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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Curieux
March 7, 2009 1:30 am

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“.
This is true but it’s also the brand of a failure. 😉

Ellie in Belfast
March 7, 2009 1:36 am

Well I’ve always known I had a few screws loose.

Pierre Gosselin
March 7, 2009 1:37 am

This kind of low level of desparate, childish name-calling says a lot about AGW science and the integrity of the people behind it.
Any serious scientist ought to be ashamed of being associated with these sophomores. I predict mass defections to the sceptic side in the coming months.

Ron de Haan
March 7, 2009 1:41 am

P Folkens (23:47:20) :
“Years ago, I attended my brother’s wedding in the deepest part of the Southern Bible Belt. One lady from the bride’s side made conversation by asking what I did. I told her I worked in the field of evolutionary biology. She said she’d pray for me.
AGW alarmists are kind of like that except they won’t pray for me, but rather relegate me to the hinterlands of social banishment.
AGW alarmists and Creationists do share something in common. It matters not a wit the good, empirical data and scientific analysis one presents. Facts that demolish their illusions mean only that I am a bad person for questioning their “truth.” Deep down, they really hate me for it.
How can we overcome this growing level of stupid around us?”
F. Folkens,
I think you make a wrong assessment of the situation.
These kind of publications show the true face of the Green (read RED) eco-socialists.
At the same time it shows how desperate they are.
People are not stupid.
Opposition is growing world wide.
As long as we keep a cool head and sound science, we will do well.
Eventually I think we can not escape from active involvement in the political process because in Europe and the USA there is no political party that represents our view.

John Edmondson
March 7, 2009 1:41 am

As Josef Goebels said “If you repeat a lie often enough, people will assume it is the truth”, or words to that effect (obviously Goebel’s spoke in German).
As Edmund Burke said “If good men do nothing, evil triumphs”
If this post is where the debate is headed then it is worth remembering this.

Roger Knights
March 7, 2009 1:49 am

Somehow I doubt that Steve Moore will be wagging his finger at these folks for their ad hom.

mercurior
March 7, 2009 2:09 am

this is scary. Voltaire said: “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.”
So we are “sick”, its only a short step to forcing treatment upon us for the sake of society.

Robert Bateman
March 7, 2009 2:11 am

Reading through the threads above, I come away with the notion that AGW is a desperate clamor to be on the side that is saving Earth, as a cause to ease the mind over the overpopulation of Earth. It is soothing to them, and they cling to it with religious fervor. Who wants to be on the side that is left out?
The planet grows small, the resources are strained. The latter condition has repeatedly caught up with civilizations in one way or another.
So, the religion is this: We have the science that will save us (the true believers, not the Earth).
The fear of the AGW’er is that the masses will react in herd fashion and overwhelm them as they face extinction.
That fear in not unfounded.
For too long modern science has held at bay the twin forces of disease and overpopulation. That relationship is strained, and hence the desperation.
Denial does very strange things to those who cannot face reality.
Playing with Stem Cells, maybe they will break the hold of disease, but at what cost?
Playing with genetics, they have broken the hold of food resources, but only delayed the inevitable.
Playing with the Earth’s atmosphere, they may break the perceived threat of Global Warming, but the cost may be to the cradle of life itself.
Has science reached the limits of it’s ability to preserve mankind ad infinitum?
It has certainly found the Earth’s limit.

ROM
March 7, 2009 2:16 am

I see this as a frightening escalation of the AGW ideology.
It is another step in the conditioning of it’s believers to take a more and more extreme position.
The AGW ideology already seems to have it’s sycophants close to the seat of American power and when there is any close association with powerful elements in any current power base a considerable level of camouflage and protection is available to the upper level leaders of the ideology and is usually sought and used until ultimate power is fully acquired.
The usual path, the conditioning of the outer circle of believers, in this sought for escalation of power of an ideologically based, non-tolerant doctrine is being followed.
The branding of dissidents ie; skeptics, as heretics and mentally unstable is under way as a means of emphasising the inherent superiority of the believers and the unfitness of the heretics to govern or have any influence in the power structure.
The next step in the road to power is already under way.
We are now starting to see an increase in demonstrations against power plants and similar carbon based industrial users.
The following step will be demonstrations, often violent, against organisations, individuals and businesses.
There will be many side steps in this period such as legal challenges and bureaucratic based disruptions to carbon reliant industries.
The next step in this conditioning process, the radical step that takes an ideology over a psychological threshold is the assassination of a high profile and prominent skeptic.
This releases the inhibitions against killing for the cause and the conditioning of individuals and groups for more and more radical actions becomes easier.
Outlier groups such as prominent dissidents [ skeptics! ] and gatherings of dissidents become legitimate targets in the psychology of the ideologists and they are then free to use whatever force is necessary to rid the [ insert appropriate icon here. ie. race, nation, planet ] of the evil embodied in that person, group or organisation.
The demands for the level of belief becomes higher and higher and doubters are outed and then destroyed until the ideology starts to consume it’s own.
Selective terror against individuals and state organisations has and is being used today somewhere in the world as the path to ultimate power by power seeking, ideologically based totalitarian orientated groups and even governments to destroy those who dissent from it’s ideology.
It is a very slippery moral and ethical downward slope that the ideologically based AGW movement is starting on, a slope than can only lead to a disaster of an unknown magnitude to mankind if allowed to continue.
It is also the path that nearly every one of the most inhumane ideologically based totalitarian regimes of the last 150 years has followed.
There is an old saying; Evil prevails when good men do nothing.

March 7, 2009 2:20 am

Along these lines, I have a piece up at Pajamas Media today — note my name dropping of a familar fellow in the second-to-last paragraph:
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/the-incurious-case-of-the-carbon-alarmists/
Best,
David

Robert Bateman
March 7, 2009 2:26 am

I draw serious distinction between science as a means to obtain knowledge and science used as a means to control the forces of nature.
The former is benign, the latter is where it gets dicey.
One pandorra’s box of nuclear power was opened.
It is barely under control, but not by much.
How many more dare we open?
Want to control the weather?
Want to control death?
Want to control genetics?
Curiousity is insatiable, and there are boxes that some wish to open.
One padorra’s box is plenty.
AGW take warning: Leave the Earth’s atmosphere alone.

Bil
March 7, 2009 2:43 am

Is this really just admission that, although they own the mainstream media and that the masses only hear their message, they masses aren’t as stupid as they think?
Most people in the UK are more worried about whether they’ll have a job and food on the table in a month’s time than about what may happen in 50, 100 years time. There’s your psychology: food, cave, warmth, safety, now.

Claude Harvey
March 7, 2009 2:45 am

I was blind, but now I see. It really isn’t my fault. I have a disease. I’m addicted to rational thought. I think the first of my twelve steps to recovery will be to put away my thermometer. When I’m better, I’m hopeful I’ll be able to be around thermometers without yielding to my compulsion to actually read the vile things.

Chris Schoneveld
March 7, 2009 2:45 am

P Folkens (23:47:20) :” AGW alarmists and Creationists do share something in common.”
Apart from the tautology in your sentence I agree with the analogy. Yet, most Creationists are climate sceptics, not because of in depth knowledge or a sceptical mind-set (far from that) but more for political reasons.

James (UK)
March 7, 2009 2:49 am

‘Our judgements judge us, and nothing reveals us, exposes our weaknesses, more ingeniously than the attitude of pronouncing on our fellows’ Paul Valery
I am shocked to see this is being held here in England, only 50 miles away. ‘Only in America’, I thought, before clocking the location. I would go but I may display signs of anger and paranoia, to add to my mentally imbalanced state of denial and non-conformism.

Ron de Haan
March 7, 2009 2:53 am

Robert Bateman (02:26:09) :
“I draw serious distinction between science as a means to obtain knowledge and science used as a means to control the forces of nature.
The former is benign, the latter is where it gets dicey.
One pandorra’s box of nuclear power was opened.
It is barely under control, but not by much.
How many more dare we open?
Want to control the weather?
Want to control death?
Want to control genetics?
Curiousity is insatiable, and there are boxes that some wish to open.
One padorra’s box is plenty.
AGW take warning: Leave the Earth’s atmosphere alone.”
Robert,
Don’t worry, we are already looking for another planet.

UK Sceptic
March 7, 2009 3:09 am

Great. I shall wear my Mental Denialist badge with pride

Allan M R MacRae
March 7, 2009 3:12 am

Halfwise (21:14:21) :
“Well, since the idea of spending real money on a symbolic gesture towards a non-existent problem makes me crazy, they are probably right.”
Excellent comment.
Really though, it’s not our fault – it’s a serious disability, probably worthy of generous state-sponsored compensation.
This debilitating condition of ours demands a label:
Is it a Phobia, as in BSophobia?
A Mania, as in Mannomania?
A Syndrome perhaps, as in Skeptics Syndrome?
Or a Disorder, as in Denialist Disorder?
Maybe it is time we fought back, with pet names for our opponents.
Those who obsess about catastrophic global warming, when Earth has been cooling for the past decade or so, are Climate Dyslexics.
Any more submissions for Slander of the Week?
Prizes will be given – a bacon sandwich for the best entry.

Ceolfrith
March 7, 2009 3:15 am

Why do I have the feeling I’m going to hear the clang of Death Camp gates as they close behind me?

Aron
March 7, 2009 3:19 am

Michael Crichton said he was worried that there was a totalitarian gene waiting to be activated in many humans and it just takes the right memes and circumstances to coalesce to activate the totalitarian streak in people. Communism failed, Malthusian predictions failed, religion trying to drill shame into people failed. Now they have returned under the umbrella of environmental activism to try to do again what they failed at before, except now they have three weapons they did not before.
The first is big money. They now know how to monetise their agenda.
The second is disinformation. By spreading unfounded fears about the future, of scientific treatments, and of industrialism in general, they exploit the curiosity and fears of people who do not know any better. These poor victims are what Michael Crichton called ‘information invalids’. They have become mentally crippled by bad information.
The third weapon is taking advantage of what Richard Dawkin’s called a relativistic society. In this politically correct culture nobody is right or wrong. Creationism is right, evolution is right. Democracy is right, totalitarianism is right too. Every belief and idea has to be tolerated and respected because everyone is equal and also equally exploitable.
By taking advantage of a society that lacks vision and a quest for truth alone, environmental activists are able to to get away with spreading disinformation in the name of social justice, saving the children of the future and saving the planet. Because we live in a tolerant society with respect for diverse opinions and cultures, we must tolerate environmental activists even when they call us Holocaust deniers, criminals and mentally ill. We must also tolerate their carbon taxation, their desire to control every aspect of our lives, and even our imprisonment for being climate criminals if they deem us to be one.
That is the way totalitarian returns. What will you do to stop it?

Spencer Atwell
March 7, 2009 3:26 am

Mike Bryant states that ‘the science is settled’. The scientific method requires that in order to establish a scientific fact the hypothesis must be validated and verified. AGW science has not been able to do this. The outputs of the IPPCC models are not facts but predictions.
Many current global observations and measurements (temperatures, sea levels etc.) conflict with these predictions.
Scientific facts are incontrovertible and unaffected by abuse, no matter how loud or prolonged.

March 7, 2009 3:26 am

Roger Sowell (00:28:17) – To the beach, Roger. To the beach!

Ron de Haan
March 7, 2009 3:27 am

Stephen Brown (01:18:28) :
“Two rather appropriate quotes lifted directly from the home-page of http://www.grumpyoldsod.com/index.asp
Thanks for the link, very funny.

Allan M
March 7, 2009 3:28 am

tmtisfree (00:50:58) :
pft (21:43:01) :
Great lists of quotes. A few more:
The desire to save mankind is always a false front for the desire to rule it.
(H.L. Mencken)
To do evil a human being must first of all believe that what he’s doing is good…
Ideology – that is what gives evil doing its long-sought justification and gives the evil-doer the necessary steadfastness and determination. That is the social theory which helps to make his acts seem good instead of bad in his own and others’ eyes, so that he won’t hear reproaches and curses but will receive praise and honours.
(Alexander Solzhenitsyn)
Their needs to be a blood sacrifice.
(Tony Blair, ex PM of Britain. He let that one slip in a news interview; wonder what he meant? It was never repeated.)

Argus
March 7, 2009 3:32 am

pft and tmtisree
Sorry,
Daniel Botkin should not be quoted as a deep ecologist. He is rather a skeptic.
He was just quoting somebody’s else citation. He is not the author.