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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cedarhill
March 7, 2009 3:39 am

Regardless of original intention, the climate change is a political movement based on the usual power, money and control. AGW is as good a name as any for it. The technique that’s used has been refined to what you see today to the point where it’s sometimes difficult to truly separate the politicians from the believers from scientists hitching along for the ride.
The politicians are very easy to identify and include most of UN folks at IPCC along with Al Gore, Mikhail Gorbachev, various members of Congress and, evidently, Barack Obama and his administration. A favorite technique of the group is serial demonization of their opponents. It serves three primary purposes: (1) to discredit the opponents, (2) force the opponent to spend resources defending the attack and (3) diverts public attention from the facts of the issue(s). It does work especially if the media decides to jump on board and amplifies it along with including the “prove to us you are not …. and not just some nut” interview.
What’s interesting about the “denier” attack is how persistent it has become in the overall AGW movement. It won’t make much difference if there is actual science regarding denier psych. For example, studying why some persist against strong “consensus” and draw correlations regarding ultimate proof of the position – i.e., moving from “consensus” to “scientific fact.” Regardless, the “denier” and the “consensus” are clearly part of the main political talking points you will hear to prepare for the passage of AGW laws and regulations.
All in all, the public seems to be doing what juries usually do when “experts” present completely opposite conclusions – they ignore the experts and decide the case on other issues unless the science is just overwhelming (like an expert testifying that gravity really doesn’t work on top of the Empire State Building).
In short, I don’t think the public has bought into the “denier” hypothesis given the polling numbers. Once that point is reached in the public mind it won’t make much difference what another conference presents. The majority of the public, even in the UK, questions AGW’s science. Name-calling by the AGW crowd at this point will have little effect other than the “deniers” spending a lot of time talking about not being a “denier”.

Håkan B
March 7, 2009 3:41 am

I’ll go and see a doctor on monday, I’m sure our health insurance system will pay for the therapy. A complicating factor is that I live at this latitude, 59°13’16.06″N, but a long stay at a sunny and warm location, the Maldives for example, might help me. Wish me good luck!

A Lovell
March 7, 2009 3:54 am

You ask “What will they think of next?” See Greenie Watch. (You can google.)
It appears that snails, slugs and worms are emitting dangerous greenhouse gases!

Chris Schoneveld
March 7, 2009 3:58 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.”
Sure science is a means to obtain knowledge. But knowledge in itself would only satisfy our curiosity. Applying the knowledge is really what in most cases drives science. Applying it in a way that would ultimately benefit mankind, even if that would interfere with the forces of nature.
Nature per se is not sacred. Forces of nature could, for instance, impoverish our atmosphere of CO2 making life as we know it difficult to sustain. Imagine if the burning of fossil fuels could save our planet from too low levels of atmospheric CO2? Wouldn’t we have the right to interfere with nature for the benefit of our biosphere?
The idea that everything that is natural is by definition good is a fallacy on which the green movement is founded. Stem cell research and genetic engineering of food may save millions of people from disease or famine, yet , it does interfere with natural processes.
Yes, and if we could control the weather (which we can’t, I’m afraid) to delay the coming of a next ice age then I would be all for it. Wouldn’t you?

Robinson
March 7, 2009 4:05 am

Do I have a mental disorder, or a lack of one? I would have thought credulity (the willingness to believe anything, on authority) a mental disorder in this context. For the record, I don’t use an internal combustion engine (I do drive, but don’t own a car, I cycle to work), or heat my apartment with oil, or cook with gas. I’m not a huge consumer of anything (except cheesecake).
It seems to me that the mental disorder in question should be mass hysteria, not scepticism.

Alan
March 7, 2009 4:16 am

The ‘mental disorder’ is spreading. This is a link to a podcast from the financial sense newshour for 7 March. It’s normally about the markets but climate change are discussed. The talk about the PDO, AMO and US droughts starts about 30 minutes in:
http://www.netcastdaily.com/broadcast/fsn2009-0307-3a.asx
Or you will find the link from this page. It’s the second part of 3rd Hour with Jim & John for 7 March
http://www.financialsense.com/fsn/main.html

Johnny Honda
March 7, 2009 4:19 am

Please help me!
I suffer from an very severe mental illness, I don’t believe what the newspaper say! I don’t even believe Al Gore! And the worst is:
It’s March, I live in the lowlands of Switzerland, there is full Global Warming……….and if I look out of the window, I see snow in the garden!!
My brain is playing very bad tricks on me!

Brian Johnson
March 7, 2009 4:22 am

Gore’s Law -” What ever I say is right, whatever I do is right. Whatever you say or do against me is wrong.”
Peer reviewed by Hansen, Moore and Gore!

Bart van Deenen
March 7, 2009 4:23 am

Cargo cult science is what I think the late great Nobel prize winning physicist Richard P. Feynman would have called the whole of the AGW cult. He had a talk with this title at his 1974 Caltech commencement address. The whole text is here
Some choice quotes:

Details that could throw doubt on your interpretation must be given, if you know them. You must do the best you can — if you know anything at all wrong, or possibly wrong — to explain it. If you make a theory, for example, and advertise it, or put it out, then you must also put down all the facts that disagree with it, as well as those that agree with it. There is also a more subtle problem. When you have put a lot of ideas together to make an elaborate theory, you want to make sure, when explaining what it fits, that those things it fits are not just the things that gave you the idea for the theory; but that the finished theory makes something else come out right, in addition.

or this bit

We have learned a lot from experience about how to handle some of the ways we fool ourselves. One example: Millikan measured the charge on an electron by an experiment with falling oil drops, and got an answer which we now know not to be quite right. It’s a little bit off because he had the incorrect value for the viscosity of air. It’s interesting to look at the history of measurements of the charge of an electron, after Millikan. If you plot them as a function of time, you find that one is a little bit bigger than Millikan’s, and the next one’s a little bit bigger than that, and the next one’s a little bit bigger than that, until finally they settle down to a number which is higher.
Why didn’t they discover the new number was higher right away? It’s a thing that scientists are ashamed of — this history — because it’s apparent that people did things like this: when they got a number that was too high above Millikan’s, they thought something must be wrong — and they would look for and find a reason why something might be wrong. When they got a number close to Millikan’s value they didn’t look so hard. And so they eliminated the numbers that were too far off, and did other things like that. We’ve learned those tricks nowadays, and now we don’t have that kind of a disease.

or this bit about honesty to other scientist and laymen

I would like to add something that’s not essential to the science, but something I kind of believe, which is that you should not fool the layman when you’re talking as a scientist. I am not trying to tell you what to do about cheating on your wife, or fooling your girlfriend, or something like that, when you’re not trying to be a scientist, but just trying to be an ordinary human being. We’ll leave those problems up to you and your rabbi. I’m talking about a specific, extra type of integrity that is not lying, but bending over backwards to show how you’re maybe wrong, that you ought to have when acting as a scientist. And this is our responsibility as scientists, certainly to other scientists, and I think to laymen.

MartinGAtkins
March 7, 2009 4:23 am

Mike McMillan (22:35:21) :
“If I were reincarnated I would wish to be returned to earth as a killer virus to lower human population levels.”
– Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, patron of the World Wildlife Fund
I though he was happy with being born a leech.

Alan
March 7, 2009 4:30 am

Oops! The first link I posted above is part 1. You want part 2 for the interview with Evelyn Browning Garriss about climate change. Her father is a ‘foremost climatologist’. recommended.
http://www.netcastdaily.com/broadcast/fsn2009-0307-3b.asx

Bernie
March 7, 2009 4:33 am

Perhaps we should come up with a button or some other visible marker that would allow us climate skeptics – which I loosely define as those who do not believe there is sufficient data to support the notion of catastrophic anthropogenic global warming – to identify ourselves to each other. In large measure the big lie is that only a few wild eyed, fossil fuel fuelled, knuckle dragging, sheet wearing, know nothing, crazies are skeptics. I suspect that there are many of us out here.

Aron
March 7, 2009 4:51 am

Bernie said: “Perhaps we should come up with a button or some other visible marker that would allow us climate skeptics – which I loosely define as those who do not believe there is sufficient data to support the notion of catastrophic anthropogenic global warming – to identify ourselves to each other. ”
No, we’ll leave images of the Holocaust for the Alarmists to exploit as they always do. We do not do such things, because we are NOT mentally ill.

Robert Wood
March 7, 2009 4:54 am

Eco-psychology ????

JimB
March 7, 2009 4:58 am

I usually take great joy in reading the posts here, and especially the comments. So many of you provide entertainment and insight among the varying points of view. It’s both my morning and evening entertainment. This one I’m taking a pass on though, because much like elections, it really makes me terribly disappointed in my fellow citizens. That so many can be manipulated by so few so easily is a testament to the mental laziness that has been developed, encouraged, and perpetuated for some time now.
As a friend of mine quoted some time ago…”Since we discovered fire…this is as far as we’ve come?”
See y’all on the next post, which I see is already up! 🙂
JimB

Robert Wood
March 7, 2009 5:01 am

Yes, I admit it, I am pathologically opposed to poverty and death.
Are there twelve steps to salvation?
1. Accept Al Gore into your heart and mind
2. Accept David Suzuki into your beer fridge
3. Accept Ontario Green Police into your home.
4. Walk, don’t run as that produces more CO2.
5. Don’t breed
6. Freeze in the dark.
7. Grovel before enviro-priests
9. Fly around the world to exotic locales.
10. Deny deniers
11. Sport Jim Hansenn lapel badges
12. Throw up

Alan
March 7, 2009 5:26 am

The general nastiness of the environmentalists shows their true nature, in my opinion. Misanthropy is the new racism. Just insert ‘brown’ in front of the ‘people’ word in some of those quotes above. That, I suspect, is what their subconscious is really babbling about. Nasty, nasty people.

March 7, 2009 5:35 am

Maybe this means they’ll let us off with “diminished capacity” or something at Hansen’s Nuremberg-style trials. Whew!

BarryW
March 7, 2009 5:35 am

I find it interesting that skeptics have a psychosis but it’s the believers that seem to dress up in funny costumes, shout slogans, threaten people with violence, become incoherent with rage, and will not look at any data that does not support their position. Seems like a good set of symptoms for diagnosing a mental disorder.

Bruce Cobb
March 7, 2009 5:52 am

This quote caught my eye:
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).”
Wow. By their own admission, Belief in AGW/CC is anti-knowledge, and anti-science, since the more you learn, the less you Believe.
They seem incredulous, and enraged about the fact that there are increasingly more of what they disparagingly call “denialists”, but which are actually climate realists. This denialism-as-sickness idea is just one more weapon leveled at us, and anyone who dares to refuse to go along with that agenda. Instead of being a search for truth, and a wish to “understand”, however, it is in fact just another in their long line of assaults on reason. Yes, it is a measure of their desperation, but it will have an effect. It is just one more of their insidious ways of shutting down debate.
Orwell was indeed prescient, just off by about a quarter century.

Dorlomin
March 7, 2009 6:02 am

The AGW debate: Two tribes of monkees throwing sh*t at each other while each proclaiming themselves to the annointed apostles of “true science”.
This may be one of the funniest threads on WUWT yet.

Mike Bryant
March 7, 2009 6:12 am

Burt van Deenan,
What a contrast to the scientists of today…

Gordon Smith
March 7, 2009 6:23 am

I seems that the collective unconscious (to use Jung terminilogy) has always needed an “end of the world” fear.. Judgement day followed by the world wars and finally the threat of a nuclear war between USA and USSR. I have not the time or resources to check but I suspect that when communism collapsed a new “judgement day” was required and global warming and eco-disaster theory and activism rapidly took off from then.

Mike Bryant
March 7, 2009 6:26 am

I have recently heard about a new, even deadlier type of denialism. It seems that there are some people who believe that it is a bad idea to bail out our free spending government with money that our grandchildren have not even earned yet. These people are threatening the continued spending on such ptaiseworthy projects as:
1) Finding out why pigs stink-(I’m not making this up)
2) Bailing out profligate companies, states, cities and the federal government.
3) Giving even more money to people who never intented to pay mortgages.
4) Giving billions more to right-thinking scientists
5) Doing all this with an IOU
I know that it is hard to believe that some people think this is a bad idea, but believe me, these crazy people are out there in incredible numbers. These deniers must be shown the “New Common Sense” and shown quickly. Government health care must start NOW to treat these millions upon millions of deluded people, NO MATTER WHAT IT COSTS

Allen63
March 7, 2009 6:33 am

pft,
Thanks for the quotes — I copied them.
Stifling dissent and free speech will cause catastrophes worse than the worst AGW predictions — as the global experiment with democracy is ultimately destroyed. Oh yes, I remember now — “it can’t happen here”.