Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

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Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by FSTargetDrone »

Incidentally, I loathe "-gate."

Anyway:
Review: E-mails show pettiness, not fraud

Climate experts, AP reporters go through 1,000 exchanges

By Seth Borenstein, Raphael Satter and Malcolm Ritter

The Associated Press

updated 12:18 p.m. ET, Sat., Dec . 12, 2009

LONDON - E-mails stolen from climate scientists show they stonewalled skeptics and discussed hiding data — but the messages don't support claims that the science of global warming was faked, according to an exhaustive review by The Associated Press.

The 1,073 e-mails examined by the AP show that scientists harbored private doubts, however slight and fleeting, even as they told the world they were certain about climate change. However, the exchanges don't undercut the vast body of evidence showing the world is warming because of man-made greenhouse gas emissions.

The scientists were keenly aware of how their work would be viewed and used, and, just like politicians, went to great pains to shape their message. Sometimes, they sounded more like schoolyard taunts than scientific tenets.

The scientists were so convinced by their own science and so driven by a cause "that unless you're with them, you're against them," said Mark Frankel, director of scientific freedom, responsibility and law at the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He also reviewed the communications.

Frankel saw "no evidence of falsification or fabrication of data, although concerns could be raised about some instances of very 'generous interpretations.'"

Some e-mails expressed doubts about the quality of individual temperature records or why models and data didn't quite match. Part of this is the normal give-and-take of research, but skeptics challenged how reliable certain data was.

The e-mails were stolen from the computer network server of the climate research unit at the University of East Anglia in southeast England, an influential source of climate science, and were posted online last month. The university shut down the server and contacted the police.

Million words reviewed

The AP studied all the e-mails for context, with five reporters reading and rereading them — about 1 million words in total.

One of the most disturbing elements suggests an effort to avoid sharing scientific data with critics skeptical of global warming. It is not clear if any data was destroyed; two U.S. researchers denied it.

The e-mails show that several mainstream scientists repeatedly suggested keeping their research materials away from opponents who sought it under American and British public records law. It raises a science ethics question because free access to data is important so others can repeat experiments as part of the scientific method. The University of East Anglia is investigating the blocking of information requests.

"I believe none of us should submit to these 'requests,'" declared the university's Keith Briffa in one e-mail. The center's chief, Phil Jones, e-mailed: "Data is covered by all the agreements we sign with people, so I will be hiding behind them."

When one skeptic kept filing Freedom of Information Act requests, Jones, who didn't return AP requests for comment, told another scientist, Michael Mann: "You can delete this attachment if you want. Keep this quiet also, but this is the person who is putting FOI requests for all e-mails Keith (Briffa) and Tim (Osborn) have written."

Mann, a researcher at Penn State University, told The Associated Press: "I didn't delete any e-mails as Phil asked me to. I don't believe anybody else did."

The e-mails also show how professional attacks turned very personal. When former London financial trader Douglas J. Keenan combed through the data used in a 1990 research paper Jones had co-authored, Keenan claimed to have found evidence of fakery by Jones' co-author. Keenan threatened to have the FBI arrest University at Albany scientist Wei-Chyung Wang for fraud. (A university investigation later cleared him of any wrongdoing.)

"I do now wish I'd never sent them the data after their FOIA request!" Jones wrote in June 2007.

In another case after initially balking on releasing data to a skeptic because it was already public, Lawrence Livermore National Lab scientist Ben Santer wrote that he then opted to release everything the skeptic wanted — and more. Santer said in a telephone interview that he and others are inundated by frivolous requests from skeptics that are designed to "tie-up government-funded scientists."

Contempt for contrarians

The e-mails also showed a stunning disdain for global warming skeptics.

One scientist practically celebrates the news of the death of one critic, saying, "In an odd way this is cheering news!" Another bemoans that the only way to deal with skeptics is "continuing to publish quality work in quality journals (or calling in a Mafia hit.)" And a third scientist said the next time he sees a certain skeptic at a scientific meeting, "I'll be tempted to beat the crap out of him. Very tempted."

And they compared contrarians to communist-baiting Sen. Joseph McCarthy and Somali pirates. They also called them out-and-out frauds.

Santer, who received death threats after his work on climate change in 1996, said Thursday: "I'm not surprised that things are said in the heat of the moment between professional colleagues. These things are taken out of context."

When the journal, Climate Research, published a skeptical study that turned out to be partly funded by the American Petroleum Institute, Penn State scientist Mann discussed retribution this way: "Perhaps we should encourage our colleagues in the climate research community to no longer submit to, or cite papers in, this journal."

The most provocative e-mails are usually about one aspect of climate science: research from a decade ago that studied how warm or cold it was centuries ago through analysis of tree rings, ice cores and glacial melt. And most of those e-mails, which stretch from 1996 to last month, are from about a handful of scientists in dozens of e-mails.

Still, such research has been a key element in measuring climate change over long periods.

As part of the AP review, summaries of the e-mails that raised issues from the potential manipulation of data to intensely personal attacks were sent to seven experts in research ethics, climate science and science policy.

"This is normal science politics, but on the extreme end, though still within bounds," said Dan Sarewitz, a science policy professor at Arizona State University. "We talk about science as this pure ideal and the scientific method as if it is something out of a cookbook, but research is a social and human activity full of all the failings of society and humans, and this reality gets totally magnified by the high political stakes here."

In the past three weeks since the e-mails were posted, longtime opponents of mainstream climate science have repeatedly quoted excerpts of about a dozen e-mails. Republican congressmen and former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin have called for either independent investigations, a delay in U.S. Environmental Protection Agency regulation of greenhouse gases or outright boycotts of the Copenhagen international climate talks. They cited a "culture of corruption" that the e-mails appeared to show.

'Trick' reference explained

That is not what the AP found. There were signs of trying to present the data as convincingly as possible.

One e-mail that skeptics have been citing often since the messages were posted online is from Jones. He says: "I've just completed Mike's (Mann) trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (from 1981 onward) and from 1961 for Keith's to hide the decline."

Jones was referring to tree ring data that indicated temperatures after the 1950s weren't as warm as scientists had determined.

The "trick" that Jones said he was borrowing from Mann was to add the real temperatures, not what the tree rings showed. And the decline he talked of hiding was not in real temperatures, but in the tree ring data that was misleading, Mann explained.

Sometimes the data didn't line up as perfectly as scientists wanted.

David Rind told colleagues about inconsistent figures in the work for a giant international report: "As this continuing exchange has clarified, what's in Chapter 6 is inconsistent with what is in Chapter 2 (and Chapter 9 is caught in the middle!). Worse yet, we've managed to make global warming go away! (Maybe it really is that easy...:)."

But in the end, global warming didn't go away, according to the vast body of research over the years.

None of the e-mails flagged by the AP and sent to three climate scientists viewed as moderates in the field changed their view that global warming is man-made and a threat. Nor did it alter their support of the conclusions of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which some of the scientists helped write.

"My overall interpretation of the scientific basis for (man-made) global warming is unaltered by the contents of these e-mails," said Gabriel Vecchi, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientist.

Gerald North, a climate scientist at Texas A&M University, headed a National Academy of Sciences study that looked at — and upheld as valid — Mann's earlier studies that found the 1990s were the hottest years in centuries.

"In my opinion the meaning is much more innocent than might be perceived by others taken out of context. Much of this is overblown," North said.

Mann contends he always has been upfront about uncertainties, pointing to the title of his 1999 study: "Northern Hemisphere Temperatures During the Past Millennium: Inferences, Uncertainties and Limitations."

Several scientists found themselves tailoring their figures or retooling their arguments to answer online arguments — even as they claimed not to care what was being posted online.

"I don't read the blogs that regularly," Jonathan Overpeck of the University of Arizona wrote in 2005. "But I guess the skeptics are making hay of their (sic) being a global warm (sic) event around 1450AD."

'Good faith,' says one critic
One person singled out for criticism in the e-mails is Steve McIntyre, who maintains Climate Audit. The blog focuses on statistical issues with scientists' attempts to recreate the climate in ancient times.

"We find that the authors are overreaching in the conclusions that they're trying to draw from the data that they have," McIntyre said in a telephone interview.

McIntyre, 62, of Toronto, was trained in math and economics and says he is "substantially retired" from the mineral exploration industry, which produces greenhouse gases.

Some e-mails said McIntyre's attempts to get original data from scientists are frivolous and meant more for harassment than doing good science. There are allegations that he would distort and misuse data given to him.

McIntyre disagreed with how he is portrayed. "Everything that I've done in this, I've done in good faith," he said.

He also said he has avoided editorializing on the leaked e-mails. "Anything I say," he said, "is liable to be piling on."

The skeptics started the name-calling, said Mann, who called McIntyre a "bozo," a "fraud" and a "moron" in various e-mails.

"We're human," Mann said. "We've been under attack unfairly by these people who have been attempting to dismiss us as frauds as liars."
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Liberty »

It's unnerving to think of scientists as human. I prefer to think of science as this unbiased, reliable mechanism of getting at truth, but the reality is that scientists - the arbitrators of science - are human, and thus flawed.

I also hate it when people act like they're experts in things they're not trained in. And that's to my understanding the role held by most skeptics.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Gil Hamilton »

Liberty Ferall wrote:It's unnerving to think of scientists as human. I prefer to think of science as this unbiased, reliable mechanism of getting at truth, but the reality is that scientists - the arbitrators of science - are human, and thus flawed.

I also hate it when people act like they're experts in things they're not trained in. And that's to my understanding the role held by most skeptics.
Anyone who things scientists aren't flawed human beings has never met a scientist. To say that they aren't capable of being petty is silly, particularly if you've ever gone to a seminar and watched two distinguished researchers with large amount of publications and vast amount of knowledge basically get into a name calling match over the necessity of including a particular term in the Hamiltonian for the wavefunction they were talking about.

As for "Climategate", it always was conservatives making a mountain out of molehill and pretending they found the smoking gun that proves that there is a massive scientist conspiracy around global climate shift.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Liberty »

Gil Hamilton wrote:
Liberty Ferall wrote:It's unnerving to think of scientists as human. I prefer to think of science as this unbiased, reliable mechanism of getting at truth, but the reality is that scientists - the arbitrators of science - are human, and thus flawed.

I also hate it when people act like they're experts in things they're not trained in. And that's to my understanding the role held by most skeptics.
Anyone who things scientists aren't flawed human beings has never met a scientist. To say that they aren't capable of being petty is silly, particularly if you've ever gone to a seminar and watched two distinguished researchers with large amount of publications and vast amount of knowledge basically get into a name calling match over the necessity of including a particular term in the Hamiltonian for the wavefunction they were talking about.

As for "Climategate", it always was conservatives making a mountain out of molehill and pretending they found the smoking gun that proves that there is a massive scientist conspiracy around global climate shift.
I'm in the soft sciences - history. Believe me, I've seen historians go head to head - were the North and South more alike or more different in 1800? When did the distinctive South develop? Are the "Great Awakenings" a figment of historical imagination? Was early American religion of the people or of the institutions? I guess I'd just like to think that the hard sciences, where you can test and retest in a lab (you can't do this in history) are different. I'm aware that they're not - I guess I just wish they were.

Also, I grew up in a family that rejected evolution and global warming and expected the rapture any day; I rejected that, and I like to feel like my rejection of it rests on solid ground. Any time someone trumpets some new fraud or discovery contradicting years of theory, my upbringing nibbles at me. I'd rather science be 100% positive. I know it's irrational, but that's how it is.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Alyrium Denryle »

Liberty Ferall wrote:It's unnerving to think of scientists as human. I prefer to think of science as this unbiased, reliable mechanism of getting at truth, but the reality is that scientists - the arbitrators of science - are human, and thus flawed.

I also hate it when people act like they're experts in things they're not trained in. And that's to my understanding the role held by most skeptics.
That is why we have a standardized process. The method we use smooths over the errors of personal bias, but we still talk. You should see some of the things said in my Population Ecology Seminar. We get kinda heated when it comes to reptile and amphibian conservation (fully half of said seminar was comprised of herpetologists). Hell I know better than anyone that science can be fraudulent, but we take care of it internally. Tyrone Hayes at UC Berkley works on Atrazine induced sex reversal in frogs. The makers of atrazine hired some biologists to "take him down" so to speak. What did he do? He exposed their scientific fraud through meta-analysis..

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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Morilore »

Liberty Ferall wrote:Any time someone trumpets some new fraud or discovery contradicting years of theory, my upbringing nibbles at me. I'd rather science be 100% positive. I know it's irrational, but that's how it is.
Maybe that kind of thought comes from confusion between the predictions of science and the methods of science? Religious fundamentalism tells you "we know how things are;" science tells you "we know how to figure out how things are." In one case, if the story changes at all it severely damages its credibility; in the other case, one should expect the story to change, and in fact, if the story never changes that's a mark against its credibility. When deciding who to trust, one should look not just at the things people say, but how they decided what to say. And as for fraud, well, it's always other scientists practicing science who uncover things that are actually fraud.

...

I love how a portion of this article is devoted to discussion on "name-calling," as if that has anything to do with the price of beer. Besides the irrelevance of politeness to correctness, I wonder if anyone is honestly surprised that climate scientists think the people who strive to destroy their life's work should jump off a bridge.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by The Yosemite Bear »

FSTargetDrone wrote:Incidentally, I loathe "-gate."

not as much as Liddy does, he calls it the watering down of his contribution to national security and politics
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Crossroads Inc. »

Before this devolves into yet another debate about the Science of Climate change specifically... I want to say that what has infuriated me so much about this whole incident is how Conservatives and the far right have taken "Climategate" to basically be THEE nail in the coffin of Global Warming. As far as they are concerned, the debate is over... There is no more arguing, there is no more need to discuss, for them Global Warming is 100% FALSE.

Case in point, a guy atwork I know will usually go back and forth about various liberal and conservative things. Last week Monday when I came in, he had this shit eating grin on his face and comes out saying "Well, I bet YOUR embarrassed" and proceeded to tell me how hes been right all along that Climate change is nothing but a Hoax and a Conspiracy cooked up by scientists. There was no arguing any more, he had "proof"

I know these people would never believe global warming in the first place, but up untill now there was at least "debate" going on.. Now they are all going around smug wiht 100% confidence that they now "Know" its false.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by The Yosemite Bear »

remember there are a lot of car owners in the USA, you can't tell them that they are responsible for the drastic effects of climate change. I talked with my dad a man whose been working on cars and trucks longer then I've been alive, he just doesn't want to think that his whole life has been causing this, and is willling to believe anything that says otherwise just to deal with the guilt...
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

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Crossroads Inc. wrote:Before this devolves into yet another debate about the Science of Climate change specifically... I want to say that what has infuriated me so much about this whole incident is how Conservatives and the far right have taken "Climategate" to basically be THEE nail in the coffin of Global Warming. As far as they are concerned, the debate is over... There is no more arguing, there is no more need to discuss, for them Global Warming is 100% FALSE.

Case in point, a guy atwork I know will usually go back and forth about various liberal and conservative things. Last week Monday when I came in, he had this shit eating grin on his face and comes out saying "Well, I bet YOUR embarrassed" and proceeded to tell me how hes been right all along that Climate change is nothing but a Hoax and a Conspiracy cooked up by scientists. There was no arguing any more, he had "proof".
People who think in terms of "proof" deserve a swift kick to the head. There are very few times a piece of evidence is ever conclusive enough that it can't be toppled, or takes precedence over all other available data. Those kids of people are trying to be amateur lawyers when they should be thinking like investigators.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by FSTargetDrone »

The thing is, why should there be a conspiracy? What is to be gained by the scientists if the science is right (and I believe that it is--a few fringe/naysayer scientists aren't going to suddenly shift my opinion on the matter, after all)? If they are wrong, so what? We've spent some money and put some sensible regulations in place. The costs that will have to be dealt with are far higher in the long run if GW does as much damage as many scientists feel it will.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

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FSTargetDrone wrote:The thing is, why should there be a conspiracy? What is to be gained by the scientists if the science is right (and I believe that it is--a few fringe/naysayer scientists aren't going to suddenly shift my opinion on the matter, after all)? If they are wrong, so what? We've spent some money and put some sensible regulations in place. The costs that will have to be dealt with are far higher in the long run if GW does as much damage as many scientists feel it will.
Most opponents claim that such regulations will cripple our world industry and make us the world fall behind the Chinese and Indian Menaces economically. But as you said, the risks are worth the gamble. The general response of the conspiracy theorists is that somehow, global warming has become a larger industry than everything that would be effected by global warming legislation, generally marked by them declaring it a "billion-dollar industry" with disparaging remarks about actors and actresses.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Sky Captain »

Even if human impact on climate change is exaggerated and it`s getting warmer because of some overlooked natural cause earlier reductions of emissions and lower usage of fossil fuels will be beneficial in the long term because of reduced pollution and resource consumption. There is no doubt that easily extractable fossil fuels will run out and transition to non fossil energy sources will be long and expensive so it`s better to start it sooner than when it`s too late. If climate change is a reason to start the transition before the shortages of fossil fuels become acute then it can be only beneficial in long term even if human made CO2 is`t the cause of climate change.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Edi »

This, just like any other evidence, is going to make absolutely zero impact on the anti-global warming nuts, who are exactly like creationists in that regard. Only the evidence or doctored, quoted out of context evidence that supports their claims is admissible, anything that contradicts their preordained conclusions is dismissed out of hand.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Sarevok »

To me this sham over so called "climategate" only illustrates a bigger problem. Talk to average people about their religion vs science. Oftentimes their trump card is "science is always changing, once they thought earth was center of universe, then they thought sun was center now they they don't know if there is a center or not". Then they point out in fundamentalist dogma Earth has always been the center and it has never changed. Thus science is suspect because scientists always keep revising their ideas each time new data comes into light. Why do people not understand there may not be an absolute truth about a complex issue like climate change ? Argumentation, heated debates are part of any progressive institution. If everyone in a field of study accepted the popular ideas without criticism we would be stuck with Aristotle's ideas about the universe even today.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Covenant »

Liberty Ferall wrote:I'd rather science be 100% positive. I know it's irrational, but that's how it is.
Just to make you feel better, the thing that makes science better than dogmatism is that it can mature over time as new information is added to it, so don't get feelings of buyer's remorse because you're still sitting on the side of science. It'll never be 100 percent correct, it's just that the process of 'science' makes it superior to a 'non-science' approach. For an example, the reason that evolution is 'scientific' isn't that it is anti-religion, that has nothing to do with anything, but that it's been extensively put to the test.

Climate chance stuff is extremely difficult to do an 'experiment' on and certain people are intensely motivated to obfuscate the results and the meaning of the results for those things we CAN do data-collection on.

And skeptics, of whatever stripe, should be armed with a reason not to believe something which they then weigh against the evidence to make it look less sure. These people are less 'skeptics' than 'deniers', because the evidence of climate changes is basically all but irrefutable, even if they could try to say they don't think it's man-made or entirely man-made. Their intentional ignorance or disagreement with the fact doesn't make them a 'skeptic'.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Darth Ruinus »

FSTargetDrone wrote:The thing is, why should there be a conspiracy? What is to be gained by the scientists if the science is right (and I believe that it is--a few fringe/naysayer scientists aren't going to suddenly shift my opinion on the matter, after all)? If they are wrong, so what? We've spent some money and put some sensible regulations in place. The costs that will have to be dealt with are far higher in the long run if GW does as much damage as many scientists feel it will.
I listen to Sean Hannity's show* (mainly for kicks and giggles) and he claims that climate change is basically a giant attack on capitalism, and that scientists and liberals are trying to "fundamentally change America" and reduce freedom and private property and make us all socialists or something. Mark Levin (sp?) says the same thing.

*I've actually been trying to call the show the point out as many as Mr. Hannity's logical fallicies on "Climategate" as I could, but now I guess I can throw this news in too. If I get on.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by wolveraptor »

I like how they totally ignore the massive economic interests in favor of discrediting global warming. No, it's definitely the socialist scientists and their insidious agenda out to ruin America. Obviously.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Sarevok »

The question is how will climate research regain lost credibility. They were already on shaky public support grounds to begin with. Now global warming deniers in every country have a potent PR weapon for years to come. I really wish the media had not sensationalized this incident so much.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Formless »

Sarevok wrote:I really wish the media had not sensationalized this incident so much.
Yeah, but what can you do? The media practically exists just to sensationalize stuff, especially that which they do not understand.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by FSTargetDrone »

I fully expect, of course, that the discrediting of this non-story will be met with the same breathless and exuberant coverage. 8)
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Tellos »

Ok first off I believe the earths warming and cooling or whatever is happening at the moment and I believe there are a lot of good men and women trying to figure all this stuff out. With that said some members of the believers in climate change over reacted and left us wide open for this. They kept claiming in 5 years we all will die unless we stop everything. I got a friend at work who says we got to stop pollution or al gore says we’ll be under water. I ask what research says this and he says al gore. Atop this some politions use this now to pass legislation they want in the name of planetary safety. This unfortunately added with a disturbing but not unheard of set of problems with scientists being human and some bad apples spoiling the bunch and few of the people asked to explain them doing anything but pulling the republican’s own move to pretend their nothing at all and should be ignored outright instead of understood for what they are leads to a firestorm as nobody explains them or they say their false or hacked or something else trying to ignore it rather than confront it and explain that sadly some people with the intention of tying to help the planet forgot that they could get more by proven solid data decided to try and air brush over stuff. This unfortunly causes set backs to what might have been good progress. For me I just rather people say it won’t be good if we do not work toward cleaning lifestyles rather than tell me I need to live under a rock or I am killing polar bears every minute by breathing.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by D.Turtle »

And now you will show where any proper scientist said that we will all die in 5 years, or that we will have a global flood, or that we all need to live under a rock, etc?

As for the whole explaining thing: Thats where, for example, the IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) comes in. For a relatively short overview read the Summary for Policymakers of the Synthesis Report (pdf).

Or, for a more recent overview, but only directly involving 26 scientists instead of the thousands of the IPCC, look at the Copenhagen Diagnosis.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by [R_H] »

Formless wrote:
Sarevok wrote:I really wish the media had not sensationalized this incident so much.
Yeah, but what can you do? The media practically exists just to sensationalize stuff, especially that which they do not understand.
There wasn't much coverage of the story at all. BBC sat on it for awhile, and neither they nor CNN did a detailed story on what was going on.
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Re: Surprise Surprise, "Climategate" Isn't A Massive Conspiracy

Post by Darth Wong »

Edi wrote:This, just like any other evidence, is going to make absolutely zero impact on the anti-global warming nuts, who are exactly like creationists in that regard. Only the evidence or doctored, quoted out of context evidence that supports their claims is admissible, anything that contradicts their preordained conclusions is dismissed out of hand.
Indeed. They thought this was their Piltdown Man (which is bad enough, since Piltdown Man didn't disprove evolution either), but as it turns out, it's more like the fake butterfly pictures.
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