
For those too young to remember (such as Jim Hansen’s coal protesters in Washington this past week), Clara Peller, pictured above, started a national catchphrase with “Where’s the beef?” that even made it into the 1984 presidential campaign. Today, the Boston Globe asks: where’s the global warming?
Watch the original commercial that started the catchphrase. It seems applicable today. – Anthony
JEFF JACOBY
By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist | March 8, 2009
SUPPOSE the climate landscape in recent weeks looked something like this:
Half the country was experiencing its mildest winter in years, with no sign of snow in many Northern states. Most of the Great Lakes were ice-free. Not a single Canadian province had had a white Christmas. There was a new study discussing a mysterious surge in global temperatures – a warming trend more intense than computer models had predicted. Other scientists admitted that, because of a bug in satellite sensors, they had been vastly overestimating the extent of Arctic sea ice.
If all that were happening on the climate-change front, do you think you’d be hearing about it on the news? Seeing it on Page 1 of your daily paper? Would politicians be exclaiming that global warming was even more of a crisis than they’d thought? Would environmentalists be skewering global-warming “deniers” for clinging to their skepticism despite the growing case against it?
No doubt.
But it isn’t such hints of a planetary warming trend that have been piling up in profusion lately. Just the opposite.
The United States has shivered through an unusually severe winter, with snow falling in such unlikely destinations as New Orleans, Las Vegas, Alabama, and Georgia. On Dec. 25, every Canadian province woke up to a white Christmas, something that hadn’t happened in 37 years. Earlier this year, Europe was gripped by such a killing cold wave that trains were shut down in the French Riviera and chimpanzees in the Rome Zoo had to be plied with hot tea. Last week, satellite data showed three of the Great Lakes – Erie, Superior, and Huron – almost completely frozen over. In Washington, D.C., what was supposed to be a massive rally against global warming was upstaged by the heaviest snowfall of the season, which paralyzed the capital.
Meanwhile, the National Snow and Ice Data Center has acknowledged that due to a satellite sensor malfunction, it had been underestimating the extent of Arctic sea ice by 193,000 square miles – an area the size of Spain. In a new study, University of Wisconsin researchers Kyle Swanson and Anastasios Tsonis conclude that global warming could be going into a decades-long remission. The current global cooling “is nothing like anything we’ve seen since 1950,” Swanson told Discovery News. Yes, global cooling: 2008 was the coolest year of the past decade – global temperatures have not exceeded the record high measured in 1998, notwithstanding the carbon-dioxide that human beings continue to pump into the atmosphere.
None of this proves conclusively that a period of planetary cooling is irrevocably underway, or that anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions are not the main driver of global temperatures, or that concerns about a hotter world are overblown. Individual weather episodes, it always bears repeating, are not the same as broad climate trends.
But considering how much attention would have been lavished on a comparable run of hot weather or on a warming trend that was plainly accelerating, shouldn’t the recent cold phenomena and the absence of any global warming during the past 10 years be getting a little more notice? Isn’t it possible that the most apocalyptic voices of global-warming alarmism might not be the only ones worth listening to?
There is no shame in conceding that science still has a long way to go before it fully understands the immense complexity of the Earth’s ever-changing climate(s). It would be shameful not to concede it. The climate models on which so much global-warming alarmism rests “do not begin to describe the real world that we live in,” says Freeman Dyson, the eminent physicist and futurist. “The real world is muddy and messy and full of things that we do not yet understand.”
But for many people, the science of climate change is not nearly as important as the religion of climate change. When Al Gore insisted yet again at a conference last Thursday that there can be no debate about global warming, he was speaking not with the authority of a man of science, but with the closed-minded dogmatism of a religious zealot. Dogma and zealotry have their virtues, no doubt. But if we want to understand where global warming has gone, those aren’t the tools we need.
Jeff Jacoby can be reached at jacoby@globe.com.
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One can argue that ‘dogma’ in the technical sense of the word, is a valid authority to be appealed to in discourse that deals with revealed truth, i.e. in Christian theology, while wholeheartedly agreeing that such an appeal has no standing in discourse about the realm of physical change, i.e. in the natural sciences– insofar as such discourse must appeal only to the authority of human reason.
Pray for me, St Thomas of Aquino.
Some may remember Jeff’s previous article of Jan. 6, ’08:
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2008/01/06/br_r_r_where_did_global_warming_go/
It’s a good one to re-read, even over a year later.
Climate changes. The questions to be answered are: What direction are we changing, and where are we now?
My opinion is that, climate wise, we are in early September and headed for winter. Therefore, the Met can accurately say 11 of the past 13 years have been the warmest of the century, and for those of us over 40, we have seen a warming trend. Climate wise, none of us has ever seen a winter.
Michael Ronayne (06:18:43) :
…
At this point the only thing which can stop the new state religion is a full Maunder Minimum, which is far from certain, and even then the true believers will ignore such an event. The old state religions were not stopped by facts and the new state religion will not be stopped by them either.
Mike
I was under the impression that the “old state religions” got stopped by economics… I.e. the economy failed so badly that the state was unable to continue as a going concern.
It is snow pelting right now, and no, not hailing. These are lighter snow pellets falling rather softly from a partly cloudy sky. The area has been setting breaking low temps again (since near the turn of the last century), and building snow. That is not very unusual. I have sat on Wood’s Hill near Lostine and watched snow storm after snow storm blow over South Fork and the rest of the Wallowa Mountains during spring break, leaving behind a once bluish mountain landscape with nothin but white.
“soooooo typical of you flat earthers.”
GEEZ I’m tired of this kind of comment; the next time madam or sir, that you cross a bridge or fly on an aircraft REMEMBER one of us ‘flat earthers’ and *our* science designed it, fabricated it, tested it, then flew or opened it to the public!
Talk about FLAT EARTHERS, Tenney-what-her-name is projecting!
Enough already Tenny.
Everytime I come to the east coast for the winter it’s bad. When I stay on the west coast I always hear it is a mild winter. Maybe it’s just me.
Finally! I knew the global warming fad would fade out eventually. Good riddance!
~snip~ will read this post and pat themselves on the back for “seeing through the propaganda”, the conspiracy theorists self flattery. Skeptics will read this post and follow up by doing further research. If they did, they may have run across this quote from Kyle Swanson, whose research was cited:
Michael Ronayne said:
“At this point the only thing which can stop the new state religion is a full Maunder Minimum…”
Haha thanks for that prescient observation as always, Mike!
I must secretly confess…a little guilty pleasure of mine…that there is the twisted side of me that WANTS to see another Maunder Minimum do its dirty work.
I would love to see the new International Church of the AGW lose parishioners faster than it is!!
Still, all things serious, there is grave cause to be worried about the snoozing sun.
I certainly want my fresh produce in the grocery store. I love going to the beach in May. I would rather subsist with as few articles of clothing as possible.
But back in the days of JS Bach, Beethoven, and Hans Christian Andersen….they certainly did not have the technology to keep warm like we did, yet they somehow survived…even thrived.
They, and others like them, ice skated on ponds and enjoyed the fireplace and wrote timeless music….even when the Great Frost of 1709 came and went.
The Stradivarius violins were made from a particularly dense type of wood, because of the slower growth and colder climes. My point is…it ain’t ALL BAD!!
And you know what they say a good cold winter kills all the bugs.
Well…er um….how to say this….perhaps Mother Nature feels the same way about OUR species…. and that a good GRAND MINIMUM gets rid of all the excess. In the long run, the species, if it survives, will be stronger for the adversity.
Bundle up!!
Chris
Norfolk, VA
global warming causes temperatures to go the extremes: cold places get colder, hot places get hotter, rains get stronger, and droughts last longer. the northern states may find winter unusually could, but the southern states will find the coming summer to be unnaturally hot…
kyokoumei wrote:
“global warming causes temperatures to go the extremes: cold places get colder, hot places get hotter, rains get stronger, and droughts last longer. the northern states may find winter unusually could, but the southern states will find the coming summer to be unnaturally hot…”
Wow this is getting FUN.
Global warming?? What global warming?? Show it!!
For all of the errors in the foregoing statement….one thing this person is correct on….we ARE trending toward more extremes.
BUT…..and that is a BIG BUT…(haha) …..when the cold gets colder and the warm gets warmer… it all still smoothes out against the means.
Interestingly about drought, is that ice core samples that are taken from ice age or sub-ice age periods, have more DIRT.
The planet is windier and drier during ice ages…in contrast to the wonderful temperate balminess that we as a a species, have evolved to enjoy.
Chris
Norfolk, VA
kyokoumei (17:28:48) :
“global warming causes temperatures to go the extremes: cold places get colder, hot places get hotter, rains get stronger, and droughts last longer. the northern states may find winter unusually could, but the southern states will find the coming summer to be unnaturally hot…”
heat waves get wavier, hurricanes get hurricanier, and Al Gore gets even more annoying.
That would be a conservative opinion columnist spreading propaganda, not the actual news source. The title of your post is as misleading as his column.
REPLY: I understand your point, but it made it through the globe editorial department – Anthony
Uh uh. That’s why the Arctic, a very cold place, will see ice area, depth, and extent increase according to your theory. Canada, also a relatively cold place, will eventually be covered with ice, and we will have the equivalent of a new ice age in the NH, not to mention the unmelted Anarctica. Meanwhile, Nevada and Arizona, rather hot places in my opinion, will spontaneously burst into flames. Unless you meant that cold places will get warmer and colder, and warm places will get warmer and …how’s that go again?
“Canada, also a relatively cold place, will eventually be covered with ice, ”
Pamela … I am 61 years old … can you make it hold off for a few decades … ☺☺☺☺
Unfortunately the ice covering may have started this week. Sheesh. ☺
Clive
Still from the frozen North where this week it would not be ‘mart to stick your tongue on a steel post. ☺
Since when do regular folks feel compelled to argue climate science? Of course, they’re really not–they’re discussing whose rhetoric is better crafted to reflect a current snapshot of reality.
Sure, Al Gore is easy to make fun of. But one winter does not disprove a growing trend in temperatures across the globe. Ornithologists are noticing the ranges of many birds extending northward over the last twenty years. Wildlife who make changes in their habitat and range are not influenced by the popular media, news reports, etc.
“..heat waves get wavier, hurricanes get hurricanier, and Al Gore gets even more annoying.”
Al Gore gets richer….and larger, have you noticed how large he has become lately? Climate alarmism clearly pays very well!
Jacoby was hired to be the token conservative at the Globe. When he writes an editorial, it is not “The Globe” speaking. The newspaper does take editorial stands on policy matters, and it is firmly in the AGW camp. The title of your post really is inaccurate. Not a big deal in the greater scheme of things, but true nonetheless.
there is a huge difference between weather and climate change
here in SoCal we’ve had a strange winter with unusual highs and lows
that’s weather not climate change
climate change is BIG picture…and undeniable in my picture
oh and forgot to mention also that this is a column (opinion) that you are posting and not a news article
Welcome to the 21st Century’s Wars of Religion. Pray that you are not on the wrong side. *insert maniacal laughter here*
Did the MET actually say that 11 0f the past 13 years have been the warmest this century?
Is it March of 2009? Are they confused or am I?
I guess if you can say AGW is a fact then you can fit 13 years into 8.
“NO, STOP! YOU MUST BECOME VEGETARIAN TO SAVE THE PLANET!!” — James Hansen
good overview here…
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4860344067427439443
…i.e., there is no beef.
This should clear up any confusion on the climate vs weather debate:
http://anhonestclimatedebate.wordpress.com/2008/12/05/understanding-man-made-climate-change