about. Regurgitation is a brick in the wall of faith and part of religious dogma.

  62. Straw men are made of straw! by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    It's hardly worth bothering to reply to these anonymous cowards, I'm afraid; they never admit to being wrong, and even if they did, they'd just keep on posting. Pretty much every single statement he says makes no sense.

    Except for religious nuts, nobody has predicted that the world is going to end. This is an argument by the technique of wildly exaggerating what has been said, and then pointing out that the wild exaggeration is wildly exaggerated.

    Again: Nobody has predicted that the world is going to end.

    There's really no point in arguing these straw men.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Straw men are made of straw! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's hardly worth bothering to reply to these anonymous cowards, I'm afraid; they never admit to being wrong, and even if they did, they'd just keep on posting. Pretty much every single statement he says makes no sense.

      Except for religious nuts, nobody has predicted that the world is going to end. This is an argument by the technique of wildly exaggerating what has been said, and then pointing out that the wild exaggeration is wildly exaggerated.

      Again: Nobody has predicted that the world is going to end.

      There's really no point in arguing these straw men.

      "The objective now, negotiators say, is to stave off atmospheric temperature increases of 4 to 10 degrees by the end of the century; at that point, they say, the planet could become increasingly uninhabitable." - New York Times, on the IPCC Lima meeting, 30th Nov 2014

      http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12...

      (You're correct that skeptics post as anonymous cowards here. The religious CAGW supports go back and moderate our posts down in completely unrelated threads if we happen to forget clicking the checkbox)

    2. Re:Straw men are made of straw! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, you should learn to read what you post.

      Increasingly uninhabitable clearly means that larger and larger regions of the earth will not be able to sustain life.
      Like for example Antarctica, and the Sahara can not sustain life now.

      That is not in any way the same as 'The World Is Going to End'.

    3. Re:Straw men are made of straw! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the contrary - it's exactly what the means in the eyes of the public, which is the whole reason for that fantasy to be propagated in media.

      Here's another one (since, to the contrary of what the parent posted, they're numerous):

      "[I]f we burn all reserves of oil, gas, and coal, there is a substantial chance we will initiate the runaway greenhouse. If we also burn the tar sands and tar shale, I believe the Venus syndrome is a dead certainty." - James Hansen

      http://news.nationalgeographic...

  63. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It used to be just "Global Warming". Then it became "Anthropogenic Global Warming". I hadn't seen CAGW until today, though.

    Are we going to keep adding letters to the front while evidence for the later ones becomes clear? How long until it's ALTCCWBDBAEBIEBTSCAGW ("At Least The California Coast Will Be Destroyed By An Earthquake Before It's Engulfed By The Sea Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming")?

  64. Do you think W could get a BJ without bragging? by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Do you think W could get a BJ without bragging to his buddies, and without forgetting to turn off his mic first? We'd have heard about it.

  65. Question it with a hypothesis... by AnontheDestroyer · · Score: 1

    ...and then test it. By all means, question everything, but back it up with relevent, scientifically sound data.

    Eventually your data may help form a scientific consensus. That's how global warming came to be understood. The opposing view has been totally unable to form a gain such support.

    (By the way, no, "global cooling," was never a real thing, before somebody ham-handedly posts a link about it. There are fake magazine covers out there, etc., but ignore the deniers.)

    1. Re:Question it with a hypothesis... by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      (By the way, no, "global cooling," was never a real thing, before somebody ham-handedly posts a link about it. There are fake magazine covers out there, etc., but ignore the deniers.)

      You must be kind of young.... global cooling was a not so popular and short lived theory just as we were starting to realize that we do and how we might effect our environment.

  66. CAGW [Re:Science is on the skeptical side] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    I do not deny the science I embrace it. I challenge you as well to present one piece of evidence of CAGW.

    CAGW is real: Not only do they have a web page, they have a wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    Oh, and QWTFCA, OK?

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:CAGW [Re:Science is on the skeptical side] by LaGator · · Score: 1

      Wikipedia is garbage, this is why college professors don't allow it as a reference. Why don't you quote some actual science.

    2. Re:CAGW [Re:Science is on the skeptical side] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wooosh!

  67. Forget 6000 years... The Universe Began in 1970 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Won't you be surprised to find out this is all just a computer simulation and Unix time does actually represent the beginning of the known universe... by the way it all began on a Thursday, 1 January 1970

    The clock is right.

  68. Meanwhile, on a more Practical Level... by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 1

    Tabloid, much?
    Who cares what dem people call dem other people??
    Only freaks publicly insist on labeling other people freaks.
    Says I, in public.

    There are places where folks are still covering topics of pure-CO2 temperature causation (or not) that involve studies of available data, and just as important these days, breakdown and evaluation of the various 'corrections' that have been retroactively applied to those datasets, the reliability of models and various proxy methods. WattsUpWithThat is one such resource. If you conclude that it is on the other side of the fence than perhaps you should ask yourself, who built the fence?

    Branding dissenters as heretics in the popular press on this level --- it is as if they are appealing to some Supreme Diety to descend from the heavens with a 'Mighty Dog' branding iron --- to mark the foreheads of chosen persons. It's ridiculous, boring and trite.

    The climate furor may be part of a larger trend in science noted by master lexicographer Daniele Fanelli. The paper Negative Results are Disappearing from Most Disciplines and Countries [2011] is a fascinating read. It notes that "Of the hypothesized problems, perhaps the most worrying is a worsening of positive-outcome bias. A system that disfavours negative results not only distorts the scientific literature directly, but might also discourage high-risk projects and pressure scientists to fabricate and falsify their data."

    Let me spell it out, what is being claimed here is a progressive shortage of applied effort to discredit popular hypotheses. Is it because we are such great guessers. we tend to get these things right so often the first time it's a waste of time and effort to back-check, to reproduce? Does it come down to money?

    Or are people letting themselves become religious about science?
    Isn't this what Carl Sagan warned us about?

    Note to self: add citation to paper, "Climate Change may decrease eggshell thickness of duck-billed salamanders by 0.25mm by the year 2050."

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
  69. Isn't There a Difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't there a difference between someone who flat out denies the global climate is changing and someone who simply denies that it's ONE HUNDRED PERCENT related to human activity? So, if I'm "skeptical" that it's all our fault, I should be labeled a science denier, despite the fact that I acknowledge climate change?

  70. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://woodfortrees.org/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:2001/to:2014/offset/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:2001/to:2014/trend
    http://woodfortrees.org/plot/uah/from:2002/to:2014/offset/plot/uah/from:2002/to:2014/trend
    http://woodfortrees.org/plot/rss/from:1998/to:2014/offset/plot/rss/from:1998/to:2014/trend

    CO2 levels are at a high of approximately 400PPM. They have risen heavily in the last two decades. If CO2 had any significant effect, it would show up in the temperature record. But all of the satellites show zero or below trend for more than a decade.

    Denier is a badge I wear with pride. I deny your religion and so does the data.

  71. Be a Skeptic! by s.petry · · Score: 1

    Like you, when I was in schools being a skeptic was a good thing. "Curiosity killed the cat, and satisfaction brought him back!" is one of the oldest quotes I remember being teased with by teachers. There is absolutely nothing wrong with being a skeptic, and this modern push to demonize anyone that asks a question is really frightening. It is a cyclical part of our history, but usually when curious people are demonized we ended up with the Salem Witch trials, and purges, or other various mass tragedies (genocides).

    Real science is exactly proving your arguments, over and over and over again. This is how we progress in science. If nobody in history questioned we would not have round globes, Zeus would still be the cause of lightning, and we would still be killing people to appease the Sun god(s).

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

  72. Ferrari HD, HQ wallpapers by HammadShifa · · Score: 0

    Ferrari wallpapers for your desktop visit it and download HD HQ wallpapers http://www.websken.com/ferrari...

  73. Hegel strikes again? by s.petry · · Score: 1

    Did you ever stop to consider the possibility that the arguments being pushed at the top of both ends are to ensure the status quo remains? If we argue about "Global Warming" where do we begin to solve the problems causing Global Arming? We have inched forward a bit with alternative source of power, but how far have we moved with pollution (dumping) and massive deforestation for profit? Very little has changed during the time we have been arguing about Global Warming, except that some of the biggest polluters have increased profits dramatically.

    I agree with your post from the point of implying that bitching without taking actions to improve is a futile approach. I don't agree that building nuclear power plants is the answer to all of our woes, because this introduces a huge set of problems in and of itself. It would have been more fair to say "Alternative" vs. "Nuclear".

    --

    -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    1. Re:Hegel strikes again? by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      When someone uses the term "Alternative energy" they almost always mean "A little bit of energy on sunny days when the wind is blowing". It may work for households, but when it comes to industry, as a replacement for coal, without nukes, it's pure unadulterated Arithmetic Denialism.

      I have been advocating phasing out coal in favor of nuclear for about 40 years now.

    2. Re:Hegel strikes again? by s.petry · · Score: 1

      There is no safe solution for nuclear waste, and until we have something it can't be the _only_ replacement for coal. Arguing "only nuclear" when viable alternative sources are able to supplement the system to reduce the dangers of waste exist is pretty foolish in my opinion.

      Consider where your 40 years of advocacy has gone so far with such a limited view, and expect that to continue. In other words, my opinion is not unique.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    3. Re:Hegel strikes again? by vakuona · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are safe solutions. Geologically secure sites where we can stored nuclear waste and not worry about it getting into ground water or leaking into the environment exist. It is well within our capability to safely dispose of nuclear waste. The only problem is political, and the irrational fear of anything nuclear.

    4. Re:Hegel strikes again? by s.petry · · Score: 1

      This is anything but safe, do at least make an attempt to contemplate your answer before giving it.. There is no magic storage for Radioactive material. Material must be handled over and over again because containers break down, and material must be transported from the plant to the disposal area. There is a whole shit ton of logistics you are ignoring if you claim "we can just bury it safely".

      I'd agree that it's no more dangerous than a nuclear power plant to begin with, but that does not make either "safe".

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    5. Re:Hegel strikes again? by Mike+Van+Pelt · · Score: 1

      When you say "Material must be handled over and over again because containers break down" it shows you have not bothered to even look at the actual proposals for how to deal with the waste; what was actually going to be put into the repository at Yucca Mountain. (Or, you're being deliberately disengeuous, but I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt.)

  74. Bow to the new faith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or be cast into the fire, climate change unbelievers!

  75. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by dave420 · · Score: 4, Informative

    The science is on the side of AGW. That's it. Challenge all you want, but when you start ignoring study after study and claim they're all wrong or in some sort of conspiracy, you are not engaging in science or skepticism but block-headed cynicism.

  76. Random questions from anonymous cowards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's little point in answering questions from anonymous cowards.

    There's plenty of evidence that measles vaccine works. Go read the papers from the early 1960s. Sorry, you can't just google them: science did not start with the invention of the web. Find a research library.

    There are a few hundred thousand papers about the relationship of HIV to AIDS. Nice to see that you've heard of one of them; why don't you pay attention to some of the rest.

    Venus is not a blackbody. Neither is Earth. The atmospheres are also quite different, and the atmospheric profiles are quite different. If you're criticizing thermal models of Venus, show that you understand thermal models of Venus.

    1. Re:Random questions from anonymous cowards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's little point in answering questions from anonymous cowards.

      Fair enough, there is also little point to rant at them.

      "There's plenty of evidence that measles vaccine works. Go read the papers from the early 1960s. Sorry, you can't just google them: science did not start with the invention of the web. Find a research library.."

      I did read the papers, they are online, they all failed to blind the doctors. They even report differences in diagnosis by different people depending on their bias and up to 90% disagreement between diagnosis by symptoms and lab tests. I don't feel like digging up refs, that's why I asked for one blinded RCT. I don't think it exists.

      "There are a few hundred thousand papers about the relationship of HIV to AIDS. Nice to see that you've heard of one of them; why don't you pay attention to some of the rest."

      20 years of papers (~1000) lead up to my PhD project, all questionable due to missing controls. The original authors mention the confound but no one ever addressed it. A mountain of literature does not mean it is valid.

      "Venus is not a blackbody. Neither is Earth. The atmospheres are also quite different, and the atmospheric profiles are quite different. If you're criticizing thermal models of Venus, show that you understand thermal models of Venus."

      Exactly why that relationship is strange.

  77. "Skepticism" CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by BergZ · · Score: 1

    "The vast majority of the loudest global warming proponents are certainly not scientists. Most of them are environmental activists, with their own agenda to advance."

    The "skeptics" of Evolution said the same thing.
    They said "the vast majority of the loudest Evolution proponents are certainly not scientists. Most of them are atheists(/secularists) with their own agenda to advance."

    I didn't accept that argument from Creationists. Why would I accept it from you?

    --
    Warning: This sig is not thread safe. For more information see Slashdot's sig policy.
  78. if they could get away from the folks who are pedd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EXACTLY! Science is a about understanding the natural world and universe. Policy is the subject of politicians and people do not trust politicians. And they have damn good reasons not to. Publish research, inspire skeptical challenges to do more science and if the working hypothesis stands the test of time then we all have better understanding. Being associated with activists who have a need to subvert the dominant paradigm or more plainly "Fundamentally Change (tm) your country" and living standards makes such scientists accessories to the enormous dishonesty that defines much of progressive policy dreamers.

  79. Ahh liberals.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..when you can't win with evidence, or by buying out all the scientists to generate some evidence, or with a massive PR campaign spanning decades - there's always newspeak.

  80. Social trauma victims. by Anonanonaon · · Score: 1

    I personally don't like the word "skeptic"; it carries the feel of that cynical and smug kid at the back of the class who is trying desperately to conceal social retardation and fear of rejection.

    That kind of person is deeply interested in the value of labels and identifies with their own opinions on the ego level. -They have little else to derive confidence from other than their carefully polished sense of intellectual superiority. I've not met a self-professed skeptic who was free of this influence.

    -And when I say self-professed, I am NOT talking about the person who accepts the label out of deference, thinking, "Yeah, so I guess I'm a skeptic because I'd like to reserve judgment and not jump on your bandwagon." -I'm talking about those rabid assholes. You know the ones. The ones who subscribe to the newsletter and put the word in their website banners and attend the meetings. Those guys are *damaged*.

    People who have more clues and agility in thinking will usually cringe away from the term 'skeptic' and tend to not bother with self-labeling at all. I'd call such people, (if forced to identify them as a group), something like "Curious" or...

    Nah. I'm already bored trying to come up with a label.

    People with no emotional investment tend to find their way to the right answers (or at least the right-er answers) as a result of their basic approach. I want to know what those people think. -Not what a bunch of angry and socially traumatized post-adolescents are trying to hammer into place.

    1. Re:Social trauma victims. by Anonanonaon · · Score: 1

      Hm.

      That was sucky of me. I apologize.

      Replace "Socially retarded" with "Normal". This is something *done* to people to achieve exactly the observed results. Getting angry with those who have been hurt by the system is pointless.

      The behavior is frustrating to deal with, but it's not solved by kicking those who are down.

  81. California Energy Commission still saying it by raymorris · · Score: 1

    Here's the California Energy Commission STILL saying it. SInce 2010 has passed, as of 2012 they pushed the "underwater by" date to 2050:
    http://www.energy.ca.gov/2012p...

    Here's an "underwater San Francisco" map that GW alarmists were circulating in 1997:
    http://www.sfgate.com/news/art...

    Asked about the effect on California, professor of climatology at the University of California at Berkeley Orman Granger said in 1997:

          "Climatologic records over the last 10,000 years show that species move north (in the Northern hemisphere) roughly 500km for every degree C temperature increase ... in order to survive they have 100 years to move to Canada".

    1. Re:California Energy Commission still saying it by Tetetrasaurus · · Score: 0

      "by the end of the next century." "over the next 100 years"

      Do you even read your own sources?

    2. Re:California Energy Commission still saying it by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1

      Here's the California Energy Commission STILL saying it. SInce 2010 has passed, as of 2012 they pushed the "underwater by" date to 2050:
      http://www.energy.ca.gov/2012p...

      Perhaps you could point out where they say anything similar to "San Francisco will be underwater by 2050". What I've found are comments that, essentially, extreme tide-related flooding events would become more frequent and last longer.

      Here's an "underwater San Francisco" map that GW alarmists were circulating in 1997:
      http://www.sfgate.com/news/art...

      Asked about the effect on California, professor of climatology at the University of California at Berkeley Orman Granger said in 1997:

      There's no date associated with the image. I skimmed the article, though, so I may have missed a non-explicit prediction.

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    3. Re:California Energy Commission still saying it by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      In short, these models results provide a somewhat fuzzy set of scenarios from which to view the future, they are not detailed predictions

      I take back the liar allegation. You are just a subliterate moron.

      And still proving TFA so, so, very right.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    4. Re:California Energy Commission still saying it by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Sod it, forgot to wrap that 'you' in an element.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    5. Re:California Energy Commission still saying it by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      Interesting evidence you bring to the table. So we have a prediction that increased tides induced by sea level rise will likely become very dangerous by 2050 for the bay area (up to half a meter of additional storm surge tide). An "underwater map" about what could happen in about 100 years from 1997 given a 1 meter sea level rise at the highest tide, and a professor that states that species will need to move to Canada if the temperature rises by about 2.5 degrees Celsius in 100 years.

      Not sure if this truly supports your point, as this seems to be pretty consistent with what we're expecting to experience. Not 100% sure about the specifics of the Bay Area as that seems to be a bit on the high side, but could be an effect of the actual geography of the area.

    6. Re:California Energy Commission still saying it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you seem unable to read the date off of the server source, one can only assume that you are clearly a religious nutjob.

  82. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

    If someone discovers a heat source at the center of the Earth that has been increasing its heat output lately, then yes, they will have found out that it wasn't caused by human activity.

    The point being made was that it's very difficult to predict what discoveries will be made in the future and change our understanding of some scientific topic.

  83. Re: So just call me a bloody goat shit glue mix bu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HOLY SHIT, what a terrific post! Someone mod this bitch +5 insightful!

  84. Established science CANNOT BE QUESTIONED! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, then, clearly you have absolutely no understanding or comprehension of the issue being discussed. I don't know whether to find it absurd or obscene that I would have to point out that climate science and research IS constantly questioned and improved, but not by deniers.

  85. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    The thing is, with what science currently says, we should reduce our CO2 emissions. Maybe some day we will discover that it was wrong, but probability is so low that we shouldn't live according to that possibility. And that doesn't change the fact that current science is that AGW is happening.

  86. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    And popular technology isn't either. Read the sources on wikipedia. The problem with those 1350+ articles is that as an individual, I don't have the time to read them all to verify your claims. So I have to rely on synthesis reports such as those from the IPCC and various science academies. And they are well summarized on wikipedia.

  87. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by danbob999 · · Score: 1
  88. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The science is on the skeptical side of the CAGW argument.

    No, it's not.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S...

    97 Articles Refuting The ‘97% Consensus’ on global warming

  89. Undersea volcanoes! [Re:Skeptics and Deniers] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unfortunately, the examples you give are typical examples of denier style of argumentation-- you just throw random stuff out, without even doing a back of the envelope calculation to ask whether what you're talking about is even close to being significant, on the assumption that you can make somebody else can waste their time explaining basic orders of magnitude to you. Basically: do some basic calculation before just randomly saying stuff like "undersea volcanoes! What about undersea volcanoes?"
    What is the order of magnitude of the effect you're talking about? How does it compare to the effects driving climate? Has this been looked at by others? What have previous studies concluded?

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Undersea volcanoes! [Re:Skeptics and Deniers] by Hussman32 · · Score: 1

      Oh my, thank you for proving my point. Orders of magnitude analysis it is.

      Carbon inventory and exchange: we release 10 gigatons of CO2 per year as carbon. Natural inventory in the atmosphere is on the order of 1,000 gigatons (I've seen lower and higher), natural inventory above the thermocline of the ocean is 1,000 gigatons, and below the thermocline it's 150,000 gigatons. Annual interchange from biological ecosystem interactions is estimated at 150 gigatons (90 sea, 60 air). All of these estimates have an error within the annual anthropogenic CO2 release.

      Regarding volcanoes undersea, there are an estimated 30,000 of them, and if you look at Klauea, you'll see even a relatively small volcano that is close to the ocean surface could in theory generate 600 MW of electricity, which means that it's about 1.8 GW of thermal energy. Multiply by 30,000 and you have 60,000 GW of heat released to the ocean. Which converts to an annual energy of 525 TW-h, The annual world consumption is 142 TW-h. Variations in that much energy could lead to a tremendous amount of heat added to the ocean, which would affect the global temperature.

      That's the back of my envelope, care to share yours that would state unequivocally that it's not a possible contributor? You (or anyone else) can't because the data aren't acquired.

      Hence the need for more rigorous science and dropping terms like 'denier.'

      --
      "Who are you?" "No one of consequence." "I must know." "Get used to disappointment."
    2. Re:Undersea volcanoes! [Re:Skeptics and Deniers] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And thus the alarmists technique jumps in. Omg guys you didn't do the math. I mean neither did I. But see? You said something questioning my belief so therefore you've got no idea what your talking about. Deny the debate. And the cycle begins anew. He suggested some other iv's that are treated as cv's and instead of talking numbers or existing theories you just said yah that means nothing shut up youre crazy. Go team co2

    3. Re:Undersea volcanoes! [Re:Skeptics and Deniers] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and that's the kind of argument that other branches of physical sciences are prepared to defend against. AGW isn't. That's the problem.

    4. Re:Undersea volcanoes! [Re:Skeptics and Deniers] by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the examples you give are typical examples of denier style of argumentation-- you just throw random stuff out

      Not to mention that the argument accepts (for the sake of argument) that CO2 has something to do with warming - something which deniers usually strongly, well, deny.

      A real skeptic would never feel the need to make such an "even if you were right"-argument. Deniers do.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
    5. Re:Undersea volcanoes! [Re:Skeptics and Deniers] by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1
      Just look at the CO2 content of the atmosphere. For thousands of years before the industrial revolution it was basically constant (despite the numbers you just quoted, because that is how the carbon cycle works), since then it has been climbing at a rising rate. And there is no natural phenomenon that would explain that.

      And you claim that the heat from undersea volcanoes drives Global Warming is too silly to even consider. But nice to see that you think we could replace fossil fuels with geothermal energy.

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  90. CAN A DA by raymorris · · Score: 1

    He said that they'll have to migrate further and further north each year, so that those in the bay area in 1997 would have to be all the way in CANADA within 100 years. So roughly 20 miles per year, or 340 miles in 17 years since he made rhat statement. Has anyone or anything moved an inch, much less 340 miles?

    Your next step is to say he's a fringe kook, not representative of what people have been saying. Well, he's a tenured professor of climate science at Berkeley, a position as well respected (by the left) as a constitutional law professor / community organizer.

    1. Re:CAN A DA by rbrander · · Score: 1

      The words "under water" do not appear in the paper. The numbers '2010' and '2012' appear only in references to papers written. You're simply not telling the truth.

    2. Re:CAN A DA by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      Do you even know what a "species" is?

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  91. Narrow definition of sharing used by joetainment · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Overall I like the sentiment of the post made, but it falls apart at the point when it incorrectly defines sharing:

    >> "Sharing: Willingly giving a portion of your possessions to another, denying you use or benefit thereof."

    You have just redefined sharing for your own purpose. Your argument makes the same mistake it seeks to oppose, loading words for it's own purpose.

    Sharing is not so limited in definition. I can "share" my knowledge with my students, and not be deprived of anything myself. In addition, I can share things that don't belong to me with others, although it might be illegal, it's still pretty clearly sharing. In particular, transferring information is definitely "sharing" and is not always illegal. I could be sharing information I created myself, perhaps my own artwork.

    Even if your definition is copy pasted a dictionary definition, one particular dictionary definition does not suffice to fully define a word. Dictionaries are extremely simplified definitions written for quick reference. Etymology and semantics of words are much more complex. For example, even by just using other dictionaries I can find that a common definition is "to use or enjoy something jointly".

    Specific types of copying can (and do) run afoul of particular laws, so "copyright infringement" meets your definition of it, but sharing simultaneously meets a definition of sharing that is more reasonable and widespread than that which you use. Copying itself, and in general, is not wrong. Whether particular copyright infringement is ethical or not depends on a lot of factors too complex to really get in to here (eg. the legitimacy of the laws in effect, the proper functioning of democracy, the consent of those governed, etc).

    1. Re: Narrow definition of sharing used by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The poster is probably a Ruby developer; redefining things as it suits him is in his nature.

  92. A bit of difference [Re:deniers and skeptics] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 2

    There isn't much difference between the two religious camps, except one gets excused by the AGW proponents much more quickly.

    One side shouts--LOUDLY-- that scientists are frauds, scientific results are a hoax, anybody paying attention to science is participating a "scam", and there's a worldwide conspiracy of scientists to defraud the public.

    The other side doesn't.

    I see a very clear difference.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:A bit of difference [Re:deniers and skeptics] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nope the climate scientists are not helping them selves by being furtive and blocking open access to information.
      (the climate gate emails prove this!, acting as a cabal that ignored and hid problems with their research)

      If they had been truthful, I would have been more inclined to believe what they say, but it just looks like they had made their minds up and suffered badly from confirmation bias!

  93. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by dryeo · · Score: 1

    You mis-understand the Michelson & Morley experiments. At the time science had shown that light had certain properties, namely traveling as a wave, things like interference patterns showed the wave like nature of light.
    All the current evidence showed that waves needed a medium to travel in so it was postulated that space was full of a mysterious substance known as aether.
    Questions came up such as is the aether stationary or moving? Can we use it to measure the motion of the Earth? and such.
    To test these ideas meant accurately measuring the speed of light and towards the end of the 19th century better apparatus was made to accurately measure the speed of light.
    Michelson & Morley used the most up to date apparatus to measure the speed of light expecting to get different numbers depending on things like the time of day and time of year as the speed of light relative to them should vary.
    They got totally unexpected results, namely that the speed of light was constant. This resulted in having to rethink the whole idea of aether and eventually led to better theories.
    They were not skeptics but trying to advance knowledge and were honest enough to recognize that current theory failed in the face of experimentation.
    Now if someone can show an experiment that shows that the greenhouse affect doesn't exist, that would be similar and then we can go on to figure out why the Earth is 30 degrees warmer then its black body temperature etc. This is much harder now as so many experiments have been done that shows the greenhouse affect does exist rather then we only lately have got good enough instruments to accurately measure temperature.

    --
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  94. The science actually leans towards the Skeptics by REALMAN · · Score: 1, Informative

    For your review:

    Peer-Reviewed Survey Finds Majority Of Scientists Skeptical Of Global Warming Crisis

    Article: http://www.forbes.com/sites/ja...

    Peer Reviewed Survey http://oss.sagepub.com/content...

    --
    - A Frog in a pond utters an azure cry. -
    1. Re:The science actually leans towards the Skeptics by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

      For your review:

      Peer-Reviewed Survey Finds Majority Of Scientists Skeptical Of Global Warming Crisis

      Article: http://www.forbes.com/sites/ja...

      Peer Reviewed Survey http://oss.sagepub.com/content...

      That's from a " fee-charging open access journal" of Sage Publishing, which was one of the publishers that "peer reviewed" and published complete bullshit papers send in as a test by a Science sting last year. So, "yeah, right".

      --
      Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  95. Armchair denial is not questionning science by aepervius · · Score: 2

    If you have data, make a model, and then either make experiment or prediction on model and come with a different result than the actual science, youa re doing science you can PUBLISH and then you are a climate skeptic because you have reason to.

    Climate change denier, usually the same people which respond to criticism with "hey science is a religion you can't question it" are usually armchar people havign read a blog or two or have a poltical ground and have no fucking clue about the real state of climate science state.

    How many people worldwide can be called climate science skeptic ? AKA : publish article and have data model to back it up ? Not many. I can count them maybe on a hand or two. ALL the rest are denier which throw any excuse up and they are present by many many order of magnitude more than the previous group (including the false criticism "established science cannot be questionned" ... It can, but with a proper data and evidence. Not with bullshit from a sofa).



    And this is essentially why your criticism is not warranted. Science is about being constantly questionned by other falsifiable science hypotheses. Not by idiot in a chair repeating some conservative BS they saw somewhere abou solar flare or volcanoe.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  96. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    He wasn't talking about scientists, he was talking about science. Your link talks about scientists.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  97. Actually, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The current California drought IS severe by modern standards, but there is plenty of data to show that droughts this severe have occurred many times before. One thing that IS different now is the massive increse in human population demanding potable water. If you simply kicked-out the millions of illegal aliens in the state, California would have enough water to easily get through this current drought (BUT that's one thing the left-wing activists will NEVER support - there are limits to what they'll do to mitigate this problem...) Incidentally, this is not unlike the Hurricane agitprop: Yes the damage from some recent hurricanes was record-setting in dollars (though absolutely NOT in lives) but that was caused by the massive build-up in expensive construction in previously un- or less-developed areas NOT increased storm severity.

    The climate catastrophe chicken littles have three things going for them that help them pursuade the public:

    1. Most people have a VERY short memory of climate/weather (just a couple decades, and with very bad precision particularly with regard to weather during their childhood)

    2. Humans have only been recording weather data for most of this billions-of-years-old planet during the past century, so people are always hearing weather stories that include phrases like "hottest August on record" or "coldest January ever recorded" and they interpret these as "it's NEVER been hotter/colder"

    3. The Schools and the media are "on board" with the agenda and are acting as 24/7 propaganda pushers

    This, of course, presents an inintended problem for the climate activists: Most skeptics are the sort of people who actually seriously THINK about things (the flighty, easliy propagandized non-thinkers have already been "properly educated") and they are therefore NOT the sort who will fail to notice manipulated data, rigged peer review processes, rigged paper publishing, and the massive piles of government cash paying for all this propaganda that drives the agenda of more government power and control...

  98. "Science denier" is sensationalism by larryjoe · · Score: 0

    I personally think there is some human influence on climate change. However, the use of the term "science denier" is plain sensationalism, and it's ridiculous. "Science" does not equal climatology. To say that someone who rejects one set of scientific theories or results necessarily rejects all scientific ideas is pure propaganda. Worse yet, it's unnecessary and makes such speakers appear ignorant. It's best to keep the appearance of idiocy on the target of one's criticism.

    1. Re:"Science denier" is sensationalism by larryjoe · · Score: 1

      I see that my post got moderated as a troll. Seriously?! There are many intelligent individuals utilizing science and reasoning to support climate change, but there are also idiots who for some reason try to match some of the mudslinging of the anti crowd. Hotheads on either side of the issue are still hotheads and serve to discredit their respective viewpoints.

  99. Not skeptics? Alright.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ignorant barbarians it is, then!

  100. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

    "Trend for more than a decade" = statistical and signal detection illiteracy, or attempted deception. At all time scales at which a *statistically significant trend is detectable*, the trend is exactly as would be expected given the scientific consensus as expressed by, for example, the IPCC. Which means warming at the surface, warming in the upper and middle layers of the oceans, warming in the lower atmosphere, and cooling in the stratosphere. On shorter time scales, the signal is too noisy to say anything meaningful. Also, as you either don't know or don't want others to know, there are lags of differing intervals in the temperature response to CO2, determined by the efficiency of various climate components (like the oceans) as heat-sinks. Your suggestion that you should be able to see an instantaneous and simple effect, obvious to your naked eye in the 3 charts you generated at wood for trees would suggest that you are deeply ignorant of how climate works and what climate scientists are saying is happening. However, I don't think that's the whole story. The fact that you chose the specific start dates that you did..2001 for hadcrut, 2002 for UAH, 1998 (!) for RSS...suggests that you are deliberately cherry-picking start dates to give a visual impression that your (statistically meaningless) statements are accurate. Make the plots again with the whole available data sets, and it becomes obvious that we are looking at a noisy system trending upward on a multi-decadal scale.

  101. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by anonymousJUGGERNAUT · · Score: 1

    If CO2 had any significant effect, it would show up in the temperature record.

    Which of course it does. Google "temperature CO2 graph." It's glaringly obvious, if you don't truncate the graphs to only show a few years. Or does the AC believe that if the CO2 in the atmosphere disappeared, there would be no impact? (without the greenhouse effect of CO2, the current surface temperature would be about 30C lower)

  102. IPCC = totally uncredible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hockey stick graph loll

    funny how dumb people are, and continue believing in hoaxes/straight lies

  103. It's not science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not science. It does not follow the scientific method. Who put the earth's climate under controlled conditions to study how it works? I'm tired of this BS claiming to be science, when it is clearly not. The scientific method calls for extensive experimentation and controls. Global Warming science has none of that.

  104. Spelling by 12WTF$ · · Score: 1

    Since the US calls them skeptics and the rest of the English world calls them sceptics. I propose the following:

    Climate change deniers from now on, are to be called septics.

    They stink. They are pollution.They are a waste.

    [Australian slang etymology: septic tank = yank]

    --
    Cryonics - Keep cool and carry on.
  105. recycling fallacies is skepticism? by Layzej · · Score: 1

    So you're saying that repeating fallacies is the act of a skeptic? Seems like a skeptic would try to learn from her mistakes.

  106. I'm skeptical about your solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I consider myself a "skeptic," yet:

    I agree that our carbon consumption is having a negative effect on the world.
    I agree that our industrialization is having a negative effect on the world.
    I agree that our human footprint is having an effect on the world.

    How, then can I be skeptical about the whole global warming thing?

    I think the obvious solution to removing our human footprint is to remove the humans, but that's obviously not a sane thing to propose.
    I don't think that you really understand the long-term effect that your [popular solution of the month] will have on the environment.
    I strongly suspect that you're using the climate change flag to get things that you want that have nothing to do with the environment, because I keep hearing this "sacrifice" rhetoric but it seems like it's always me that's supposed to be doing the sacrificing and not you.

    However, I do think I'm doing my part:

    I have sought to minimize the length of my commute, because that way I burn less gas. [and spend less money on it]
    Fuel efficiency is an important factor for me when picking a vehicle, because that way I burn less gas. [and spend less money on it]
    I have sealed up my house and have high-efficiency windows and a high efficiency HVAC system, because that way I burn less energy. [and spend less money on it]
    I avoid using disposable bottles when I can. [because water is cheaper out of the tap]

    My common theme, and my solution of the month: Ask people to sacrifice convenience for the environment, not money. Don't sell people on "be clean because otherwise we're all going to die" - sell people on "be clean to make the world a better place for our children."

  107. Evidence of a Losing Argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you cant win on merit, change the language. Nice try liberals.

  108. In related news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Climate Change skeptics all over the world are lobbying the media for them to change the term "climate scientist" to the more accurate and colorful "Tax Hog Whores".

  109. Skeptic or Denier? by Layzej · · Score: 1

    So do you reject all but the most optimistic projections? Time to find out who is the real "True Believer".

    1. Re:Skeptic or Denier? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I don't know what you mean by 'the most optimistic projections' (AGW brings about world peace?), but the evidence I see points to between .7 and 1.5 degrees of warming with a doubling of CO2.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:Skeptic or Denier? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Wow! You've even opted to ignore most of the more optimistic projections! Good job! Perhaps you were projecting when you talked of "true faith"?

    3. Re:Skeptic or Denier? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Wow! You've even opted to ignore most of the more optimistic projections!

      Which ones are you talking about specifically?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    4. Re:Skeptic or Denier? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      Well, you have ignored 95% of the evidence. For example, even the optimistic projections of Lewis&Curry 2004 are twice your chosen range. And ironically you are suggesting I am the one with "true faith"!

    5. Re:Skeptic or Denier? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Well, if you want to talk about evidence, the only way you could get more than 1 degree of warming (doubling CO2) is with feedbacks. CO2 by itself won't do that.

      So you can hypothesize as many feedbacks as you want, up to and including 'clathrate gun', which isn't considered likely by most scientists, including the IPCC.

      So really what I'm looking for here is convincing evidence (or even reasonable evidence, something more than a hypothesis, and something more than a crappy computer model) that one of the feedbacks will cause an exponential increase in temperature.

      If we see that then I will easily change my mind, and in some cases even support drastic changes to prevent CAGW. Right now not even the IPCC is predicting CAGW, though.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:Skeptic or Denier? by Layzej · · Score: 1

      You are ignoring the observations. Did you even read Curry and Lewis 2014?

  110. OK, so how much CO2 produced....? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, about 1/130th of the CO2 humans do. Totalled.

    Hmmmm.

  111. Just like by Livius · · Score: 1

    Holocaust deniers would rather be called skeptics, but everyone knows it's not really about skepticism.

  112. Thermal calculations [Re:Undersea volcanoes!] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    Excellent. You have at least tried to put some numbers down: you have now met minimum standards for actual debate.

    So let's analyze your numbers:

    First, the link you gave which you listed as "30,000 submarine volcanoes," when you follow it, actually states "An estimated 30,000 seamounts occur across the globe," where it helpfully defines seamount: "typically extinct volcanoes that rise abruptly from a seafloor of 1,000 - 4,000 meters depth." So, the first caveat is that you will want to answer the question, how many active submarine volcanoes are there?

    Next we need to figure the energy emitted by a volcano. It's a weird calculation to take an estimate of potential electrical power from a volcano and back calculate that to thermal power; I'd go with cubic meters of lava times temperature times heat capacity, but right now we're analyzing your calc. So, 60,000 GW = 60 TW. (I calculate that at 500 million TW-hrs per year, by the way: check your numbers.)

    Indeed: that's more than human energy consumption. But, why do we care? This is a climate calculation, so we are looking for a climate answer: does this affect climate?

    Googling "solar energy absorbed by the Earth," Earth receives 340 watts per square meter times the surface area of the Earth (510 million square kilometers= 510 trillion square meters), that comes to 170,000 TW. So the estimated volcanic heat contribution is a 0.00035 increase in input energy. From the Stefan-Boltzman equation, we can translate that to a temperature increase (Kelvin) of a factor of 1.00009. At Earth's equilibrium temperature, that's an increase of roughly 0.025 degrees K

    But, that's not a calculation of the contribution to observed warming-- that's a steady state effect. It's the amount that the Earth's climate would change if all those 30,000 volcanoes were originally off, and suddenly turn on. They're not likely to be all turning on in phase. So, the modulation in the Earth's climate is at most that number, and most likely less.

    Not significant.

    That's the back of my envelope, care to share yours that would state unequivocally that it's not a possible contributor?

    Sure.

    The entire heat flux from the interior of the Earth is 0.05 watts per square meter. That's all of the volcanoes, including your undersea volcanoes, all of the geothermal energy, everything. The estimate radiative forcing from carbon dioxide emitted by humans is order of magnitude 1 watt per square meter. Thus, heat flux from the Earth's interior can account for, at most, 5% as much warming as anthropogenic carbon dioxide.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
    1. Re:Thermal calculations [Re:Undersea volcanoes!] by Hussman32 · · Score: 1

      A nice response, and interesting. But if you dig a little deeper, you'll see it's not that trivial.

      I would note that your post didn't address the relative orders of magnitude of CO2. My revised argument (I didn't type the following in the earlier post) is that natural CO2 dominates anthropogenic CO2, and any changes we induce to the overall temperature are overshadowed by natural variations. In particular, the variations in chemistry and temperature of the ocean dominate the chemical equilibrium.

      What I didn't add about the undersea volcanoes is when heat and acid are added to water, LeChatlier's principle states that the alkaline ocean (remember, ocean pH varies from 7.0 to 8.0) will go slightly more acidic (sulfuric acid is a much stronger acid than carbon dioxide) and push the carbon dioxide out of the water, and increasing temperature raises the dissociation constant of water (or lowers the pKw, take your pick) and also forces out more CO2. Anyone who has drunk a warm, flat beer, or poured vinegar into soda water and watch it fizz, can observe this. The assumed heat added by volcanoes is 525,000 TW-h, [check your numbers too ;-)], and the acidity from sulfuric acid is enough energy (in terms of chemical potential) to affect the solubility and cause the ocean to release more CO2 into the atmosphere, or absorb more if the volcanic activity decreases.

      If there is a 10% variation in the volcanic releases of heat and SO4 (or 52,000 TW-h, compared to 142 TW-h from anthropogenic sources), that will affect the environment more than what we add, and it can be argued that from the energy balance difference (recall the worlds energy demand is another way of showing the chemical potential differences between the hydrocarbons and CO2 + H2O). This is significant, and the argument cannot be dismissed by calling me a denier.

      It could be dismissed if all volcanoes were identified and their activity cataloged. Then you'd need to start working on the fish population issue, which is a much harder problem.

      --
      "Who are you?" "No one of consequence." "I must know." "Get used to disappointment."
  113. not science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Until politics are not part of the discussion, it's not science.

    See AL Gore for current rise in Temps his mouth is emitting the hot air. Its him and other political hacks that are perverting science for political ends.

  114. Re: So just call me a bloody goat shit glue mix bu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG!! That's got to be the funniest post I've read in years! Awesome! ;)

  115. How times don't change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once upon a time, people who sought truth were ostracized, exiled, imprisoned, or murdered for speaking out against the prevailing views of their time. They were called heretics, and the truths in their minds and hearts were decried as satanic lunacy, regarded as a malignant cancer upon the natural and social orders. Some of these scientists, philosophers, and artisans chose to embody courage and dedication to truth and humanity above all else, often paying the ultimate price. Eventually, at the cost of many lives and untold suffering, the fruit of these sacrifices loosened the hold of the power-hungry church and its ignorant dogma. They paved the way for the Renaissance, freeing the minds of many people to seek their own truth *without* fear for their very life and limb. After a few centuries of that freedom providing for exponential growth in human understanding from generation to generation, we find ourselves in the midst of an unmitigated explosion of endlessly unfolding understanding and capability w.r.t. the physical world around us.

    So, we better hurry and ostracize those heretics and their unpopular opinions before their malignant satanic lunacy dooms us all.

    I am neither a skeptic nor a denier when it comes to climate change, but I don't blame anyone who isn't convinced that we have a solid handle on these incredibly complex patterns that exist on scales of time which are so much greater than any human life. Does anyone else see what a slippery slope this is? Sure, many powers that be are still trying to save expense and cling to the old industrial ways by burying heads in the sand about climate change. But do we need to collectively decide on a particular label to apply to these people, and the corresponding derision they supposedly deserve? Science has a long and storied history of proving itself wrong. Which is great, because otherwise we wouldn't learn anything. But unless people are allowed to have those dissenting, unpopular opinions without being vilified and demonized, all we've done is traded one oppressive regime for another. The truly important lessons that escape us have not changed, apparently: basic human respect and decency; balancing confidence with humility; thinking (and especially feeling) for yourself instead of becoming one with the angry mindless mob. Perhaps calling these people "science deniers" would be convenient for this particular argument, and I tend to agree with that label *in this case*, but that kind of blatant disregard for freedom of opinion does not, and will not, stop there.

    If we have to label "them" something, how about something that isn't loaded with the fallacious assumption that our current prevailing views at this particular tiny speck in history are beyond reproach. We already have a bunch of words for people who prioritize personal gain over truth and justice. We also have words for people who allow themselves to be blindly led around on a leash. We also have words for people who simply lack the will to confront such large and frightening possible futures. So I suggest using those words, because lumping all those people into the same labeled category so you can ostracize them into silence might serve your purposes now, but that *is* the essence of the same evil that had to be overcome for science to even exist in its modern form, and I can promise you, dear reader, that whatever your unique qualities might be, you too can be shoehorned into a mislabeled box if people don't like what you have to say some day. Worse yet, social regressions of this kind will lead straight back to the dark ages we emerged from (socially speaking; I don't mean your phone will magically disappear). What sort of social climate do you want your children and your grandchildren to exist in? Should they feel free to explore brilliant revolutionary ideas? Or be too scared to go against the grain? The choices we make now about how we handle these people and these issues determine what that future will look like, just as a small course correction can chang

  116. Re: So just call me a bloody goat shit glue mix bu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG!! That's got to be the funniest post I've read on SD in years! Awesome! ;)

  117. Global cooling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The irrefutable science is that global earth temperatures have been COOLING over the past 20 years, which is part of the normal cycle of warming/cooling that have been a part of planetary climate for billions of years. (thus the reason why they now call it "climate change" instead of the debunked "global warming")

    Progressive liberals and eco-socialists just figured out how to exploit this natural trend and brainwash the naive useful idiots into funding their hippie research grants, and Al Gore is making Millions with the "Generation Investment Management" company he set up to reap profits from carbon trading, shortly before going on his "global warming" propaganda tour.

  118. Don't speculate, calculate [Re:Thermal calculatio] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    A nice response, and interesting. But if you dig a little deeper, you'll see it's not that trivial.

    Yes it is.

    I would note that your post didn't address the relative orders of magnitude of CO2.

    Calculations, please. Making stuff up isn't science. Calculating effects is. If you think that relative magnitude of CO2 is relevant, give me a back of the envelope showing plausibility. You can use as a starting point the fact all the volcanoes worldwide emit, on average, an estimated 130 to 440 million metric tons of CO2 each year. (Sounds like a lot, doesn't it?)

    My revised argument (I didn't type the following in the earlier post) is that natural CO2 dominates anthropogenic CO2,

    Correct.

    and any changes we induce to the overall temperature are overshadowed by natural variations.

    Nope. They add to the natural variations... but the natural variations tend to average out with time, while the anthropogenic CO2 is monotonic upward.

    In particular, the variations in chemistry and temperature of the ocean dominate the chemical equilibrium.

    Don't speculate, calculate. About two minutes of work should show you that this is not even within a few orders of magnitude of being relevant. You need a back of the envelope calculation showing plausibility.

    What I didn't add about the undersea volcanoes is when heat and acid are added to water, LeChatlier's principle states that the alkaline ocean (remember, ocean pH varies from 7.0 to 8.0) will go slightly more acidic (sulfuric acid is a much stronger acid than carbon dioxide) and push the carbon dioxide out of the water, and increasing temperature raises the dissociation constant of water (or lowers the pKw, take your pick) and also forces out more CO2.

    Now you're talking effects that aren't even close to being relevant. Don't speculate, calculate.

    Anyone who has drunk a warm, flat beer, or poured vinegar into soda water and watch it fizz, can observe this. The assumed heat added by volcanoes is 525,000 TW-h, [check your numbers too ;-)], and the acidity from sulfuric acid is enough energy (in terms of chemical potential) to affect the solubility and cause the ocean to release more CO2 into the atmosphere, or absorb more if the volcanic activity decreases.

    Show me an order of magnitude. How much is the effect?

    If there is a 10% variation in the volcanic releases of heat and SO4 (or 52,000 TW-h, compared to 142 TW-h from anthropogenic sources), that will affect the environment more than what we add, and it can be argued that from the energy balance difference (recall the worlds energy demand is another way of showing the chemical potential differences between the hydrocarbons and CO2 + H2O). This is significant,

    Sorry, but your numbers fail a check of units. The units needed are warming in degrees K. Any other numbers need to, eventually, be turned into warming in K by a calculation.

    and the argument cannot be dismissed by calling me a denier.

    You have stopped being a denier when you started doing calculations with actual numbers. You may be wrong... but you have now demonstrated that you are not a denier.

    It could be dismissed if all volcanoes were identified and their activity cataloged.

    Unnecessary. If the effect is many orders of magnitude too small to think about, no need to pay further attention.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  119. Re:Don't speculate, calculate [Re:Thermal calculat by Hussman32 · · Score: 1

    Yes it is.

    It's not, and one point that needs to be clarified is that AGW proponents must supply the burden of proof. The null hypothesis is that climate and weather are determined by natural processes, and human effects on that must be proven.

    I would note that your post didn't address the relative orders of magnitude of CO2.

    Calculations, please. Making stuff up isn't science. Calculating effects is. If you think that relative magnitude of CO2 is relevant, give me a back of the envelope showing plausibility. You can use as a starting point the fact all the volcanoes worldwide emit, on average, an estimated 130 to 440 million metric tons of CO2 each year. (Sounds like a lot, doesn't it?)

    I'm not talking about the CO2 from the volcanoes, it's the heat and acidity. Simple order of magnitude won't work, but to give it a sniff test if you take the total mass of oceans at 1.37e21 kg and the potential variation of volcanic heat at 52,000 TW-h, converting that to Joules 1.872e20 J, then you get the rough dT of 0.13K, or about 0.2 deg F. That assumes uniform energy distribution throughout the ocean.

    The argument is the heat and acid from volcanoes disrupts the CO2 equilibrium. Start with the data, and note the data do not have error bars (which is my main point): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...

    Every number in this figure is calculated on an average, and if you want to calculate it effectively, you'd need to use Navier-Stokes, heat convection/diffusion, combined convection/diffusion mass transfer equations with reactions , and thermal radiation integrated simultaneously with known time dependent, boundary conditions. These equations aren't solvable.

    and any changes we induce to the overall temperature are overshadowed by natural variations.

    Nope. They add to the natural variations... but the natural variations tend to average out with time, while the anthropogenic CO2 is monotonic upward.

    Ahem, calculations please.

    In particular, the variations in chemistry and temperature of the ocean dominate the chemical equilibrium.

    My two minutes of work showed the lower limit is 0.12 Kelvins, that is significant enough. As for the chemistry, I can direct you to Smith and Van Ness and a physical chemistry text, it takes a little bit of work but I can't put it on a slashdot post (I do numerical chemistry for a living).

    Now you're talking effects that aren't even close to being relevant. Don't speculate, calculate.

    It is relevant, remember, AGW needs to prove that it isn't.

    Sorry, but your numbers fail a check of units. The units needed are warming in degrees K. Any other numbers need to, eventually, be turned into warming in K by a calculation.

    See above.

    You have stopped being a denier when you started doing calculations with actual numbers. You may be wrong... but you have now demonstrated that you are not a denier.

    It could be dismissed if all volcanoes were identified and their activity cataloged.

    Unnecessary. If the effect is many orders of magnitude too small to think about, no need to pay further attention.

    Denier is being applied to skilled scientists. That is my objection.

    Gotta go to bed, nice chat.

    --
    "Who are you?" "No one of consequence." "I must know." "Get used to disappointment."
  120. keep on calculating [Don't speculate, calculate] by Geoffrey.landis · · Score: 1

    A nice response, and interesting. But if you dig a little deeper, you'll see it's not that trivial.

    Yes it is.

    It's not, and one point that needs to be clarified is that AGW proponents must supply the burden of proof.

    Nope. You have just proposed a hypothesis. Unless you show that it is plausible, there's no reason for anybody to pay attention: your hypothesis, your burden to show it's plausible.

    As it turns out, about two minutes of calculation shows it's several orders of magnitude too small to be relevant. But you need to learn to do your calculations.

    Unsupported speculation is not science. It may be the start of science... but it's not science until you start using numbers.

    I would note that your post didn't address the relative orders of magnitude of CO2.

    Calculations, please. Making stuff up isn't science. Calculating effects is. If you think that relative magnitude of CO2 is relevant, give me a back of the envelope showing plausibility. You can use as a starting point the fact all the volcanoes worldwide emit, on average, an estimated 130 to 440 million metric tons of CO2 each year. (Sounds like a lot, doesn't it?)

    I'm not talking about the CO2 from the volcanoes, it's the heat and acidity.

    You randomly shift back and forth from saying its the CO2 (first quote in this thread this one), it's the heat (listed first in this sentence), or it's the acidity (end of this sentence). Three completely different effects; three completely different calculations. This leads me to suspect you haven't actually thought it out. Pick one. Do the calculation. Check your numbers. Check them again.

    Sorry, gotta go.

    --
    http://www.geoffreylandis.com
  121. What is it they are denying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what is it that they are denying? The phrase "efuse to accept the reality of climate change" is as stupid as it gets. Climate is always changing. We live in a world with a semi-chaotic climate that has 2 main attractors. The dominant one is cold and 90% of the time we are in ice ages, the other 10% are inter-glacial periods like now.

    So the "ice age is coming" of the 1970s becomes "global warming" in the 1980s/90s and has now morphed into "climate change" because the warming stopped 14-18 years ago. "Climate Change" is so nice because they won't have to change their scam's name every time the climate does something they don't expect .... like CHANGE!

    If anyone is engaged in denial it is those who still continue to insist that CO2 controls the climate. It is way way more complex than that. CO2 is a factor but a very minor one. A serious question for everyone who thinks that CO2 controls the climate. How long with rising CO2 and flat or falling temperatures before you admit your theory is wrong? 20 years? 30? Never?

    All 5 of the major datasets (RSS, UAH, HadCRUT4, GISS, NCDC) show no warming for between 14 and almost 18 years. In that time CO2 has risen 8-10%.

    Here are 2 predictions. First I predict that CO2 will continue to increase because China and other countries don't care about CO2. They don't even care about real pollutants much less CO2. Second I predict it will get colder over the next 20-30 years. Why?

    Dr Libby in the 1970s said that "looking forward it will stay cold until the mid 80s (it did), then it will warm by about 1/4 degree F until the end of the century it did), then it gets cold". When asked how cold she was predicting a 1-2 degree F drop with an outside chance of a 3-4 degree drop.

    Dr Easterbrook in 2001 said the PDO was done it's positive warm cycle and that we were in for 25-30 years of cold weather. How cold? We have his good, bad and ugly predictions based on previous negative cold phases of the PDO.

    Why do I join with them and side with their predictions? While past performance is not a guarantee of future correctness it is a lot better record than the IPCC and their dozens of models of which none have been accurate. They are all based on CO2 controlling the climate and the other 2 are all cyclical natural cycles. I'll go with those who have a good track record at predicting future climate. Dr Libby is the most impressive as her prediction is 30+ years going and still accurate.

    If you want to read a great explanation of why the IPCC models are broken beyond belief there was a great article describing that and all the other problems with climate science by Dr Brown of Duke university

    http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/10/06/real-science-debates-are-not-rare/
     

  122. Climate change is natural by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....the science deniers are the ones who refuse to accept the fact that the climate modeling is failing to match observed temperatures. Science shows we've had no warming in 18 years, 2 months. Science shows that there's no increase in either frequency or magnitude for hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, droughts, wildfires, etc. Science shows that glacial retreat started after the little ice age, and has decelerated in recent decades. Global sea ice is dramatically rebounding, at a record high in the Antarctic and a ten year high in the Arctic. Science shows that sea level rise was dramatic....20,000 years ago, and barely measurable over the past century.

  123. Sceptic as a science denier... by vac65 · · Score: 1

    How about call them idiots... ?

  124. Re:keep on calculating [Don't speculate, calculate by Hussman32 · · Score: 1

    You randomly shift back and forth from saying its the CO2 (first quote in this thread this one), it's the heat (listed first in this sentence), or it's the acidity (end of this sentence). Three completely different effects; three completely different calculations. This leads me to suspect you haven't actually thought it out. Pick one. Do the calculation. Check your numbers. Check them again.

    Sorry, gotta go.

    There's nothing random about my statements, you're not understanding them. The hypothesis, based on known chemistry that is well supported, is that addition of heat and acid changes the solubility of the massive CO2 inventory in the ocean (the CO2 I discuss in my first post), and the energy (both heat and chemical) are sufficient enough to dominate CO2 inventory changes introduced by man. We've already done enough estimates to show the energies are sufficient for further review.

    --
    "Who are you?" "No one of consequence." "I must know." "Get used to disappointment."
  125. It's funny to me by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

    that a couple organizations with the word "Skeptic" in their name feel they have the right to represent all skeptics everywhere. And that otherwise intelligent people buy into such bullshit.

    If you have data and facts that are conclusive, talk about them. The constant focus on the tiny percentage of people who call themselves MMGW skeptics naturally causes me to suspect the veracity of the oppositions claims.

    The more you rail on and on about the Skeptics the less you're talking about the data and the facts. Why would you DO that if your evidence wasn't as solid as you shrilly claim it is ?

  126. they are skeptics by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    the attempt to label them deniers is an attempt to compare them to holocaust deniers. that in itself is despicable.

    --
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  127. Re:keep on calculating [Don't speculate, calculate by KeensMustard · · Score: 1

    Sure. Once you've done the numbers to support your hypothesis then get back to us. At the moment, to be honest, it sounds like more wild speculation. Let's say your hypothesis is correct and undersea volcanoes have reduced the ability of the ocean to absorb CO2 from the atmosphere. Wouldn't this act in such a way as to increase the sensitivity of the climate to anthropogenic CO2 emissions?

  128. Fiddled! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Global warming figures were fiddled by governments, we all know this. Global warming does not exist, not by man anyway. There is a natural climate change far greater than we can alter.

  129. forgot to read the title? by raymorris · · Score: 1

    I see you forgot to read the title , much less the summary or article. This is about how the MEDIA portrays people in debates over POLITICAL proposals. Most such "science" simply isn't science.

    Unfortunately, politics is process of apportioning money and power, so the department head of Climate Science at UC Berkeley, whose job is to maintain their funding, is essentially a POLITICAL position. When the continued existence of your department is contingent on you acquiring a $20 million federal grant paid by taxpayers, that's a political job, not a scientific one, regardless of what the title "tenured professor " might imply.

  130. definitions by gzuckier · · Score: 1

    If the extent of your skepticism is repeating No No No, even though you have a different reason each time why it's No, you are a denier. If you can cite a priori precise criteria which, if satisfied, would prove it to your satisfaction (which are possible, i.e. not "two identical planets, one burning fossil fuels, one not", then you are a skeptic.

    --
    Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
  131. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, maybe they'll stop calling pollution a warming problem, and address real issues like over fishing and desertification of the planet. You know, things that actually can affect the carbon cycle unlike your fucking fraudulent cap and trade programs that put money into the pockets of immoral scientists and politicians.

  132. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Sarius64 · · Score: 1

    I agree. But how do we do that? Cap and trade is under investigation throughout Europe for fraud. Maybe we should follow systems that actually produce carbon sinks instead of enriching more bankers and politicians.

  133. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    There has always been corruption in democracies. Should we abolish democracies? Oil companies are also corrupt. Should stop using oil?
    Cap and trade works, just like taxes on CO2. Europe emit far less CO2 per capita than US/Canada/Australia. That some politicians fail to implement policies or are corrupt is not a valid reason for doing nothing.

  134. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

    And popular technology isn't either. Read the sources on wikipedia. The problem with those 1350+ articles is that as an individual, I don't have the time to read them all to verify your claims. So I have to rely on synthesis reports such as those from the IPCC and various science academies. And they are well summarized on wikipedia.

    Oh, so now the argument is that there is too much evidence for GW to be checked by one man alone, so it can all be disregarded.

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  135. Re:Science is on the skeptical side of this debate by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    Not disregarded. Synthetized by other scientists.

  136. but i am skeptic by ancientmyth · · Score: 1

    And i am skeptical about the science, which is science. Other scientists are also skeptical. But the insult is when trying to debate the validity of the data from the science in its relation to cause and effect, especially when the recorded data is such a small miniscule portion of the timespan of the subject itself (earth), relatively with an even smaller portion of coinciding timeframes that neglect the larger non coinciding timeframes, the skepticism suddenly becomes laffable and ignored because of the inability of other skeptics (religion) to express themselves.

    1. Re: but i am skeptic by ancientmyth · · Score: 1

      In other words, some skeptics are not calling the science non-scientific, but rather the science with one climate change theory is ignoring other scientific theories lumping them with zealots.