Guest post by David Ross
According to his own account, Peter Gleick “received an anonymous document in the mail describing what appeared to be details of the Heartland Institute’s climate program strategy.”
http://heartland.org/media-library/pdfs/FORGED%20HEARTLAND%20MEMO.pdf
Why was the “Climate Strategy” leaked only to Gleick? His explanation is less than convincing: “I do not know the source of that original document but assumed it was sent to me because of my past exchanges with Heartland and because I was named in it.” None of the other people named in the document (some of whom have also had “past exchanges” with Heartland) received a copy.
Why didn’t Gleick show the “Climate Strategy” document to anyone else? He has many journalist contacts. Any one of them could have given him their opinion on the veracity of the document and told him exactly what to do with it.
Instead, he then “solicited and received additional materials directly from the Heartland Institute under someone else’s name” in an attempt to “confirm the accuracy of the information in this document.”
He then “forwarded, anonymously, the documents” he “had received to a set of journalists and experts working on climate issues”.
Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-h-gleick/-the-origin-of-the-heartl_b_1289669.html
From: Heartland Insider
Date: Tue, Feb 14, 2012 at 12:13 PM
Subject: Files from Heartland Institute
Dear Friends (15 of you):
In the interest of transparency, I think you should see these files from the Heartland Institute. Look especially at the 2012 fundraising and budget documents, the information about donors, and compare to the 2010 990 tax form. But other things might also interest or intrigue you. This is all I have. And this email account will be removed after I send.
Source: http://davidappell.blogspot.com/2012/02/header-from-leakers-email.html
Peter Gleick is a scientist, but he is not asking people to look at scientific data or arguments. He wants you to “look especially at…fundraising and budget documents” and “the information about donors”. If “in the interest of transparency” it is so important to know who is the source of information, why did Gleick post his “information” anonymously. He cannot claim to be a disinterested party or without a vested interest in climate science and policy.
That he deceived Heartland when he impersonated a member of their board (a criminal offence otherwise known as “phishing”) does not seem to bother many of his supporters. But, regardless of whether they accept that the key document is a fake (and it seems nothing will shake the faith of some), they should realize that Gleick also sought to use and deceive them.
Claiming to be an insider
————————-
Gleick lied when he titled his “leak” email “Heartland Insider” and sent it from the address heartlandinsider@gmail.com.
Based solely on this, these “journalists and experts” called the matter a “leak” and referred to the, then unknown, source as a “whistleblower” or “insider” (in contrast to their treatment of the Climategate emails which the same journalists, again with no evidence, invariably refer to as “stolen” or “hacked”).
This “insider” claim was repeated uncritically in media such as the U.K.’s Guardian.
“Leak exposes how Heartland Institute works to undermine climate science…DeSmogBlog, which broke the story, said it had received the confidential documents from an “insider” at the Heartland Institute”
The journalists at the Guardian could have asked those at DeSmogBlog, how they knew the source was an insider. Perhaps they did, but thought “because the anonymous guy who sent us them said so” was not an answer that would impress their readers.
Muddying the source of the documents
————————————-
In his confession Gleick accuses Heartland of “efforts to muddy public understanding”. Yet this is exactly what he did when he included the “Climate Strategy” document among the documents he had obtained directly from Heartland, and then referred to them collectively as “these files from the Heartland Institute”. It was a crass attempt to lend credence to a fake document, by mixing it in with ones he knew to be genuine. The deception worked with some journalists, others just played along.
“It was not possible to immediately verify the authenticity of the documents, although Heartland issued a statement on Wednesday claiming at least one document was fake, and that it was the victim of theft and forgery. However, Anthony Watts, a weathercaster who runs one of the most prominent anti-science blogs, Watts Up With That?, acknowledged Heartland was helping him with $90,000 for a new project.”
Note how this Guardian journalist, while protecting her paper from legal sanction, uses one verifiable fact from a genuine document to imply (see “However”) that all the documents are genuine.
About half of the “Climate Strategy” consists of mundane text also found in the phished documents. The text that the media pay most attention to, that portrays Heartland in the worst light, such as “dissuading teachers from teaching science” or “it is important to keep opposing voices out” does not appear in any of the phished documents but just happens to be exclusive to the one document even Gleick admits he did not obtain from Heartland.
Megan McArdle of the Atlantic put it best: “their Top Secret Here’s All the Bad Stuff We’re Gonna Do This Year memo…reads like it was written from the secret villain lair in a Batman comic. By an intern.”
Nemesis of the deniers
———————-
Gleick is a scientist who had a hypothesis: i.e. “Heartland’s views are contrary to his because they are anti-science/evil”. To prove this hypothesis he gathers reliable evidence – the phished documents. When the reliable evidence does not support his hypothesis he uses unreliable (or fabricates fake) evidence, and throws the two together.
This is not the first time in the climate “debate” that “evidence” from two different sources has been spliced together and passed off as one, after results diverge from expectations. The “Climate Strategy” document is the blade of Gleick’s hockey stick.
Gleick only confessed after he had been fingered as the source of the “leak” or, as the Guardian put it, not “until there was already feverish online speculation about his involvement”.
The speculation arose partly because he was portrayed (or he portrayed himself) in the “Climate Strategy” document as a “high-profile climate scientist” and as the nemesis of Heartland and the “deniers”. A quick bit of Googling quickly dispels the notion that Heartland or anyone else describes themselves as “anti-climate”. And Gleick, whose area of expertise is water supply, may be a loud voice in the climate “debate” but he is not a central figure in the actual science.
Call for debate
—————-
In his confession Gleick asserted that “a rational public debate is desperately needed” and that there were “ongoing efforts — often anonymous, well-funded, and coordinated — to attack climate science and scientists and prevent this debate.” Gleick’s belief in his conspiracy theory may be sincere, but his call for debate, and accusation that others are trying to “prevent” it, is a sham.
On Jan 13, Jim Lakely of Heartland invited Gleick to debate at the Institute’s 28th Anniversary Benefit Dinner and even offered to “donate $5,000 to the charity of” Gleick’s “choice in lieu of an honoraria”. The two subsequently exchanged emails on the matter.
Source: http://climateaudit.org/2012/02/23/heartlands-invitation-to-gleick-details/#more-15663
However, on Jan 27, less than one hour after he sent his last email request posing as a Heartland board member Gleick, then chair of the American Geophysical Union Task Force on Scientific Ethics, felt the desperate need to email Lakely (as himself this time) and decline this invitation to debate.
Source: http://fakegate.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/1-27-2012-8-36-am.jpg
Perhaps it was this invitation that led Gleick to believe that the people at Heartland regarded him as their No.1 adversary “high-profile climate scientist”. But given his tendency to hyperbole and his often emotional rants in various media, they may just have thought he would be an easy mark. All the information, about this invitation to debate and Gleick’s decline, comes from Heartland. Gleick, an active blogger, told his readers nothing, and now tries to hide his decline.
No comment
———-
Towards the end of his confession, Gleick states that he “will not comment on the substance or implications of the materials” yet in much of the rest of his confession he does just that: “…an anonymous document in the mail describing what appeared to be details of the Heartland Institute’s climate program strategy. It contained information about their funders and the Institute’s apparent efforts to muddy public understanding about climate science and policy…The materials the Heartland Institute sent to me confirmed many of the facts in the original document, including especially their 2012 fundraising strategy and budget.”
Curiously, that last line closely echoes one in the “Climate Strategy” document:
“More details can be found in our 2012 Proposed Budget document and 2012 Fundraising Strategy memo.”
If, as Gleick claimed, he had the “Climate Strategy” document in his possession before the others, why didn’t he use the information contained in it to his advantage, when phishing Heartland?
As one of the commenters at DeSmogBlog put it “Asking for something that didn’t exist could cause suspition [sic]”.
Source: http://desmogblog.com/it-s-bird-it-s-hockey-stick-it-s-faked-document#comment-725425
According to Gleick’s account, he knew of the existence and the specific titles of Heartland’s “2012 Proposed Budget document and 2012 Fundraising Strategy memo”, before he started his phishing expedition. If these were where corroboration and “more details” could be found, why didn’t he specifically ask for these by name?
Instead, after his initial impersonation of a board member had succeeded, this was what he asked for: “can you send me the most recent Board minutes and agenda materials, if they are available?”
He then receives some confidential documents that just happen to be the ones referred to in the “Climate Strategy” supposedly already in his possession.
Gleick’s conspiracy within a conspiracy
—————————————
Given that the Gleick phished seven documents from Heartland, why was the “Climate Strategy” document not sent out with the “most recent Board minutes and agenda materials”? There is a ready made answer within the document itself: “I propose that at this point it be kept confidential and only be distributed to a subset of Institute Board and senior staff.” Neither the “subset”, “senior staff” nor the author of this “confidential” memo, written in the first person, is named. How are the members of this conspiracy within a conspiracy to know each other? How are some board members and staff expected to keep secrets from each others when a determined outsider like Gleick can get them? If this “Confidential Memo” was only distributed to “a subset of Institute Board and senior staff” then Gleick would have us believe that his “anonymous” source was one of them.
The language used here – “distributed to a subset of Institute Board and senior staff” – betrays someone from a scientific background and echoes that used by Gleick in his confession – “I forwarded, anonymously, the documents I had received to a set of journalists and experts”.
Implying that some part of a group are working behind others backs or betraying their mission, may be a clumsy attempt at divide and conquer. The author also appears to do this with two individuals, generally regarded as on Gleick’s side in the climate “debate”: “Revkin…who has a well-known antipathy for some of the more extreme AGW communicators” and “Curry…who has become popular with our supporters”.
Names, such as, Taylor, Gleick, Revkin, Romm, Trenberth, Hansen and Curry, appear without title or reference only in the last paragraph of the “Climate Strategy” document. In all the phished documents, individuals are always introduced with their full name or title. Using surnames alone, assumes that the reader is familiar enough with the subject for this to suffice. This style is more common in scientific literature. In other media, most writers avoid it, but not Gleick, as you can see in his, Jan 5, rant at the Huffington Post: “Gingrich, Romney, and Huntsman…Feldman, Maibach, Roser-Renouf, and Leiserowitz”.
Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-h-gleick/climate-change-denial-_b_1185309.html
Both Andrew Revkin and Judith Curry have earned Gleick’s displeasure in the past and both are now convinced that he is the culprit in this affair.
Foreshadowing today’s events, on Friday, Ross Kaminsky, a senior fellow and former board member at Heartland, posted a piece on the American Spectator site naming Gleick as an “obvious suspect.” Now they have their man.
Andrew Revkin
He has made it known to me via email that he has been displeased with my “behavior.” I seem to have gotten his goat to have been mentioned in the fake Heartland strategy doc (hard to believe that he didn’t write this).
Judith Curry
Source: http://judithcurry.com/2012/02/20/breaking-news/#more-7302
Gleick’s motivation
——————-
If Gleick’s purpose was to “confirm the accuracy of the information” contained in the supposed “Confidential Memo: 2012 Heartland Climate Strategy”, why didn’t he specifically ask for a copy of this document. His impersonation had worked. He had already succeeded in phishing other confidential documents. His anonymity was still secure. He had nothing to lose.
If it had been genuine, and Gleick had managed to obtain a copy directly from Heartland, he would have had strong email evidence to back him up, and could have then revealed it and himself openly, and been automatically elevated to enviro-sainthood.
The obvious conclusion (which other evidence supports)
http://climateaudit.org/2012/02/20/heartland/
is that Gleick did not have a copy of a “2012 Heartland Climate Strategy” when he was phishing Heartland. He did not have a copy because he (or whoever the forger was) had not written it yet.
Instead, this was his next and final request: “When you get a chance, can you please email me the most up-to-date contact list for the board, with emails/phone numbers?”
Gleick again lied when he claimed to have phished Heartland in an attempt to “confirm the accuracy of the information in this document.” His last request would not help him “confirm the accuracy” of anything. He already had detailed information about donors, budget, motivation, strategy and operations.
As with his previous request, Gleick received more than he explicitly asked for: a “Board Directory” with information about 14 members, including what appears to be home addresses and home telephone numbers of some and cell phone numbers of most.
We know where you live
———————–
Regardless of how you view the other documents or Gleick’s other actions, there can be no legitimate or ethical reason for Gleick disseminating this private information or for sites like ThinkProgress to host it, which is what happened.
As Andrew Revkin pointed out: “Some of the released documents contain information about Heartland employees that has no bearing on the climate fight.”
Source: http://thinkprogress.org/heartland-institute-documents/
ThinkProgress.org has removed the fake “Climate Strategy” document from their website but still hosts the “Board Directory”. They have also added a section “Other Documents” with links to copies of 12 letters sent to the employers and others holding power over some of the individuals named in the phished documents. Eight of them are from Greenpeace.
In April 2010, Greenpeace posted an article on their website (where, incidentally, DeSmogBlog is one of 17 others listed on their blogroll to the left of the page):
Will the real ClimateGate please stand up?
Sources:
which concluded with the following:
“Pressuring politicians on climate change is not working. … We need to shift targets and go after the real termites that hollowed out and imploded Copenhagen. … And we need to inspire, engage and empower … the volunteer activists that have been making life hell for fossil fuel lobbyists in the US. … We must break the law to make the laws we need: laws that are supposed to protect society, and protect our future. Until our laws do that, screw being climate lobbyists. Screw being climate activists. It’s not working. We need an army of climate outlaws.
The proper channels have failed. It’s time for mass civil disobedience to cut off the financial oxygen from denial and skepticism. … If you’re one of those who have spent their lives undermining progressive climate legislation, bankrolling junk science, fueling spurious debates around false solutions, and cattle-prodding democratically-elected governments into submission, then hear this:
We know who you are. We know where you live. We know where you work.
And we be many, but you be few.”
The author of the article is “Gene from Greenpeace India” and “Ananth, International Programme Director” assures us that “Anyone who knows Gene knows he’s an entirely peaceful guy.” Of course, the only people who really know Gene are other Greenpeace activists because of Greenpeace’s frequent use of anonymous first names in their communications.
Greenpeace eventually removed the article from their website (read some of the comments that persuaded them to do that here)
but not from the web. Despite admitting “We got this one wrong, no doubt about it” on the (now redacted) page, the page contains the statement “In the interest of transparency we have moved it off site to this location” and a link to a copy of the original article. Reader comments have been removed and the following update was added by the Greenpeace web producer:
“A lot of folks commenting are sizing [sic] on the words, “we know where you live”. … There are only two cases I can think of where Greenpeace protesters actually showed up at someone’s home … Personally, I think both of these protests were pretty cool.”
This article was widely reported in the climate blogosphere and it is by no means the only example of its kind. No matter what interpretation Greenpeace tries to put on the words “We know where you live”, they cannot be so naive to think that others, including the violent or deranged, will not interpret them differently.
By way of contrast, Watts Up With That?, http://wattsupwiththat.com/ and a host of other skeptical sites, link to the ClimateGate FOIA Grepper http://www.ecowho.com/foia.php where you can read the Climategate emails for yourself and where “All full emails [addresses], telephone numbers and passwords have been redacted.”
Gleick did not request a copy of the specific document he claimed to already have in his possession (the one whose authenticity he claimed to be attempting to confirm) nor did he specifically request by name the documents he did eventually receive, even though, by his account, he should have known their names.
He did not even ask for information specifically about “climate” or “strategy”. But he did specifically phish for information on board members. Neither Gleick nor those who have posted these documents on the web have made any attempt to remove personal information about the Heartland board members or staff, exposing each of them to a campaign of hate and intimidation. Perhaps that was what Gleick wanted all along.
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Amused at Lucia’s has found CCITT resolution metadata in the Strategy document – this is an indication it was scanned to a fax. The visual quality of the document, as well as the lack of fold creases, supports that it was.
DeSmog, ThinkProgress, Greg Laden and others have posted the documents – including the board directory, with NO REDACTION. Yet some high profile people who support Gleick’s attackj – such as Leo Hickman – have already whined that Demelle from Desmog’s home address was posted without redaction. Despite the fact that I don’t think anyone knew Demelle uses his home address for DeSmog.
Ignorant duplicity at its finest.
Yep … I archived all the links in the excel file … and most are still there even if not referenced on the DeSmog, ThinkProgress etc story pages …
Derek Sorensen wrote:
“Does there come a point where, in “our” eagerness to embarrass Gleick further, we might prejudice whatever legal action might take place in the future?”
I appreciate your concern Derek. But Heartland are the victim of this phishing attack, defamation and fraud. If there is to be a civil suit, they are the ones who will initiate it. They have set up a website and explicitly invite input:
“Many have been following some of the excellent investigations into this matter, all of it unsolicited by Heartland. More sleuthing is welcome.”
http://fakegate.org/
They also have a page listing supportive press.
http://fakegate.org/fakegate-buzz/
I probably wouldn’t have written my article if I hadn’t seen these. I’m not a lawyer. But even the best lawyers can miss something. Applying more minds to the case can only help Heartland formulate better arguments.
The whitewashing of Climategate and the deplorable response of much of the media again suggests that Heartland will need all the help they can get in what will probably be the real battleground -the court of public opinion.
If you have a pertinent observation or valid point to make that hasn’t been made before, then you should make it. I don’t see anything prejudicial in that.
Apropos of nothing in particular except perhaps a particular predilection for the pretentious, can anyone out there of an optometric bent tell me what me what the refraction of the eyeglasses of our subject du jour is? I see little or no refraction.
We now return you to more serious matters.
Not quite true. Subtle but important point: it was the FAKE document that led Mosher and Lucia to him. There was nothing in the (presumably) real ones to tip them off. If it wasn’t for that fake, he wouldn’t have been suspected.
Speaking of optometric, if I am to understand correctly, telescope technicians must correct for temperature distortion to the nth degree. As of a few months ago no corrections have been required that would approximate GCM models. Can anyone expound?
“Pressuring politicians on climate change is not working. … We need to shift targets and go after the real termites that hollowed out and imploded Copenhagen.”
So Greenpeace are picking on termites now.
Phew. I guess that will give the rest of us a few minutes break.
There is an abundance of evidence here for Heartland to take legal action.
A great summary, David. But there are (IMHO) some other elements one might want to consider:
As you say, Gleick is a “waterman” not a “climate” guy, relatively unknown in the pantheon of climate change “heroes” – and notwithstanding his own claims to the contrary, quite possibly in other related fields, particularly “sustainable development” (SD). IOW, he and his organization have always been little pishers in the Big Green Pond.
Even his involvement in AR4 was limited to that of “expert reviewer”; and there are references to only 4 publications that he authored, co-authored or edited – only one of which can be assumed to have been “peer-reviewed” 😉
SD is the primary focus of his Pacific Institute (PI), which he founded in 1987 – the very year that this “official term” was coined. The “mission” of PI boils down to a copy and paste of a slightly modified “three pillars” of SD. According to PI’s Form 990 return, Revenues for 2010 were less than US$3 million – far from sufficient to position him or his organization as a powerhouse in the Pond!
I, for one, don’t recall even seeing his name mentioned as a player in the climate change game before the so-called “Climate Rapid Response Team” came into being. He made his “debut” during the course of l’affaire Wagner (circa August 2011)
That being said, let’s assume for the sake of argument that Gleick actually did receive an anonymous memo “in the mail” – and that the :”contents” were exactly as he distributed them.
According to him, he’s Mr. Ethical Integrity, right?! Much as it must gall him to acknowledge, he and Heartland’s Joe Bast are peers – both are CEOs of organizations they had founded.
If Gleick truly wanted to “verify” the contents of this alleged memo, wouldn’t the mature, professional and ethical course of action have been to simply call Bast and ask him?!
Had the situation been reversed, with Bast being in receipt of exactly the same “revelations” about PI, I cannot begin to imagine the cries of outrage we would have heard were Bast not to have contacted him.
Consider also that while Gleick has attempted to portray his actions as a momentary lapse of judgement, his first phish came after ten days of silent but “serious consideration” of Heartland’s invite.
He cast his net, not once but several times over a subsequent period of twelve days. If he had a functioning moral compass, he would have checked it, seen that he was sailing in the wrong direction, headed back to port and turned himself in! But this was not a choice that our “genius” – who, no doubt, considers himself too smart to get caught – decided to take.
FWIW, my guess is that Gleick’s “primary” motivation (which has probably been eating at him for a good number of years) was nothing more than pure unadulterated green envy. Quite possibly exacerbated by his recently – but legitimately – acquired knowledge that Heartland’s Revenues for 2010 were double those of PI.
There are some other pixels in the Big Picture that may – or may not – be purely coincidental. For those who might be interested, I have discussed these in three recent posts:
From the ashes of Gleickgate a new mantra is born
A Gleickgate “teleconnection” or coincidence?
Gleick and the green factor$
As an amusing footnote, btw, here’s a comment I had posted at Bishop Hill, yesterday:
Hmmm … “just a prank”, eh? How in the name of Gaia would they know?! Or have they arbitrarily decided to redefine “prank”?!
But that aside … when was the last time I heard that little bit of “revisionism”?
Yes … I remember, now! On Feb. 4/2010, according to a quartet of “journalists” at the Guardian – who would never attempt to deceive or mislead readers – Good ol’ Gav had used “sort of a prank” as the latest and greatest incarnation of his ever-changing story regarding the key events of Nov. 17, 2009.
Perhaps there’s new PNAS paper in the works – authored by Trenberth, Lacis and other high profile prophets of “climate concern” – in which the measurement of “Gleick’s status” becomes the designated new, improved (upside-down) proxy for temperature. Thereby assuring place of honour for the resurrected “hockey-stick” as an icon to impress upon the masses the need for “sustainable development” which – in accordance with Pachauri’s “vision” – will “pervade” all 3 WGs’ reports in AR5.
Hilary Ostrov
This is a marvelous piece of analysis. I’ve read it twice & will have to go back for further clarification & “understanding.” My hat’s off for the intelligence of the author, David Ross.
I have a suspicion: I figure the Climategate champion, the “leaker,” will see this turn of events as a call to break the 64 bit password. I think he will come to the conclusion that the level of combat has been raised & now the Skeptics have been given absolution to go NUCLEAR!
PLEASE PUBLISH CLIMATEGATE III Damn the torpedo’s!
Good analysis. But there is this: “If Gleick’s purpose was to “confirm the accuracy of the information” contained in the supposed “Confidential Memo: 2012 Heartland Climate Strategy”, why didn’t he specifically ask for a copy of this document.”
Gleick’s attorney might answer that Gleick wouldn’t have known if the board member he was impersonating was included in the subset of board members who received the confidential email.
I’m only partway thru the comments, but several have asked why Gleick confessed when he did, e.g., post by:Eric Dailey says: March 2, 2012 at 11:20 am
If I recall correctly, he did so only a day or so after Heartland announced that they had sufficient & all the information necessary to be able to trace the identity theft to it’s source, and that they fully intended legal action. Perhaps more pressure and importance in this regard than Mosher and others ‘fingering’ him as the source already too.
So I think you put both together, and Gleick went scurrying in terror to top lawyers for advice on how to try to mitigate the legal consequences, presto, one carefully weasel worded ‘apology’ provided before the law knocked on his door…. to try to help engender some sympathy on the part of judge or jury. ‘Look, he came clean, he tried to make amends, he showed ‘remorse.” Ya, right.
Rational Db8 (used to post as Rational Debate) said this…
“…a day or so after Heartland announced that they had sufficient & all the information necessary to be able to trace the identity theft to it’s source,…”
This makes sense to me. We don’t know all that Heartland may have communicated to Gleick before they went public with their statments. They may have had the goods on him, and he may have known it.
It sounds like Gleick ID’d Greenpeace’s new ‘targets’ for harrassment…or worse.
That is conspiracy to commit whatever crime follows the actionable intel that Gleick produced for them.
Climate outlaws….that says it all
theduke wrote: “Good analysis.”
Thanks
And: “But there is this: “If Gleick’s purpose was to “confirm the accuracy of the information” contained in the supposed “Confidential Memo: 2012 Heartland Climate Strategy”, why didn’t he specifically ask for a copy of this document.”
Gleick’s attorney might answer that Gleick wouldn’t have known if the board member he was impersonating was included in the subset of board members who received the confidential email.”
Neither would he know if the person he was emailing to were part of it. So, he requests a copy of the “Climate Strategy” document and…
1 The other person is part of the subset and knows all the other members:
1A And so is the person Gleick is impersonating
=> Gleick receives a copy. “Remember mum’s the word”
2B But the person Gleick is impersonating is not
i) the other person assumes Gleick has joined the inner circle of super-villains and sends him a copy “I didn’t know you were one of us”
ii) the other person alerts another of the super-villains “X knows about the our super secret Climate Strategy”
2 The other person is part of the subset but does not know all the other members:
=> Gleick receives a copy. “Remember mum’s the word”
3 The other person is not part of the subset
=> “I’m sorry I don’t know what document you are referring to”
This whole idea of “subsets” keeping secrets from each other sounds like a badly written spy novel. And, to me, is further evidence that the document is a forgery. I keep thinking of Megan McArdle’s comment “their Top Secret Here’s All the Bad Stuff We’re Gonna Do This Year memo…reads like it was written from the secret villain lair in a Batman comic. By an intern.”
The main point is that there was no additional risk to Gleick in asking for this document, no matter what permutation of “subsets” was involved. He either gets a copy or he sets off alarm bells at Heartland a few days earlier than planned. Again, he had nothing to lose. He had no good reason not to ask for it, if his account were genuine.
I think Gleick is a fantasist who saw himself bringing down an evil empire. Remember how he signed off his email to his “set” of 15 confidantes: “…this email account will be removed after I send.” It reminds me of the line from the old “Mission Impossible” TV series: “This tape will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jim.”
Don’t watch this! You won’t be able to get an image of Peter Gleick and the sound of the Mission Impossible theme music out of your head.
I think there is a lesson to be learnt here and it’s for the 15. “Beware of Gleicks bearing gifts.”
“Gleick’s attorney might answer that Gleick wouldn’t have known if the board member he was impersonating was included in the subset of board members who received the confidential email.”
Neither would the administrator he was emailing, and would undoubtedley have checked to find no such document existed and put it in writing that there wasn’t. If you want my opinion he went phishing and didn’t get a catch, so he pretended he’d got a whopper. It certainly casts a new light on the word “genius”, for me at least.
John another says:
March 2, 2012 at 4:27 pm
Speaking of optometric, if I am to understand correctly, telescope technicians must correct for temperature distortion to the nth degree. As of a few months ago no corrections have been required that would approximate GCM models. Can anyone expound?
My limited understanding is that such adjustments are based on contemporaneous readings, i.e. you take the temperature and immediately make the adjustment. There is no need to adjust for Warmening as there is no long-term planning involved.
The temperature an hour from now may be of concern, ten years from now is kind of irrelevant (to the task).
Geronimo wrote: “Neither would the administrator he was emailing, and would undoubtedley have checked to find no such document existed and put it in writing that there wasn’t.”
Bingo Geronimo! You’ve nailed it.
Gleick would have been familiar with the whole Climategate affair. He would probably have known how his CRU pals were caught out by backup servers keeping copies of emails they thought they had deleted. He knew the email provider might be subpoened to produce all communications for the account he used.
He didn’t ask for a copy of the “Strategy Document” because he didn’t want to receive a reply clearly stating that there was no such document, which might later be unearthed in an investigation.
But knowing that the email exchanges might come to light he reckons that the absence of any mention of his “Climate Strategy” document doesn’t help his scheme much either. So he concocts his “subset” of board members to explain the omission and inserts this into the “Strategy” document.
If the “Climate Strategy” document were genuine Gleick had no good reason not to ask for it. Because it isn’t genuine he couldn’t ask for it.
Some dots were connected in the essay: Gleick, Greenpeace, Sierra Club, the warmist lapdog Media. But the warmist conspiracy is vastly larger than that.
In comparison, Heartland is teensy-weensy. Yet this mote is stuck in the eye of the CAGW cabal. Their gross over-reaction indicates something, I’m not sure what. That this episode is a dying gasp of a collapsing fraud is wishful thinking. More likely it is bullying hubris on the part of global mega-fascists with too much money and no sense of proportion.
Bottom line: the Gleicks of this world are legion and deep-pocketed. Freedom-loving rational realists are not winning, not yet and not in the foreseeable future, unfortunately.
http://heartland.org/about/staff/4945
Heartland’s board is listed on their website including their city and state. Their board membership is no secret. Dr. Gleick wanted addresses, phone numbers and email addresses. What for? Very creepy!
David: I second Lucy Skywalker and others. This is a valuable contribution to the debate. Not just “piling on” but holding discrete bits of evidence steady for inspection under a bright light and examining how they line up and what’s still missing. Thanks.
And especially thanks for the “hockey stick” analogy. Brilliant. It is of course funny and ironic to see the figure turned against its creators. But it also goes deeper. These people are fundamentally careless about the evidence. Their truth is power, not science; and they will tape anything to anything else they can pick up or make up, if it helps them win. It’s a deep rot. In a real sense, Gleick can’t help himself.
Cherry picking, according to Mr. Gleick.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/petergleick/2012/02/05/global-warming-has-stopped-how-to-fool-people-using-cherry-picked-climate-data/
Gleick didn’t phish for the “Climate Strategy” memo from HI because it didn’t exist at that time. It was created as a result of the lack of any “smoking gun” from the phished docs.
Another good point made – why did he specifically phish the board members addresses, phone numbers and email addresses? Their names and city/state are posted on the HI site. This is only meant to cause harassment (and possible violence) to the board members. Sounds like yet another crime to add to the growing list. He should be prosecuted.