“Plato’s Noble Lie resuscitated in a pas de deux of flimflammery”

Fakegate Apologism — It’s How They Roll

Guest post by Chris Horner

This morning I read a terrific recounting of the “the fact that a whole section of the scientific establishment is defending Gleick on the grounds that it’s OK to lie to promote their cause…from the intellectual heights of the establishment and specifically from those who have proclaimed themselves to be experts on scientific ethics.” (“‘Fake But Accurate’ Science”, TIA Daily, subscription required). Following on my post Fakegate: It’s what they do, and Anthony’s continuing elaboration of the “noble cause corruption”, this recalled for me a recent experience that had nagged at the back of my mind, bothersome for what it indicates. And it all fits together.

Last week I gave a talk at Yale Law School on the role of environmental regulation, sponsored by the Federalist Society and Young America’s Foundation. I made my way to the greatest economic boom-time opportunity we’ve ever faced — we’re told — which happens to be (surprise!) a massive regulatory boom. But before being sold — in adaptation to the downturn — as an economic boom it was sold — during flush times — as necessitating economic slowdown. Got it.

Rationales I cited and supported with sources included: make the uneconomic “profitable” (Pres. Obama, Ken Lay), redistribute the world’s wealth (UN guy), restructure the global economy, “level the playing field” (unions, greens, EU Environment Commissioner Margot Wallstrom), “slow down our economy” (Bill Clinton, Alan Greenspan), create a boom economy (Pres. Obama, Al Gore, Carol Browner, some congressmen), transform our economy (Tom Friedman), “raise billions of dollars”/finance social agenda (Pres. Obama, lawmakers), avoid having “too much energy”, too little drudgery (John Holdren and his ilk).

President Obama said in his 2010 State of the Union speech that, even if you doubt the scientific argument, it’s “the right thing to do”, echoing movement-godfather Sen. Tim Wirth who said the very same thing in 1988. Now, with more “human redemption”! (guess who).

Thomas Friedman, responding to such doubts, told Meet the Press that, “everything we would do to get ready for climate change, to build this new green industry, would make us more respected, more entrepreneurial, more competitive, more healthy as a country.”

To which Jonah Goldberg responded, “Thus Plato’s Noble Lie is resuscitated in a pas de deux of flimflammery. The diagnosis might be fake, but the cure will still fix your lumbago, whiten your teeth, and give your horse a shiny coat.”

And I walked through the raging hypocrisy and outright fabrications embodied in the sales pitch for an agenda that was rebranded as pollsters dictated. When John Kerry cancelled the scheduled (by pure coincidence) Earth Day introduction of his cap-and-trade bill, he told the press it was because “this is not an environment bill.” Amending the Clean Air Act. Granting authority to the…EPA. Riddled with hundreds of references to “environment”, “greenhouse” and “pollution”. 

Not an environment bill. And, true enough, no one says it would detectably impact the climate. It was repackaged and introduced as the Kerry-Lieberman American Power Act.  It was now a jobs bill. His pollster told him so.

And it would bring a jobs boom the likes of which we had never seen, though it had killed jobs everywhere; it would lower the price and increase the reliability and security of our energy supply, though the opposite had been proved true; and it would lower emissions as study after study indicates the opposite results, from the inefficiencies.

Hey, man, back off. There’s a “cause” to push here, after all. By whatever means necessary.

During the discussion that followed one attendee, a student at the nation’s most prestigious law school clearly unnerved by my challenging the climate agenda, if not by the brazen employment of untruths to justify employing the state’s police power, complained that I was merely making fun of flaws in their communication effort. In focusing on such details I wrongly ignored the larger problem that we must act.

So, a movement being exposed as risibly dishonest in saying whatever might wash in order to get their way, a way which as I noted is leading to terrible human consequences in the European theater of operations where they are several years ahead of us, merely harps on a communications problem?

No. This is a movement — someone once called it a “cause” — clearly not about what it says it’s about. After all, no one or no computer model on which they premise their cause claims that anything they’ve ever proposed, all of which is typically sold as salvation, would actually do anything about that in which name it is demanded.

These are Alinskyites, schooled that the issue isn’t the issue. When I pointed that out at a Heartland event, a leftist journalist in the audience dedicated many words of outrage in response. Outrage grounded in (faux) morality. Outrage not that I would say that — she also went on to say that of course the issue isn’t the issue. But that I would say that.

She had heard me recount the serial admissions of this by her ideological allies, but left that part out of her otherwise deathless essay which found room for anything and everything else. Not relevant.

As always with this crowd, it’s one’s cause, or motivations, that determine the rightness of their words or deeds. Greenpeace said the same thing about how our replicating their FOIA request to the University of Virginia was, well, different than their identical effort. Sorry, their multiple efforts. Our “objective” was different, you see. A hypocrisy shared by the Washington Post and the academic and scientific establishments.

This movement is quite plainly one infested with unethical actors. Climategates 1 and 2 exposed this. Fakegate affirmed it. The apologies for Fakegate cast it in stone. The political and policy dogmatists only adorn the stone with flowers. R.I.P. 2012.

This is not a communications problem any more than what we have seen from Fakegate’s fallout represents science.

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steveta_uk
February 29, 2012 10:10 am

Can I suggest that this article could do with a total re-write once the caffeine overload has worn off?

michael eiseman
February 29, 2012 10:16 am

The Climate Changers Creed: If you can’t beat em with FACTS, smear em with lies…then circle your wagons if you are caught RED HANDED

PaulR
February 29, 2012 10:23 am

Aprove of argument and conclusion, writing very choppy.

Ed Caryl
February 29, 2012 10:23 am

I like the article just the way it is. The Emperors clothes are increasingly looking like plastic wrap.

February 29, 2012 10:27 am

“….a student …..complained that I was merely making fun of flaws in their communication effort. In focusing on such details I wrongly ignored the larger problem that we must act….”
This sums it up well. These crafty salesmen have been reasonably effective in marketing the need for their cure, and scarcely bothered to explain the disease.
Now, when we question them on the details (and indeed existance) of the disease, we are accused of obstructing them in their craft, and of terminally endangering the patient.
We are told, we must ask no questions and buy the cure now, just in case they happen to be correct.

perlcat
February 29, 2012 10:31 am

@steveta_uk:
I like it just fine as it is. Flimflammery called what it is.

DesertYote
February 29, 2012 10:42 am

steveta_uk
February 29, 2012 at 10:10 am
Can I suggest that this article could do with a total re-write once the caffeine overload has worn off?
###
Sure, you can suggest watering down the truth so as to not offend those trying to destroy civilization.

Alexander K
February 29, 2012 10:50 am

Wow! This article reminds me of a pony I used to exercise – as soon as I hoisted myself into the saddle and it knew it had my attention, it’s ears would go back and away we would go, careering madly all around the paddock while I clung on for dear life. I was never quite dislodged from the saddle, but it was always a near thing and every ride was breathless from start to finish.
Great article, but I was a bit breathless when I reached the conclusion.

Dave L.
February 29, 2012 10:52 am

Keep the faith brethren: Algae is now going to be our salvation. Our glorious leader has spoken.

February 29, 2012 11:03 am

Offered to the AGU as their new motto
egregium esse causum mentiri.
(apol. Plato).

Frank K.
February 29, 2012 11:03 am

“And I walked through the raging hypocrisy and outright fabrications embodied in the sales pitch for an agenda that was rebranded as pollsters dictated.”
To me, the biggest hypocrisy of the global warming movement/religion is that, by and large, the most ardent supporters of the movement are WELL COMPENSATED for their efforts. In fact, MONEY and CLIMATE CHANGE go hand-in-hand. Billions of dollars are spent each year on “the science” and millions more on advocacy and “policy making”. And when these people tell us we need a new tax to artificially increase energy prices (hurting the poor) or we need to eliminate jobs in the oil and gas industry, they can do so knowing they don’t have to worry about increased prices with their fat salaries and benefits or their jobs because they have enriched themselves on the spoils of government climate ca$h.
Someday, I would like to get an accounting of how much stimulus money was wasted on climate research. This was money over and above the huge funding increases these group were enjoying back in 2009 and 2010. Yes, our climate heroes were living it up while our neighbors were being let go from their jobs…
NOTE: NONE of the usual warmist commenters who visit here will EVER talk about the climate ca$h. Never..Ever…

Richard T. Fowler
February 29, 2012 11:08 am

I think it says some things that are way overdue to be said. Perhaps it might benefit from having two or three cowlicks combed down, but I’d rather it stay as-is than get toned down too much. After all, there is reason for outrage!
RTF

Ged
February 29, 2012 11:12 am

This was fun to read. I enjoyed it!

jorgekafkazar
February 29, 2012 11:12 am

Algae will run all our cars. Obama said so. Algae, in case you don’t know, is green slime. Not to be confused with algore, which will cause all our cars to stop running.

rw
February 29, 2012 11:17 am

The remarkable thing about the entire AGW episode is that it has brought into high relief the extent to which a kind of intellectual and moral decay has seeped into many sectors of the intellectual life of the West.
It’s been about 40 years since Political Correctness first manifested itself – in places like Comparative Literature and Anthropology departments, as well as faux academic areas like Women’s Studies and Black Studies. Even liberals made fun of it at one time, but the decay spread, seemingly unstoppable. Now, thanks to the AGW episode, can we see the extent that it has invaded even the august halls of physical science.
Happily, PC entails a kind of natural stupidity that has allowed those in its thrall to promote something as silly as CAGW, without realizing that Nature might not comply with their alarums and their breathless predictions. (And they’ve left a six-lane highway of evidence behind them! thankfully collected on the Internet and elsewhere, that they can never evade or explain away.) This is why I see the whole AGW movement as a kind of gift from on high.

rw
February 29, 2012 11:20 am

Make that “Only now …” (dammit!)

biff33
February 29, 2012 11:29 am

Chris Horner writes:
“This morning I read a terrific recounting of the “the fact that a whole section of the scientific establishment is defending Gleick on the grounds that it’s OK to lie to promote their cause…from the intellectual heights of the establishment and specifically from those who have proclaimed themselves to be experts on scientific ethics.” (“‘Fake But Accurate’ Science”, TIA Daily, subscription required).”
The article is available for free here:
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2012/02/29/fake_but_accurate_science_113294.html

February 29, 2012 11:44 am

It got my attention. Well said!

Tom G(ologist)
February 29, 2012 11:44 am

Chris – terrific, punchy summary. Unfortunately, although I find its fast pace, clipped, fluffless style both infromative and persuasive, I’m afraid it is above the 8th grade reading level of the NYT style book and those who NEED to read this in fora other thatn WUWT will be lost and give the thing up.
Loved it – but it ain’t for the masses.

Gary Hladik
February 29, 2012 11:52 am

Given the resounding support Gleick has received in certain quarters, I have to wonder if he expected to get away with his forgery, even if caught. After all, his previous lies got him the chair of the AGU’s task force on scientific ethics, to name just one reward. Bigger lies, bigger rewards, right? In the world Chris Horner describes, it could well happen.

February 29, 2012 12:02 pm

I read the linked article by Naomi Klein. Most striking–how the hordes of displaced auto workers and coal miners will experience the joys of a new job: millions of people stooping to pick crops in the blazing Kansas sun!
“Another bonus: this type of farming is much more labor intensive than industrial agriculture, which means that farming can once again be a substantial source of employment.”
I saw no indication, however, that she herself is ready to embrace the raptures of shoveling dung or digging in the muck for organic heirloom potatoes.

chilli
February 29, 2012 12:18 pm

Those who have trouble following Chris’s staccato prose should perhaps limber up with some James Ellroy (L.A. Confidential, White Jazz). Great piece Chris.

February 29, 2012 12:34 pm

Excellent Chris!
Well stated even though it was a choppy ride with some abrupt transitions. I liked it much much better than all of those “Isn’t Gleick such a handsome and courageous hero? blink flutter blink blink” instances of gooey sophisms so abundant around the net.

Rational Db8 (used to post as Rational Debate)
February 29, 2012 12:42 pm

This could be an absolutely excellent article for long term reference if just a few sentences are added to provide a bit of transition and clarification.
Tom G(ologist) said “Loved it – but it ain’t for the masses.”
It seems to me that just smoothed out a little (NOT ‘toned down’) would very much make it exactly what is needed “for the masses.” A few more links to support points being made such as “greatest economic boom time” or Obama’s “profitable” would help also – along with links to info showing the inverse is true.
Many of us here are well aware of such extravagant claims along with the dismal reality, but I suspect that quite a few are not, and that quite a few ‘warmists’ would likely take issue supporting the claims while being oblivious to the real facts.

Downdraft
February 29, 2012 12:52 pm

Remind me never to disagree with you or, God forbid, get into a debate, Chris.

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