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Montana Legislator Introduces Bills To Give His State His Own Science (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The legislator in question is Republican Joe Read, who represents an area north of Missoula, home of many fine scientists at the University of Montana. Read has eight bills under consideration in the current session of the legislature, and two of those focus on climate change. One of them focuses on his state's role in any greenhouse gas regulatory program that would be instituted under a future president. Read is apparently unaware of past legal precedent indicating that the federal government has the legal ability to regulate pollutants. Instead, the preamble of the bill seemingly argues that Montana's emissions are all due to commerce that takes place within the state, and thus "any federal greenhouse gas regulatory program in the form of law or rule violates the 10th Amendment of the Constitution of the United States."

As a result, the bill would prohibit state agencies, officials, and employees from doing anything to cooperate with federal efforts to limit greenhouse gas emissions. If passed, the Montana government "may not implement or enforce in any way any federal regulation, rule, or policy implementing a federal greenhouse gas regulatory program." But if you thought Read's grasp of constitutional law was shaky, you should check out his reason for objecting to doing anything about climate change. That's laid out in his second bill, which targets both science education and in-state programs designed to reduce carbon emissions. And it doesn't mince words, suggesting that pretty much all the scientists have it wrong: "the [US] National Climate Assessment makes the same errors as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and the National Academy of Sciences is also fundamentally wrong about climate change."

40 of 339 comments (clear)

  1. Stupids gonna stupid... by Jahoda · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And Montana is that extra special breed of republican corruption. Rememeber whitefish energy and Ryan Zinke?

    1. Re:Stupids gonna stupid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, that simply says that the Dems actually pursue corruption in their ranks and punish them, while the GOP ignores corruption and then blindly defends their own. The GOP actively supports corruption by ignoring it in their own ranks

    2. Re:Stupids gonna stupid... by Holi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Besides lying about getting a little side action in the Oval Office, what crimes did the many investigations into the Clintons produce?

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  2. Interesting by TimothyHollins · · Score: 5, Funny

    The first person to know everything. Impressive.

    1. Re:Interesting by dkman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "I know better than the experts, who actually studied the subject."

      Why is it that politicians especially fall into the category of people who don't know what they don't know. Is undeserved blind confidence a trait that's required to go into the field?

      --
      I refuse to sign
    2. Re:Interesting by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's just a guess but I suspect he may not know how ignorant he is.

    3. Re:Interesting by GonzoPhysicist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >Is undeserved blind confidence a trait that's required to go into the field?

      yes, because people will mostly vote for the person that gives a confident answer (even if wrong) over the one that says they don't know or aren't sure.

      --
      horror vacui
  3. Evolution by Only+Time+Will+Tell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This effort to write into law and enforce bad science through education reminds me of the battles over evolution. Science education should be as agnostic as possible to any viewpoint and should be teaching the lastest widely-held scientific understanding. We don't teach older models of the atom once Bohr's came along, and no other model of DNA beyond the double helix is taught. If our understanding of climate and CO2 changes in the future, we will teach that, but for now, an overwhelming majority (>90%) of the scientific community holds that climate change is real and is human-activity driven.

    1. Re:Evolution by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 3, Informative

      We don't teach older models of the atom once Bohr's came along, and no other model of DNA beyond the double helix is taught.

      Well, I remember being taught earlier models of the atom to demonstrate what was wrong with them and how Bohr got to his model. Perhaps texts these days aren't going into as much science history, which is a shame. Besides, these days they ought to teach wave mechanics right off the bat.

      --
      That is all.
    2. Re:Evolution by shilly · · Score: 4, Insightful

      - The scientists: Our current model predicts a massive change, we don't know what that means or what will happen, but we probably have to do something

      The only way to think this is what scientists are saying about climate change is to be so committed to your preconceptions that you ignore what scientists are actually saying.

  4. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by Gilgaron · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Consensus is hugely important in science. The idea that "The instant you start rolling out "pretty much all" or "97% of scientists" say, you're INSTANTLY anti-science." would have trouble being less correct. You don't have to personally revalidate the sum of human knowledge to move further afield.

  5. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by religionofpeas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The instant you start rolling out "pretty much all" or "97% of scientists" say, you're INSTANTLY anti-science.

    Please explain how lawmakers should use scientific findings, if not going by consensus ?

  6. Re:So which is it? by religionofpeas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How do you people do this without brain damage from all the cognitive dissonance?

    You are accusing a diverse group of people from having different opinions ? Or are you talking about a person in particular ?

  7. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by religionofpeas · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Science is not just about objective facts. It's about theories that explain these facts. Different scientists can, and have, propose different theories for the same facts.

  8. Re:Wow by religionofpeas · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It depends. A big factor would be how the laws affect other states and countries.

  9. Wickard v. Filburn; Gonzales v. Raich by tepples · · Score: 4, Informative

    Weed grown in California and consumed in California is constitutionally outside the jurisdiction of the DEA because no matter what Congress says, the butterfly effect does not expand the ICC into a general warrant to regulate anything that might remotely impact interstate commerce.

    In Wickard v. Filburn and Gonzales v. Raich, the US Supreme Court reached the opposite conclusion. Even plants grown for personal use theoretically compete in the market with plants sold interstate.

    1. Re:Wickard v. Filburn; Gonzales v. Raich by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In Wickard v. Filburn and Gonzales v. Raich, the US Supreme Court reached the opposite conclusion. Even plants grown for personal use theoretically compete in the market with plants sold interstate.

      That's because SCOTUS started with a conclusion and bullshitted its wait to a justification. The interstate commerce clause was clearly written specifically to allow the federal government to play arbitrator in commerce disputes among the states. If the purpose was for the federal government to have supreme power over commerce, there would no reason to specify "interstate". Of course the whole problem with being a mere arbitrator of commerce disputes is you don't get to dictate rules upon the states to have control of commerce, especially when the states can and will actively limit certain economic sectors entirely within a state to avoid federal involvement.

      The fundamental issue is, then, that the federal government wanted powers it could only legally have if the Constitution was changed. But there never was enough support to change the federal government enough, even in the Great Depression, to really empower it in the way a unified nation of laws requires. This still is the greatest weakness of the United States which still manifests itself in the Republican/Democrat split upon the absurd notion that SCOTUS will ever revert the clearly illegal ruling and that Republicans, as a national party, have any real interest in returning power to the states. I truly wish the Constitution was changed to reflect the reality of things, and I wish the Republican party to self-disband because of its obviously delusional base upon which they support a party that is nothing at all like they market themselves*.

      * And to the point, Donald Trump very much marketed himself on the stated Republican platform, yet of course in practice he's not followed through at all on any of his promises precisely because virtually no one in his part in Congress has any interest in following through with any of what he, and they, have stated is their agenda. It's quite amazing, amusing, and disturbing that anyone would still vote Republican at this point.

  10. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by lurcher · · Score: 4, Informative

    So, is a photon a wave or a particle?

    What science does is attempt to provide a model that can be used to understand how reality operates, but the model is not the thing it models.

    Its been very successful at creating those models, and they are very useful, but no one who isnt trying to create a strawman is under any illusion that they are in some sense true. Truth is a mathematical concept not a scientific one.

  11. Re:He's probably correct by Dragonslicer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Same with pollution that can be reasonably shown to have either no interstate transmission or its interstate transmission does not meaningful damage to people, property or commerce.

    Because it's well known that air pollution is very careful to never cross state borders. Stupid scientists.

  12. Re:CO2 a pollutant? by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    First, it doesn't matter what you call it, if you have too much, it's a problem. You can call it peaches and it won't change its effects.

    Second, there is no such thing as blasphemy against chemistry or physics, which is what life is. Blasphemy only has meaning in religion.

    Third, to pollute is to render harmful through inclusion, and adding more co2 to the atmosphere renders it harmful on multiple levels, so co2 is actually a pollutant by a reasonable definition. But as per point the first, it really doesn't matter if you call it a pollutant. What matters is that we know co2 to be a greenhouse gas, and we know that GHGs promote global warming. We also know that last time co2 was this high, Earth wouldn't have been a nice place for humans. We also know that this rate of co2 rise is unprecedented. We also know that adding energy to a system produces effects, and that climate is a chaotic system. We know that our species has enjoyed a period of climatological stability, and that our actions are perturbing that stability.

    Tldr you're arguing about whether we're about to be eaten by alligators or crocodiles, and it's a meaningless argument.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  13. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by UnknowingFool · · Score: 4, Insightful

    science isn’t about consensus, it’s about truth

    If there’s no consensus then what happens is you have your version of the truth and someone else has their version. For example Newton and Einstein were both right about gravity. Einstein’s version accommodates relativity whereas Newton does not.

    Also your assertion is somehow 97% of the people who know, study, and understand a subject will gladly accept a lie. Have you met scientists? These are some of the most anal-retentitive people in the world. They will argue endlessly about whether a hyphen sound belong in the name of a newly discovered thing. Yet according to you, they’ll gladly swallow a lie that everyone is propagating.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  14. Re:Wow by tsm_sf · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I hope you see how, by wrapping a science/health issue in the "states rights" flag, they've walked you around to supporting foolishness.

    --
    Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
  15. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by chthon · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, they don't. They propose different hypotheses. The set of validated (by measurement, observation, proof, experiment, reasoning picked apart) hypotheses is what constitutes a theory.

  16. Making up groups of peopole is insanity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or just plain dishonest. Which is the case here? You forgot the fifth group: idealogues who NEED a story that helps them support their insanity as rational.

    Your group 1 does not exist.
    Your group 2 does not exist,
    Your group 3 does not exist, because you added a caveat that does not exist to them.
    Your group 4 and 5 does.

    You invented 1 and 2 so that you could deny AGW while pretending you're in the moderate rational middle. Without them your group 3, those that don't accept that the problem is a real big one with dangerous consequences is still a massive outlier and not in the middle of anything.

    1. Re:Making up groups of peopole is insanity by Holi · · Score: 4, Informative

      So where are these "engineers" that say we have to kill off a large percentage of the world's population?

      You make the claim, you provide the supporting data. That's how it works man, If you can't then you are literally just making shit up.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  17. Re: The laws of thermodynamics apply everywhere by Joce640k · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Nobody, yet.

    The point is that the lunatics are running the asylum.

    --
    No sig today...
  18. Re:Wow by Sique · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Someone is again forgetting the 500 year old insight:

    All substances are poisons; there is none which is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a poison and a remedy.

    (Paracelsus)

    The same can be said about pollutants: All substances are pollutants; there is none which is not a pollutant. The right dose differentiates a pollutant and a necessary substance. So given enough of it, also CO2 is a pollutant.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  19. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by TimothyHollins · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yeah, we do this a lot. Specially if there is a latin root for the word.

  20. While they're at it, can they also set Pi=3 by karlandtanya · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My gut tells me when I'm being conned; I don't need to be an expert to know when I'm being lied to.
    Truth is simple; when the "experts" give you a complicated non-answer it's BS.

    I'm fed up with "mathematicians" going on about irrational numbers; they can't even give an exact answer--just a string of digits that seems to keep going on forever.

    --
    "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away." - Philip K. Dick
  21. Re:He's probably correct by hey! · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, the case for CO2 is much stronger than, way, the case for NOx, because NOx has a half-life measured in hours, but CO2 has an effective half-life in the century range (note carefully: an atom of CO2 that dissolves into the ocean tends to displace one that is already there back into the atmosphere).

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  22. Cult of ignorance by cmdr_klarg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there always has been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that “my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.” - Isaac Asimov

    --
    THE SOFTWARE, IT NO WORKY!!!
    1. Re:Cult of ignorance by david_thornley · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Skepticism is fine. I have no problem with skeptics.

      However, I do have a problem with people with fixed opinions who call themselves skeptics. If you're honest-to-FSM skeptical about something, you neither fully believe it nor fully disbelieve it. There's a lot of people who have made it very clear that they aren't skeptical about global warming, but are absolutely convinced it isn't happening. To that end, they'll believe anything else, no matter how improbable. Those are deniers, and members of a cult of ignorance.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  23. Re:Feds vs states by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative

    Read is apparently unaware of past legal precedent indicating that the federal government has the legal ability to regulate pollutants

    California's state legislature regularly passes laws regarding pollutants, so do several others. This "apparently unaware" dig is just a form of ad hominem attack.

    No, and also no. You are apparently unaware that California is the only state which is permitted to set atmospheric emissions standards, because we've been doing it for so long and by the time the feds thought about arguing about it, it was too late. Other states are only permitted to choose whether they adopt California's standard, or the federal standard.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  24. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by greythax · · Score: 3, Informative

    And that criticism has been brought up by physicists. You probably aren't going to get this based off of your post, but for others who are interested, in physics, many of the theories proposed are given weight first by the mathematical symmetries that they reveal, hinting they might be based in reality. That is the current state of string theory. The math looks very compelling. What makes it a theory is not that it hasn't been validated, but that it is TESTABLE. If a test can not be devised, then it is not a theory. In the case of string theory, we think we can test it, if only colliders with high enough energy existed (google string phenomenology).

  25. Repeal SLOT immediately! by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 4, Funny
    Whereas, the Second Law of Thermodynamics is enacted by a bunch of unelected Godless European elite scientists,

    Whereas, the Constitution of the United States has supremacy over any foreign law including but not limited to Shari-ah Law of Gravitation, Law of Thermodynamics, and Laws of Motion,

    Whereas, the State Constitution of Montana has supremacy over the US Federal Constitution,

    Wheres, this SLOT prevents from Montanans from creating perpetual motion machines, or creating engines with more than 100% thermal efficiency,

    It has been resolved that

    This law has been repealed in Montana, and no machine or physical process in this state shall obey the aforementioned unconstitutional second law of thermodynamics.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  26. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by UnknowingFool · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In science, that's called a theory until proven. AGW is unproven.

    There’s multiple things wrong with your statement. An idea is a hypothesis until consensus deems it to be correct. A theory is a set of accepted (by consensus) hypothesis. There also isn’t really “proven” as science isn’t math and there are no “proofs”. Evidence is found for or against hypotheses.

    The disagreement over AGW is more fundamental. While pro-AGW scientists may argue about whether a hyphen should be used, anti-AGW scientists argue a hyphen doesn't exist in the alphabet or that pro-AGW scientists fail to recognize extra characters in the alphabet that should be used or considered (metaphorically).

    As for pro-AGW vs anti-AGW, the anti-AGW is a very, very tiny minority. The vast majority of those who know and understand the science are pro. They aren’t arguing over a hyphen. They aren’t arguing whether it is true. They’ve moved on as arguing whether it is true is like arguing whether gravity exists.

    Not to mention, it's career suicide for a scientist to come out against AGW in any way at this point. Wouldn't want to be a homeless denier, would they?

    Do you know what scientists call other scientists that come up with ground-breaking science that changes the fundamentals of their field? Visionaries and most of the time, Nobel prize winners. The difference between them and deniers is that visionaries have evidence.

    Unless you can verify the work of pro-AGW scientists, you could be swallowing a giant lie as well. The burden is on those claiming the sky is falling, not those who present evidence to the contrary.

    Me personally or scientists? You understand that’s why scientists publish right? Here’s a fatal flaw to this logic. Just because you can’t understand the science or how to validate it, doesn’t mean it wasn’t validated by people who can understand.

    It would go a long way if the pro-AGW crowd divorced the movement from politics and found a way to explain AGW in a way that is verifiable by your lay man. It would also help if the pro-AGW scientists could make some short-term predictions that accurately come true. The track record of predictions to this point isn't very good. The methodology for collecting and manipulating data (especially temperature data) is also a big problem for anti-AGW folks and needs to be standardized in an unbiased way that removes the questions and uncertainty about the data.

    You do understand that it isn’t in the realm of science to change the behavior of people and society right? As for the secon part of your post, have you looked at the data because it doesn’t seem that you have.

    Otherwise, expect those with a critical eye toward science and politics to dismiss AGW as yet another issue created by politicians for their own gain. Like any political issue, it will have its loyal followers and those who disagree.

    Um didn’t you just post that the vast majority of scientists are pro-AGW. That alone makes this sentence nonsense.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  27. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by UnknowingFool · · Score: 4, Informative

    Any scientist who proposes a hypothesis that goes against the prevailing ides without evidence is ignored. If they are loud and insistent but still have no evidence, then they are shunned.

    What happens to those scientists that have evidence for ground breaking ideas that go against established scientific principles? Accolades, reknown, and sometimes a Nobel prize. See Raymond Davis Jr who devised a way to measure solar neutrinos that were created by the Sun’s nuclear fusion. His results showed that there something fundamental wrong with the Standard Model when it came to neutrinos.

    Was he shunned? Was he obstracized? No. Other scientists were skeptical as they should be until his results were verified by Mataoshi Koshiba. For their work, they got 1/2 of the 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  28. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by thomst · · Score: 4, Insightful

    cthon stated:

    No, they don't. They propose different hypotheses. The set of validated (by measurement, observation, proof, experiment, reasoning picked apart) hypotheses is what constitutes a theory.

    You're so close to being right.

    The distinction between hypothesis and theory in science is not a clear, bright line - and, for the most part, scientific theories are always subject to revision in light of new evidence.

    That's because the scientific method is not about proving anything other than that a given hypothesis cannot be true, because experimental evidence proves it incorrect. It doesn't matter how many experiments have lent support to a given hypothesis in the past - all it takes is a single one that conclusively demonstrates that it's wrong to invalidate it. It then is discarded in favor of the next-best alternative (regardless of whether that alternative is an older hypothesis that has not yet been proven wrong, a revised version of the same hypothesis, or is a brand-new, minty-fresh one that is consistent with all the evidence to date).

    The graduation of a hypothesis to the status of scientific theory is a gradual process, and one that can happen only by (wait for it!) consensus. The greater the number and variety of different experiments that fail to disprove it, the more the scientific community comes to agree that a hypothesis should be considered as reliable enough for practical purposes to deserve to be treated as if it were correct.

    The thing is, though, that status is never set in stone. Take Newtonian physics, for example. For three centuries, Newton's theories withstood experimental efforts to disprove them so reliably that they came to be regarded as actual laws. (And, I hasten to add, they're still reliable enough to be treated that way by engineers for quotidian, practical purposes.) But then Einstein proposed his General Theory of Relativity, and Newtonian physics went out the window - at least at astronomical scales. It was an actual revolution in scientific understanding of how physics works in our universe, and general relativity achieved the status of theory in what was pretty much record time, because every experiment that attempted to disprove it at the macro level failed miserably.

    But it broke down at the nano scale. There, accumulated observational data poked progressively bigger holes in Einstein's theory, until it became undeniable that Something Else was going on.

    Enter quantum mechanics.

    Einstein hated it - and it wasn't because it contradicted his own theory. It was because the notion of what he called "spooky action at a distance" offended his sense of order. Uncertainty, superposition of states, entanglement (the "spooky action" to which Einstein's sarcastic comment referred), and the fundamental randomness of the nature of the universe at the smallest scale bothered him so deeply that he famously thundered, "God does not play dice with the universe."

    But he was wrong about that. At the quantum scale, as an ever-increasing body of experimental evidence has established, randomness and uncertainty are inescapable - to the point where, at the Planck scale, the current model of quantum theory holds that "virtual particles" actually blink into and out of existence in such profusion that the fabric of reality itself consists of a so-called "quantum foam." (That bit has not yet been tested by experiment, mostly because we simply don't yet have the tools to conduct direct observation of such incredibly tiny phenomena. In fact, given the ever-increasing effects of quantum uncertainty as we approach the Planck scale, it may be physically impossible for us ever to directly observe and measure those virtual particles. The best evidence of their existence in the real world may forever remain indirect - which doesn't mean the model is wrong, or that won't earn the status of theory, however.)

    There's an ever-growing mountain of evidence that both general relativity and quantum mechanics accurately model

    --
    Check out my novel.
  29. Re:It's only ok to ignore federal law for the left by swillden · · Score: 3, Interesting

    No, they don't. They propose different hypotheses. The set of validated (by measurement, observation, proof, experiment, reasoning picked apart) hypotheses is what constitutes a theory.

    No theory is ever completely proven. Not only is it always possible to get new observations that will contradict a given theory, it's also possible to posit a different theory that predicts contradictory observations which have not yet been made. This means that consensus is always what defines our current notion of scientific "truth" (which is never absolute, so "truth" is really not a good word). For any given broadly-accepted theory there are often individual scientists who take issue with some element of the theory, or even that propose something quite different. That's not just okay, it's a fundamental element of scientific progress -- even though those who fight the consensus are usually wrong.

    No one individual has the ability to independently research and verify all of scientific knowledge, so the rational choice is to accept the consensus unless you have invested in becoming sufficiently expert in a field to be able to intelligently challenge that consensus. That doesn't mean you have to challenge the consensus as a whole, either. If you can identify one part of the consensus that isn't correct and you can provide compelling evidence to support your point, that's completely valid, and a valuable contribution which can update and correct the consensus. But note that identifying one error rarely invalidates the entirety of the consensus view; more often it just points out that an adjustment is needed.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  30. Re:The laws of thermodynamics apply everywhere by Darinbob · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nazis were generally right wing in outlook. Learn history from somewhere other than Infowars. Don't forget the newpaper editorial last week from Alabama suggesting that the KKK go and lynch Democrats in DC. Of course, if right wingers suggest this then it's just a joke, but if left wingers suggest it they must be serious about it.