
Guest post by Harold Ambler of “Talking about the weather”
Climbing down is seldom anything less than complicated.
Here’s something that you can bring to the bank: With regard to global warming, the major purveyors of news in the industrialized world will be climbing down from their various versions of frenzied alarmism. Here’s something else that you can bring to your banker: the climb-down will be sneaky. On the other hand, when the series of editorial re-positionings is visible to casual members of the public at all, it will be beyond awkward.
How do I know? Because the process has already begun.
When in 2009 Arianna Huffington approved my piece about the merits of skeptical climate science, the HuffPo was attempting to get a start on its own climb-down. As I had written to Huffington, more than once, and heard back from her personally, more than once, I knew that she had considered my argument that it was not a question of whether the big news dogs would have to eat a little humble pie on climate but rather when. Huffington’s response was to publish “Mr. Gore: Apology Accepted.” It is safe to say that she badly underestimated two things: (1) the amount of traffic that the article would receive and (2) the amount of pressure that would be applied to her for the heretical decision to publish it. As for the former, the piece remains the third-most e-mailed blogger piece in HuffPo history. This, despite the fact that “Apology Accepted” was removed from the front end of the site. (Google searching the story still calls it up.) Within hours of being put up on HuffPo, the article had gone viral (to the extent that a climate piece can). Eventually, the piece wound up being translated into dozens of languages, getting cited by television pundits, and being published in part in The Wall Street Journal and The National Review Online, among many other places.
You could argue that the tempest in a teakettle was representative of the surprise – and in some cases horror – that a solidly left-leaning American media outlet like the HuffPo had betrayed its own principles. You can also see, especially in retrospect, how the global warming alarm industry was rightly perceived as vulnerable, standing, as it were, on quivering legs above the precipice of truth. This was the news in the brief, but red-hot, global response to a lone blog article: maybe the climb-down would happen faster than even the most hopeful skeptics could have imagined.
That’s when the second thing that Huffington underestimated – the storm of protest from her own camp – came into play. Whatever was said to her publicly, and privately, was enough to induce her to disavow knowing anything about me, or having read my piece at all. Again, however, she had already corresponded with me by e-mail more than once by this time. My final e-mail to her, prior to publication, was this:
Hi Arianna. Happy New Year! I have written a 2,000-word piece on why Al Gore is wrong about climate. May it increase your enjoyment of the New Year so much that you feel compelled to publish it!
All the best,
Harold Ambler
Arianna’s response:
Many thanks, Harold. I’m CCing our blog editor, David Weiner to coordinate. All the best, Arianna.
Three days later, however, Huffington had a sudden change of heart, issuing a statement that included the following:
When Ambler sent his post, I forwarded it to one of our associate blog editors to evaluate, not having read it. I get literally hundreds of posts a week submitted like this and obviously can’t read them all — which is why we have an editorial process in place. The associate blog editor published the post. It was an error in judgment. I would not have posted it. Although HuffPost welcomes a vigorous debate on many subjects, I am a firm believer that there are not two sides to every issue, and that on some issues the jury is no longer out. The climate crisis is one of these issues.
The key word in understanding Huffington’s original acceptance and later misstatements is “coordinate.” If you’re going to take her word for not having read the piece you have to argue that “coordinate” means read and evaluate. This would mean that a busy editor is delegating authority, rather than exercising it, and runs counter to any reasonable reading of Huffington’s message. If she were to delegate authority to an underling for deciding whether to publish what was a potentially scandalous piece, she would not do so in view of the writer. What “coordinate” clearly means, in the context of the warm phrase “many thanks,” is “I have green-lighted this, and the editor I’m cc’ing is going to do be the one to get your piece up and on the site.”
What could get a high-powered editor to move from friendly acceptance to public disavowal in three days’ time? My own theory is that it was the threatened withdrawal of her blog’s funding. (Huffington declined to respond to repeated requests for comment for this article.)
It is highly unlikely that any media outlet will be able to compete with The Huffington Post for awkward climb-downs on climate, after this particular debacle. But, strange as it may seem today, even Huffington’s website will have to honor its master’s flickering epiphany of early 2009, and step away from the global warming cant prevalent during the past two decades. Having been first to the skeptic party among liberal media players, The Huffington Post will now, after its hasty departure, likely be the last to return. So, which publication will be next, and what kind of rhetorical outfit will it put on?
Climate skeptic bloggers like to suggest, in an effort at comedy, that media outlets warning of a global meltdown will casually ease themselves back into the journalistic garb of “a manmade ice age is nigh.” The idea here is that, whenever possible, writers and editors will prefer to skip the skeptics’ ball altogether. If the prognostications of Russian solar physicist Habibullo Abdussamatov and others like him, predicting a solar-driven descent into cooler temperatures during the next few decades, prove to be correct, this seems likely. Pointing to the shift in direction of the global mean temperature and asserting that “it’s mankind’s fault, we were right all along, only it’s going to be dangerously cold,” is likely to be the dress worn by The New York Times, for one. For the Times has been shifting out of warming and cooling scare story gowns for more than a hundred years. Whoever else in the media world has been especially wrong about global warming is likely to put on this same dress, too. A brief list of outlets that have made a name for themselves in global warming alarmism: The Weather Channel, NBC News, CBS News, ABC News, NPR, PBS, the BBC, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, Newsweek, Time, and, last but not least, my former employer: The New Yorker. This last takes great pride in getting the facts right, and yet has gotten the central fact about Earth’s climate, that it is cyclical and has been cooling since several thousand years ago, wrong.
When The New York Times Magazine published a long story about Freeman Dyson last year, it was arguably the start of a down-climb on the part of the newspaper as a whole. Howls of scorn were heard throughout the media world over the piece. It turns out, when it comes to climate, that such agonized sounds are the tell-tale signs that the journalists have gotten something right. Since the piece about Dyson, of course, the Times, led by Tom Friedman, Paul Krugman, and Andy Revkin, has returned to the position that if it’s weather and it’s bad, then it was caused by global warming.
If past experience is any guide, when the Times’ climb-down eventually begins in earnest, most people will barely notice. But you will!
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Like many intellectual wannabes, Ambler holds out the NYTs as the benchmark for truth or worse for authority. This willingness to defer to received wisdom in place of the hard work of personal reasoning is a hallmark of insubstantial men.
Maybe someone should have a word in Cameron’s shell-like, as at the CBI conference today he has reinforced his position on “green” jobs, and ludicrously expensive (and poitless) windfarms. The British public are stuck with this idiot for another four years (unless the coalition self destructs, which is quite possible), THEN you have the spectre of Miliband and his leftie cronies looming on the horizon, and it was his idea to kill the UK economy stone dead in the first place.
So any “climbdown” really needs to be vociferous and forceful, followed by a loud reversal, otherwise these idiots holding the pursestrings will never get the message.
I doubt we’ll see an actual climb down – the major media have adopted many “we’re all gonna die!” memes, and have never admitted error when we didn’t.
For example – off the top of my head –
DDT?
Global cooling?
Mathusian resource economics?
Acid Rain?
The ozone hole?
Global Warming?
Sarah Palin ? 🙂
These issues just disappear from the headlines – no apologies, no mea culpas, just on to the next scare.
Biodiversity is the new big one. Delingpole’s on the case already.
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/jamesdelingpole/100060132/biodiversity-the-new-big-lie/
We already have the Intergovernmental Science Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), 2020 targets and the usual power and money to go to the UN…
Looks like Mt. Whitney, California. Eastern part of the peak looking down.
That is Iceberg Lake in the lower left.
The easy climb down is to the far right out of the picture. The hard climb
down is to the left. The shoes on the foot show the climber wants the
hard climb down. Turn 160 degrees left and walk back about 500 meters
and take the Mountaineers Route down. Less difficult, but still lots of
fun.
The liberal media had a similar problem when the Berlin Wall fell and the Soviet Union collapsed. For decades during the cold war they had insisted that detente was necessary because communism and the Soviet Union were here to stay, were armed with nuclear weapons, and so had to be placated and accommodated. Reagan was an idiot and a fool to call the Soviet Union an evil empire, etc., — anybody who was reading or listening to the mass media back then remembers what the liberal and progressive party line used to be. Then current events — the way the Soviet Union so thoroughly lost the cold war — revealed this attitude and its associated policies to be complete foolishness. As I remember the basic response of the media establishment, it was almost complete silence on the editorial pages while events unfolded. During this time there was a brief era of objective news reporting. (After all, so many interesting and unforeseen historical events were happening.) Then, after a year or so of avoiding the subject, the establishment editorialists succeeded in pretending they had known all along that the Soviet Union would collapse and lose the cold war. They did not even touch on the issue of how they had given aid and comfort to the other side while the cold war was on — how, for example, the establishment media had led the charge in opposing the Vietnam war during the late 1960s and early 1970s and then in opposing the so-called Star Wars missile-defense systems during the 1980s. All that just disappeared from view, and it became vaguely rude and ill mannered even to bring this sort of stuff up in conversation. The changeover in the overall media narrative displayed how to use the Orwellian memory hole on a massive scale, and it was quite breathtaking in its way. By the time of Reagan’s death the media establishment had succeeded in convincing themselves that they had known all along that he was a great president. The liberal politicians and media establishment never had to accept any blame for how they had behaved during the cold war.
Four things must happen. 1) The Climategate whistle blower must be revealed. (Where are you, Keith Briffa?) 2) Shooting holes in the AGW hypothesis is not enough. The media has to have a competitive theory to move towards. Svensmark’s will do nicely after results of the CLOUD Project are released by CERN. 3) The Alarmists must lose their last icon, the Arctic ice. 4) Simple cooler weather for the next few years is a must. In fact, if we DON’T see cooler temps soon, we’ll be the ones with cognitive dissonance.
This should all occur within the next two years. Then we will all have to find something else to obsess about.
I completely agree. Billions are going to die….eventually.
If the media need a scape-goat I heartily recommend Al Gore.
what means MSM?
[Reply: Acronym for mainstream media. ~dbs, mod.]
Frank Lee says:
October 25, 2010 at 10:48 am
Another question is this: How will skeptics handle the collapse of alarmism? I, for one, am in no mood to be nice. My career, my social life, and my sanity have been harmed by vicious attacks by alarmists. I’m not going to forget that.
Agreed. Forgive yes, forget.. NEVER!
there will be no “climb down.”
I see two scenarios:
1) over the next 10 years alarmists manage to push through legislation restricting energy production and consumption, massively increasing energy costs and slowing economic growth. the trivial decrease in CO2 emissions will correspond with cooling temperatures and the alarmists will claim “victory” over how they “saved us all just in the nick of time.” the damage having been done, they will move on to the next crisis.
or 2) falling temperatures will result in cries of “thank gaia that natural processes have temporarily halted the man-made increase in temperatures. this buys us valuable time to get our act together before warming returns worse than before.” then proceed with scenario #1.
alarmists are incapable of recognizing as legitimate any view but their own. under no circumstances will they ever acknowledge ANY error for they cannot be wrong. their beliefs are not based on objectively measured facts or observations; they are based upon faith. those who are unbelievers are labeled as heretics, considered mentally damaged, and must be eliminated.
for, in the end, human nature has not changed. sacrifices to the gods, witch hunts, genocide, the atrocities of Hitler, islamic extremism…it’s all expressions of the same human nature of zealous beliefs.
Phrases like these will start to appear and the translation.
‘we had to be guided by what the scientist’s were saying’ = ‘it’s not our fault it was the guys in the lab coats who got it wrong’
‘there always was a broad band of possible outcomes’ = ‘everything from ice age to fiery Armageddon, we presented them all’
‘we took a measured view of the science’ = ‘we measured what would make the scariest headlines’
‘we presented the sceptic side’ = ‘we got a AGW believer to set out his version of the sceptic side and then knock it down’
‘we regularly invited guest sceptic articles’ = ‘we included sceptic articles so we could sneer at the author and hint he/she had connections with Big Oil’
‘we were one of the van guard of scepticism’ = ‘we did a really big sceptic section a few months ago’
‘we investigated the sceptic claims but we didn’t want to publish until we were sure’ = ‘we were nowhere’
‘we supported the sceptical argument where we could’ = ‘our carbon offset bank backers wouldn’t let us’
‘the scentists were convincing, charismatic people’ = ‘we thought they were so square they couldn’t possibly be wrong’
and many more…
A more interesting question would be when will the last pseudoskeptic cease to proclaim every snowflake as the start of the next ice-age? Will it be when the global mean temperature is a degree higher, perhaps in 2050? Or will they then have changed the argument to how wonderful Canadian podsols are for agriculture? Surely the last bleat that reality contradicts the second law of thermodynamics must come before the global mean temperature rises three degrees, perhaps by the end of this century.
Climbing down is not sufficient to overcome the harm caused by the acolytes of AGW.
When lawyers violate their ethical standards they are disbarred. Medical doctors loose their license when they are incompetent. Government contractors are debarred when they cheat, steal or lie. But, there are no means of disciplining journalists, politicians, and scientists for their misdeeds committed while promoting the fraudulent AGW hypothesis.
Journalists will continue to get a free pass. Politicians can be voted out of office, but that process is lengthy and uncertain. Scientists on the other hand should be debarred from receiving government research grants. They are also subject to discipline within their academies, but this outcome is neither certain nor likely.
VA AG Cuccinelli efforts are groundbreaking. He is investigating potential fraudulent claims and misuse of research grants by Mann during his employment at U VA. If the investigation results in a successful prosecution under state law (federal law is equivalent), it would establish useful way to discredit and punish similar conduct by those who have pushed the AGW agenda with fraudulent misrepresentations based upon their work.
Bad actors must suffer consequences for their misdeeds.
Humans are very adaptable creatures, inhabiting all climatic zones from tropics to Arctic.
Do not underestimate their capacity to overcome a minor inconvenience such as changing tune on AGW. Most of the AGW scientists are not stupid, they are well aware that CO2 story is a dodgy item, but it provids funds, put selected few on the pedestal and the rest flocked for a free lunch.
Nevertheless it will be entertaining to watch gradual transformation, which sceptics may welcome at their peril, sidelined and inconsequent. We shall forgive but not forget!
There will be those who just change horses and go the other way. Ehrlich and Sneider, (and others) who were beating the drum of the coming ice age because of human pollution had no trouble switching to the burning up of the planet will destroy the earth’s delicate ecology. Now, deliciously, they (except for the recently departed Schneider) can say they were right 40 yrs ago, the ice age cometh- it was just interrupted by a delaying natural climate cycle and now it’s is going to be worse than we thought.
Just remember: a man will forgive you for being wrong. We will never be forgiven for being right.
Eric Dailey says:
October 25, 2010 at 11:18 am
“Like many intellectual wannabes, Ambler holds out the NYTs as the benchmark for truth or worse for authority. This willingness to defer to received wisdom in place of the hard work of personal reasoning is a hallmark of insubstantial men.”
Don’t you kids learn to read these days anymore? The article is about how the media will react. You know, reading is not just telling an A from a B. It also involves a process called comprehending.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comprehension
Watermelons will attach themselves to any anti-capitalist, anti-globalisation meme they can and will prostitute themselves for the price of support in that. They have no shame and will never give up. To them, winning an argument only requires them to slam a door behind them before returning with a different tack to start again. What drives them? Goodness knows, but they are the curse of my generation.
And the future fights? Watch out for biodiversity, habitat loss, species extinction, water resources. And the bogey man? Soaring human population.
James Evans says:
October 25, 2010 at 11:06 am
I think the climb-down is going to be a long, long process. There are SO many egos involved….
What goes up must come down
spinning wheel got to go round
Talking about your troubles it’s a crying sin
Ride a painted pony
Let the spinning wheel spin….
And….those who climbed up so high they believed they were in heaven!
Those of the “Pebbles’ Universe” (Dr.Fred Flinstone et Al.), those who wanted to scare kids with those horror tales of black holes , dark matter, Big-Bangs, entangled n-dimensional strings, etc., etc, from the realm of the never more…..
We are living in interesting times indeed!,
Buy more popcorn!!
Gareth Evans says:
October 25, 2010 at 11:25 am
“Biodiversity is the new big one. Delingpole’s on the case already.”
Guess the next Peace Nobel is booked. Who will do the Gore part?
Harold Ambler,
Your post was a pleasurable read. Thanks.
I would have recommended that you should have included a closing remark urging all to document well the detailed scenario that played out leading to the ongoing demise of the pseudo-scientific alarmist claims by AGW-by-CO2 supporters.
What has played out in the blogosphere does need to be constantly summarized, consolidated and chronicled. It is needed because the next ideological environment apocalypse program that is hatched can be debunked using the same template that was used to debunk AGW-by-CO2 pseudo-science.
We still need a ton more posts, articles and books to document what has and still is occurring with the alarmist AGW-by-CO2 supporters.
The fat lady ain’t singing yet . . . .
John
@mkelly I am now officially a persona non gratia at LGF. Charles kicked me out for pointing out that the “witch doctor” picture of Obama was really a picture of a guy from New Guinea in his sunday best with Obama’s face photoshopped in and that native healers have added greatly to our knowledge of medicine. Anyway, I could care less about his comic book collection. I won’t diagnose Charles, but manic depressive does come to mind.
John Whitman says:
October 25, 2010 at 12:06 pm
What has played out in the blogosphere does need to be constantly summarized, consolidated ….
Historians should do that. WUWT has made history.