Friday Funny – The Sceptic Isle

Josh writes:

With a certain amount of hysteria and hand wringing over the latest Heartland ads I thought a more pastoral cartoon might be a good idea.

I will update the cartoon if people suggest improvements but my aim is to express where we are in the debate over Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming – I think the catastrophists are on a small island of sinking sand out there somewhere cold, and, even though there are still arguments to win and vested interests to battle, I think the land is ours.

Click for much large image

Here is the wonderful Shakespeare reference in full.

This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle,
This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
This other Eden, demi-paradise,
This fortress built by Nature for herself
Against infection and the hand of war,
This happy breed of men, this little world,
This precious stone set in the silver sea,
Which serves it in the office of a wall
Or as a moat defensive to a house,
Against the envy of less happier lands,–
This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England.

William Shakespeare, “King Richard II”, Act 2 scene 1

Cartoons by Josh

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DaveF
May 4, 2012 2:46 pm

Brilliantly done as usual, Josh, and thanks for the Shakespeare – we Brits don’t like to shout too much, but that is pretty much how we think of our home.

Editor
May 4, 2012 2:52 pm

Brilliant. Just Brilliant.

garret seinen
May 4, 2012 2:54 pm

And finally, their, “We’re doomed.” makes sense (as they sink out of sight).

NZ Willy
May 4, 2012 3:06 pm

The land may be ours, but the money is still all theirs. Until the spigot is turned off, no victory.

May 4, 2012 3:12 pm

Josh & Mrs Josh,
Well, it is Josh with Shakespeare . . . . who woulda have thunk dat?
John

Editor
May 4, 2012 3:14 pm

Josh,
surely you caught Andi Cockcroft’s Will Tuvalu Survive ‘Super moon’?? Or maybe that needs a new cartoon with all the alarmist dogs howling doom at the supermoon

suissebob
May 4, 2012 3:20 pm

You forgot about the Greenland ice sheet not accelerating as much as was thought, it’s below the most optimistic projections!

Ed Scott
May 4, 2012 3:20 pm

Leon Panetta Unleashes U.S. Army To Battle Carbon Dioxide
“Yes, sir. A ray of hope was provided by British Intelligence. They worked out a scheme in which soldiers would take to the field and capture the enemy in hand-held non-EM-blocking polymerized containment devices—”
“—What in the world…?”
“Plastic baggies, sir. The plan was to march to the enemy’s hot zone, open the baggies and expose them to the air and then, before they had a chance to escape, to close the baggies and seal the enemy within.”
“Brilliant!” Secretary Panetta marveled.
“No, sir; not brilliant. Futile. Oh, I’ll admit the plan worked at first. Analysis showed that after the first twenty-four hours, the enemy was actually reduced by 0.00000000000034%.” The general sighed.
“Then what’s the problem? You didn’t run out of ammunition?”
“Plenty of ammunition, sir. But we ran out of storage space. We’ve filled all our hangers, offices, barracks, cupboards, closets, every space we could think of, but there just isn’t anywhere left to put the prisoners. But, sir, to anticipate your thoughts, even if we could find a place to put them, we can’t capture enough of the enemy fast enough. And paradoxically, the harder the soldiers work at putting these vile molecules out of commission, the more of them appear. It’s almost demonic.”
The line was silent for a minute. Finally, Secretary Panetta spoke. “You’re not saying what I think you’re saying, are you, general?”
“Sir, I…I can hardly speak the words. But a good general knows when a battle is lost.”
“I can’t tell the press the battle is lost. Our dear leader has promised the seas would recede and the skies would clear. I’ll do the only thing I can do.”
“What’s that, sir?”
“I’ll ask for more money to study the problem.”

imoira
May 4, 2012 4:03 pm

Very clever Josh! Thank you.

geologyjim
May 4, 2012 4:45 pm

Excellent! But I might change the caption to “CO2 is plant food”

Steve from Rockwood
May 4, 2012 4:56 pm

That was very funny and much needed.

Mac the Knife
May 4, 2012 5:01 pm

I like the Dire Straits! Might I suggest a little trip ‘down to the waterline’?
http://youtu.be/Lz1TlJGLzqs

corio37
May 4, 2012 5:04 pm

The island needs a money tree watered by government funding. And a name — “Hysteria”, perhaps?
And I wonder if you could work ‘Here be monsters’ into it somehow?

Editor
May 4, 2012 5:14 pm

even though there are still arguments to win and vested interests to battle, I think the land is ours.

That’s my sense of the battlefield. Way too early to turn our backs to it, but under control and absolutely no need for desperate tricks like the Heartland billboard.
The warm and extreme weather events in the last couple of years from my point of view in New Hampshire is that very few people have wrung their hands over them wailing about global warming, a very welcome change.
The spell of alarmism hasn’t produced results – nature continues on her own path, one that may be heading back to some mostly forgotten events in the 1960s and 70s, and not experienced by most of the public.
As a certifiably old fogey, I’m going to have fun pointing out future weather events where I can say, why I remember back in 1962….

pat
May 4, 2012 5:19 pm

Dire Straights is appropriate. Money For Nothing.

Randy
May 4, 2012 5:39 pm

Dire Straights is BRILLIANT!!
maybe a few shark fins circling around that island is the only thing I can think of that might contribute.

Tom in Texas
May 4, 2012 5:42 pm

“sea is ice
is fine”?

juanslayton
May 4, 2012 5:57 pm

Americans love to laugh. If HI has money to pay for billboard time, they ought to get Josh to draw a billboard cartoon aimed at the driving audience.

OssQss
May 4, 2012 6:17 pm

Nice job Josh! 🙂

May 4, 2012 6:26 pm

“Time shall unfold what plighted cunning hides,
Who covers fauls, at last with shame derides.”
Cordelia from King Lear, Act 1, Scene 1
[just happened to be reading the Bard last night]

mfo
May 4, 2012 6:30 pm

Better tell NASA you’ve spotted one of their rubber duckies.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/09/24/rubber-duckie/
Beautifully drawn and very funny.

Andrew
May 4, 2012 7:10 pm

I generally like the idea but would prefere to have geographic location of climate skepticsm/ climate realism unstated. And besides, the cartoon image implies it is in Wales and not England as the quote would have us believe. Further, the depicition implies the Isle of Man to be the origin of climate alarmism. While I appreciate the hidden humour (Isle of Man(n) = climate alarmism) I feel we should have some concern for the sensitivities of the Manxians…

Ted Clayton
May 4, 2012 7:14 pm

I took that as a palm tree on Sinking Sand, but then had a double-take. 😉
Very nice work, Josh!

Alvin
May 4, 2012 7:14 pm

NZ Willy says:
May 4, 2012 at 3:06 pm
The land may be ours, but the money is still all theirs. Until the spigot is turned off, no victory.

If the sustainables have their way, there will be NO money for anyone.

Robert of Texas
May 4, 2012 7:29 pm

You really need a failed solar panel outhouse on the island. Maybe with a little thundercloud and lightning striking it… Call it Elton’s John.
(“Don’t Let the Sun Go Down On Me” by Elton John for those not musically inclined – no slur intended to the artist)

May 4, 2012 7:45 pm

Josh “Argon is a green house gas” pick one but there is more argon in the atmosphere than Co2.
Co2 does not have an observational anthropogenic so called finger print any more than argon has.

Jer0me
May 4, 2012 7:48 pm

How about where “the world has warmed a little” have a couple of people enjoying a nice day on the beach?

Editor
May 4, 2012 8:33 pm

Sparks says:
May 4, 2012 at 7:45 pm
> Josh “Argon is a green house gas” pick one but there is more argon in the atmosphere than Co2.
I assume you’re referring to some misstatement by someone who should know better or a politician, but I don’t recall the reference. (Argon, being monatomic, is very transparent to longwave IR.)

rogerknights
May 4, 2012 9:10 pm

Andrew says:
May 4, 2012 at 7:10 pm
Further, the depicition implies the Isle of Man to be the origin of climate alarmism. While I appreciate the hidden humour (Isle of Man(n) = climate alarmism) I feel we should have some concern for the sensitivities of the Manxians…

Label it Gulligan’s Island.

Jan P. Perlwitz
May 4, 2012 9:46 pm

Nice to have a look in the head of the fake skeptics and what they fantasize how the world looks like. And how you try to improve the morale among yourself by confirming to each other how right you were, although it’s really just pure fantasy that mainstream climate science was a sinking ship.

John West
May 4, 2012 10:13 pm

I like it!
I would like to see a huge wave about to crash onto the alarmist island, although, I don’t see how that really fits the narrative. Perhaps rats fleeing the sinking (IPCC) ship.

Bloke down the pub
May 5, 2012 3:26 am

That chap Shakespeare had a way with words didn’t he.

Julian Braggins
May 5, 2012 3:39 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
May 4, 2012 at 9:46 pm
Nice to have a look in the head of the fake skeptics and what they fantasize how the world looks like. And how you try to improve the morale among yourself by confirming to each other how right you were, although it’s really just pure fantasy that mainstream climate science was a sinking ship.
———————————————————-
Might be a good time to look at the bigger picture,
http://joannenova.com.au/2010/02/the-big-picture-65-million-years-of-temperature-swings/
Even if the higher scenarios of the IPPC temperature forecasts come true, it would be the equivalent of moving your location a few hundred miles closer to the equator, (and the equatorial regions will not warm as they are already constrained by WV) would that be such a terrible thing, worth trashing the country’s economy to avoid? Most people take their holidays in such locations.

May 5, 2012 6:42 am

“Dire Straits” :-), Good one.

Editor
May 5, 2012 6:43 am

I agree totally with Judith Curry’s comment from http://judithcurry.com/2012/05/04/week-in-review-5412/
‘Josh has a good cartoon that was posted at BishopHill. However, he omitted the lunatic fringe on the Sceptic Isle (e.g. the people at Heartland that came up with the billboards).’
Of course, as with two-party politics, there is the lunatic fringe on the other side: CAGW alarmists on ‘Thermogedon Isle’ too.

Gail Combs
May 5, 2012 7:53 am

juanslayton says:
May 4, 2012 at 5:57 pm
Americans love to laugh. If HI has money to pay for billboard time, they ought to get Josh to draw a billboard cartoon aimed at the driving audience.
_________________________
Humor is a much better method of fighting compared to mud slinging. Nothing makes bullies more blue in the face that laughing at them.
A series of cartoons by Josh would be just the ticket. change them every other day or so and Joe Sixpack would soon be laughing at CAGW.

Jan P. Perlwitz
May 5, 2012 9:51 am

Julian Braggins wrote:

Even if the higher scenarios of the IPPC temperature forecasts come true, it would be the equivalent of moving your location a few hundred miles closer to the equator, (and the equatorial regions will not warm as they are already constrained by WV) would that be such a terrible thing, worth trashing the country’s economy to avoid? Most people take their holidays in such locations.

Please could you explain how you get to this claim that a temperature change, even if the worse scenarios from the IPCC report 2007 became true would be only like moving a few hundred miles toward the equator? And what time frame are you talking about?
The worst case scenarios in the IPCC report 2007 are the business-as-usual emission scenarios A2 and A1FI, latter the one for intensive fossil fuel use. These are the emission scenarios one has to assume as the most likely ones, if the ones who oppose any curbing of greenhouse gas emissions get their way in society, which is how it looks like, currently, at least in US. The likely range (66% probability) of the projected temperature change in the A1FI is 2.4 to 6.4 K[1] for the global average at the end of the century. That is, there is also a >10% projected likelihood in this scenario that it could be higher than 6.4 K. So, let’s say the worst case scenario is a globally averaged temperature increase of 6 to 7 K until the end of the century. Regional changes will vary around this average, with higher values in the high latitudes than in the low latitudes, and higher values over land than over sea. The amplification factor for the zonal and annual average over land between 25 and 50 deg. N relative to the global mean increase is between about 1.3 and 1.5. [2] (shown for the A2 scenario, but probably not much different for the A1FI scenario), and higher in latitudes north of 50 deg. N. So we are talking about a possible increase in the annually averaged temperature of about 7 to 10.5 K on the territory of the contiguous US until the end of the century in the worst case scenario. With such a warming you likely would get heat waves in summer with temperatures > 50 deg. C (> 122 deg. F) in regions where you have heat waves up to 40 deg. C today, and higher or lower scaled accordingly where you are. And it wouldn’t just stop at the end of the century. The increase in temperatures would continue into the following centuries.
Note, this is a possible worst case scenario, not the most likely one. Although the real worst case scenario would probably be the occurrence of a positive feedback leading to additional warming on top like the one that could happen due to a release of methane into the atmosphere that is currently bound in methane hydrates in the ocean floors, when the ocean floors warm.
So where would that be that you would only have to move a few hundred miles toward the equator today to have a similar change in your climatic environment like in the worst case scenario above? What are the vacation places where people like to go today where temperatures are above 50 deg. C during the heat waves in summer?
[1] The Physical Science Basis, Table TS.6 http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/tssts-5-2.html
[2] The Physical Science Basis, Figure 10.6. http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/figure-10-6.html

May 5, 2012 10:18 am

@Ric Werme
Nothing gets past you but the humor.

David Mayhew
May 5, 2012 12:20 pm

Totally brilliant, Josh!
Im looking for the Moral High Ground, but I think it may have been submerged by now…

May 5, 2012 12:50 pm

Ya need some trees Josh. You know, the honest kind of trees responding to good sun. water and fertilizer (the animals deposit regularly).
I Love it! A land of good science versus the science practised by the CAGW ‘teamsters’. Kind of makes you wonder if there is some sort of malignant godfather(mother?) overlord ruling who discovers what findings they’re trying to call science.
It shows the barren desolution that the warmists want for their future; no consistent electricity, no personal transportation (horses emit), no malicious farming (must eat weeds signs posted along walkways) not to mention bad science institutions (I like Frankensteins castle, the Mel Brooks variety). Speaking of bad science; once the warmistas get the earth of their dreams (nightmares to us) just imagine where their role in establishing bad science will take them. Their science will establish that it’s good to drink vodka while taking tylenol; and to mix bleach with ammonia for cleaning. ( Don’t do this at home kiddies!)

Bruce Cobb
May 5, 2012 12:54 pm

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
May 4, 2012 at 9:46 pm
Nice to have a look in the head of the fake skeptics and what they fantasize how the world looks like. And how you try to improve the morale among yourself by confirming to each other how right you were, although it’s really just pure fantasy that mainstream climate science was a sinking ship.
It’s been pointed out many times before, and your comment simply reinforces it; CAGW “scientists” just don’t get humor, which is part of their psychological profile, I guess.
Oh, and look again. That sinking ship is the IPCC (my guess is it would say IPCC “Consensus” if there were room), done in by a glacier named “Donna”, (an obvious reference to Donna La Framboise). So-called “mainstream climate science” is now an island made of sand which is sinking into the sea, with climate “scientists” proclaiming that they are doomed, with the charred remains of a bird-chopper in the background. It’s genius, really.

Editor
May 5, 2012 2:14 pm

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
May 5, 2012 at 9:51 am
> Note, this is a possible worst case scenario, not the most likely one.
The most likely worst case? What a great concept. I’ll keep that in mind to describe possible outcomes it trying to fix a customer’s problems with our file system. Fortunately, there aren’t too many.

Jan P. Perlwitz
May 5, 2012 2:31 pm

Bruce Cobb wrote:

It’s been pointed out many times before, and your comment simply reinforces it; CAGW “scientists” just don’t get humor, which is part of their psychological profile, I guess.

Oh, you totally err, if you think I don’t find this funny. Obviously just for other reasons than you. I find it very funny, because it demonstrates the distorted perception of the world on the side of the fake skeptic crowd, who, in reality, are just a fringe movement relative to where real science takes place, even though they see themselves differently in the fake reality they have created for themselves. You find it funny because it confirms your view, I find it funny because it confirms my view about your view.

Jan P. Perlwitz
May 5, 2012 2:50 pm

Ric Werme at May 5, 2012 at 2:14 pm wrote:

Note, this is a possible worst case scenario, not the most likely one.
The most likely worst case?

It’s a possible worst case scenario. It’s not the most likely scenario.

Monique
May 5, 2012 7:08 pm

Nice job, Josh.

corio37
May 6, 2012 12:02 am

No, in the ‘possible worst case scenario’ the global temperature will rise by 100 degrees Celsius by tomorrow morning and we’ll all be parboiled. But mere possibility is no reason to believe — or do — anything. Reasons require evidence.
AGW alarmists always have to walk a tightrope between saying “things are so bad that we can’t do anything” and “things are so trivial that we needn’t do anything”. Their position is “It’s good enough that we can fix it with large amounts of your money, but bad enough that we’ll always need more.” Hence all the to-ing and fro-ing.

David in Georgia
May 6, 2012 6:26 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
First, in Georgia, we have had temperature spikes at the near 50 degree level in the 1930s, but not since. Our normal heat waves are in the high 30s. Only out west, in the desert (and near desert) do we normally see very high summer temps like that.
Where do people vacation where temperatures are in the high 50s? Some of my very favorite memories are my trips to the Arizona, New Mexico, Utah desert areas. It was nearly 52 degrees in Goblin valley the day we visited there, and reached 48 degrees most days in Moab, Utah. I LOVED it.
Millions of people a year visit Moab, Death Valley, White Sands, the Bonneville Salt Flats, and dozens of other hot spots across the West.
Why do those areas get so hot? It’s not CO2, it’s not back-radiation from Water Vapor, it’s DRY air. There is no moisture to absorb the heat during the day and carry it away, like there is in, say Louisiana. Summer heat may be uncomfortable there, but it’s not because it’s so hot, it’s because it’s muggy. Temperatures in Louisiana seldom ever hit 40 degrees. Hell, they rarely hit 33 degrees, because all the water prevents it from happening.
I’m still waiting for Global Warming to effect the Southeast, where I live. Has not happened yet. Look at the BEST temperature reconstructions for my region. See all that BLUE. Our temperatures have actually dropped. I’m hoping that our winters will get a bit more mild in the future, since I hate to be cold. I consider 28 C to 30 C be the perfect temperature, and don’t get uncomfortable until it’s over 31.
All you people who want it to be perpetually 22 C or lower are defective.

Ian Cooper
May 6, 2012 4:17 pm

Hi Josh,
you must have been looking at a map of my locale recently to come up with that profile. That looks amazingly like the west coast of the lower North Island of New Zealand!
Where the main stream media are is Mt Egmont/Taranaki (like many major mountains in NZ it has a european and Maori name). I live where the Climate Science Refugee sign is and we are curently in a mild autumn drought so the ground colour is quite apt, it is normally verdant green like the Taranaki region. Most climate scientists at NIWA reside in Wellington which is where that guy in the white coat is walking from!
The mountain chain with the glaciers is where the large strato volcanoe Mt Ruapehu sits, and it has the only glaciers on the North Island so that works too. I don’t know if Auckland zoo has any polar bears, but if they do then you have positioned them to a tee as well. The man pointing to the shail oil drilling is also pointing towards the east coast of the North Island where there is growing opposition being stirred up by green activists against oil exploration of any kind so that is spot on as well (no pun intended).
I checked the maps but couldn’t find the sinking island off the coast, so alas we must conclude that it has disappeared beneath the waves along with the dire straits.
Cheers
Coops

May 8, 2012 8:03 am

Randy says:
May 4, 2012 at 5:39 pm
Dire Straights is BRILLIANT!!

Also PC. Unlike, say, Dire Gays!

May 8, 2012 8:07 am

Jan P. Perlwitz says:
May 5, 2012 at 2:50 pm
Ric Werme at May 5, 2012 at 2:14 pm wrote:
Note, this is a possible worst case scenario, not the most likely one.
The most likely worst case?
It’s a possible worst case scenario. It’s not the most likely scenario.

“Possible” and “worst case” are redundant. But perhaps as contrasted with “impossible worst case scenarios”, it makes sense. Grammatically. Scientifically, all CAGW scenarios are looking more and more asymptotically infinitesimally possible.

May 8, 2012 8:11 am

A Coops’ oops. That would be “shale” oil.
>;-p