As we’ve previously seen with Professor Bob Carter in “The phenomena of disinvitation and the brotherhood of silence“, the surfacetemperatures.org meeting in Exeter, where the people that raised the issues about metadata and siting were not invited, but their work was presented and roundly criticized, and now with this example, it has become clear that the warmists really don’t want an opportunity to discuss our views on climate science, but rather an opportunity to diss it, unfettered by “equal time”.
via ICECAP
David R. Legates, Ph.D., C.C.M
Introduction
On Wednesday, August 25, I was invited by Environment America to speak at its September 8 press conference on “Extreme Weather in Delaware”, to promote the release of their new report on the subject at Legislative Hall. Ms. Hannah Leone was pleased to have me speak because my “knowledge on climate change and weather would be a great asset to the event.”
On Friday, August 27, I was uninvited from the event by Ms. Leone, who noted that “I believe it is in the best interest of the success of our report that you do not participation [sic] in this event” but “as lead climatologist in the state, your opinion would be beneficial to us.” She had earlier indicated to me in a telephone call that she wanted to make sure everyone was on the same page at the event.
I believe that it is in the best interest of the citizens of Delaware that my “knowledge on climate change and weather” is made public, in light of the biases that are potentially inherent in the Environment America report. I say ‘potentially inherent’ because, although I was promised a copy of the report, even after I was uninvited, I have yet to receive it. However, Ms. Leone was kind enough to indicate the premise of the report in her first e-mail to me:
On September 8th we will be holding a press conference around our new Environment America Extreme Weather Report that examines the science linking global warming with hurricanes and tropical storms; coastal storms and sea level rise; flooding and extreme rainfall; snowstorms; and drought, wildfire and heat waves. The report includes snapshot case studies of these extreme weather events that have occurred in the U.S. since 2005, and the damage that they caused, including a case study in Delaware. We do not suggest that these extreme weather events were caused by global warming. Rather, the point of examining the recent extreme weather events – and the economic losses and other negative impacts they caused – is to document why we need to take action to protect against them, including by reducing emissions of pollutants that are changing our climate.
The contradictions and biases evidenced by my communications with Environment America are fascinating. Although they willingly admit that “we do not suggest that these extreme weather events were caused by global warming,” they are willing to assert that: (1) average planetary temperatures continue to increase; (2) the frequency and/or intensity of these events are increasing; and (3) reducing ‘climate changing’ CO2 emissions will protect against these events. I will argue that none of these assertions is true.
Conclusions
As a Delaware Native who has lived in this State for almost forty years, I care very much about the Diamond State and its ecology. I too am concerned that we act as good stewards of our environment. As a scientist, I have spent my entire professional career studying weather and climate and trying to understand climate change processes. I am therefore outraged when I see outright misstatements of fact being used for political gain. My concern is that there has been no significant increase in extreme weather – just an increase in its coverage with a more global media and an increase in its hype due to the political ramifications that climate change can have.
Environment America’s claim that the alleged increase in extreme weather events can be alleviated by taking action to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide is unfounded. These events have not been increasing in either frequency or intensity and they are clearly not linked to increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide. Limiting carbon dioxide emissions will have no effect at all on the frequency or intensity of these events. Unfortunately the negative ramifications of attempting to limit such emissions will be far too real. Our best solution is to make the public more aware of these dangers, provide more timely detection and dissemination of potential extreme weather hazards (in which the National Weather Service and several State agencies have been actively engaged), and encourage people to stop building in hazardous locations, thereby putting the existing population more at risk.
See detailed analysis of all the weather threats claimed by Environment America and other environmental groups, psuedoscientists and mainstream media alarmists here.
It is clear these groups and their media messengers are uninterested in facts or the truth just in communicating the scare message that they think will bring their movement to success. This is just another example of the blatant hypocrisy that the public must be made aware of.
Times are a changing,
Delaware’s Republican candidate counts political cost of climate support.
Republican hopefuls deny global warming
All but one of the 48 Republican hopefuls for the Senate mid-term elections in November deny the existence of climate change or oppose action on global warming, according to a report released today.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/sep/14/republican-hopefuls-deny-global-warming
It is time! We the people will have to replace them, it can be done.
Bruce Cobb:
September 26, 2010 at 8:00 am
Thank you Mr. Cobb. A wonderful reality check.
“…unfettered by equal time”
What makes you think you deserve any time at all?
REPLY: Because in the case of the Exeter meeting (which we were also excluded from)
1) They use our data
2) They use our graphs
3) They use our photos
The entire meeting revolves around the topic of metadata, which is what the surfacestations project is all about. In Legates case, the man is the state climatologist. Surely his opinion and data counts for something, unless the whole point is to prevent people from hearing his view. Of course, for “repellent” academic cowards such as yourself, rationalizing the need for exclusion is easy. – Anthony Watts
rbateman says:
September 25, 2010 at 6:54 pm
“[…] Would you vote for someone who is going to turn off the power, shut down transportation and drive the country back to the 19th Century? […]”
People are busy. Life was comfortable for just about everyone until recently. People weren’t paying much attention. Then when wallets started to get squeezed (joblessness does have a tendency to concentrate the mind) people started paying attention. They don’t have money for frivolities and they darn-sure don’t want the gum’mint wasting money.
The U.S. November elections should be interesting. The elections may prove you to be correct. I know how I’ll be voting.
RW says:
September 26, 2010 at 10:45 am
“What makes you think you deserve any time at all?”- The hubris is nauseating, especially coming from academia. It is like when a police officer commits a crime. Seems doubly wrong.
Science may not be settled, but the dictatorship is.
I see peer review by [snip] has remained the choice of Climate (whatever the term is today). Nothing has changed, the agenda remains…
hunter says:
September 26, 2010 at 4:16 am
The AGW social movement allows people to do this because they are virtuous people practicing virtuous science.
……………………………………………………………………………………….
I haven laughed so hard in a while… Virtuous??…BWahahahahahahaahaha
From Robuk on September 26, 2010 at 8:04 am:
Which sounds amazing since only 1/3 of the 100 Senate seats are up for election every two years. They’re counting those running for the nomination as well. Oh look, Mike Castle of Delaware was that one lone Republican. And guess who lost his nomination fight?
Curious. Is this a simple mistake, or some sort of Freudian slip and/or frank admission? It says at the start of the article:
At the end it says:
Very curious indeed. ☻
“No statement should be believed because it is made by an authority.”
— Robert A. Heinlein
“Equal time rather assumes equal competency.” Are you claiming Al Gore’s scientific competency matches that of degreed scientists? Or are you saying that you have to be competent to recognize spin?
Extreme weather events are not caused by global warming but cutting down on ‘pollutants’ will prevent climate change. A classic example of double think! I’m not the first to say it but it bears repeating, George Orwell’s 1984 was meant to be a warning not an instruction manual.
David W says: “Precisely the type of arrogance and lack of any sort of humility which has completely destroyed public confidence in our scientists and scientific institutions.”
Last time I checked, science wasn’t a matter of public option.
What truly stuns me is the arrogance of a general public that has been so badly educated they couldn’t tell bad science if it arrived on their door step smelling of fetid cheese.
This is not a court of law, where both the truth and lies get equal time.