UPDATE: Some new data has come to light, see below.
As Bishop Hill and WUWT readers know, there’s been a lot of condemnation of the way John Cook’s Skeptical Science website treated Dr. Roger Pielke Sr. recently when he attempted to engage the website. Shub Niggarath did a good job of summing up the issue (and demonstrating all the strikeouts of Dr. Pielke’s comments) here, which he calls a “dark day in the climate debate”.
As the issue found its way through the blogosphere, the condemnation of the technique became almost universal. Pielke Sr. tried again, but finally resigned himself and gave up trying to communicate. WUWT received some criticism from SkepticalScience as a rebuttal to the issue of “Christy Crocks” and other less than flattering labels applied by the Skeptical Science website to sceptical scientists whom they don’t like. They objected to the category I had for Al Gore, (Al Gore is an idiot) which I created when Mr. Gore on national television claimed the Earth was “several million degrees” at “2 kilometers or so down”. I thought the comment was idiotic, and thus deserved that label.
In the dialog with Dr. Pielke this label issue was brought up, and I found out about it when he mentioned it in this post: My Interactions With Skeptical Science – A Failed Attempt (So Far) For Constructive Dialog.
I decided the issue of the Gore label, like Dr. Pielke’s complaint about labels like “Christy Crocks”, was valid, and decided immediately to address the issue. It took me about an hour of work to change every Gore related post to a new category (simply Al Gore) and delete the old one. I then sent an email to Dr. Pielke telling him that I had taken the suggestion by Skeptical Science and Dr. Pielke seriously, and changed the category, with the hope that Skeptical Science would follow the example in turn. You can read my letter here.
Meanwhile Skeptical Science dug it its heels, resisting the change, and Josh decided that it might be time to create a satirical cartoon, about how Skeptical Science’s proprietor, John Cook had painted himself into a corner not only with the labeling issue, but because Bishop Hill had caught Skeptical Science doing some post facto revisionism (months afterwards, logged by the Wayback Machine) making moderators inserted rebuttal comments look better, which in turn made commenters original comments look dumber.
Of course the original commenters had no idea they were being demeaned after the fact since the threads were months old and probably never visited again. The exercise was apparently done for the eyes of search engine landings.
Both WUWT and Bishop Hill carried the cartoon.
I figured, since Mr. Cook makes part of his living as a cartoonist, he’d appreciate the work. While he has since removed the reference to his cartoon work from his current Skeptical Science “About us” page, it does survive on the Wayback Machine from December 2007 like those previous versions of commenter web pages that have been edited. A screencap is below:
The cartoon where he spoofs Mr. Gore is something I can’t show here, due to copyright limitations (there’s a paywall now on Cook’s sev.com.au cartooning website) but it does survive in the Wayback Machine here.
So point is, like me, even Mr. Cook has spoofed Mr. Gore in the past, he’s an easy target, especially when he makes absurd claims like the temperature of the interior of the Earth being millions of degrees.
While we haven’t (to my knowledge) heard from Mr. Cook what he thinks about Josh’s latest bit of cartoon satire, we all have heard plenty from Skeptical Science’s active author/moderator “Dana1981”
While we could go on for ages over what was said, what was rebutted, etc, I’m going to focus on one comment from Dana1981 that piqued my interest due to it being a splendid window of opportunity for us all.
Dana wrote in the WUWT cartoon thread:
dana1981 Submitted on 2011/09/24 at 5:42 pmPlease, can people stop using the acronym “SS”? The correct acronym is “SkS”
Dana probably doesn’t realize the magnitude of the opportunity he opened up with that one comment for his beloved Skeptical Science website, hence this post.
For the record: this was my reply:
REPLY: On this we agree, folks please stop using it. Now Dana, would you agree to stop referring to people here and elsewhere using that other distasteful WWII phrase “deniers”. You’ll get major props if you announce that. – Anthony
Note that this wasn’t the first time I admonished WUWT commenters on the issue,I also said it as a footer note in this thread:
Note to commenters, on some other blogs the Skeptical Science website is referred to as SS.com with the obvious violations of Godwins Law immediately applied. Such responses will be snipped here in this thread should they occur.
Dana is obviously upset about the “SS” abbreviation, due to the immediate connection many people have to the feared and reviled Schutzstaffel in World War II. I understand Dana’s concern first hand, because when I first started my SurfaceStations project, I had a few people abbreviate it as SS.org and I asked them to stop for the same reason. I suspect that like me, when Skeptical Science created the name for their website, they had no thought towards this sort of ugly and unfortunate abbreviation usage.
But this distaste for “SS” as an abbreviated label opens up (or paints a corner if you prefer) another issue for Skeptical Science – their continued serial use of that other ugly and unfortunate WWII phrase “deniers” in the context of “holocaust deniers”. Of course some will try to argue there’s no connection, but we know better, especially since the person who is credited with popularizing the usage, columnist Ellen Goodman, makes a clear unambiguous connection:
I would like to say we’re at a point where global warming is impossible to deny. Let’s just say that global warming deniers are now on a par with Holocaust deniers, though one denies the past and the other denies the present and future. – Ellen Goodman, Boston Globe, February 9, 2007 “No change in political climate” on the Wayback Machine here
Skeptical Science authors, moderators, and commenters know that people involved in the climate debate here and elsewhere don’t like the “denier” label any more than Skeptical Science like the “SS” label.
The big difference though becomes clear when you do a site specific Google Search:
A similar search on WUWT for “SS” using the internal WordPress engine search yields two results, Dana’s comment/my response, and another commenter asking about the issue which is fair game. The other handful of “SS” references Dana 1981 were removed from the thread per his request (click to enlarge image):
So, since Dana1981 has not answered my query about the use of the word “denier” on Skeptical Science and since there is such a huge disparity in usages (thousands versus two), I thought this would be a good opportunity to bring the issue forward.
In addition to their own sensitivity over ugly and unfortunate WWII labels, Skeptical Science has two other good reasons to stop using the term “denier”.
1. Their own comments policy page, which you can see here on the Wayback Machine (Feb 18th, 2011 since I can’t find a link anymore from the main page, correct me if I am wrong), emphasis mine:
No ad hominem attacks. Attacking other users or anyone holding a different opinion to you is common in debates but gets us no closer to understanding the science. For example, comments containing the words ‘religion’ and ‘conspiracy’ tend to get deleted. Comments using labels like ‘alarmist’ and ‘denier’ are usually skating on thin ice.
Interestingly, the first appearance of the comments policy page (Jan 17, 2010) said this:
No ad hominem attacks. Attacking other users, scientists or anyone holding a different opinion to you is common in debates but gets us no closer to understanding the science. For example, comments containing the words ‘alarmist’, ‘religion’ and ‘conspiracy’ are usually skating on thin ice.
So clearly they have moved to address the use of the word “denier” in policy, which seems to have appeared in March 2010, but strangely I can’t find any link to the comments policy page on their main page today that would allow users to know of it. Again correct me if I have missed it.
2. The other good reason is their recent Australian Museum Eureka Prize award (Congratulations by the way to John Cook) which has this to say in their code of conduct policy
Not calling people you disagree with on science issues “deniers” with a broad brush would be consistent with both Skeptical Science’s and The Australian Museum policies on how to treat people. Mr. Cook might even ask the Museum to remove the phrase from their press release (2011 Australian Museum Eureka Prizes Winner Press Release pdf – 1,419 kb) since it clearly violates the Australian Museum’s own written policy:
While he and Dana1981 may not realize it, there’s an excellent opportunity here for Mr. Cook to redeem himself and his Skeptical Science website in the eyes of many.
My “modest proposal” is simply this:
Make a declaration on your website, visible to all, that the use of the word “denier” is just as distasteful as the use of “SS” to abbreviate the website Skeptical Science, and pledge not to allow the use of the word there again. Update your own comments policy and ask the Australian Museum to adhere to their own policy of respect on the treatment of people, and remove it from their press release as well. As Eureka winner, you are now in a unique position to ask for this.
In turn, I’ll publicly ask people not to use “SS” in referring to your website, and to ask that in the future the phrase “AGW proponents” is used to describe what some people call “warmists” and ask the many bloggers and persona’s I know and communicate with to do the same. I’m pretty sure they would be thrilled to return the gesture of goodwill if you act upon this. I’ll bet Josh would even draw a new cartoon for you, one suitable for framing. (Update: Josh agrees, see comments)
You have a unique opportunity to make a positive change in the climate debate Mr. Cook, take the high road, and grab that brass ring. Thank you for your consideration. – Anthony
——————–
UPDATE: Tom Curtis in Australia in comments works mightily to defend the use of the phrase “climate denier”. One of his arguments is that the word “denier” has a long period of use, going back to 1532, and of course he makes the claim (as most AGW proponents do) that “we shouldn’t be upset about the phrase” because there (and I’m paraphrasing) “really isn’t much of a connection”. He didn’t accept examples such as the one Ellen Goodman made in 2007 that really propelled the phrase into worldwide consciousness via her syndicated column.
So I thought about this for a bit, how could I demonstrate that the word “denier”, by itself, has strong connotations to the atrocities of WWII? Then I remembered the ngram tool from Google Labs, which tracks word usage over time in books. So I ran the word “denier”, and here is the result:
Note the sharp peak right around WWII and afterwards, as books and stories were written about people who denied the horrible atrocities ever happened. No clearer connection between WWII atrocities denial and the word “denier” by itself could possibly exist. It’s a hockey stick on the uptake.
Curiously, the phrase “climate denier” is flatlined in books, probably because many book editors rightly see it as an offensive term and don’t allow it in the manuscript:
UPDATE2: In comments, Tom Curtis now tries to claim that “holocaust denial” is a recent invention, and thus the peak use of the word “denier” after WWII has no correlation with the war. This updated graph shows otherwise:
As would be expected, the word “Nazi” starts a sharp peak around 1939, and then starts tapering off after the war ends. In parallel, and as the war progresses and ends, the word “denier” starts peaking after the war, as more and more people denied the atrocities. But as we see in the Jewish Virtual Library historical account, “denial” started right after the war.
Paul Rassinier, formerly a “political” prisoner at Buchenwald, was one of the first European writers to come to the defense of the Nazi regime with regard to their “extermination” policy. In 1945, Rassinier was elected as a Socialist member of the French National Assembly, a position which he held for less than two years before resigning for health reasons. Shortly after the war he began reading reports of extermination in Nazi death camps by means of gas chambers and crematoria. His response was, essentially, “I was there and there were no gas chambers.” It should be remembered that he was confined to Buchenwald, the first major concentration camp created by the Hitler regime (1937) and that it was located in Germany. Buchenwald was not primarily a “death camp” and there were no gas chambers there. He was arrested and incarcerated in 1943. By that time the focus of the “Final Solution” had long since shifted to the Generalgouvernement of Poland. Rassinier used his own experience as a basis for denying the existence of gas chambers and mass extermination at other camps. Given his experience and his antisemitism, he embarked upon a writing career which, over the next 30 years, would place him at the center of Holocaust denial. In 1948 he published Le Passage de la Ligne, Crossing the Line, and, in 1950, The Holocaust Story and the Lie of Ulysses. In these early works he attempted to make two main arguments: first, while some atrocities were committed by the Germans, they have been greatly exaggerated and, second, that the Germans were not the perpetrators of these atrocities — the inmates who ran the camps instigated them. In 1964 he published The Drama of European Jewry, a work committed to debunking what he called “the genocide myth.” The major focus of this book was the denial of the gas chambers in the concentration camps, the denial of the widely accepted figure of 6 million Jews exterminated and the discounting of the testimony of the perpetrators following the war. These three have emerged in recent years as central tenets of Holocaust denial.
These books and the reaction to them clearly account for the post war peak in the word “denier” [at least in part, the word denier also is used with nylon stockings which came into vogue during the period – see comment from Verity Jones] . My point is that the peak of the word “denier”, is associated with WWII and the atrocities committed that some people did not believe, and wrote about it. Unless Mr. Curtis wishes to start disputing the Jewish historical account, clearly the peak is related and I find it amusing he is working so hard to distance the word from this association with WWII. Sadly, it is what users of the word do to justify their use of it when using it to describe skeptics, which is the whole point of this post.
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Note to commenters and moderators – extra diligence is required on this thread, and tolerance for off topic, rants, or anything else that doesn’t contribute positively to the conversation is low.









Tom Curtis,
You’re right “climate realist” it is far from neutral and has all the associations I was talking about 1:42 pm. I was comparing it to denier. Mea culpa.
All – please consider that the term ‘denier’ can also refer to ladies hosiery, and would have been in very common usage in the 1940s.
Tom:
Doubter. What’s wrong with that? It’s neutral, accurately expresses the perspective (if used in the context of AGW, as opposed to the inaccurate terms “Climate Change” and “Global Warming), and has no possibility of being confused w/ Holocaust denier.
Anthony – the peak of ‘denier’ correlates with the introduction of the term ‘nylons’ http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/graph?content=denier%2C+nylons&year_start=1800&year_end=2000&corpus=0&smoothing=3
I suspect that is a more likely reason for a hike in its use.
The greatest threat to freedom of speech is the perceived threat of offending someone, it is a divisive and inflammatory trend that may be well-meaning but in practice muzzles everybody.
Verity Jones says:
September 26, 2011 at 3:10 pm
“Anthony – the peak of ‘denier’ correlates with the introduction of the term ‘nylons’ ”
Great catch! 😉
Further to my comment on the update, I have refined my search skills on Ngram, mostly by noticing case sensitivity. The link shows a search for the terms “Holocaust denier”, “holocaust denier”, and “denier”.
http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/graph?content=Holocaust+denier%2Cholocaust+denier%2C+denier&year_start=1800&year_end=2000&corpus=0&smoothing=3
My conclusions still stand, but my calculated proportion of uses of “Holocaust denier” is too low.
REPLY: Your conclusions are a straw man argument. I’ve never seen anyone argue so hard to keep using a repugnant term. Of course a look at your blogroll explains why.
Like it or not, the word denier is associated with WWII atrocities. No amount of convoluted logic will change that. Of course a courteous and caring person would be apologetic for using a term that people find distasteful, instead you (and especially the friends you keep) champion for it.
And, as I’ve said twice before now, this argument is NOT ABOUT YOU OR WHAT YOU THINK ABOUT IT, its an offer to the Website Skeptical Science.
– Anthony
Tom Curtis
When I started looking into climate science, I was a warmist, in fact I was an alarmist, desperately concerned that the scientific evidence showed so clearly that we were facing potential catastrophe as a result of our actions. I knew about the phony science used to try to deny all this, that the climate deniers used. I had studied John Cook’s 54 debunks of “climate skeptics” false arguments (this was 3 years ago), and thought I understood it all. I thought I was being fair. But I was frantic with people in denial, so expletives were very natural.
However, one thing saved me. I care about truth. So at the same time as learning that Monckton and Easterbrook had abused science so badly it wasn’t worth even looking at their work, I kept on spending a couple of hours each week just checking the science. I started to get whiffs of something different. Only whiffs because no proper science website referred to anything else but what Cook explained so well. And when I examined the whiffs, Cook’s answers held up for a long time. But since I’ve been badly on the wrong side of misunderstandings, I wanted to be sure I had the full truth.
Suddenly all hell broke loose. I realized that global temperatures were not rising in synch with CO2. I learned that there were eminent scientists who were not, as Al Gore and Oreskes said, “either kooks or crooks”, who did not believe in CAGW. I realized that Monckton was saying some extremely important truths about Al Gore’s serial rubbish entitled “An Inconvenient Truth”. I discovered WUWT. I realized there was a network of competent skeptics’ websites that none of the official scientific outlets nor the BBC even mentioned.
Science – corrupt?????? what the – £$)%$ 0 *^$^)($ – how can Science be corrupt? What and whom can I trust???????????? This is worse than the threat of CAGW!!!!!!!!!!!!!! But Cook has provided answers to all the points – or has he?????????????? Heck, I’ve got an impossible job to do, to teach myself the science so I can check each of those 54 “disproofs”.
For about six weeks I swung violently back and forth in my opinions, as evidence came in for each “side” in turn. Thankfully I was on extended sick note, so I had time to do something for the planet – write it all up to help others find their way through this nightmare.
Click my name.
Many people taught me to temper my language. It has taken time, because both the original “warmist” thesis and the later realization of corruption at the heart of Science are highly disconcerting, and both raised my emotions to expletive levels. Both the moderators here and my strongest “warmist” critics have helped me. I’m grateful to all of you. Including you, Tom.
Anthony, tonight I’ve checked my piece re. use of the words “warmist” and “alarmist” and changed the wording with some, but not all. Sometimes I felt I needed those words to describe things accurately. They are used in context, with evidence, and as mindful as I can be about courtesy.
Verity Jones says:
September 26, 2011 at 3:10 pm
Anthony – the peak of ‘denier’ correlates with the introduction of the term ‘nylons’ http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/graph?content=denier%2C+nylons&year_start=1800&year_end=2000&corpus=0&smoothing=3
I suspect that is a more likely reason for a hike in its use.
Absolutely, during the 60s in the UK I hardly ever encountered the word ‘denier’ associated with the verb ‘deny’, but very frequently saw ‘denier’ referring to the fineless of nylon stockings!
Nylon stockings were introduced in 1939.
“Please, can people stop using the acronym “SS”? The correct acronym is “SkS””
The Communist Regime Weapon?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SKS
Verity Jones says:
September 26, 2011 at 3:10 pm
“Anthony – the peak of ‘denier’ correlates with the introduction of the term ‘nylons’ ”
Heh, how interesting. I’ve added some historical references from the Jewish Virtual Museum also, related to publications that started appearing after the war, so there’s probably a mix of the two uses of the word. Still clearly from the historical references, the denial of atrocities started shortly after the war.
The whole issue is that the word “denier” is repugnant in the way Tom Curtis and the friends he has on his blogroll of his website use it. Is essence he’s denying the association of the word denier with WWII, which I suppose makes his argument a D^2.
Or:
Hot-Air Heretics.
Climate {Contrarians | Cynics}
Dioxide {Dissenters | Dissidents | Deviationists}
“Climate Cynics” carries no hint of approbation, but rather one of disapproval, so it ought to be acceptable to Tom Curtis. “Climate Contrarians” and {Dissenters | Dissidents | Deviationists} are neutral, like “Warmists,” so again they ought to be OK, though not as tempting to TC.
(They are of course shorthand terms, where “climate” and “dioxide” stand for “the-climate-is-endangered-by-CO2.”)
I noted this in a previous post, but have seen no replies.
I have to say that “skeptic” is appropriate in some cases, and “denial” (not just a river in Egypt) is appropriate in others. A scientific skeptic continually doubts, tests, checks their data, and is cautious about coming to conclusions without solid evidence. A person in denial, on the other hand, rejects solid evidence in favor of a more personally acceptable (albeit poorly or unsupported) conclusion. Different situations, different appropriate terms based upon the approach.
Now, the decision to consider something skepticism or denial is a judgement call, albeit in many cases based upon a great deal of available evidence.
So I’ll ask everyone here – if someone is clearly rejecting evidence in favor of a more pleasing and poorly supported conclusion, and that term is disliked, what term would be appropriate? You can certainly argue on a case-by-case basis as to the validity of that judgement (and I would argue that exactly what someone judged to be in denial should do), but just what term would be appropriate?
Anthony, thank you for that powerful, clinching evidence that your ngrams provide! To think that without Tom’s frantic attempts to shift word meanings from common perception, and your own quick wits and passion for fairness, this evidence would not have come to light.
So I’ll ask everyone here – if someone is clearly rejecting evidence in favor of a more pleasing and poorly supported conclusion, and that term is disliked, what term would be appropriate?
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bedwetter……………..
Lucy, I suspect the next argument somebody will make will be to point to the red and blue lines on the ngram graph I provided and say “correlation is not causation”.
The spinning is amusing to say the least.
So Tom Curtis,
What does your “research done properly” make of this?
http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/graph?content=SS&year_start=1800&year_end=2000&corpus=0&smoothing=3
If that peak after WWII were indeed related to holocaust deniers, then specific searches for “holocaust denial” and “holocaust denier” should also peak in the 1950’s. Alas they do not — both results start in the 1980’s. The peak truly IS related to “the mass in grams per 9000 meters”, as a quick perusal of the titles will confirm.
http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/graph?content=holocaust+denial%2Cholocaust+denier&year_start=1800&year_end=2000&corpus=0&smoothing=3
In the other hand, a search of “denier yarn” exactly matches the 1950’s peak, once again showing the true source of the peak.
Tim, sorry but “exactly matches” is false.

http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/graph?content=denier+yarn%2C+denier&year_start=1800&year_end=2000&corpus=0&smoothing=3
No match there. Not even close.
Since the issue is about nylon stockings one would expect the words nylon and denier to match reasonably well in
frequencytime and amplitude, they don’t. the word “denier” has it’s own separate peak from nylon and variations. Check the historical references from the Jewish Virtual Museum in the body of the post. Books were published right after the war, denying that the atrocities happened. While nylon stockings and the related term “denier” for yarn etc certainly grew after the war, the peak for nylon and denier don’t match in time.The second book denying atrocities was published in 1948. Given the time it would take to spread and the publishing process then, reactions to it, along with use of the use of the word denier in the context of such rebuttals would take a few months to be published. the 1950 peak matches that timeline pretty well. I’ve added a vertical black line to prevent eyeballing error:
Also Tim, you are making the assumption that “Holocaust Denial” would be in use at the time to describe the issue, but if you check your Etmyology, you find that The Television mini-series Holocaust is credited with introducing the term into common parlance after 1978. So, the term back then was related to denial of atrocities, as “holocaust” hadn’t been put into wide use then.
Reference: Alan Steinweis provides a survey of this phenomenon, “The Holocaust and American Culture”, published in the journal Holocaust and Genocide Studies, 2001.
KR asks “if someone is clearly rejecting evidence in favor of a more pleasing and poorly supported conclusion…” Every time there is a thread like this here, that old strawman gets retrieved from the closet. Except in a negligible number of cases, the act of “denial” is situation dependent. “Someone clearly rejecting evidence” usually refers to someone who disagrees with a specific set of statements on SkS. It is your choice to extend it further to a generalized label.
Anthony
I have my own blog at MSNBC’s Newsvine. It is a far left leaning website as one might imagine as being from MSNBC and I have a strict code on my threads of not allowing the use of the “d” word or the word “warmist”. We used to call these words flame bait, doing nothing but raising the temperature of the discussion. I get a lot of howls from liberal leaning folks for doing it but so far the MSNBC/Newsvine staff have allowed me to moderate in this fashion.
Anthony, the issue is not about just nylon stockings — it is about synthetic fibers used form all sorts of applications.
The peak for “denier” and “denier nylon” do indeed match quite well. So do the peaks for “denier rayon” and “denier yarn” and “denier acetate” and “15 denier” and “100 denier” (common sizes of yarn). These all suggest that books on the subject of denier as relate to filaments peaked in the 1950’s.
Nylon itself continues to be a popular topic, but there is no reason to assume that the peak for books about nylon itself would match the peak for books about nylon filaments. In fact, a search of “nylon stockings” also peaks in the 1950’s.
Try the “denier” search and look thru the actual hits for the 1950’s. Tell me how many you have to look thru the find the first one relating to holocaust denial. I gave up after the first 50 hits about yarn and coins.
http://www.google.com/search?q=%22denier%22&tbs=bks:1,cdr:1,cd_min:1951,cd_max:1958&lr=lang_en
I am not denying that some forms of holocaust denial started soon after WWII as you suggest, and I find it repugnant that anyone would deny the death and suffering of millions of people. The simple fact is that the search for “denier” matches the topics about yarn much better than the topics about the holocaust. There is no evidence from your graphs that “denier” is tied to “holocaust”.
REPLY: The fact that the word denier looks like a bell curve in the graph above (and in link below) is a classic event driven spike and decay. While nylon yarn, thread, stockings, etc, could most certainly be a partial component (probably the broader pedestal in the word denier graph) it can’t be the full component. There’s simply not enough amplitude. If you look at my comparison graphs with the word Nazi, you’ll see a similar event driven interest spike, delayed which would be expected as the war ended, atrocities discovered, then atrocities denied in books, and reactions to the denial.
http://ngrams.googlelabs.com/graph?content=denier%2Cnylon+stockings%2Cnylon+thread%2Cnylon+yarn%2C+nazi&year_start=1800&year_end=2008&corpus=0&smoothing=3
Sorry Tim, I’m not buying your yarn. – Anthony
Eric (skeptic)
Actually, Eric, I would apply that judgement to anyone, on either side of the discussion, who held an opinion contrary to the mass of evidence. Not a strawman argument, if you accept the existence of an objective reality.
You have very distinctly avoided the question – if “denier” is a ‘bad term’ for someone clearly rejecting evidence in favor of a more pleasing and poorly supported conclusion, due to the Holocaust associations, and despite clarification by those using the term, then:
What is a better, accurate term???
KR, there are more accurate terms for every situation, they can be customized as much as needed to avoid generalization. One simple one is “coal state politician”. Another might be even simpler: “troll”. Each depends on precisely what the person says in each context. A troll might skip from argument to argument. Someone who argues for low sensitivity (by pointing out the red squares that are routinely left out of the depiction of the sensitivity “probability” distributions) could be “in denial of 3C sensitivity” but is more accurately “someone who disputes sensitivity evidence including the claim that there are multiple independent lines of it”.
Using a more general term like denier is mostly a sign that the poster is not putting his/her fullest effort into making a proper label.
KR:
It has been brought to the attention of SkS that denier is not a palatable term. The use of the term on SkS is often and done with the intent to demean and inflame.
The distraction that this causes is the intent, as the word denier comes out when some fail to read posted literature for what is actually says, instead of with a slant.
Camburn
Again – what is the appropriate term for someone (on whatever side of the debate) who engages in such behavior?
“Denial” and “Denier” are, from my perspective, appropriate terms for ignoring the evidence. Do you have a better (more palatable) term for that?