What WILL they think of next? Conference labels skeptics as having mental disorder

From Spiked-online.com

(h/t to Trevor Gunter)

NOTE FROM ANTHONY: this topic is rather contentious, even though temptation abounds and emotions will run high, please refrain from playing climate gutter ball. Comments will be snipped that stray far from decorum.

Wednesday 4 March 2009

Pathologising dissent? Now that’s Orwellian

Ahead of a conference on the psychology of climate change denial, Brendan O’Neill says green authoritarians are treating debate as a disorder.

Brendan O’Neill

A few months ago, for a joke, I set up a Facebook group called ‘Climate change denial is a mental disorder’. It’s a satirical campaigning hub for people who think that climate change denial should be recognised as a mental illness by the American Psychiatric Association, and that its sufferers – who probably engage in ‘regular chanting and intensive brainwashing sessions in cult-like surroundings’ – should be offered ‘eco-lobotomies’ to remove ‘the denying part of their brain’. The group now has 42 members. Yes, some have signed up because they get the joke, but others are serious subscribers to the denial-as-insanity idea. ‘Thank God I’ve found this group’, says one new member, who is sick of other Facebook groups being ‘hijacked’ by unhinged eco-sceptics.

The idea that ‘climate change denial’ is a psychological disorder – the product of a spiteful, wilful or simply in-built neural inability to face up to the catastrophe of global warming – is becoming more and more popular amongst green-leaning activists and academics. And nothing better sums up the elitism and authoritarianism of the environmentalist lobby than its psychologisation of dissent. The labelling of any criticism of the politics of global warming, first as ‘denial’, and now as evidence of mass psychological instability, is an attempt to write off all critics and sceptics as deranged, and to lay the ground for inevitable authoritarian solutions to the problem of climate change. Historically, only the most illiberal and misanthropic regimes have treated disagreement and debate as signs of mental ill-health.

This weekend, the University of West England is hosting a major conference on climate change denial. Strikingly, it’s being organised by the university’s Centre for Psycho-Social Studies. It will be a gathering of those from the top of society – ‘psychotherapists, social researchers, climate change activists, eco-psychologists’ – who will analyse those at the bottom of society, as if we were so many flitting, irrational amoeba under an eco-microscope. The organisers say the conference will explore how ‘denial’ is a product of both ‘addiction and consumption’ and is the ‘consequence of living in a perverse culture which encourages collusion, complacency and irresponsibility’ (1). It is a testament to the dumbed-down, debate-phobic nature of the modern academy that a conference is being held not to explore ideas – to interrogate, analyse and fight over them – but to tag them as perverse.

Leading green writers have welcomed the West England get-together to study the denying masses. One eco-columnist says the conference might generate ideas for dealing with those who are ‘pathologically’ opposed to the environmental movement (pathology, according to my OED, is the study of ‘morbid or abnormal mental or moral conditions’) (2). Environmentalists recognise the inherent elitism of saying that, while they brave few can see things clearly, the rest of us are somehow disordered (greens are the ‘watchful ones amongst the slaves’, according to one environmentalist writer); yet they seem unashamed. The eco-columnist says this weekend’s conference will be useful because where ‘mainstream politics now largely “gets” environmentalism’, there is still a sceptical mass, ‘a baying and growing crowd, largely consisting of people resistant to the prospect of ever having to alter their lifestyles’. Apparently this crowd ‘gathers to hurl invective’ at environmentalist ideas, such as recycling and low-energy lightbulbs (3).

In a sense, this vision of elite, brainy environmentalists on one side and a baying, insult-hurling crowd on the other speaks, however accidentally and however crudely, to an underlying truth: environmentalism remains a largely elitist project, beloved of politicians, priests and prudes keen to control people’s behaviour and curb our excessive lifestyles, and it rubs many ‘ordinary people’ up the wrong way. Of course much of the public goes along with the environmentalist ethos, bowing to the central idea that mankind is destructive and observing such rituals as sorting their rubbish, but they do so half-heartedly, recognising that, fundamentally, greens’ anti-consumerist, anti-reproduction, anti-travel arguments run counter to their own personal aspirations. Yet rather than recognise this frequently hidden divide between the green elite and the ‘baying crowd’ as one built on differences of opinion, on clashing aspirations, even on rational assessments by sections of the public that recycling is a waste of time, increasingly environmentalists pathologise it, turning it into evidence of their wisdom in contrast to the public’s mental instability.

University departments, serious authors, think-tanks and radical activists are embracing the ‘psychological disorder’ view of climate change scepticism. At Columbia University in New York, the Global Roundtable on Public Attitudes to Climate Change studies the ‘completely baffling’ response of the public to the threat of climate change, exploring why the public has been ‘so slow to act’ despite the ‘extraordinary information’ provided by scientists. Apparently, our slack response is partly a result of our brain’s inability to assess ‘pallid statistical information’ in the face of fear (4). The Ecologist magazine also talks about the ‘psychology of climate change denial’ and says the majority of people (excluding those ‘handfuls of people who have already decided to stop being passive bystanders’: the green elite again) have responded to warnings of global warming by sinking into ‘self-deception and mass denial’ (5). An online magazine called Climate Change Denial is dedicated to analysing the public’s ‘weird and disturbed’ response to climate change (6).

John Naish, the celebrated author of the anti-consumerism treatise Enough!, says our consumerist behaviour, with its promise of ‘ecological disaster’, ultimately springs from the fact that we’re all using the ‘wrong brain’. Our culture, all those flashy ads and temptations to buy, buy, buy and be fat and happy, is aimed at stimulating our ‘primordial instinct’, our ‘reptilian brain, which is responsible for arousal, basic life functions and sex’, says Naish. It neglects and makes lazy our ‘neocortex, the intelligent brain we evolved in the Pleicestocene era’. In short, we’re behaving like animals rather than intelligent beings; indeed, says Naish, our consumer culture is sending us ‘knuckle-dragging into ecological disaster’ (7). In a less hysterical and monkey-obsessed fashion, Al Gore, the king of climate change activism, says the media are warping people’s minds and actively encouraging thoughtlessness and climate change denial, giving rise to a public response to ecological disaster that is not ‘modulated by logic, reason or reflective thought’ (8).

The labelling of those who question certain scientific ideas or green ways of life as ‘deniers’, ‘addicts’ and ‘reptiles’ with a ‘baffling’ inability to understand The Science and act accordingly has a deeply censorious bent. If ‘climate change denial’ is a form of mass denial and self-deception, a fundamentally psychological disorder, then there is no need to engage in a meaningful public debate; instead people just need to be treated. Thus the Ecologist says ‘denial cannot simply be countered with information’; indeed there is apparently ‘plentiful historical evidence that increased information may even intensify denial’ (9). The respected British think-tank, the Institute for Public Policy Research, goes so far as to insist that ‘the task of climate change agencies is not to persuade by rational argument but in effect to develop and nurture a new “common sense”’ (10). This is the logical conclusion to treating disagreement as ‘denial’ and dissent as a ‘disorder’: no debate, no real information, just an insidious demand to change The Culture in order to relax the wrong side of our brains or to inject us with a new commonsensical outlook.

The psychologisation of climate change denial – even the very use of that term: denial – reveals how utterly aloof and cut off are the environmental elitists from mass society. They cannot comprehend, indeed are ‘baffled’ by, our everyday behaviour, our desire to have families, our resistance to hectoring, our dream of being wealthier, better travelled, our hopes of living life to the full. For them, such behaviour is irresponsible and it runs counter to the ‘extraordinary information’ provided by scientists. They seriously expect people to make life decisions on the basis of pie charts and graphs drawn up in laboratories in Switzerland, rather than on the basis of what they and their families need and, yes, what they want. That the green lobby is so perturbed by our failure to act in accordance with scientific findings shows the extent to which, for them, The Science is a new gospel truth and religious-style guide to life, and anyone who disobeys it is a sinner, heretic or deranged individual, a moral leper of the twenty-first century.

Psychologising dissent, and refusing to recognise, much less engage with, the substance of people’s disagreements – their political objections, their rational criticisms, their desire to do things differently – is the hallmark of authoritarian regimes. In the Soviet Union, outspoken critics of the ruling party were frequently tagged as mentally disordered and faced, as one Soviet dissident described it, ‘political exile to mental institutions’ (11). There they would be treated with narcotics, tranquillisers and even electric shock therapy. In George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, O’Brien, the torturer in Room 101, offers to cure our hero Winston Smith of his anti-party thinking. ‘You are mentally deranged!’ he tells him. Today the word ‘Orwellian’ is massively overused, to describe everything from fingerprint library cards to supermarket loyalty cards, but treating your dissenters as deranged? That really is Orwellian, and we should declare permanent war against it.

Brendan O’Neill is editor of spiked. Visit his website here. His satire on the green movement – Can I Recycle My Granny and 39 Other Eco-Dilemmas – is published by Hodder & Stoughton in October. (Buy this book from Amazon(UK).)

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jrshipley
March 8, 2009 1:59 pm

“Observations subsequent recently published in Nature and Science [snip]to the IPCC report, however, indicate that Greenland and Antartica may be losing mass much sooner (more of that nonexistent science).”
This should read.
“Observations subsequent to the IPCC report have been recently published in Nature and Science [snip], however, and they indicate that Greenland and Antartica may be losing mass much sooner (more of that nonexistent science).”

March 8, 2009 2:44 pm

jrshipley
Yes, I say the sea levels are not rising. For evidence, have a look at the U. Colorado site’s “wizard,” and gaze at all the blue/purple area on their world map. Then, click the cursor in the blue next to San Francisco, and observe the little graph that shows up. My graph of their data shows 5 mm decrease since 1993. If the seas are rising at what is it they say? 3 mm or 4 mm per year? Then over 15 years that graph should trend UP by 45 to 60 mm (that’s about 2 inches).
Over the past 5 years, 2004-2008, the decreasing trend is much more pronounced, at 50 mm in 5 years. This is clear and convincing evidence that IPCC has something very, very, wrong in their sea level claims.
For anyone who wants to verify or duplicate these results, this is from latitude 38 North, Longitude 236 in their nomenclature. Don’t believe me, go run these numbers for yourself.
http://sealevel.colorado.edu/wizard.php
Then, compare the small amount of red area on the map, with all the blue and purple. After that, please tell me again that the global sea level is rising.
I do not have to make claims that the economy is in a shambles, and the Global Warming (AB 32-style) laws will make it worse. Just watch the economic indicators, they speak far louder than I ever could or will.
Start with unemployment figures. Then the stock market indices around the world, not just the Dow Jones. Tokyo, Hong Kong, and London are also down. Then look at the consumption of basic energy, in particular oil and natural gas. Note that OPEC has cut production in attempts to prop up the price of oil above $40 per barrel.
Examine the leading economic indicators. Note that the financial markets are in chaos, still, after having billions upon billions pumped into them. Note how many banks failed in the trailing 12 to 18 months.
Then, tell me again how the measures to save-the-world-from-frying-and-drowning are going to put people to work, and kick the economy in the gas. Tell me how higher electricity prices are going to boost the economy. Tell me how higher gasoline and diesel prices, due to bio-fuels, are going to boost the economy. Tell me how it will only cost the consumer $300 more per car to purchase a new car that achieves 49 miles per gallon, as California’s Air Resources Board stated in the AB 32 regulations.
Then, make a convincing argument that the millions upon millions of people who cannot afford new cars, but must buy a used car, will have more money in THEIR pockets from buying more expensive gasoline for 5 years or so, before they have the chance to buy one of those 49-mpg used cars.
Before the AGW proponents shut down every coal-fired power plant in the U.S. and Europe (Poland will NOT be happy about that), please give us all a good plan for replacing that power. You might want to read what I wrote earlier on another WUWT thread about what happens when nuclear power provides more than about 30 percent of the total power in a national grid.
As you seem likely never to be dissuaded from your AGW views, how about you just keep watch, as I will, for the ice to melt, and the beaches to disappear. We have lots of beaches in California, and you can bet there will be plenty of news coverage when they go under.
I will give you one to watch near Los Angeles, California. In Playa del Rey, for example, just south of the breakwater at Marina del Rey, there are dozens of expensive homes right on the beach, approximately 300 feet from the water. At high tide, the homes are only about a foot or so above sea level. Large waves at high tide sometimes swirl the water to within 100 feet of the homes. Keep an eye on those. (For those interested, from Google Maps the latitude/longitude is 33.956105;-118.449526)
I look forward to your, or any other AGW proponent’s, responses on these issues.

March 8, 2009 2:46 pm

Mike Bryant (11:30:45) :
“Wow, Roger, I enjoyed the detailed and passionate response. It sounds like a summation for the jury, devastating. I’m voting guilty.
Mike”

Thank you, sir. You may take your seat in the jury box. [grin]

March 8, 2009 3:14 pm

I’ve followed the debate for nearly a decade now and get a little obsessive from time to time in researching and responding to skeptics/deniers.
jr, is that mentally healthy? You seem to be indulging in obsession, in your own words. Perhaps some other pursuit might make you happier.
I doubt your obsessive compulsion to flail at skeptics/deniers is doing anybody any good, especially yourself. Maybe you need to seek professional help. Certitude is not an attribute of an open mind. Anger is an acid that eats away at the vessel that contains it.
Re sea level change. The alarmist position is well-known. See Algore’s movie. Many is the time I have heard alarmist rants about seas rising to drown Manhattan within the next 50 to 100 years, and in particular flooding the Twin Towers Memorial, as if that particular spot is so sacred as to inflame the Precautionary Principle to red hot status.
But the best studies show that sea levels are rising at minuscule rates of a foot per century, consistent with the rate over last 2,000 years. Nothing to panic about. Nothing to obsess about.
Don’t worry, be happy. If you have such disgust at the level of science you perceive at this site, then why torture yourself about? Find something else to do. Why stick a needle in your own eye? Why stick one in mine, and in the others who enjoy this site?

Manfred
March 8, 2009 3:35 pm

you shouldn’t accuse others of cherry picking and then try to make a case with short term weather events. the nature magazine can hardly beused as a respected source after the history of handling the hockey stick debate and falsification.
the acceleration of greenland ice loss in 2002-2006 is already over.
http://www.theresilientearth.com/?q=content/greenlands-ice-armageddon-comes-end
even the hadley center opposes alarmist use of such short term data.
antarctic sea-ice levels show a long term uptrend and antarctic temperatures are falling since 1979 (even confirmed by steig and hockeystick mann).

Graeme Rodaughan
March 8, 2009 3:40 pm
Graeme Rodaughan
March 8, 2009 3:59 pm

There is a bit of flak floating around on this thread along the lines of “Skeptics are believers in Conspiracies” as evidence of psychopathology.
I for one, do not hold that there is an active conspiracy behind the AGW Movement.
I take the position that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
And a claim that there is a distinct group of people who are working together to deceive the general public by using the AGW movement as a front for their own nefarious ends is an extraordinary claim. While not beyond the bounds of possibility – I haven’t seen convincing evidence of this proposition.
The position that I do take is that there is a “Collusion of Means” in play. This is a much weaker form of “conspiracy” than the concept of an “active, ongoing, organised conspiracy”.
A Collusion of Means will have organised elements within it, but there is no overall organising structure apart from the chosen “Means”.
Re-posting from http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/02/15/hansen-on-death-trains-and-coal-and-co2/
This is exemplified by the “Baptists and Bootleggers” concept of the 1920s prohibition era. The Baptists wanted booze banned for religeous reasons. The Bootleggers wanted booze banned to allow for a monopoly market and increased profits. A Collusion of Means, “Booze Banned” to achieve very different and contrary ends. Of course the Baptists and bootleggers would have loathed each other and would not have associated as their means were the same, but the goals contrary.
In the AGW scam context. You have several “Means” in play.
[1] Use of “Catastrophism” to frighten the general public. i.e. Fear as a marketing strategy.
[2] Use of “CAP and Trade” to put a price on Carbon Emissions. i.e. An indirect tax on energy consumption that will be extracted at the final point of sale – like a Value Added Tax, or Goods and Services Tax, but with extremely broad application due to the pervasive use of energy in modern society.
The Colluders include the following possible examples who will benefit from going along with the AGW Movement.
1. Energy companies seeking to make profit from the provision of tax funded windmills.
2. Politicians seeking to get re-elected for “saving the planet – and hence every voter”.
3. Electricity providers seeking to make profit by passing on the costs of carbon credits to their customers at inflated prices to what they paid.
4. Environmentalists, seeking self-validation and the realisation of their ideal of a “Pristine Natural World”.
5. Malthusians seeking reduced human populations.
6. Banks and other trading organisations, seeking to make increased profit from the trading of Carbon.
7. Developing countries (such as China) seeking to get western funded infrastructure (i.e. Hydro Dams) paid for by carbon credits.
8. Psychopaths, and Narcisstic Personality Disordered people seeking power, control, fame, and wealth and importance at the expense of everyone else.
The Collusion of Means is the “Control of CO2 emissions”. No active conspiracy required.

tallbloke
March 8, 2009 4:27 pm

Graeme Rodaughan (13:16:41) :
http://sealevel.colorado.edu/current/sl_noib_global_sm.jpg
I’m under the impression that the graph that you have just linked to shows that.
[1] The sea level is still rising.
[2] That the rate of rising appears to have stalled over the last 2 to 3 years.

Hi Graeme,
I may be misunderstanding something, but the page title colorado university gives is “Mean Sea Level” and the 50mm change over the 15 year range of the graph does indeed equate to around 3.3mm/year.
Ignore the black linear trend line and look at the blue 60 day smoothed line. Looks like the peak levels since the end of 2005 at +30mm are lower to me. End of 2006 +28mm, end of 2007 +26mm, end of 2008 +25mm.

tallbloke
March 8, 2009 4:42 pm

jrshipley (13:57:15) :

The fact of the matter is that the IPCC was conservative in its estimate of sea level increase and did not predict a 2 meter rise as this blog has falsely reported.

The IPCC has been downsizing it’s rash predictions. However, it’s not that long since they were predicting a 7 meter rise, which of course grabbed the headlines. Science and policy by soundbite. This is why their credibility is crumbling as quickly as their theory.

Roger Knights
March 8, 2009 6:29 pm

Brendan H. wrote:
“the press release by the University of West England doesn’t mention anything about diagnosing climate change denial as a mental disorder.”
Oops–you’re right–according to the press release we’re more to be pitied than censured. (I doubt that more-in-sorrow-than-anger attitude will prevail once the conference gets rolling and attendees let down their hair. We’ll see.)
I was basing what I wrote on Brendan O’Neill’s statement:
“The idea that ‘climate change denial’ is a psychological disorder – the product of a spiteful, willful or simply in-built neural inability to face up to the catastrophe of global warming – is becoming more and more popular amongst green-leaning activists and academics.”
I presume he could document this claim with quotations, if asked.

Janice
March 8, 2009 7:07 pm

Can anyone tell me where the quotes from Maurice Strong “Is it the only hope for the planet that the industrial nations collapse? Isn’t it our responsibility to bring it about?” and Michael Oppenheimer “The only hope for the world is to make sure that there is not another United States” are from? I wan’t to quote them, but cannot find them on the internet and don’t want egg on my face!

Roger Knights
March 8, 2009 7:28 pm

I notice that one of the promoters of the conference states that it’s intended to diagnose those who have a pathological resistance to all ecological measures. If that’s the case, and the conference isn’t just about AGW “denial,” that’s less objectionable. Here’s a three-part solution I endorse, spelled out in a book called “Prescription for the Planet,” whose details are outlined in the first reader-review. Here’s the Amazon link:
http://www.amazon.com/Prescription-Planet-Painless-Remedy-Environmental/dp/1419655825/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1236568501&sr=1-1
Here’s my own suggestion for a more sustainable society, which I’ve posted a few times on a stock-market website (SeekingAlpha.com):
Since the gov’t. is throwing money at make-work projects and infrastructure improvements, it seems to me that there’s a project that could get under way much faster, with less likelihood of fraud or ineffectiveness than the ones I’ve been reading about. Namely, the gov’t should offer to pay for home-improvement projects for home-owners in exchange for a share of future profits on the sale of the house. This would stimulate lots of economic activity, would upgrade the country’s housing stock, would make life pleasanter for home-owners and their neighbors (who’d live in an upgraded neighborhood), and would be a good investment for the gov’t. in the long run. It would also be politically popular (assuming it would work). (There are certain desirable home improvements that wouldn’t require skilled labor, such as adding fencing, and improving home security, insulation, and earthquake protection. Millions could be hired to do these tasks nearly immediately.)

Roger Knights
March 8, 2009 7:33 pm

Janice: I used Google to find the Oppenheimer quote (don’t use quotes around his quote):
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&ct=res&cd=2&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.pushback.com%2Fenvironment%2FEcoFreakQuotes.html&ei=h420Sf2LHZGYsAPAqY2LAQ&usg=AFQjCNE3m1-in5X7gYcEe7hfx38dTL8AHw&sig2=eRSIsYhIg3O0f7i72QMVUw
You could probably do the same with the other quote.

Imran
March 9, 2009 6:37 am

What was it Voltaire said …… “Its dangerous to be right when the authorities are wrong.”

Roger Knights
March 9, 2009 1:06 pm

PS to my comment above on governmental jump-start funding for insulation: This technique could also be used to fund attic fans, south-side awnings, white-painted roofs, and heat pump installation. The US needs to cut its energy consumption, and a little governmental nudging–or even frog-marching–is OK to get us there. (provided the solution it is peddling WORKS.)

TitiXXXX
March 10, 2009 9:00 am

humm… those guys having a Social Dreaming Matrix event after the conference
http://www.uwe.ac.uk/hlss/research/cpss/events/2009/20090307_facing_climate_changes.shtml
I went to wiki as I didn’t know about this stuff
“Social dreaming is a method for identifying the cultural knowledge and scientific method deployed in the dream – not the oedipal issues experienced by the dreamer. ”
Might be a hint why climastrologists think they use scientific method? 😀
and found that
http://www.socialdreaming.com/
they are selling a DVD $2121… hummm…
don’t know yet what to think about all that…

LarryD
March 11, 2009 12:06 pm

Dr. Sanity has a post on this post. A Psychiatrists take on the enviros labeling of skeptics as “in denial”.

April 22, 2009 5:34 am

This is not a game anymore. This is deadly serious business. California, where I Iive and work, has already passed strong legislation to adversely impact all aspects of our once-great economy; this is known as AB 32. I predict it will be known in history as the Bill that Killed California.
Regards,
RHT Seamed Stockings

John
April 23, 2009 11:22 am

This sounds like an endorsement for brainwashing if I ever heard it.

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