Editorializing about the Editorial

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I just got my printed copy of the May 7th issue of Science Magazine, and I read their Editorial. This is the issue that contained the now-infamous Letter to the Editor with the Photoshopped image of a polar bear on an ice floe. An alternate version of that Photoshopped image is below:

Figure 1. Photoshopped version of a Photoshopped image of a Photoshopped Polar bear.

So is the Editorial as one-sided as the Letter? Surprisingly, no. There are some excellent ideas and statements in it … but it contains some egregious errors of fact, and some curious assertions and exaggerations. I have emphasised in bold those interesting parts below. First, the Editorial:

Stepping Back; Moving Forward

Brooks Hanson

Brooks Hanson is Deputy Editor for physical sciences at Science.

The controversial e-mails related to climate change, plus reported errors in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports, have spurred a dangerous deterioration in the rational relation between science and society. One U.S. senator has called 17 prominent climate scientists criminals, and pundits have suggested that climate scientists should commit suicide. Fourteen U.S. states have filed lawsuits opposing the federal regulation of greenhouse gas emissions, some asserting that “climate change science is a conspiracy.” South Dakota even resolved that there are other “astrological” forcings on climate. Scientists have been barraged by hateful e-mails. The debate has become polarized, and the distrust of scientists and their findings extends well beyond climate science. What can be done to repair society’s trust in science? A broader perspective is needed on all sides.

The main societal challenges—global energy supply, growing the food supply, and improving public health, among others—depend intimately on science, and for this reason society requires a vigorous scientific enterprise. Our expanding global economy is taxing resources and the environment in ways that cannot be sustained. Science provides a deep understanding of these impacts and, as a result, the ability to predict consequences and assess risks.

Addressing anthropogenic climate change exemplifies the challenges inherent in providing critical scientific advice to society (see the Policy Forum on p. 695 and Letter on p. 689). Climate is as global as today’s economy; we know from archaeological and historical records that an unstable climate has disrupted societies. For these reasons, scientists and governments are jointly committed to understanding the impacts of climate change. Thousands of scientists have volunteered for the IPCC or other assessments. Governments have a vested interest in the success of these assessments, and the stakes are high.

We thus must move beyond polarizing arguments in ways that strengthen this joint commitment. The scientific community must recognize that the recent attacks stem in part from its culture and scientists’ behavior. In turn, it is time to focus on the main problem: The IPCC reports have underestimated the pace of climate change while overestimating societies’ abilities to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

Scientists must meet other responsibilities. The ability to collect, model, and analyze huge data sets is one of the great recent advances in science and has made possible our understanding of global impacts. But developing the infrastructure and practices required for handling data, and a commitment to collect it systematically, have lagged. Scientists have struggled to address standardizing, storing, and sharing data, and privacy concerns. Funding must be directed not only toward basic science but toward facilitating better decisions made with the data and analyses that are produced. As a start, research grants should specify a data curation plan, and there should be a greater focus on long-term monitoring of the environment.

Because society’s major problems are complex, generating useful scientific advice requires synthesizing knowledge from diverse disciplines. As the need for synthesis grows, the avenues of communication are changing rapidly. Unfortunately, many news organizations have eviscerated their science staffs. As a result, stories derived from press releases on specific results are crowding out the thoughtful syntheses that are needed.

If the scientific community does not aggressively address these issues, including communicating its process of discovery and recognizing its modern data responsibilities, and if society does not constructively engage science, then the scientific enterprise and the whole of society are in danger of losing their crucial rational relationship. Carl Sagan’s warnings are especially apt today: “We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology.” “This is a prescription for disaster. We might get away with it for a while, but sooner or later this combustible mixture of ignorance and power is going to blow up in our faces.”

So, what’s wrong with the statements I highlighted in bold? Well, they’re not true. Let’s look at them one by one.

One U.S. senator has called 17 prominent climate scientists criminals…

Presumably, this refers to the Senate Minority Report by Senator Inhofe. However, he did not call 17 climate scientists criminals. In fact he does not use that word at all in connection with scientists. Instead, he made a much more nuanced series of statements:

In our view, the CRU documents and emails reveal, among other things, unethical and potentially illegal behavior by some of the world’s preeminent climate scientists.

and:

The released CRU emails and documents display unethical, and possibly illegal, behavior. The scientists appear to discuss manipulating data to get their preferred results. On several occasions they appear to discuss subverting the scientific peer review process to ensure that skeptical papers had no access to publication. Moreover, there are emails discussing unjustified changes to data by federal employees and federal grantees.

These and other issues raise questions about the lawful use of federal funds and potential ethical misconduct.

and

Minority Staff has identified a preliminary sampling of CRU emails and documents which seriously compromise the IPCC-backed “consensus” and its central conclusion that anthropogenic emissions are inexorably leading to environmental catastrophes, and which represent unethical and possibly illegal conduct by top IPCC scientists, among others.

So Brooks Hanson starts out with a false and misleading statement. Inhofe did not “call 17 prominent climate scientists criminals”, that’s simply not true. He said that some of their actions appeared to be possibly illegal … and me, I’d have to agree with the Senator.

On the other side of the pond, whether some of them were criminals was addressed by the UK Parliament Committee, who said:

There is prima facie evidence that CRU has breached the Freedom of Information Act 2000. It would, however, be premature, without a thorough investigation affording each party the opportunity to make representations, to conclude that UEA was in breach of the Act. In our view, it is unsatisfactory to leave the matter unresolved simply because of the operation of the six- month time limit on the initiation of prosecutions.

So it was only because the Statute of Limitations on any criminal offenses had expired that there were no criminal investigations of the acts … sounds like a validation of Senator Inhofe’s claim of “possibly illegal” to me …

… pundits have suggested that climate scientists should commit suicide.

Presumably, this refers to Glen Beck’s statement that:

There’s not enough knives. If this, if the IPCC had been done by Japanese scientists, there’s not enough knives on planet Earth for hara-kiri that should have occurred. I mean, these guys have so dishonored themselves, so dishonored scientists.

I find no other “pundits” who have “suggested that climate scientists should commit suicide”. Nor did Beck. He said that if the IPCC scientists who made the errors and misrepresentations were Japanese, they would have committed suicide from the shame. Now that may or may not be true, but is not a call for American scientists to act Japanese, even Beck knows that’s not possible.

Fourteen U.S. states have filed lawsuits opposing the federal regulation of greenhouse gas emissions, some asserting that “climate change science is a conspiracy.”

I find no State (or any other) lawsuits making this claim against climate scientists, although I might have missed them. Curiously, there was a case (Ned Comer, et al. v. Murphy Oil USA) where the claim was made the other way around, that there was a “civil conspiracy” among the oil companies to deny climate change. But I find nothing the other way.

I suspect that Brooks Hanson is referring (incorrectly) to the Resolution passed in Utah that states:

WHEREAS, emails and other communications between climate researchers around the globe, referred to as “Climategate,” indicate a well organized and ongoing effort to manipulate global temperature data in order to produce a global warming outcome;

Of course, this was a resolution, not a lawsuit. I don’t know if that claim is true or not, although the CRU emails show that there certainly was a “well organized and ongoing effort” to conceal the data regarding global temperature, and to affect the IPCC reports in an unethical and possibly illegal fashion.

South Dakota even resolved that there are other “astrological” forcings on climate.

Here’s the actual text of the South Dakota Bill:

That there are a variety of climatological, meteorological, astrological, thermological, cosmological, and ecological dynamics that can effect world weather phenomena and that the significance and interrelativity of these factors is largely speculative.

I suspect that this was a simple error, and that what was meant was “astronomical” rather than “astrological”. This is supported by their use of “thermological” for “thermal”, as “thermology” is the science of using detailed thermal images of the human body to diagnose disease … I doubt they meant that. It is also supported by their use of “effect” rather than “affect”. I’d say very poor English skills, yes … astrology, no.

Scientists have been barraged by hateful e-mails.

Barraged by mails? Hey, it’s worse than emails, it’s public calls for action:

James Hansen of NASA wanted trials for climate skeptics, accusing them of high crimes against humanity.

Robert Kennedy Jr. called climate skeptics traitors .

Yvo de Boer of the UN called climate skepticism criminally irresponsible .

David Suzuki called for politicians who ignore climate science to be jailed.

DeSmogBlog’s James Hoggan wants skeptics treated as war criminals (video).

Grist called for Nuremberg trials for skeptics.

Joe Romm said that skeptics would be strangled in their beds.

A blogger at TPM pondered when it would be acceptable to execute climate deniers .

Heidi Cullen of The Weather Channel called for skeptical forecasters to be decertified.

Bernie Sanders compared climate skeptics to Nazi appeasers..

And Greenpeace threatened unspecified reprisals against unbelievers, saying:

If you’re one of those who have spent their lives undermining progressive climate legislation, bankrolling junk science, fueling spurious debates around false solutions, and cattle-prodding democratically-elected governments into submission, then hear this:

We know who you are. We know where you live. We know where you work.

And we be many, but you be few.

And Brooks Hanson is worried about emails, and falsely accuses Senator Inhofe of calling climate scientists criminals? What’s wrong with this picture?

The IPCC reports have underestimated the pace of climate change …

Say what? I’d have to ask for citations on this one. There has been no statistically significant warming in the last 15 years, Arctic sea ice is recovering, climate changes are within natural variation … and he claims the pace has been “underestimated” by the IPCC? Sorry, I don’t buy that one in the slightest.

As a start, research grants should specify a data curation plan …

Lack of plans is not the problem. The main grantor of climate science funds in the US, the National Science Foundation, has very clear regulations about the archiving of climate data … but they simply ignore them. And to make it worse, they continue funding scofflaw scientists who ignore them. Science Magazine and Nature Magazine have very clear policies about data archiving … but they don’t ask authors to follow them whenever they feel like it. The problem is not a lack of “data curation plans” as Hanson claims. It is that the people in charge of those plans have been looking the other way, even when people like myself and many others have asked them to enforce their policies and plans and rules. Those kinds of actions simply reinforce the public idea that all of climate science is a scam and a conspiracy. I don’t think it is either one … but man, some of the AGW supporters in positions of scientific power are sure doing their best to make it look that way …

Now, given all of that, what in the editorial did I like? There were several statements that I felt were very important:

We thus must move beyond polarizing arguments in ways that strengthen this joint commitment. The scientific community must recognize that the recent attacks stem in part from its culture and scientists’ behavior.

I could not agree more. The problems are not the result of some mythical Big-Oil funded climate skeptics public relations machine. They are the result of scientific malfeasance on a large scale by far too many of the top climate scientists. People are enraged by this, as there are few things that raise peoples’ ire more than knowing that they have been duped and misled. And the climate science community is the only one that can fix that.

If the scientific community does not aggressively address these issues, including communicating its process of discovery and recognizing its modern data responsibilities, and if society does not constructively engage science, then the scientific enterprise and the whole of society are in danger of losing their crucial rational relationship.

Well put. The problem is not that Inhofe has said some actions by top climate scientists are unethical and possibly illegal. The problem is that some top scientists acted in unethical and possibly illegal ways. The problem is not that people are sending hateful emails to scientists. It is that climate scientists have poisoned the well by publicly calling for the trial of people with whom they disagree, and then want to complain that people are being mean to them. The problem is not that states are taking to the law to fight bad science, it is that the bad science is so entrenched, and the peer review system has become so much of an old-boys club, that the only way to fight it is in the courts.

This is the crux of the matter for climate scientists who wish to restore the lost trust: do honest, transparent, ethical science, and let the results fall where they may. Stop larding “scientific” papers with pounds of  “might” and “could” and “may” and “possibly” and “conceivably”, we don’t care about your speculations, we want your science. Stop underestimating the errors and overestimating the certainty. Stop making up the “scary scenarios” advocated by Stephen Schneider. Stop calling for trials for people who don’t follow the party line.

And most of all, climate scientists need to learn to say those “three little words”.

You know how women are always hoping that guys will say those three little words, “I love you”? It’s like the old joke, “You know how to get rid of cockroaches? … Ask them for a commitment.” Those are the three little words that men find hard to say.

In climate science, the three little words that climate scientists find hard to say, the three little words they need to practice over and over are “We don’t know”.

We don’t know what the climate will be like in a hundred years. We don’t know what the climate sensitivity is, or even if the concept of a linear climate sensitivity relating temperature and forcing is a valid concept. We don’t know if the earth will start to warm or start to cool after the end of this current 15-year period of neither warming nor cooling. We don’t know if a rise in temperature will be a net gain or a net loss for the planet. There are heaps of things we don’t know about the climate, and the general public knows that we don’t know them.

Climate science is a new science, one of the newest. We have only been studying climate extensively for a quarter century or so, and it is an incredibly difficult field of study. The climate is a hugely complex, driven, chaotic, resonant, constructal, terawatt-scale planetary heat engine. It contains five major subsystems (atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, and cryosphere), none of which are well understood. Each of these subsystems has a host of forcings, resonances, inter-reservoir transfers, cycles, and feedbacks which operate both internally and between the subsystems. The climate has important processes which operate on spatial scales from atomic to planet-wide, and on temporal scales from nanoseconds to millions of years. Our present state of knowledge of that system contains more unknowns than knowns. Here is my own estimation of the current state of our climate knowledge, which some of you may have seen:

In this situation, the only honest thing a climate scientist can do is to do the best, clearest, and cleanest science possible; to be totally transparent and reveal all data and codes and methods; to insist that other climate scientists practice those same simple scientific principles; and to say “we don’t know” rather than “might possibly have a probabilistic chance of maybe happening” for all the rest. That is the only path to repairing the lost trust between the public and climate science.

Oh, yeah, and one more thing … apply those principles to scientific editorials as well. Don’t exaggerate, and provide some citations for scientific editorials, trying to trace these vague claims is both boring and frustrating …

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DirkH
May 22, 2010 7:52 am

Willis, you forgot Pachauri comparing Lomborg with Nazis:
http://cei.org/GENCON/019,04013.CFM

DirkH
May 22, 2010 7:56 am

Nick Stokes:
ROTFL! So Hansen doesn’t want the run-of-the-mill skeptic to be tried for high crimes against humanity, only the people who deliver the fuel that we need to run our civilization. Thanks for the clarification, Nick!

May 22, 2010 7:59 am

@Willis, re “I find no State (or any other) lawsuits making this claim against climate scientists, although I might have missed them.”
The State of Texas filed a lawsuit under the Clean Air Act against the US EPA challenging its Endangerment Finding for CO2, alleging that 1) the Endangerment Finding was arrived at by a fundamentally flawed methodology, and 2) that methodology was legally unsupported.
see http://sowellslawblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/texas-v-us-epa-over-co2-endangerment.html
There are other similar lawsuits, with some sources stating sixteen have been filed. The EPA website lists ten, as of 5/22/2010. see http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/endangerment/petitions.html
One could argue, I suppose, that climate scientists are not the defendants in these lawsuits, rather, the US EPA is the defendant. The Texas lawsuit states that the work relied upon by the EPA was flawed, and that work was performed, at least in part, by climate scientists.
I do not know whether or not any of the lawsuits allege that “climate change science is a conspiracy.” I rather doubt that they do, as the word “conspiracy” has the legal meaning when used in a lawsuit, that is, the crime of conspiracy has been committed. It would be odd for a civil lawsuit to allege criminal wrongdoing, as crimes may be prosecuted only by, oddly enough, a prosecutor. The word “conspiracy” is not used in the Texas lawsuit.

DirkH
May 22, 2010 8:04 am

“Phil Clarke says:
[…]
“Anyone who knows Gene knows he’s an entirely peaceful guy. … Of course the anti-science brigade on the web has seized on the line in Gene’s post[…]”
Looks like he was right there. ”
1.) Post threatening calls to intimidate the enemy.
2.) Take down the post after you get a 1000 comments protesting against it.
3.) Don’t forget to include an insult into your apology.
4.) profit!

artwest
May 22, 2010 8:08 am

OT:
Plan B: edge quietly out of AGW into something else that will do the same job?
UN says case for saving species ‘more powerful than climate change’
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/may/21/un-biodiversity-economic-report

Jack Maloney
May 22, 2010 8:08 am

“… we know from archaeological and historical records that an unstable climate has disrupted societies.”
Fact: the earth’s climate is unstable. It always has been, and always will be. And societies have always had to adapt to this natural phenomenon.
But in this editorial’s context, the statement is clearly meant to frighten the ignorant. The implication is that society must do something to make the earth’s climate stable. In other words, man must try to disrupt the natural process of climate instability, without regard to unintended consequences. Brilliant!

Bill Sticker
May 22, 2010 8:10 am

Those three little words some researchers find so hard to say; “We don’t know.” Shades of the Red Green show, methinks.

DirkH
May 22, 2010 8:11 am

Oh, and Nick inspired me to search a little on Greenpeace’s website, our “entirely peaceful friends”, and looky here, a nice pic of the Koch brothers western-style:
http://www.greenpeace.org/international/en/news/features/dirty-money-climate-30032010/
“Wanted for crimes against the climate: Charles and David Koch. ”
You don’t have to invent it. Greenpeace delivers all the ammo one can need themselves.

evilincandescentbulb
May 22, 2010 8:19 am

Even if it had not been a mistake, a skeptic entertaining the role of astrology in the global warming hoax makes a lot more sensce than the use of numerology by the secular, socialist schoolteachers in the government-funded education machine to further the hoax, no?

Alexej Buergin
May 22, 2010 8:32 am

“TFN Johnson says:
May 22, 2010 at 4:33 am
JB makes a good point. The 2010 ice line (for the second time) does seem to be heading South.”
Actually, at both poles the ice line is going north (because it is May). But maybe you are influenced by these australien maps that have south at the top? (It would still be going north).

May 22, 2010 8:33 am

The belief in haunted houses is above that of Americans who believe global warming.
Haunted Houses came in at 36%.

Gary Pearse
May 22, 2010 8:38 am

“The main societal challenges—global energy supply, growing the food supply, and improving public health, among others—depend intimately on science, and for this reason society requires a vigorous scientific enterprise. Our expanding global economy is taxing resources and the environment in ways that cannot be sustained. Science provides a deep understanding of these impacts and, as a result, the ability to predict consequences and assess risks.”
Willis, you should have highlighted this too. Global energy supply is the main thing we need for all the benefits of prosperity, sufficient good quality food and good health, and the science that is under discussion here is the very one that is trying to kill off the only sources of energy that are practical and the wealth that is necessary to attain these laudable achievements. Hundreds of billions have been wasted on bandwagon research, growing forests of ineffective windmills and the like that could have been invested in development in the poorer parts of the world. If we are looking for an alternative to fossil fuels, forget the idea of replacing them with these toys (I’m all for green energy on an individual, civic, or corporate level for their buildings- hey solar panels on the roof make sense – but not panelling the Mojave with glass! or chopping up condors, seagulls (recall the Youtube of a hawk diving and swinging repeatedly through the blades until it got chopped) and making a huge eyesore). We already have seen the outcome of science’s bio fuels – higher food prices and shortages. No, the energy arena is not been well done by science – it is for engineers who have to constrain the science to fit an economic reality. Science could tackle the nuclear waste matter but they are reluctant to deal with this sort of thing. It would be more fun to spray the stratosphere with sulphur dioxide, to put a blanket over Greenland and Antarctica, or spray the ocean up in the air to make more clouds – see what I mean that it is a matter for the engineer who is already laughing about this stuff.
There is no shortage of available energy – nuclear. Yeah, I know, the same crowd that battled against nuclear is now battling against coal and oil so I guess there is not room for argument with them on that. Also, I’m aware of the nuclear waste and the non-peacful uses etc. etc. But you know what? Whether we like it or not, when conventional energy sources decline with depletion, we are going to go nuclear anyway. Unfortunately, we have wasted 40 years in which we probably would have solved the (largely blown out of proportion) problems associated with nuclear. France is 80% nuclear only because France is France and they march to their own drummer always whether the WWF, or Gpeace or whoever trys to change them. We will join them eventually and may have to heat the atmosphere and pump a little CO2 into it if AGW theory is correct.

Truman
May 22, 2010 8:40 am

And STOP piling on papers whose conclusions you disagree with while ignoring those papers whose conclusions match your own. If only Mann 98 et al’s paper had enjoyed the same level of scrutiny and skepticism received by Lindzen. I believe that’s a symptom of the real problem: which scientist is awarded tenure in academia is largely determined by other scientists who have achieved tenure. That ultimately leads to group think and scientists unaligned with the “enlightened” seeking employment elsewhere (like big oil heaven forbid!). Fix tenure and the hiring practices of media rags like Science Magazine and everything will be fine.
It’s interesting that Phil Jones self-destructed after Dr Sonja Boehmer-Christiansen retired. Jones was even celebrating his new-found freedom in emails: “Since Sonja retired I am a lot more free to push my environmental interests without ongoing critique of my motives and supposed misguidedness.” Be careful what you wish for, Phil. Perhaps removing all of the scientists who disagree with you isn’t such a great ideal. That email (1256765544.txt) also shows that there really is a difference between the old guard of science and the new.

Hu McCulloch
May 22, 2010 8:45 am

You might add Paul Krugman, who called a vote against the Waxman-Markey bill “treason against the planet” in his 6/29/09 NY Times column last year:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/29/opinion/29krugman.html

Enneagram
May 22, 2010 8:54 am

Who were/are the original promoters/funders of the Global Warming/Climate change fraud?. Are they still pushing the same agenda?. Why?. What is it so important behind it?

Steven mosher
May 22, 2010 8:58 am

Thanks Willis. The pronouncement that the ‘debate is over’ is a veiled threat to settle our differences by other means, in Santer’s dark alley or in courtrooms or in congress.
I find it ironic that a group of people who are trained to ‘use your words’ to settle conflict have even suggested the things they did.

Sam Hall
May 22, 2010 8:58 am

“The main societal challenges-global energy supply, growing the food supply, and improving public health, among others-depend intimately on science, and for this reason society requires a vigorous scientific enterprise. ”
Then why are you proposing reducing our energy supplies? Why are you using cropland to “grow” energy instead of food?
“Our expanding global economy is taxing resources and the environment in ways that cannot be sustained”
Proof please.

kcom
May 22, 2010 9:01 am

The IPCC reports have underestimated the pace of climate change …
Does anyone else see the irony in this statement?
Hasn’t the argument all along been that the IPCC is the gold standard for the study of climate change? The IPCC brings together the best of the best to analyze all the latest research and act as a counselor to governments about the effects of climate change? It’s the synthesis of what the top climate scientists in the whole world think. The unbiased efforts of the IPCC (i.e. pure science) are what’s supposed to give us citizens confidence in the claims of AGW and the measures necessary to combat it.
And then along comes one scientific journal to assert that the IPCC is wrong and climate change is, to paraphrase, “worse than we thought.” In other words, they have just declared that those millions of dollars and millions of man hours and thousands of scientists’ expert analysis that have gone into the IPCC reports have all been a waste of time. A lone scientific journal knows more than the IPCC and its thousands of scientists does and can invalidate all their work with a single sentence.
So, is the IPCC the gold standard or not? If it is, how can Science make that claim, especially as offhandedly as they do (as has been pointed out above)? And if it’s not, wasn’t all the time, money and expertise poured into the IPCC process for the last 20 years a waste? Why should the public buy into the sacrosanct nature of the IPCC and its conclusions (as has been drummed into us over the last 20 years) if one of the leading scientific journals in the world can’t even do it?

Frank Slojkowski
May 22, 2010 9:04 am

One can hardly quarrel with your fine admonitions regarding the openess and h0nesty necessary in the scientific process. But it still comes down to the one issue for which I’m not sure there is a solution — the issue of funding bias.
A Federal agency come to me and says, “Frank, I have a million bucks here; and I need to know whether climate (or ocean acidity, or suburban bedbug infestations, or whatever) is a problem. Take a year and let me know what you find out.” Am I likely to go back to them six months later and say, “Nope, nothing to worry about; and, by the way, here’s $500K back that I didn’t need”; or am I more likely to say “Wow, I don’t know; looks like there might be a problem. I have a dozen related issues I need to pursue”?
Perhaps some sort of “blind” funding pool is called for where the sources of funds are hidden and multiple research proposals are listed as available to “interested”
researchers. This would not only decouple research studies from their sources and their “expected” answers, but also eliminate the temptation to string out a project by offering the promise of other projects to come.

Pat Moffitt
May 22, 2010 9:05 am

Climate change is battle between scientists and between belief systems. Science gets lost in such battles. It is important to note that the idea of the National Academies was championed by Louis Agassiz. Agassiz saw the chance to create a quasi governmental “society” where he and his fellow anti-Darwinians would be able to hand pick members. The quasi governmental status would give the force of authority to the antiDarwin position. (I think it was Dana that achieved an end run around Agassiz’z plan) Both sides in the Darwin wars in the late 1800s also sought to pack university positions with like minded academics. Anti-Darwinians used pressure/threats to philanthropic funding to the universities to control the correctness of evolution.
DDT becomes a political battle. The science of DDT wins in court but it is somehow overuled by EPA regulation. The scientists supporting DDT and others warning caution relative to cancer scares are smeared (Bruce Ames and others)
Acid rain was not discovered it was announced under Carter. Reagan was able to push the half billion NAPAP study to investigate the science. Acid rain was the first crisis to use a natural phemomena as the cirisis name. All rain is acid– it make it impossible for a scientist to claim acid rain was not real. Marketing genius and adopted by climate change. The director of NAPAP was forced to resign when the interim report found acid rain was not as dire a threat as claimed. The new director promised that acid rain would be found as a problem. Bush Sr came into office promising to be an environmental president. The NAPAP report was concluded with the unfortunate inability to find support for extreme damage of acid rain. EPA refused at first to release the report until Congress passed the Clean Air Act legislation. The report was finally released but noone in Congress read the report since the political solution had already been achieved. Rather than switch to low sulfur western coal the eastern high sulfur mining unions lobbied that the CWA mandate sulfur scrubbers at all power plants whether or not low sulfur coal was used. The Clean Air Act was passed. EPA then publicly smeared the lead scientists ED Krug and blacklisted him as a scientist. Acid rain used models to prove the acid rain. The models assumed acidity was the result of simple titration– Ed Krug showed that the dominant acid inputs were from naturally derived organic acids and the reforestation of the northeast. The acid rain models said we should see recovery in 20 years- we haven’t (why we use 100 years now for model predictions). The role of dissolved organic acids are now admitted but they are now the result of climate change. A cynical scieintist involved with the acid rain study said at its conclusion– there will be no NAPAP for climate change. (And why EPA never did its own study relying on the IPCC instead— too dangerous that the findings were not controllable)
Climate change is announced to Congress in late 1988. Happer and others are removed from the scene. The “debate is over” is announced in 1991.
Some things never change.

Craig Loehle
May 22, 2010 9:12 am

Great post, Willis!
Perhaps we should call it “anthropomorphic” global warming–as in “made in our own image”. We look into the inkblot of squiggly lines and we see disaster looming, just as has almost every generation before us. And they were usually right in the past: if it wasn’t a drought or a war it was the Black Death–few generations ever got a free ride for their whole lifetime. We imagine monsters under the bed and bogey men in the alley just in case the real world isn’t scary enough. But that doesn’t mean every nightmare we have is real, just that we are prone to nightmares.
I would also point out the big difference between the hate mail that some of these people may be getting and the public statements of doom and “denialist” and “traitor” (which your quotes Nick did not actually diminish): those AGW proponents making threats are in charge of GISS (Hansen) or hold public office or have tremendous influence (Gore). Hate mail from the public is not the same, though regrettable. Inhofe made a specific reference to the climategate emails and the violation of FOI rules, and did NOT call all AGW proponents criminals. And Hansen did compare coal cars to Nazi death cars (going to concentration camps). Not the same thing at all.

DR
May 22, 2010 9:13 am

Yes Nick Stokes, it all depends on what the meaning of “is” is doesn’t it?
But words mean things don’t they?

dbleader61
May 22, 2010 9:20 am

Absolutely masterful writing. You really should send as a letter to the editor to Science.

Kan
May 22, 2010 9:22 am

From the editorial:
“Science provides a deep understanding of these impacts and, as a result, the ability to predict consequences and assess risks.”
Really? If you think you are an oracle, you had better have all the answers.

May 22, 2010 9:31 am

The NAS letter states that man-made global warming is causing “climatic patterns to change at speeds unprecedented in modern times, including increasing rates of sea level rise and alterations in the hydrologic cycle.”
The inconvenient truth is that sea level rise has been decelerating over the past century and over the last 6000 years:
http://hockeyschtick.blogspot.com/2010/05/inconvenient-truth-sea-level-rise-is.html