David Suzuki insults, but won't debate

David Suzuki, Canadian environmental activist
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As the climate scare fizzles, Canada’s celebrity environmentalist resorts to ad hominem attacks

Guest post by David R. Legates

David Suzuki has never met, debated or even spoken with my colleague, scientist Willie Soon. But as more people dismiss Mr. Suzuki’s scare stories about global warming cataclysms, Suzuki has resorted to personal attacks against Dr. Soon and others who disagree with him.

Dr. Soon’s brilliant research into the sun’s role in climate change has helped make millions aware that carbon dioxide’s influence is far less than Suzuki wants them to think. In a recent column that was picked up by the Huffington Post and other media outlets, Suzuki attacked Dr. Soon, mostly with a recycled Greenpeace “investigation” that is itself nothing more than a rehash of tiresome (and libelous) misstatements, red herrings and outright lies. It’s time to set the record straight.

First, the alleged corporate cash. Suzuki claims Dr. Soon received “more than $1 million over the past decade” from US energy companies – and implies that Dr. Soon lied to a US Senate committee about the funding. In fact, the research grants were received in the years following the Senate hearing; the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics took nearly half of the money (for “administration”), and what was left covered Dr. Soon’s salary, research, and other expenses including even toner for his printer.

By comparison, the Suzuki Foundation spends some $7 million every year on its “educational” and pressure campaigns – many of them in conjunction with various PR agencies, renewable energy companies, other foundations and environmental activist groups. They all stand to profit handsomely from Suzuki’s causes, especially “catastrophic climate change” and campaigns to replace “harmful” fossil fuels with subsidized, land-intensive, low-energy-output, “eco-friendly” wind and solar facilities.

Under another convoluted arrangement, the Suzuki Foundation, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, University of Alberta, US-based SeaWeb and other organizations provided or divvied up some $23 million, to promote an anti-fish-farming campaign. The years-long effort suddenly and inexplicably ended – and all traces of it disappeared from the Suzuki Foundation website – after Vancouver-based researcher Vivian Krause raised serious questions about its claims.

And yet Suzuki is criticizing Dr. Soon – while alarmist climate catastrophe researchers share over $6 billion annually in US and Canadian taxpayer money, and millions more in corporate cash, to link every natural phenomenon to global warming and promote renewable “alternatives” to fossil fuels.

If it is wrong to receive grants from organizations that have taken “advocacy” positions, then virtually every scientist with whom Suzuki has associated would be guilty. Even Suzuki recognizes this. “We should look at the science, and not at who is paying for the research,” he wrote recently.

But if he truly believes  real science must stand or fall on its own merits, not on the source of its funding – why does he insist on double standards and continue to attack Dr. Soon over his funding sources?

Second, Suzuki repeats an absurd Greenpeace claim that Dr. Soon tried to “undermine” the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s “peer-reviewed” work. In reality, scientists are required to examine, review and even criticize other scientists’ research – especially when it is used to justify slashing the hydrocarbon energy on which our jobs, living standards and civilization depend.  In reality, the IPCC solicits reviews of its publications but is under no obligation to address any criticisms that scientists raise – in contrast to the normal peer-review process.

Moreover, the IPCC refuses to conduct its own quality control – and repeatedly promotes scare stories about rising seas, melting Himalayan glaciers, disappearing Amazon rainforests, more severe storms and droughts, and other disasters. By now anyone familiar with the Climategate and IPCC scandals knows these headline-grabbing claims are based on nothing more than exaggerated computer model outputs, deliberate exclusion of contrary findings, questionable air temperature station locations, and even “research” by environmental activists.

Third, Suzuki’s most egregious distortion of reality involves the Climate Research journal’s handling of two papers by Drs. Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas, regarding solar links to climate change. The publisher concluded that the manuscript editor had “properly analyzed the evaluations and requested appropriate revisions,” and the authors “revised their manuscripts accordingly.”

However, when Dr. Hans von Storch became editor-in-chief, he circulated a hurriedly written editorial declaring that the review process had failed, and the Soon-Baliunas manuscripts should not have been published, due to alleged “methodological flaws.” He intended to publish the editorial prior to a US Senate committee hearing, thereby discrediting Dr. Soon. von Storch even asserted that Soon and Baliunas should be barred from publishing again in Climate Research – a disciplinary action usually levied only for convictions of plagiarism or fraud.

The publisher refused to publish the editorial until the editorial board could be consulted – which meant after the hearing. So von Storch and other editors and review editors resigned. Senator Jeffords highlighted the resignations during the hearing. But fortunately, I was a hearing witness and provided a correct account.

Nevertheless, after the hearing, the publisher changed his mind and said the Soon-Baliunas paper should not have been published. I resigned as review editor because I felt the journal had succumbed to pressure from activist scientists and was no longer an unbiased outlet for healthy climate change debates.

Climategate made it clear that the truth was even worse. The emails paint a vivid picture of advocacy scientists strong-arming the publisher, threatening to destroy Climate Research by boycotting the journal, and intimidating or colluding with editors and grant program officers to channel funding to alarmists, publish only their work, and reject funding requests and publications from any scientists who disagreed with them on global warming chaos. Suzuki’s increasingly strident and desperate attacks mirror their campaign, as do Al Gore’s – and no wonder.

The global warming scare has fizzled. The sun has entered a new “quiet” phase, and average global temperatures have been stable for 15 years. Climate conferences in Copenhagen and elsewhere have gone nowhere. Kyoto has become little more than a footnote in history. Countries that agreed to “climate stabilization” policies are retreating from that untenable position. The public realizes that climate science is far from “settled.” The climate-chaos religion is about to go the way of Baal-worship.

Most important, Canadians, Americans and Europeans alike are beginning to realize that the real dangers are not from global warming.

They are from potentially cooler global temperatures that could hamstring agriculture – and from government (and Suzuki-advocated) policies that are driving energy prices so high that companies are sending jobs to Asia, and millions of families can no longer afford to heat and cool their homes, drive their cars, or pay for electricity that powers all the wondrous technologies that make our lives infinitely better, safer and healthier than even kings and queens enjoyed just a century ago.

 

Dr. David R. Legates is Professor of Climatology at the University of Delaware and a former review editor for the journal Climate Research.  He has worked with Dr. Willie Soon since they were the first to uncover the flaws in the so-called ‘Hockey Stick’ in 2002.

 

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juanita
August 17, 2011 6:13 am

Well, I hope this isn’t considered an “ad hom,” but I’d like to say, that Mr. Sexton should refrain from talking about what he thinks other people know about anything. Don’t vote because you don’t know about an issue? Oh, coming from a man who just knows it all! I’m SO unworthy, forgive me for polluting the voting process with my puny brain, you big jerk.
Oh, that came off like an ad hom, dang it! Sorry! Nothing personal Mr. Sexton.
Also, I’d like to see the title of this post changed to, “David Suzuki sulks, but won’t debate…”

Nuke
August 17, 2011 6:19 am

Darren Parker says:
August 16, 2011 at 6:19 pm
I always laugh at how the warmists trolls like Bystander make a throwaway comment without any proof in the hope it will be accepted. Unfortunately for him , regular readers to this site know that we only play the ball , never the man. So go ahead Bystander, show just one single example of an ad hom attack. Just one. Should be easy shouldn’t it?

It’s the old childhood game of trying to get your goat. Don’t feed the trolls, and they will go away.
We do have some warministas here who are regulars and who mostly try to engage people in a civil manner. Plenty of room for disagreement — one is not a troll simply for disagreeing with the ‘consensus opinion’ 😉 on this site.

Danny V.
August 17, 2011 6:20 am

A sad indication on the level of intellectual curiosity of the folks that subscribe to Reader’s Digest.
http://www.readersdigest.ca/magazine/top-10-most-trusted-canadians?id=1
Surprising that Stephen Harper made the top ten.

Bystander
August 17, 2011 6:22 am

JPeden says August 16, 2011 at 7:52 pm
….but haven’t made any case whatsoever for your own claim!
You must not read the forum comments here – there is a knee jerk attack on any one that challenges the “skepticism” and knee jerk cheer-leading for any post (regardless of how many laws of physics it breaks) that challenges AGW.

Gary Sandberg
August 17, 2011 6:25 am

Like Gore, his elite genetic makeup requires more than the replacement level of reproduction. 5 kids for him, but the genetically inferior should be limited to one child or less.

Paul Vaughan
August 17, 2011 6:33 am

David R. Legates wrote:
“[…] anti-fish-farming campaign. The years-long effort suddenly and inexplicably ended – and all traces of it disappeared from the Suzuki Foundation website – after Vancouver-based researcher Vivian Krause raised serious questions about its claims.”
[bold emphasis added to “inexplicably”]
ANYTHING BUT “inexplicable”.
You’ve missed something massive here.
That was the MASSIVE salmon run of last year.
The article by Vivian Krause, which I’ve never seen & can’t imagine had a fraction of the impact, certainly wasn’t the hammer. The hammer was NATURE itself.
The problem as I see it is that the true environmental movement has been severely diluted (truly divided & conquered) by those who call themselves “environmentalists” but place worship of anthropogenic abstractions above observation of & respect for nature. There is an environmental movement vanguard (might look like a rearguard depending on one’s perspective) that sees things a little more clearly. Toxic pollution & land use are real environmental issues at the core.

Steve from Rockwood
August 17, 2011 6:36 am

The first time I saw Dr. Suzuki was in 1989 when he debated Dr. Philip Rushton at Western (London Ont) on whether orientals were smarter than whites who were smarter than blacks. I did my homework – the science on this is so ridiculous (they had to adjust the data because blacks are bigger than whites who are bigger than orientals so unless you “normalize” the data you get the wrong answer). Suzuki showed up and engaged in ad hominem attacks and zero facts. He didn’t do his homework. Very frustrating for me because Rushton (who seemed like a racist to me) came out looking like the smarter guy.
The last time I saw Dr. Suzuki a few years back he was in the Vancouver airport. He ordered a large double double at Tim Hortons and then carried his coffee onto an airplane. That, to me, is the calling card of the AGW leaders. Do as I say…

Venter
August 17, 2011 6:45 am

Since Bystander talks about tobacco, let’s see this article about Al Gore and tobacco hypocrisy
http://nofrakkingconsensus.blogspot.com/2010/01/al-gores-tobacco-hypocrisy.html
So how’s it about hypocrisy when Al Gore himself was a tobacco farmer and continued accepting revenue from tobacco farms even after is sister died from lung cancer?
Any comments about your AGW idol?

Ken Harvey
August 17, 2011 6:59 am

“Robw says:
August 16, 2011 at 6:31 pm
I completely agree with your position but I strongly suggest you refer to him as Dr. Suzuki. respect starts at home.”
Generally. around the world, Dr. is a courtesy title, as, indeed, is Mister. In many countries the law entitles those with certain qualifications to call themselves Dr., Eng. or whatever, but I have not come across one that makes such use obligatory and I don’t imagine that Canada is an oddity in this respect. Accordingly in the most unlikely event that I should ever find myself in Suzuki’s company, I would no more consider addressing him as “Doctor” than I would consider shaking his outstretched hand.

stevo
August 17, 2011 7:01 am

“Dr. Soon’s brilliant research…”
According to the Astrophysics Data System, he has 13 first-author peer-reviewed publications, and his most cited first-author paper has 35 citations. His papers have an average of 12.5 citations each.
For a comparison, James Hansen has, according to the same database, 127 first-author peer-reviewed publications, with an average of 36.4 citations each, and the most cited having 488 citations.
How are you defining “brilliant”?

August 17, 2011 7:12 am

Here Ezra Levant and Vivian Krause talk about the “F-off” in a Vancouver cafe:

August 17, 2011 7:13 am

I’m a Canadian geologist working in the oil and gas industry. I’m a skeptic. He insults me by saying I am (not must be but “am”) an anti-environmentalist being paid by the oil industry to cause trouble. He also complains about being insulted.
Suzuki is such an egomaniacal hypocrite.

TomRude
August 17, 2011 7:41 am

Paul Vaughan, this year is also shaping up as masive salmon run…

Jeremy
August 17, 2011 7:43 am

Bystander says:
August 16, 2011 at 4:32 pm
Snort – you guys complaining about personal attacks on scientists.
Now that is ironic… Do y’all ever read what you write?

Oh, I agree Bystander. It’s just that one side has been saying for a long time that the debate is over. Now that there’s legitimate reason to doubt and debate things, it seems the side that was claiming previously that debate was unnecessary because this was “Settled science” has abandoned reasoned arguments for self-promotion and ad hominem attacks. I would consider the comments here mere laughter at how the previously unassailable position of CAGW has fallen into throwing insults rather than talking and debating about how sound their “science” is.

Matt Skaggs
August 17, 2011 7:54 am

RDCII raises some good questions. Thanks to Bill Illis for linking to the paper. S&B 03 is a meta-analysis of various papers that reaches the conclusion that “the 20th century is probably not the
warmest nor a uniquely extreme climatic period of the last millennium.” The primary thrust of the paper is actually the latter half of the conclusion, that studies not performed or sanctioned by the Hockey Team tend to not show anything particularly notable in the recent record. The Hockey Team was incredibly successful at strawmanning S&B 03 as a paleotemperature study by drawing attention to the ill-advised first half of the conclusion. The Team argument had some merit in the sense that precipitation and other tangential studies shed little light on paleotemperature. On the other hand, the second half of the S&B 03 conclusion, that we see little objective evidence of ongoing catastrophe, is well supported and a useful contribution to the literature.

Brian
August 17, 2011 8:20 am

Bravo Stevo. Hansen is the man we’re supposed to be listening to.

PaulH
August 17, 2011 8:30 am

This is a common tack for Dr. Suzuki.
“From The Source, Aug. 16, 2011: David Suzuki is revered by many Canadians, but he is a hypocrite of the highest order. Environmentalist Vivian Krause tells us about the day Suzuki told her to “F%$ Off.”
http://ezralevant.com/2011/08/suzukis-insults.html

Dan Kurt
August 17, 2011 8:32 am

re: Suzuki is a geneticist.
He even blew that expertise in his feud with J. Philippe Rushton who espouses significant heritability of IQ–something becoming more and more obvious.
Dan Kurt

Pamela Gray
August 17, 2011 8:33 am

If a person overstates one scientific opinion, he is likely to overstate others. His salmon predictions were wwwaaayyyy out there and have been refuted by observations (see link). So too has his pontifications on global warming, thus providing evidence that he is lacking a mortar board on these subjects and can safely be ignored as a media-courted expert.
http://www.fpc.org/adultsalmon/adultqueries/Adult_Table_Species_Graph.html

DBD
August 17, 2011 8:38 am

It’s not the first time for the good Doctor…http://www.citycaucus.com/2010/06/temper-temper

wilddog
August 17, 2011 8:57 am

Ran into this guy about ten years ago in northern Saskatchewan. (Canada). He was standing on the side of the road being interviewed by a CBC news crew. (native land claim issues I believe). This was before I was aware of the AGW fraud. I hated this dude even then. Its all I could do to not put my hands on buddy’s steering wheel… well you know the rest. Instead buddy honked his horn repeatedly to get their attention and when he looked over at us there were at least three middle fingers being waved. Its the least we could do for the fruitfly dude.

August 17, 2011 9:04 am

Suzuki: We are familiar with this effect in a car that has sat in the sun. The interior becomes hot because the carbon in the glass keeps the heat in.
Really?… REALLY???????????

G. Karst
August 17, 2011 9:14 am

Let us all try very hard NOT to allow discussion to be sidetracked into the tobacco debate. If we want to discuss tobacco, then let’s start a new thread to discuss it. Please don’t respond to tobacco provocations. GK

A Lovell
August 17, 2011 9:15 am

Megalomania is a terrible thing………….
meg·a·lo·ma·ni·a (mg-l-mn-, -mny)
n.
1. A psychopathological condition in which delusional fantasies of wealth, power, or omnipotence predominate.
2. An obsession with grandiose or extravagant things or actions

August 17, 2011 9:20 am

ferd berple says:
August 16, 2011 at 7:08 pm
If you had any idea how much time I spent poking around there as a kid… We lived a few blocks from there from 1970-1996, and I came to know every rock and tree all along the shore from the Planetarium all the way to Wreck Beach. Though I was a member of the RVYC… Much better sort of clientele there don’t you know. (lol) I believe I still hold the record time for for under 12’s, sailing a Laser solo from the RVYC across to Whytecliff then back again. Ah, the memories…

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