A look at comment deletion at RealClimate compared with WUWT
Guest post submitted by Ian Rons
Regular readers will doubtless be familiar, either at first- or second-hand, with the enthusiasm with which moderators at RealClimate.org seem to reject comments from AGW sceptics. Ecotretas’ recent story on Realclimate censorship (re-posted here) piqued my interest, since in addition to the usual tones of indignation, it suggested a method of estimating the RealClimate comment deletion rate by looking at the comment IDs (as revealed by WordPress’s use of the HTML (attribute), and counting the number of these IDs which are missing from the sequence.
Being at a loose end, I took up the cudgels and wrote a script using PHP and cURL which took about an hour to mine every available page on realclimate.org by accessing the page using its WordPress “post_id” value (from http://…/?p=1 to http://…/?p=8092, as at (14th July), extracting comment IDs with a simple regular expression and doing a bit of maths on the result. Naturally, the source code and the various output files are available upon request.
The figures are rather high, though doubtless some missing comments will have been spam.
However, at least in recent times, the RC site has employed the “re-CAPTCHA”service, which (unlike the Akismet service used by WUWT) does not create a new comment ID if the comment is rejected for being spam, so for instance the 56% of comments missing during June 2011 seems likely to be an accurate figure, unless some other explanation can be found.
A possible explanation might be the existence of a large number of comments on the site by an inner circle of users hidden on special-access pages, but I find it hard to believe this could account for a large proportion of (e.g.) the 933 comments which are missing in June 2011. Similarly, the apparent surge of deletions beginning July 2007 may also be truly reflective of events, since it has been suggested in comments here that it “coincided” with RC’s attack on the surface stations project. However it has also been pointed out that such interpretations are impossible to verify using this method.
Overall, there were 78,639 missing comment IDs, out of a total of 210,595, or 37.3%. As for the RC page known as “The Bore Hole”, which started on 6th January 2011 (the date being evident from the post_id of 6013 and the moderator’s response to the first comment, although they have since re-dated it 6th December 2004 for some reason), the comments on that page are of course counted here as “published” comments, however they are small in number (404) when compared with the number of comments which seem to go missing even after that date in January (5,000). At the risk of mixing metaphors, “The Bore Hole” could perhaps be regarded as something of a fig-leaf.
I ran a similar scan on WUWT (also a WordPress site) on the 14th July, extracting data from http://…/?p=1 to http://…/?p=43440. However, analysing WUWT with this method presented several problems that aren’t applicable to the RC site:
- Some earlier comment IDs are out of chronological order (stemming, it seems, from the import from TypePad to WordPress in October 2007), so figures for early months are impossible to calculate. During this period there seems to have been some infilling of comment IDs (probably due to the TypePad import not setting the “auto_increment” values in the database properly), which would affect the overall total; however, the numbers involved (whilst impossible to calculate precisely) are probably at most in the very low hundreds.
- WUWT has always used WordPress’s Akismet spam-filtering, which creates new comment IDs before marking them as spam. Anthony provided me with a screenshot showing the total volume of spam which had been deleted as of early on the 15th July to be 55,097. This can be adjusted down to 55,085 for the period covered by my data to late on the 14th July 2011.
- The Tips & Notes page encourages comments from readers which are not intended to remain permanently on the site, so they are to be regarded as “legitimate” deletions. Anthony provided me with records of the numbers of Tips & Notes comments posted (then eventually deleted) for the period 24th March to 10th July 2011 (3,220), on which I based an estimate of 22,215 “legitimately deleted” comments for the period 23rd June 2009 (when the T&N page was created) to 14th July 2011 inclusive.
Overall, WUWT has 75,989 missing comments IDs, out of a total of 700,115 submitted comments (10.9%). Subtracting the above figures for Akismet and Tips & Notes gives us a problem, since it’s a negative figure: -1,311. I think this is most likely due to an over-estimation of the number of comments posted on the Tips & Notes page, combined with perhaps a few hundred from the infilling problem mentioned above. However, the combined additions from these two sources of error would have to be in excess of 8,000 to raise the number of deletions to 1% of the total submitted, which I think very unlikely.
Putting it another way, and assuming a total of 200 “infilled” comment IDs (a high estimate, in my opinion), I would have to have over-estimated the volume of Tips & Notes comments by some 58% to reach a 1% deletion rate. I therefore see no reason to doubt the claims made on behalf of WUWT that the deletion rate is less than 1%. In fact it may be considerably lower. It is, however, noteworthy that December 2007 and January 2008 show high deletion rates, with another bump during Sep-Oct 2008:
In summary, whilst there remains some uncertainty especially regarding the RC data, the data does tend to support the anecdotal evidence concerning RC’s tendentious comment moderation practices. It also tends to support (or at least does not contradict) WUWT’s claims of a <1% comment deletion record.
For reference, here are the monthly totals which I used for the graphs. This table excludes incomplete months and some early WUWT months as noted:
| RealClimate | Watts Up With That? | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month | Missing | Submitted | Missing (%) | Missing | Submitted | Missing (%) |
| Jan 2005 | 86 | 524 | 16.4% | |||
| Feb 2005 | 111 | 383 | 29% | |||
| Mar 2005 | 53 | 286 | 18.5% | |||
| Apr 2005 | 96 | 294 | 32.7% | |||
| May 2005 | 47 | 305 | 15.4% | |||
| Jun 2005 | 119 | 482 | 24.7% | |||
| Jul 2005 | 524 | 826 | 63.4% | |||
| Aug 2005 | 255 | 474 | 53.8% | |||
| Sep 2005 | 112 | 527 | 21.3% | |||
| Oct 2005 | 99 | 664 | 14.9% | |||
| Nov 2005 | 67 | 654 | 10.2% | |||
| Dec 2005 | 544 | 1150 | 47.3% | |||
| Jan 2006 | 277 | 944 | 29.3% | |||
| Feb 2006 | 306 | 1236 | 24.8% | |||
| Mar 2006 | 390 | 1292 | 30.2% | |||
| Apr 2006 | 660 | 2130 | 31% | |||
| May 2006 | 580 | 1477 | 39.3% | |||
| Jun 2006 | 174 | 995 | 17.5% | |||
| Jul 2006 | 142 | 1252 | 11.3% | |||
| Aug 2006 | 888 | 2123 | 41.8% | |||
| Sep 2006 | 253 | 1005 | 25.2% | |||
| Oct 2006 | 340 | 1055 | 32.2% | |||
| Nov 2006 | 114 | 1290 | 8.8% | |||
| Dec 2006 | 62 | 876 | 7.1% | |||
| Jan 2007 | 203 | 1791 | 11.3% | |||
| Feb 2007 | 223 | 2282 | 9.8% | |||
| Mar 2007 | 343 | 3107 | 11% | |||
| Apr 2007 | 160 | 1960 | 8.2% | |||
| May 2007 | 213 | 2271 | 9.4% | |||
| Jun 2007 | 188 | 2055 | 9.1% | |||
| Jul 2007 | 4061 | 5724 | 70.9% | |||
| Aug 2007 | 7171 | 9511 | 75.4% | |||
| Sep 2007 | 4140 | 5499 | 75.3% | |||
| Oct 2007 | 4561 | 7091 | 64.3% | |||
| Nov 2007 | 6064 | 8226 | 73.7% | 108 | 476 | 22.7% |
| Dec 2007 | 4184 | 6073 | 68.9% | 547 | 869 | 62.9% |
| Jan 2008 | 493 | 1938 | 25.4% | 497 | 1217 | 40.8% |
| Feb 2008 | 452 | 1656 | 27.3% | 536 | 2027 | 26.4% |
| Mar 2008 | 332 | 1444 | 23% | 776 | 3212 | 24.2% |
| Apr 2008 | 854 | 2222 | 38.4% | 396 | 3023 | 13.1% |
| May 2008 | 1159 | 3050 | 38% | 465 | 3192 | 14.6% |
| Jun 2008 | 880 | 2526 | 34.8% | 586 | 5781 | 10.1% |
| Jul 2008 | 1156 | 3086 | 37.5% | 751 | 6651 | 11.3% |
| Aug 2008 | 922 | 2733 | 33.7% | 514 | 6775 | 7.6% |
| Sep 2008 | 873 | 2827 | 30.9% | 1596 | 9174 | 17.4% |
| Oct 2008 | 692 | 1892 | 36.6% | 1918 | 8936 | 21.5% |
| Nov 2008 | 1466 | 3026 | 48.4% | 931 | 7012 | 13.3% |
| Dec 2008 | 1089 | 3127 | 34.8% | 436 | 7599 | 5.7% |
| Jan 2009 | 1063 | 3269 | 32.5% | 508 | 11357 | 4.5% |
| Feb 2009 | 834 | 2587 | 32.2% | 1053 | 12586 | 8.4% |
| Mar 2009 | 1232 | 3260 | 37.8% | 857 | 16186 | 5.3% |
| Apr 2009 | 1635 | 4369 | 37.4% | 662 | 16291 | 4.1% |
| May 2009 | 2037 | 4361 | 46.7% | 641 | 14217 | 4.5% |
| Jun 2009 | 808 | 3183 | 25.4% | 1236 | 13525 | 9.1% |
| Jul 2009 | 646 | 3664 | 17.6% | 1561 | 14722 | 10.6% |
| Aug 2009 | 384 | 2341 | 16.4% | 1606 | 13619 | 11.8% |
| Sep 2009 | 337 | 1657 | 20.3% | 1802 | 15389 | 11.7% |
| Oct 2009 | 722 | 3699 | 19.5% | 2187 | 19746 | 11.1% |
| Nov 2009 | 1518 | 5745 | 26.4% | 2945 | 25712 | 11.5% |
| Dec 2009 | 981 | 6401 | 15.3% | 4339 | 36716 | 11.8% |
| Jan 2010 | 728 | 5349 | 13.6% | 2250 | 26840 | 8.4% |
| Feb 2010 | 966 | 6020 | 16% | 2267 | 26640 | 8.5% |
| Mar 2010 | 873 | 5066 | 17.2% | 2349 | 26051 | 9% |
| Apr 2010 | 883 | 4227 | 20.9% | 2312 | 23259 | 9.9% |
| May 2010 | 966 | 3425 | 28.2% | 2877 | 20174 | 14.3% |
| Jun 2010 | 983 | 2915 | 33.7% | 2295 | 19584 | 11.7% |
| Jul 2010 | 1613 | 3808 | 42.4% | 2789 | 23840 | 11.7% |
| Aug 2010 | 772 | 2324 | 33.2% | 3211 | 27241 | 11.8% |
| Sep 2010 | 770 | 2072 | 37.2% | 3414 | 24257 | 14.1% |
| Oct 2010 | 681 | 2267 | 30% | 2547 | 24362 | 10.5% |
| Nov 2010 | 824 | 2698 | 30.5% | 2667 | 20508 | 13% |
| Dec 2010 | 1942 | 3744 | 51.9% | 1983 | 22411 | 8.8% |
| Jan 2011 | 685 | 2794 | 24.5% | 2716 | 24451 | 11.1% |
| Feb 2011 | 963 | 2901 | 33.2% | 2243 | 22524 | 10% |
| Mar 2011 | 1077 | 2326 | 46.3% | 2371 | 23480 | 10.1% |
| Apr 2011 | 684 | 1674 | 40.9% | 2124 | 17466 | 12.2% |
| May 2011 | 738 | 1679 | 44% | 2457 | 20028 | 12.3% |
| Jun 2011 | 933 | 1677 | 55.6% | 2544 | 20682 | 12.3% |
====================================================================
UPDATE:
Thanks to Ian. It should be noted that I had no influence of any kind on his analysis, other than providing the input data he requested. It is published exactly as he presented it to me, with only some small edits for formatting, with no content changes.
I thought this might be a good time to show something I encountered personally on June 7th, 2009 at RC. Gavin posted up a thread asking for ideas about the blog.
http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2009/06/groundhog-day-2/
His central question to readers was:
“What is it that you feel needs more explaining?”
I decided I’d offer my suggestion. Big mistake. Here’s a series of screen caps I made illustrating the central systemic bias that RC has, even for basic and germane topics.
It starts out like this when my first suggestion was not published:
It never appeared, so I thought I’d try an experiment. Using my wife’s computer (on the same DSL circuit, same IP address) I decided I’d submit an upbeat generic comment that didn’t offer any sort of challenge to RC using a new email account to see if it was an automation problem related to IP or my name/email address, or if it was simply that RC does not like challenges to their position:
And amazingly, it went right through. So I knew I was not being blocked by IP address or name/keyword, as you can see below, it was approved:
So, I tried again, again on the same home network, my PC this time:
And here it is awaiting moderation:
Nope, it was consigned to the ether:
A few comments later, we can see who is moderating, Gavin himself, note the inline response:
I decided to send a polite email inquiring about my missing comments:
And of course, I never received a response.
So there you have it, even when they ASK for ideas, ones that come from skeptics are apparently deleted; real open debate from a Real Climate scientist, Dr. Gavin Schmidt of NASA GISS.
Update#2 Ric Werme asks in comments:
The next question is “Why do people even bother posting comments at RC?” I’ve found it easier to not go there at all, so I don’t get tempted to add a comment.
Apparently, other than dhogaza and a few hangers on, not many do:
Except for search engine hits, WUWT beats RC in every measure. See for yourself here:
http://www.alexa.com/siteinfo/wattsupwiththat.com+realclimate.org#trafficstats
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At 11:04 AM on 22 July, Russell C made mention of a response he’d gotten from a warmista Web site after having posted “a reasonable question … about why the blogger didn’t come down harder on Al Gore on refusing to debate skeptics. After all, a more effective defense would be to first show how skeptics’ climate assessments are wrong, and THEN put the final nail in the coffin by showing irrefutable proof such skeptics are paid to say what they say by big coal & oil.”
That image reflected an attitude so utterly vicious that I had to download the JPG and take the trouble to reproduce the text – in toto – here for all to easily read:
Hm. So what policy do the proprietor(s) of Futurism Now have about the fulfillment of the commonplace assurances given to those registering to comment that their e-mail information will not be given out, or to civil lawsuits filled against them for compensatory and punitive damages they inflict by way of malicious mischief perpetrated in their fanatic hateful efforts to punish people for expressing their opinions?
For their own good, these inflamed sphincters really ought to ask a tort lawyer to review their suicidally stupid excuse for an “anti-denier” policy.
I can just imagine the blanch of horror and dismay on that attorney’s face.
I guess this is one of those “Duh” facts. We found out almost 2 years ago with Climategate that warmists would go to any length to make sure that no dissension was heard by anyone. Unfortunately for them, they forgot that no one owns information in the information age, so it gets out. Perhaps they are not trying to convince the undecided, but to keep the faithful in line? if that is the case, it surely is a sign of desperation.
kadaka (KD Knoebel) July 22, 2011 at 10:14 am (and Richard S Courtney)
Yes I’d say a good % of the deleted comments here are “please fix..” or “sorry I forgot to close the html..” or some such. It would be tempting to bin the ‘me too’ type comments sometimes, but then where do you draw the line? Such decisions would only make moderation harder/slower. If you are only looking for bad language, ad homs, approving comments is quick.
How I would like to see this method applied to http://www.loonwatch.com/
My “islam-critical” comments are systematically deleted there, and I suppose the same is true for anyone else’s…
Mark Wilson said on July 22, 2011 at 10:27 am:
David Appell scored an impressive string of four straight complete snips on the recent NYT “death threats” post on July 19, 11 days after the thread’s previously last comment. (I noticed one of his as a “Recent Comment” and checked.) Apparently he has a problem with Mr. Watts’ “put up or shut up” demand earlier in the thread to post the actual individual (recent) death threats he’s been griping about or issue an apology, until that’s done his comments get snipped.
Even then Anthony let him slip in a couple on the Russian heat wave “mostly natural” post, of which one amazingly did not contain evidence of credible death threats despite proclaiming to show such, and another complained about a complete snip of another comment for a common site policy violation. Then on July 19, same as on the other thread, a complete snip.
Thus even though the moderation is very fair, there is a certain amount of (apparently) egotistical masochists skewing the snip statistics. 😉
kadaka (KD Knoebel) says: July 22, 2011 at 12:16 pm
“…until that’s done his comments get snipped.
Even then Anthony let him slip in a couple on…”
Ah but it depends who sees and approves the comments – you see too many moderators spoil the blog. It’s probably very easy to miss previous bad behaviour or ultimatims – you’d have to read each entire thread to catch them.
Yo, Moleman,
Too bad about RealClimate. How does it feel to be so impotent?
dp says:
July 22, 2011 at 11:14 am
“This is a crazy survey. ”
dp from your comment I have the feeling you did not encounter the experience of trying to communicate, having valid arguments and being simply rubbed away by somebody wanting to have only his truth standing.
It is easy for a moderator to fake a discussion his way if he wants to.
There are several dirty of tricks used to form opinion, give the impression they want dialogue but in reality recurring to such low methods of deleting valid comments or pretending your mail is an ad-hominem attack to leave their answers standing.
It is right to show it up.
Tucci, reading the response you got made me laugh. I have worked at organizations that PAT their addresses. They just banned the entire organization! And in case anyone is wondering, it was “Social Services”, staffed by people mostly sympathetic to their cause!
They are morons!
Would they delete “A pox on both your houses” at RC?
James Sexton says @ur momisugly July 22, 2011 at 11:09 am:
I worked for some years as a civilian employee for the Department of Defense. They had a strict policy against speaking as a DOD employee, and an even stricter policy about doing so on public time. Why it is different for NASA, I don’t know.
As for the Milton quote, it’s sad that the misapplication of the First Amendment is used by teachers to restrict American school children from studying the works of some of the greatest thinkers of Western Civilization. From the same discourse that you quoted (The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates):
OK S.
Looking back, Real Climate surged in readership during the months of August – December of ’07.
Much of the traffic had stemmed from the news about GISTEMP analysis.
Over 30,000 comments went missing.
That was on average of about 70% of all comments submitted.
Imagine the effect that could have on those reading the comments at the time.
No dissenting views on the subject about 1934 being hotter.
Or any dissenting views on any subject he published.
Maybe his only exceptions were to have himself and others ridicule the few skeptic comments he allowed to be posted, so wafflers could be swayed to believe the crap RC sells.
Selling the views of the IPCC and controlling the public’s opinion soon wavered when Climategate broke and fewer and fewer people believed the trash the warmistas were selling.
Not only has his RC readership declined, but in the last 6 months, nearly 50% of all the comments to RC are being deleted.
This contrived and controlled consensus the warmistas thought they had, has nearly unraveled.
“Naturally, the source code and the various output files are available upon request.”
That would be great to tinker with! How do I request the source?
I’ve thought for some time that some sort of meta-commenting system is required. Think of it as a web site that would be used to view a site (like realclimate) which would also allow for posting to the target site. The difference being that it would also maintain the posts made through it separately so that if they are deleted on the target site the comments would still be available in context at the meta-comment site.
I’ll note that google+ with the StartGoogle+ chrome extension shows how this might work. StartGoogle+ allows you go bring your FaceBook and Twitter accounts into your Google+ account both for reading and posting. And of course if you post to both FaceBook and a Google+ stream then it does not matter what happens on the FaceBook side. The post will remain on the Google+ side.
Wow, things must have been pretty heated on RC between August 2007 and December 2007. Both the comment and deletion count go through the roof. A veritable hockey stick !! :-).
Right around the time of the realisation that the world wasn’t getting any warmer any time soon, and when skeptic blogs started popping up
wuwt moderation is very well done. one has to be an obvious troublemaker before the mods intervene. even then, it is modulated – warnings are given with explanation.
it’s not a public place – it’s a private blog- Anthony has all the rights.
he’s also got honorable motives and is not threatened by truth – that’s why WUWT is worth visiting, to me. he’s also a professional.
i confess that i do visit r.c. occasionally – but only because they closed encyclopediadramatica.com and i sometimes have a perverted desire to indulge in schadenfreude. nobody tops gavin as pretentious buffoon. it’s sick, i know, but watching him chasing phantom squirrels always makes me feel a bit better – i think it is reassuring to know how puny the enemy is – witchdoctors in lab coats shaking rattles around a doomsday sundial muttering in panic at those who don’t respond to his incantations and imprecations…
it’s just too bad there are so many who are so much less than that – and serve as nothing but prey – that’s when i stop laughing.
i might even post something ‘unambiguous’, let’s say, and even directed at an individual – but even such a post will not be censored if it’s got reason and not too much snarl.
Isn’t it a question of diction, rather than grammar?
In British English “further” and “farther” are synonymous – although you could live many years in Britain and never hear the word “farther” spoken.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary:
“farther
var. of further adv. & adj”
Discrimination between the two words is not universal even in the USA.
“doubtless some missing comments will have been spam.”
All the missing comments are defined as spam, that’s why they’re “missing”.
oh, jeez – i wanted to say- what a cool and fun project this was! what an ingenious, entertaining and informative way to make use of a spare few hours. what a creative use of skills – what a ‘life as an active principle’ joyfulness to refresh from passive spectating.
(how piratey! P-} )
Sorry I refuse to accept these figures until you tell me they come from a model . Because as we all know reality is poor representation of models and models are always right.
Tucci78 said on July 22, 2011 at 9:34 am:
This seems to have been a period where relatively few comment IDs are missing from the sequence; however, the data for the preceding months (from June 2009) is very similar. The Examiner article that Ecotretas linked-to in his original article suggests that comment moderation after Climategate was particularly liberal, which would appear to correspond (at least in part) to the data, but at the same time we don’t know what other circumstances might possibly have a bearing (including spam and so forth). Perhaps I’m being too generous, but we have yet to hear what – if anything – the RC staff have to say about all this. But maybe they consider high levels of comment deletion a badge of honour: after all, if their Comment policy were any looser, it would have to be published in a bucket.
John Whitman said on July 22, 2011 at 11:29 am:
No, nor for RC. I would be interested (out of curiosity) if the mods here could guesstimate the amount of this sort of commenting they get, but it could never become part of any serious analysis of course.
Hans Moleman said on July 22, 2011 at 11:54 am:
I’ve merely provided data with some comments that caution about the uncertainties involved. Obviously some people like the results and others don’t, but what you’re offering is merely a “stock argument” which doesn’t specify what you feel is insufficiently rigorous about the analysis. I’d be happy to address any serious criticisms you might offer, but I can hardly respond to such broad brush-strokes.
I am not one of “you guys”, but if you’re suggesting that lowering the comment deletion rate is equivalent to “lowering the bar”, this is (as I understand it) the general thrust of what RC staff have said in the past about the site. However, the anecdotal evidence (of which there seems to be plenty) suggests that comment rejection has nothing to do with how well informed the commenter is, merely how supportive the comment is of the AGW hypothesis. There are plenty of comments on RC which add nothing to the debate, but which are accepted anyway. In other words, the RC comment moderation policy resembles that of a party political website, whereas (I suppose) WUWT’s comment moderation policy is something of a free-for-all, or marketplace of ideas. Personally, I take the side of Adam Smith and Friedrich Hayek when it comes to that sort of thing; i.e., I reject collectivism, especially in science (and we are talking about science websites). Nevertheless, to thoroughly refute your suggestion would necessarily involve a qualitative (rather than quantitative) analysis of the comments on both RC and WUWT sites, which could be done by sampling but which would of course be more time-consuming. And for what it’s worth, where you lack rigour is by confusing a quantitative analysis for a qualitative one.
Juice said on July 22, 2011 at 11:15 am:
Someone’s just said something similar, but nevertheless: cf. farther A. 4. with further adv. 4. in the OED.
Kevin said on July 22, 2011 at 1:09 pm:
Shall I send it to the email address you provide at your “blogiburton” blog?
@Ian Rons
My serious criticism is this: your analysis deals in nothing apart from uncertainties and anecdotal evidence. It is worthless and thus this article comes off as nothing more than a “hit piece”.
There’s no reason to sling mud at Real Climate. Stick to the science.
REPLY: what I’d like to know is, which are you? The fake “Hans Moleman” or the fake “Cal Barndorfer”? Pick a fake handle and stick with it – note the policy page about switching identities around. – Anthony
Excellent post!
Any chance of an automated daily update?!
This would allow us taxpayers to monitor RC, without actually having to view the site itself.
Hans Moleman says:
We get it: you guys don’t like Real Climate, but this is supposed to be a science blog not the Daily News. If this isn’t a joke then you’ve really lowered the bar for your competitors.
You have to recall Hans that the guys at Real Climate don’t just think they are right scientifically. They think they are also right morally.
In this battle of politics, for which scientific papers are mostly a tool to beat people, it is quite useful to point out the hypocrisy of the other side. A few minutes search at RC will find them attempting exactly the same thing in spades. There is no “bar” to be lowered: this is a knife fight and it would be silly to fight other than with knives.
There are other sites which stick entirely to science, or entirely to politics. Go to them if you prefer that.
It will be interesting to see it there’s a surge today, as everyone tests RC. My post is 138.
Just after the Climategate I wrote a question on the Euronews television blog :
“Why you don’t talk about the Climategate ?”
I repeated this 6 times and my question never passed the moderator.
This television is considered the best for european information …
In Italy they call this ‘mafia’ !