Happy birthday to WUWT – 5 years today

I’ve sort of dreaded writing a post for this day, mainly because it brings out a lot of emotions when I look back over 5 years. I started this blog under the auspices of the local newspaper, the Chico Enterprise Record, 5 years ago today. Originally I told the editor that I wanted to do a broad based gee whiz sort of science blog, and that’s what I set out to do.

I do remember saying that “I’ll try to keep the posts on global warming balanced with other topics”. We all know how that worked out. As a result, I branched out from the newspaper to a better publishing platform than the kludgey Moveable Type the newspaper used, to WordPress and my blog now does more traffic than all the newspapers, radio, and TV stations in my little town combined. Here’s my very first blog post on my old newspaper blog 5 years ago today. A summary and thoughts follow that.

There’s lots I could say, in way too many words, so I’ll just go on a series of bullet points as I think about things.

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly

The Good:

  • I’ve learned a tremendous amount about climate science that I did not know before. Every day here is an education.
  • I’ve broadened my horizons – my opinion and ideas are sought regularly, WUWT is cited worldwide. I find this remarkable and humbling.
  • I have friends all over the world now, something I never had before I started blogging. I wanted a pen pal in grade school, now I have thousands.
  • WUWT regularly beats all other climate related blogs on the planet, I’m particularly fond of the fact WUWT beats RealClimate every day of the week and twice on Sundays in traffic and reach. WUWT is almost always in the top 5 blogs worldwide on WordPress and on Wikio.
  • WUWT has won two “Best Science Blog” awards for which I’m revered by some, reviled by others.
  • Cartoons by Josh – I never thought I’d have a talented cartoonist help me get the word out. Thank you Josh for the laughs and for the biting satire.
  • WUWT has 94.6 million page views now, and will reach 100 million page views soon. This is the 6120th story, there are 705,385 approved reader comments as of this writing.
  • I have people who see this blog important enough to want to help me with it, moderators, guest posters, people who leave tips and email me stories. I’m forever grateful to you all.
  • I’ve written two publications on station siting, one peer reviewed in JGR, the other published by Heartland, which made NOAA react to it because it exposed just how poor their climate network was. A second peer reviewed paper is coming. A federal GAO report this summer confirmed what I discovered; the climate surface observing network is a mess.
  • I’ve seen more of the USA and the world than I ever thought possible. I’ve surveyed hundreds of weather stations in the USA, toured Australia, and seen Belgium to attend a conference.
  • I regularly converse with scientists world wide, and they kindly offer guest posts and articles here. I’m humbled.
  • I’m friends with Apollo 17 Astronaut Harrison Schmitt and aviation pioneer Burt Rutan, heroes of my youth, and now intellectual supporters of my work. I’m humbled even more.
  • WUWT broke Climategate – that was a exhilarating moment, writing that simple post and hitting publish at Dulles airport just before the door closed to my flight to California, then the terror of wondering over a 5 hour flight if I did the right thing and how it would be reacted to.
  • While many won’t admit it, logs and emails show me that scientists, media, bloggers, and some former politicians worldwide read WUWT. While they may hate what I and others have to say here, they can’t ignore it.
  • Al Gore and Bill Nye The Science Guy are (Nye recently responded here) is still mum though, about this: Replicating Al Gore’s Climate 101 video experiment shows that his “high school physics” could never work as advertised.
  • My proudest moment over the last five years? Being mentioned by Matt Ridley in his epic RSA speech just a couple of weeks ago. That was emotional for me.

The Bad:

  • While there’s a lot of good people out there, I’ve realized that there’s a lot of really angry and irrational people out there too that will do everything in their power to see me and this blog denigrated and reviled whenever possible. You know who you are. I have enemies all over the world now, something I never had before I started blogging. It is a strange realization for me.
  • As a result of the first point, sometimes I let my humanity get the better of me, and I’ve written a few things I’m not proud of. To those I’ve inadvertently offended, you have my sincerest apologies. To those who deserved it, you have my regret that I wasn’t more succinct.
  • This blog has taken a measure of my life that I could have spent doing other things. For example, I used to own a fishing boat I’d use on weekends and I used to take real two week vacations where I wasn’t trying to scout out weather stations. My wife and my kids see less of me than they should as I spend way too much time keeping up to date on the latest in climate science and the hoopla surrounding it, relaying it to you all.
  • Running the blog has affected my health; too much keyboard time has added girth, blood pressure, and stress.
  • Running the blog has affected my business, mostly with time and focus, but there’s some ugly parts too.

The Ugly:

  • The 10:10 video, Hansen’s death trains, Greenpeace’s “We know who you are. We know where you live. We know where you work. And we be many, but you be few.” commentary, and Grist’s “Nuremberg style trials for climate skeptics” – ’nuff said.
  • I’ve had a number of incidents where the ugly side of the climate debate has confronted me and my family. This includes a mentally imbalanced woman from Nevada City who has stalked me and interfered with my business and livelihood and a host of cowards who work in the shadows prying into my life because I write things they disagree with. They look for imagined “big oil” connections everywhere, because well, “he just couldn’t be doing this on his own”. Heh.
  • I have evidence that my trash has been collected at my office by somebody other than the trash service. All trash is shredded now, because it really is none of your damn business. If you try it again, please do smile for the new cameras at my home and office and I’ll make you a star right here the next morning.
  • Last year somebody in Toronto setup a fake website just one letter off my business domain name to mirror my own company website, and made a shopping cart that appeared to take orders but delivered no product. It took me months to discover what was going on and to get it shut down. Meanwhile, it damaged my business.
  • Also in Toronto, about the same time my business website was fake mirrored, a former geology student, male model, ladies man, celebrity cook, marathon runner and Mac repairman setup a mirror WUWT blog, also just one letter different than the WattsUpWithThat.com domain name, to regularly write denigrating and juvenile things about me and the people who contribute here. While I can’t yet make a legally binding connection between the two spoof websites that popped up at about the same time from the same city, and it could be coincidence, it is very suspicious. I hope I’m wrong.
  • For daring to ask for a factual correction to a slimy article, it was suggested that I have sex with farm animals, see here and scroll down to the bottom.

In retrospect, while the ugly side of the bizarre world of climate activism is something I’d rather not have experienced, it does tell me one thing: WUWT is being effective, because if it weren’t, there would be no need for these people to do these illegal and juvenile things.

Factoid: I used to be a climate alarmist, but now I’m a skeptic.

Back in 1990, I used to be just like some of the climate activists today. Inspired by what Dr. James Hansen said to congress in his famous speech in June 1988, I felt like I had to “do something”. That culminated in nationwide project with the National Arbor Day Foundation working with TV weathercasters and meteorologists nationwide to convince their viewers to plant trees to offset CO2. In 1990 and 1991, I delivered a video graphics presentation for local TV weathercasters and meteorologist to narrate on this subject for the benefit of their viewers. It was delivered nationally via satellite courtesy of CBS Newspath, where I had done some work and had connections. I can remember browbeating TV people then to carry the program I developed because “it really is the most important thing you can do right now”. A 1990 National Arbor Day foundation report showed that 174 TV stations participated and they mailed out over 240,000 Colorado Blue Spruce seedlings to viewers as a result.  Truly, I felt as if I had “done something”, and I can relate to how many people who feel motivated to “save the planet” must feel today.

Then, in 1996, I saw this graph. And I said to myself, “how does CO2 know which counties to heat more than others”? After that I was no longer much worried about CO2 and climate, but I did become worried that science was ignoring the measurement environment. It wasn’t until ten years later that I did something about it.

Then much later I discovered that Dr. Hansen’s scientific position was so weak in 1988, he resorted to stagecraft. So much for my “save the planet” inspiration from him.

About my experiences with professional climate scientists:

I’ve had interactions with professional climate scientists though these five years, and I’ve taken them for face value in what they told me. In 2008 I visited NCDC at their invitation and in the spring of 2011, I visited BEST in Berkeley. My biggest regret is that I put too much trust in these scientists, because quite frankly I couldn’t believe (at the time) they’d do the things they did related to the station data gathered by myself and by volunteers of the surface station project. Apparently, it was so threatening that in each case, my trust had to be publicly abused so that these scientists could pre-empt my own work. I won’t trust them again, and I won’t be so quick to trust anyone else on the opposite side of climate science again, especially where money and prestige is involved.

I have another paper coming, with a broader perspective, and there’s no way I’m going to share that data ahead of time with these people again. Everybody will have to wait until publication.

What’s to come?

I have ideas for a peer reviewed version of this blog, as well as a new format that will open it up more and allow for a greater variety of publications and interactive media. Look for that in the coming weeks and months. I’m also planning a “letters to the editor” feature, but with a twist. I also hope to take a vacation where I have no electronic tether of any kind that is on my person or can be reached.  I really need to unplug for awhile.

Thank you.

I wish to thank all of you that have helped me, encouraged me, sent me letters of support, and who have offered kind comments. There’s way too many of you to list individually, but know that dozens of people are in my thoughts as I write this. I wish to thank all of the people who visit here every day, and who comment and link WUWT elsewhere to help spread the word.

I must name a few special people though. Please take no offense if you aren’t named. I thank David Little for giving me a start with the local newspaper blog, Steve McIntyre for inspiration, Dr. Roger Pielke Senior for his trust and encouragement, Dave Stealey for keeping the faith, Evan Jones for making lemonade with the Rev’s special Holy Water, Willis for being Willis here, Mosh, Charles The Moderator for keeping me on the straight and narrow, and James Goodridge for helping me see beyond the data. There’s also a very special person I can’t name, but I hope you enjoyed the WUWT mugs and T-shirts I sent.

Most of all I thank my family and friends for enduring my path through the ugly side of climate blogging.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
377 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
November 17, 2011 6:22 am

It is important, Anthony, what you do! What you have done. I thank you. My children thank you. All of our posterity will thank you. You mentioned that you once thought the threat of AGW was so immense that it was the most important thing you could address. Well, it is not the threat of human actions burning fuel, it is the threat of forcibly halting the burning that is the threat. Broadcasting the truth that CO2 is one of the most important ingredients to life and NOT a pollutant is still one of the most important things we can do, and you are our champion! Thank you! We must continue to expose confirmation bias and grant-lead science in all regards, especially where it has become so corrupt–in climate science.
Again, to Anthony and all who work so hard to support this blog, thank you.

Warren
November 17, 2011 6:25 am

Congratulations Anthony, and Happy Anniversary to WUWT from a daily reader.

ImranCan
November 17, 2011 6:30 am

Anthony – you don’t know me and I don’t know you. You live in the USA, I live on the tropical island of Borneo.
I am scientist by training and career and you have helped me regain my faith in the scientific necessity of saying “I don’t believe that, because I have asked a simple question and not received a straight answer.” In the late 90’s I couldn’t get a straight answer when I asked why the single European currency was such a great idea, and in 2007 I couldn’t get a straight answer when I asked how Al Gores graph of CO2 and temperature was able to show such perfect correlation when the temperature system is so obviously complex. And I never received a straight answer when I asked why the Maldives will drown when they have survived over 100m of sea level rise in the last 10,000 years.
We live in a world where we are constantly being made to feel stupid or wrong or different if we ask simple questions which challenge orthodoxy. We live in a world where so many people are ready to take up false idols because they cannot think for themselves and are encouraged by a global media which employs so many who also cannot think for themselves. Everything is against us except for a few small places, like WattUpWithThat. What you do is important because for those of us that do ask simple questions and need straight answers, there are not many places left to go. Thank you.

Lance
November 17, 2011 6:34 am

Thank you Anthony,
many years ago (when i worked for Environment Canada), it was called global cooling.(70’s)
then it became global warming caused by co2, and i just couldn’t go there, and started looking.
one of the first sites i found was icecap.us, but yours was very soon after and your 2 sites along with others are a daily cruise so that i can learn more from the people who actually want to find out information, without the bias of the LSM.
Thank you and all your Moderators, contributors and your family who have been your help and guidance.
PS, one cupcake is missing, so I think the member of “union of concerned scientists” got that one…

pyromancer76
November 17, 2011 6:36 am

Anthony, congratulations on five magnificent curiousity-inspiring and myth-busting (of pseudo-science) years. We would be so much lesser without you. We stand more proud and tall for the truths of science and the scientific method because of you.
I imagine your expanding girth and raising blood pressure is partly due to your ability both to hold the myriad projections that come with interacting on a blog and to contain (process and evaluate) the projections along with the truths, Not many can do this. I wish for you a regular physical workout everyday so your bodymind can remain at the level of your great intellect and humanity.
I concur with Martin Brumby, the first commenter (November 17, 2011 at 12:14 am) of your fifth anniversary blog: “ANTHONY, YOU ARE ONE OF THE FEW GREAT HEROS WE HAVE FROM THE C21st.”

commieBob
November 17, 2011 6:37 am

charles the moderator says:
November 17, 2011 at 2:30 am
Q: How many activists does it take to change a light bulb?
A: Activists don’t change anything.

Activism consists of intentional efforts to bring about change. In trying to fight the AGW myth, are we not all activists. Are you saying we should all just give up and go home? 😉

Bob Wilson
November 17, 2011 6:40 am

Anthony – I started reading your blog in January, 2007, following a link from Drudge. What caught my attention at that time was a graph showing temp data from RSS, UAH, HadCru, and GISS – all trending down, in direct conflict with the meme of rising CO2 levels causing temp increases. I have learned much since and am greatful for all the time and effort, and yes, passion you have put into your excellent blog.
You are, without question, the standard, the peer in informing us with well-researched, well-written information. Thank you so much.
I pray for you and your family.
Bob W in NC

SOYLENT GREEN
November 17, 2011 6:42 am

Alas JohnWHo, they don’t make “fifths” anymore. It’s all metric now–but I share the sentiment, if nothing else.
Happy Birthday WUWT.

jack morrow
November 17, 2011 6:43 am

Thanks for a great educational site and a fun one too.

Jeremy
November 17, 2011 6:47 am

Brilliant Blog. Well Done! You are akin to Morpheus fighting the Matrix. One small team fighting the ubiquitous evil propaganda machine. Since you started, I imagine there are millions that have been saved from the Matrix. Sadly there are still many many millions who remain plugged into the virtual reality fed to them by the machine.

Bill in Vigo
November 17, 2011 6:47 am

Six years ago last month I was pronounced cancer free. Due to the effects of the cancer and the resulting chemotherapy the return to normal health has been a real triumph. I have never returned to full ability to work and am now retired/disabled. WUWT was a life saver for me. After having a fruitful happy working experience and never standing still for 55 years and then having to give it all up. The reading of WUWT consumed much of my time and gave me a great education on the climate topic. I was already a skeptic but your methods and calm respectful manner helped me to understand more than any ever before. Mr. Watts I appreciate your time and the hints that you have sent my way privately over the years. You sir are a scholar and a gentleman. God bless you. We need many more of your ilk.
With great respect and gratitude,
Bill Derryberry

November 17, 2011 6:50 am

Your blog sure gave me pause to think. Thanks for all of your hard work.

November 17, 2011 6:53 am

Interestingly, I ctrl=F’d the names of some of your regular detractors who come here to snark, and not one of them has acknowledged your contribution. No surprise, just sayin’.

Bill Illis
November 17, 2011 6:55 am

100 million page views.
Across the whole world reaching an untold number of people. It is hard to imagine what impact you have had Anthony but it is very important. Congratulations.

John Silver
November 17, 2011 7:00 am

Congratulations!
(And take it a little easier)

James Sexton
November 17, 2011 7:02 am

Congrats Anthony, and to the rest that make this the first stop for so many. Well done, and I look forward to celebrating the tenth with you all!

Theo Goodwin
November 17, 2011 7:02 am

Anthony,
There is a special genius behind WUWT and you are that genius. I was astounded at the high quality of WUWT when I discovered it at the time of Climategate and I remain astounded today. There is no question that WUWT is the best blog of any kind. You have earned a Nobel in Letters, a Pulitzer Prize, and many more. In addition, you have earned sainthood through your tireless efforts as you support WUWT and move it forward. Your many successes in presenting the truth about climate science and climate propaganda are celebrated throughout the world.
I pray that you get the time off that you want.

November 17, 2011 7:04 am

Dave’s post reminds me of Are You Ever Lucky by Dr. Suess.
“Consider poor Mr.Potter, T crosser I dotter; He spends his days out in Van Nuys; crossing T’s and dotting I’s. You are so much luckier than him”.
All of us who come to Watt’s place, where the light shines just a bit brighter, are ever so lucky.
I was directed to this site when Climategate broke and have enjoyed the ride ever since.
Congratulations Anthony on the 5th anniversary of your excellent site.

Gareth Davies
November 17, 2011 7:05 am

Hi Anthony, Congratulations.
I wrote about the perils of Manmade CO2 in 1990 as part of my degree. In 2000 my Mother asked me whether I thought Global Warming was man made. My answer was no, because by then the MSM had ramped it up so high that everything was catastrophic and becoming unbelievable (tipping points, melting ice etc.). By 2008 I had broadband at home so surfing and lurking became a hobby. I thought I’d try and find out the facts behind CO2’s powerful influence on Climate as MSM (BBC, ITV & Sky in my case) were still hyping it up. To my surprise their was no concensus in the blogoshere. Far from it. I found your site and its been my homepage ever since.
Thank-you for all your posts, your guests posts, the reference pages and the Tips and Notes from others with the same keen interest in facts rather than fiction.
Gareth

November 17, 2011 7:09 am

Happy Birthday WUWT. I’ve learned a great deal about the “Climate Change” saga (and many other things!) on this site. The strictly scientific and balanced approach you have consistently maintained is very refreshing and contrasts greatly with the often shallow and aggressive output from the disaster-mongers. Stick with it Anthony, this is important work.

November 17, 2011 7:09 am

Happy birthday. Five years old.
Only children can ask the right questions.
Cheers

Rob Potter
November 17, 2011 7:10 am

As a long-time lurker (surely it can’t be only five years?) WUWT has been a daily read for me, so much so that I wasn’t all that surprised by Climategate as most of what came out had been postulated prior to the release on these very pages.
As a (non-climate) scientist I have always been a skeptic (that is what the job demands), but WUWT has become much more than a “skeptic” site – it has become a major resource and forum for discussion in the arena of climate science. That such an site is needed outside the mainstream science community is shameful, but only goes to show the value of what you have done and continue to do.
You, the other WUWT staff, contributors and (many of the) commentors are an inspiration.

Barry Sheridan
November 17, 2011 7:11 am

Congratulations Anthony.
You have made a difference to this debate globally, how many of us could ever say that. Its disappointing to hear about the hassles directed at you for your contributions to science, but as you say, this world is full of good and bad.
A UK reader who has been with you from the beginning, or very nearly anyway.
Best wishes.

Bern Bray
November 17, 2011 7:12 am

The good: You have changed the world. Not many people can say that.

Cold Englishman
November 17, 2011 7:14 am

Many Happy Returns of the day. I too have been coming here for a very long time, it followed a search about temperatures. As a civil engineering surveyor, I knew the runnaway GW claims were nonsense, and searched to find some common-sense. I’ve been visiting daily ever since, and have learned much about science, but mostly about human nature, particularly the venal and ugly side of life exhibited by warmists. Always remember, when they attack you, it is because they have lost the argument or have no argument worth telling.

1 6 7 8 9 10 16