Diminished Climate Alarmism: Lessons from L’Affair Heartland

Guest post by Robert Murphy, reposted from Master Resource with permission

“Without being a trained climate scientist, I can read the various blogs and try to parse the academic papers, but ultimately I have to rely a lot on the good faith and judgment of the scientists themselves. The Heartland affair has reassured my earlier conviction that the case for climate alarmism is far weaker than the alarmists have been telling us.”

As an economist who has done some research on climate change policies, I am often asked questions along the lines of, “Is the science right or is it really a hoax like Rush Limbaugh says?” My standard reply is to acknowledge first of all that I’m not trained in the field, but to say that from my outsider perspective, it seems that the people warning of imminent catastrophe are vastly overrating the likelihood of their dire forecasts.

The behavior of Joe Romm and other famous climate-change alarmists during the recent Heartland Institute affair beautifully illustrates my position.

The Heartland Affair: A Quick Recap

I am assuming most readers are familiar with the basics of the Heartland Institute affair, but for those who aren’t, I highly recommend Megan McArdle’s blog posts on the issue (1, 2, 3, and 4). Not only did McArdle keep up with each new development in the saga practically in real-time, but she herself was one of the active participants in unraveling the mystery of the initially anonymous leaker, who turned out to be climate scientist (and advocate of rapid government intervention) Peter Gleick.

I recognize that some readers may be too busy to go back over four blog posts, so let me give the essentials of the story that are necessary to understand my own reaction: Back in February, an anonymous person calling him- or herself “Heartland Insider” emailed a cache of documents to various bloggers who promote government policies to combat climate change.

The Heartland Institute is one of the leading think tanks that oppose such policies, and the sensitive nature of the documents (including funding sources and strategies for the future) made the cache seem analogous to the infamous Climategate emails.

(Full disclosure: I was paid to give a talk at a Heartland conference a few years ago, summarizing my research on the poor case for instituting a carbon tax as a solution to climate change.)

For a typical example, here is the February 14 reaction of Richard Littlemore at DeSmogBlog to the receipt of the documents:

An anonymous donor calling him (or her)self “Heartland Insider” has released the Heartland Institute’s budget, fundraising plan, its Climate Strategy for 2012 and sundry other documents (all attached) that prove all of the worst allegations that have been leveled against the organization.

It is clear from the documents that Heartland advocates against responsible climate mitigation and then uses that advocacy to raise money from oil companies and “other corporations whose interests are threatened by climate policies.” Heartland particularly celebrates the funding that it receives from the fossil fuel fortune being the Charles G. Koch Foundation.

Heartland also continues to collect money from Philip Morris parent company Altria as well as from the tobacco giant Reynolds American, while maintaining ongoing advocacy against policies related to smoking and health.

Heartland’s policy positions, strategies and budget distinguish it clear as a lobby firm that is misrepresenting itself as a “think tank” – it budgets $4.1 million of its $6.4 million in projected expenditures for Editorial, Government Relations, Communications, Fundraising, and Publications, and the only activity it plans that could vaguely be considered policy development is the writing of a curriculum package for use in confusing high schoolers about climate change.

There will be more comment and analysis to follow on DeSmogBlog and elsewhere, but we wanted to make this information available so that others can also scrutinize the documents and bring their expertise to the task.

The Littlemore post then has downloadable links to the documents contained in the initial leak. By far, the most damning document was the “2012 Heartland Climate Strategy” memo [.pdf]. It was exactly what the alarmist bloggers wanted to find, and it was upon this document that they based their claims of Heartland’s foul play.

The only problem is, the document is clearly a fabrication, and any reasonable person could have identified it as such within minutes of inspection. Heartland itself almost immediately said that this particular strategy memo was bogus, while (eventually) acknowledging that the other documents were legitimate. If the reader follows the Megan McArdle links above, the numerous problems with this particular document are outlined.

Yet as of this writing—a month after all reasonable people following the case would know the situation—the DeSmogBlog post doesn’t even have an update, warning readers that there is, to say the least, some dispute as to the authenticity of the document. (To its credit, ThinkProgress took down the strategy memo after its numerous problems came to light.)

Climate Strategy Memo Legit? No Way!

The single most amazing aspect in this affair is the sheer implausibility of the alleged Climate Strategy memo. As McArdle observed, “it reads like it was written from the secret villain lair in a Batman comic.  By an intern.” I mean really, just look at this absurdity:

Principals and teachers are heavily biased toward the alarmist perspective. To counter this we are considering launching an effort to develop alternative materials for K-12 classrooms. We are pursuing a proposal from Dr. David Wojick to produce a global warming curriculum for K-12 schools. Dr. Wojick is a consultant with the Office of Scientific and Technical Information at the U.S. Department of Energy in the area of information and communication science. His effort will focus on providing curriculum that shows that the topic of climate change is controversial and uncertain–two key points that are effective at dissuading teachers from teaching science. We tentatively plan to pay Dr. Wojick $100,000 for 20 modules in 2012, with funding pledged by the Anonymous Donor. [Bold added.]

When reading the passage in bold, the climate bloggers who received the anonymous email should have had alarms going off. “Danger, danger, Will Robinson! This is obviously a hoax.”

First of all, the academics associated with Heartland think the science is on their side. They would never in a million years describe what they are doing as “dissuading teachers from teaching science.” Second of all, even if they did think that’s what they were ultimately doing, would Heartland phrase it like that in a memo for its top supporters?

Just think about that for a moment. In a mob movie, does the boss typically say to his underlings, “OK guys, tomorrow we are going to commit some serious violations of morality”? Of course not. Instead he’ll say, “We’ll make him an offer he can’t refuse,” or maybe, “Tomorrow we settle the score” or “We’re going to protect our family once and for all.”

The Climate Strategy memo also contains this gem:

Heartland plays an important role in climate communications, especially through our in-house experts (e.g., Taylor) through his Forbes blog and related high profile outlets, our conferences, and through coordination with external networks (such as WUWT [Watt’s Up With That] and other groups capable of rapidly mobilizing responses to new scientific findings, news stories, or unfavorable blog posts). Efforts at places such as Forbes are especially important now that they have begun to allow high-profile climate scientists (such as Gleick) to post warmist science essays that counter our own. This influential audience has usually been reliably anti-climate and it is important to keep opposing voices out. [Bold added.]

It should be obvious to any neutral reader that no one associated with Heartland would have written such a thing, because no one at Heartland is consciously “anti-climate.” Whoever fabricated the above—and many people think it was Gleick himself, which would explain the odd attention he receives as opposed to more famous “warmists” such as Al Gore or James Hansen—must imagine all opponents as Montgomery Burns from the Simpsons, chanting “Ehhhhhxcellent” while eating a bald eagle stew.

Finally, for added quantitative evidence that this document was clearly forged, consider the fact that it claims the Koch Foundation gave $200,000 for climate efforts in 2011. In reality, the Koch Foundation only gave $25,000 in 2011, and that was for projects related to health care. Surely the “inner circle” of Heartland wouldn’t commit such a massive error in discussing donations of this magnitude. If the discrepancy had been $200,000 versus $20,000, then we could entertain the theory that it was a typographical error.

But in light of the other oddities (outlined by McArdle and others) of this memo—coupled with the two oozing absurdities I quoted above—this mistake of $25,000 for health care activities, with $200,000 for climate projects, should have been the icing on the cake. This memo is clearly fraudulent, and yet DeSmogBlog to this day leaves up its original post with not even a nod to the controversy.

The Gullible Climate Bloggers

Some defenders of Gleick have asked what would be in it for him? Why would he have the motive to fabricate the Climate Strategy memo, since (by his own confession) he tricked a Heartland staffer into sending him the other, legitimate documents?

The answer is obvious: The legitimate documents weren’t damning enough. So someone (not necessarily Gleick, though he is the obvious suspect) cooked up the fake document that has the juiciest quotes. Steve McIntyre has a great post showing the timeline of the story as it bounced through the blogosphere. Skim through the initial discussion by the pro-intervention climate bloggers, and see how they focus almost exclusively on quotes taken from the bogus memo, not from the legitimate documents that Gleick obtained through his deception.

Now to be sure, climate science isn’t the same thing as politics and the blogosphere. Just because these climate alarmists showed ridiculously bad judgment when it came to the Heartland affair, doesn’t necessarily mean that they are wrong about the trajectory of global temperatures in the absence of mitigation strategies.

However, I do think this episode—and the reaction of the skeptic community during Climategate—are quite illustrative of the two camps’ approaches to the actual science. Back when the Climategate emails were first spreading around the Internet, I distinctly remember many people in the comments at blogs such as ClimateAudit warning their peers by saying things like, “Guys, remember, we’re skeptics. This is too good to be true. Let’s not jump up and down on this, because it might be a trap to make us look gullible.”

In contrast, the major players on the other side—when Heartland was “caught” saying things that were far more absurd than what the Climategate emails revealed—jumped with glee. For example, Leo Hickman at The Guardian‘s climate blog wrote on February 15:

Again, much to digest here, but for me one thing stands out beyond the talk of trying to “cultivate more neutral voices” and “coordination with outside networks”. When you recollect all the hullabaloo expressed by climate sceptics about how climate scientists apparently try to close down debate etc, then this sentence says so much:

This influential audience has usually been reliably anti-climate and it is important to keep opposing voices out.

If you like your hypocrisy sandwiches served with a side order of double standards, then these leaked documents are certainly the place to dine out.

Now Hickman was obviously eager to jump on Heartland, and he did so (in the above fashion) when the story first broke. But now, a month later, surely he has updated the post, to reflect the fact that most of his quotes come from a memo that is clearly fake?

Nope, all we have is this terse update: “UPDATE: 8.47pm The Heartland Institute has now issued a statement claiming one of the documents – “2012 Climate Strategy” – is “fake”.”

And be sure to check out Joe Romm’s reaction to the Gleick confession. Let’s keep in mind the irony here: Gleick was an outspoken champion for scientific integrity and ethics—accusing opponents such as Judith Curry of disappointing him in this regard—and then admitted he had pretended to be a Heartland board member, in order to trick one of their staffers into sending him documents from their last meeting.

This is arguably a crime, let alone an action unbecoming a scientist. Anyway, Romm certainly doesn’t throw Gleick under the bus. Instead, he writes an all’s-fair-when-it-comes-to-saving-the-planet defense, and spends a lot of time talking about what a jerk he thinks Andrew Revkin is.

Conclusion

The Heartland affair has shown not merely that some climate alarmists (namely Gleick) will stoop to outright deception, and most of his peers will close ranks to defend him in a sort of Green Wall of Silence. Perhaps more disturbing, it reveals that these people really have no idea how their opponents on the climate issue actually view the world. So when they dismiss skeptics as having no legitimate arguments, it should make outsiders take pause.

Without being a trained climate scientist, I can read the various blogs and try to parse the academic papers, but ultimately I have to rely a lot on the good faith and judgment of the scientists themselves. The Heartland affair has reassured my earlier conviction that the case for climate alarmism is far weaker than the alarmists have been telling us.

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Gail Combs
March 23, 2012 1:31 pm

Dennis Nikols says:
March 23, 2012 at 9:07 am
…. At my blog, at least half of the 179 essays deal in one way or another with this disconnect. Like others I still search for that honest man.
______________________________
Good luck an Honest man in today’s society in the USA is now very very hard to find.
A handshake or even a contract is now useless because “Honor” seems to be a dead concept today and “lie, cheat and steal” seems the norm. I have had that conversation with several other older small businessmen and all have seen the same trend towards dishonesty as the norm.
The disregard for honor and ethics shown by Gleick and condoned by his buddies is therefore a reflection of society as a whole where lying has become the norm. For example 80% of job applications contain false information regarding work history and 30% of the information related to educational back ground is false. (Employment Law for Business, 5th edit. 2007)

Gail Combs
March 23, 2012 1:49 pm

copner says:
March 23, 2012 at 11:50 am
….I’m sure there is a practical reason to it in the case of the mob, but they also – as most people do – convince themselves they are doing the right thing and are the good guys with a moral code….
_____________________________
Actually the “old style” Mob did have a “moral code” They were businessman and therefore to followed a code because it was just plain good business. Terrorism just to get one’s jollies, destroying property for no reason just do not make business sense. How do I know? Because we lived next door to a mob boss and a very dear friend of mine is nephew of a mob boss.
I rather deal with the mob than this bunch!

JJ
March 23, 2012 2:23 pm

rogerkni says:
No, they are not quite clear. They use roundabout methods of referring to ordering a crime or a hit to guard against the possibility that their conversation is being bugged, or that one of them might turn and testify against them later.

Thus demonstrating that they are clear as to the illegality of what they are doing. Duh.

Allan MacRae
March 23, 2012 3:16 pm

Gail Combs says: March 23, 2012 at 8:10 am
Yes, you are correct the whole objective of mud slinging is to make sure at least SOME of the mud manages to cling.
The way this is done is to be the first to sling mud and grab all the big headlines and therefore public opinion. It does not matter if it was a false accusation because the retraction in the papers will always be several days..weeks… months later in tiny print on a back page next to the advert for a funeral company.
_______________
Gail, You are correct.
This approach is a standard tactic of the CAGW slimers, and has been for years.
This same slimy CAGW tactic was used against Bjorn Lomborg, Willie Soon, Sallie Baliunas, Jan Veizer and Nir Shaviv.
Details in an E&E article published in 2005, describing events that date from 2003, available at
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/11/28/the-team-trying-to-get-direct-action-on-soon-and-baliunas-at-harvard/#comment-811913
One of the reasons this tactic works so well is the warmists are preaching to the converted, zealots of the “Church of Very-Scary Global Warming”. These zealots are intellectually slothful, so if the BIG LIE fits their political template, they are on-board. Thus the BIG LIE spreads rapidly, like a plague bacillus that targets the dishonest and weak-of-mind.
The only way to fight this tactic is to sue the slimers. In the past, the cost in time and money of a lawsuit has prevented injured parties from pursuing this course of action. Heartland should make an example of these slimers, and pursue them to the full extent of the law.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
March 23, 2012 4:11 pm

Ian W said on March 23, 2012 at 11:56 am:

I know that the ‘Support the EPA’ advert from the Conservationists has been discussed in a thread. But in the past these google ads were random and even refreshing a page could produce another one. This fake advert is now appearing on EVERY WUWT thread. Is this a validatable sign of Google-bias? Someone somewhere is spending a lot of money to keep that advert up.
Why?

First off, calling “The League of Conservation Voters” conservationists is… problematic. “Conservationist” is used by logical people who respect nature while realizing mankind is not a passive component but is actually an active manager of nature. If humans don’t want to be surrounded by large predators that view our young as tasty meals, then we must actively reduce not only the predator populations but also the prey species whose numbers are naturally suppressed by predation and will expand and destroy their food supplies without predation.
As currently used, a conservationist would build a dam to control dangerous flooding and provide a water source in times of drought, an environmentalist would destroy the dam as being unnatural (unless built by beavers, of course, as only mankind’s works are unnatural).
As to the ads, Congress is considering, mainly the Republicans are, reigning in the EPA from regulating “carbon” emissions, which has mainly been a jihad against “dirty” coal-burning power plants. The apparent EPA backup plan is regulating emissions of mercury and other things, when the atmospheric contribution from coal plants in the US is already negligible with natural sources dominating, and demanding plant upgrades as the removal technology improves, whenever it improves, no matter the cost, until coal is an economically unviable energy source and those plants are shut down.
So money is getting poured into ads to convince the public to not let Congress “gut clean air regulations”. Congress wants to stop EPA overreach. The ad campaigns want people to believe corporations will gleefully return us to historically high pollution levels if the EPA is restrained at all, as seen by the frequent use of smokestacks belching… actually that’s just water vapor that you see, but it looks menacing to the rubes. This particular ad on WUWT shows up here since climate is discussed here. Same message by the visuals and text but with “climate change” added.
If Google thinks the ads are a good choice for this site, and clicking helps support WUWT, fine by me. Go ahead and click the vaporstacks, I find the ad that comes up is humorous. “…dump unlimited amounts of industrial carbon pollution…” with carbon pollution being carbon dioxide. And this photoshopped pic is priceless. Solar panels tilted so sharply they could be in Canada, close enough that the rear one would be in the front one’s shadow, with windmills so close the tips could almost hit each other, packed so inefficiently close the turbulence would be disruptive. Heck, the clouds “reflected” on the panels don’t even match those in the sky. Such a wonderful ad this is, lies and fakery throughout!

Brian H
March 23, 2012 7:26 pm

Leo Norekens says:
March 23, 2012 at 6:39 am
Slightly off tipic : Should be “L’Affaire” with an E.
Nitpicking, I know, but if you’re going to use French, you might as well……
[REPLY: Kettle, meet pot. -REP]
Bill Davis says:
March 23, 2012 at 6:39 am
Well put Mr Murphy!

Nope. It’s his typist relative, Mrs. Muphry. (Posts correcting posts are likely to contain errors.)
;D

Brian H
March 23, 2012 7:32 pm

Ken Harvey says:
March 23, 2012 at 7:25 am
“Without being a trained climate scientist,…”
Is there any such person, I wonder? Can we come up with the name of any single person who can claim full qualification in physics, quantum physics, astrophysics, thermodynamics, electrical engineering, fluid mechanics, geology and biochemistry? That list is nowhere near complete, but seems to me to be a minimum requirement to start upon a quest for a Climatology PhD.
The sheer depth and breadth of the subject is the nub of the problem. Any fool can stand up and make any prediction that he cares to and there is no near absolute authority on the matter to say a resounding no.

Indeed. Clark (?) in Australia made the point a couple of years ago; there are about 100 significant fields that make up “Climatology”, and he acknowledged that his PhD gave him qualifications in one, with perhaps reasonable working mastery of one or two others.
Climate Scientists are Jackasses of All Sciences, Masters of None.

Brian H
March 23, 2012 7:38 pm

oMan says:
March 23, 2012 at 7:25 am
Great essay and very useful summary of “L’Affaire Gleick.” I agree that the desired action is to force the libel-mongers to eat their own cooking, just as publicly and enthusiastically as they served it up. In other words, prominent and unambiguous retractions.
People only change when they’re in pain. Sad fact.

Indeed. You might be interested in this study, which I have re-titled:
Power tends to stupefy, and absolute power stupefies absolutely.
It seems the only thing which enables the errant arrogant able to form accurate judgments again is humiliation.

Brian H
March 23, 2012 7:43 pm

Bill says:
March 23, 2012 at 8:02 am

How many 100′s of thousands of years did humans use campfires and then coal, etc. Having those in your home was less healthy than today but people still lived long lives.

Don’t overstate your case! Indoor open fires and badly vented indoor open flame in general is very directly implicated in serious lung disease and early death.
As for “long lives”, life expectancy was <50 yrs as of about 1900.

Brian H
March 23, 2012 7:48 pm

garymount says:
March 23, 2012 at 8:26 am

(Mr. Watts reminds us in response that Mr. Suzuki is, or was, a fruit fly ­geneticist).”

Not even a “working” one. Left the drudgery of Science for broadcasting as fast as his little foots would carry him immediately after getting his PhD.

Christopher Hanley
March 23, 2012 9:09 pm

….As for “long lives”, life expectancy was <50 yrs as of about 1900….Brian H (7:43 pm).
That's a popular myth. It was not that unusual for people born over a century ago to reach old age (80+) as many people will know from their family history.
For instance the life expectancy rate at birth for Australian males in 1909 was about 55 compared to around 80 today, but that was because the infant mortality rate in 1900 was 120/1000 live births (200/1000 in Britain) as opposed to 5/1000 today (other western countries are about the same).

March 23, 2012 10:01 pm

Slightly off topic but Mr. Murphy has an excellent introductory book on economics that you can download for free,
http://mises.org/document/5706/Lessons-for-the-Young-Economist

March 23, 2012 10:18 pm

I think this quote says it all
“We need to get some broad based support,
to capture the public’s imagination…
So we have to offer up scary scenarios,
make simplified, dramatic statements
and make little mention of any doubts…
Each of us has to decide what the right balance
is between being effective and being honest.”
– Prof. Stephen Schneider,
Stanford Professor of Climatology,
lead author of many IPCC reports

Chris G
March 23, 2012 11:58 pm

Lot’s of fodder for analyzing the motives and tactics of the religious environmental left. Truly cult like behavior. Disturbing really.
Say does anyone know if that bloke in England ever got his computers back? That one really irritated me, it just seemed personal, invasive, wrong and unjust.
Not as mesmerizing as this gleick glock gleick glock time bomb but I really was looking for some closure. Perhaps I missed it.
Anyone?
Chris

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
March 24, 2012 12:12 am

From Christopher Hanley on March 23, 2012 at 9:09 pm:

….As for “long lives”, life expectancy was <50 yrs as of about 1900….Brian H (7:43 pm).
That's a popular myth. (…)

Not a myth in the US.
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr59/nvsr59_09.pdf
Table 20, pg 48, born 1900-02, all races and both sexes, life expectancy was 49.24 years. Also 49.64 yrs for whites, only 33.80 for blacks. Table 21, pg 52, is life expectancy at birth with a finer breakdown by year. 1900, all races and both sexes, just 47.3 yrs. Note this data is “death registration states” thus not covering all of what was then the US. But there are no noticeable discrepancies when it shifts to “US” in 1928, so the 1900 data is most likely representative of the US as a whole.

(…) It was not that unusual for people born over a century ago to reach old age (80+) as many people will know from their family history. (…)

That’s because before vaccines and antibiotics and much more of modern medicine, the hardiest survived while many did not. I had a relative, great uncle or something, a grown middle-aged hard-working adult, whose printed obituary says he died from scratching a pimple. Marginal food quality and quantities helped the winnowing as well, also note current research showing how caloric restriction can extend lifespan. Plus their lifestyles were more “active” as physical activity was required which built up “reserves” of health for later in life. Walking those five miles to school and back five days a week alone did wonders for keeping juvenile diabetes away.
But despite these exceptional specimens living so long, average life expectancy was still lousy by modern “developed world” standards.

Barry
March 24, 2012 2:53 am

Heartland needs to take Gleick to court and he needs to serve jail time for his actions. If he does not pay the consequences for committing criminal acts, it sets a precedent for other less ethical followers to propagate such shenanigans on other “deniers”.

rogerkni
March 24, 2012 6:30 am

JJ says:
March 23, 2012 at 2:23 pm

rogerkni says:
No, they are not quite clear. They use roundabout methods of referring to ordering a crime or a hit to guard against the possibility that their conversation is being bugged, or that one of them might turn and testify against them later.

Thus demonstrating that they are clear as to the illegality of what they are doing. Duh.

So it’s heads you win, tails I lose? Your initial post implied that mobsters were explicitly clear. I contradicted that–and that alone. Now you say they’re implicitly clear–and declare victory?!
Continuing: If mob bosses camouflage their meanings, and other persons who are knowingly doing wrong do so in documents that might later impugn them, then Heartland (if it was knowingly doing wrong) wouldn’t have written in an uncamouflaged style. OTOH, if Heartland wasn’t knowingly doing evil, then it wouldn’t have explicitly advocated doing so either.
Therefore, the article’s assertion that the purported strategy memo from Heartland should have seemed like a phony (because it explicitly advocated not teaching science)–to the warmist blogs that read it is correct.
For the record, I was arguing against your assertion below, which seemed to imply that mob bosses DO explicitly advocate evil-doing–and therefore … what? I don’t see how it contradicts what I’ve written above.

JJ says:
March 23, 2012 at 8:00 am
“Just think about that for a moment. In a mob movie, does the boss typically say to his underlings, …”
That is a supremely bad analogy. The point it is supposed to be illustrating is that Heartland, whether they are correct about it or not, believes that the science supports their position. Thus they wouldn’t speak about their efforts as undermining science. Conversely, do mobsters actually believe that what they are doing is lawful or moral? No. They are quite clear on the illegality and immorality of their actions, and are knowingly making a business of it – exactly what the warmist twits accuse Heartland of doing.

Gail Combs
March 24, 2012 6:50 am

Christopher Hanley says:
March 23, 2012 at 9:09 pm
….As for “long lives”, life expectancy was <50 yrs as of about 1900….Brian H (7:43 pm).
That's a popular myth. It was not that unusual for people born over a century ago to reach old age (80+) as many people will know from their family history….
_________________________
My Aunt just died at 103 yrs of age at home with few hospital visits.

Gail Combs
March 24, 2012 7:11 am

Barry says:
March 24, 2012 at 2:53 am
Heartland needs to take Gleick to court and he needs to serve jail time for his actions. If he does not pay the consequences for committing criminal acts, it sets a precedent for other less ethical followers to propagate such shenanigans on other “deniers”.
_______________________
Yes, you are correct.
A line has been crossed where illegal activity has been seen as condoned by “Society” (The mass media) Once that line is cross, if it is not punished then the next line will be cross and the next.
You can compare this to a wife “Forgiving” her husband for slapping her in anger. Once that line is cross you are on the slippery slope to severe crippling abuse and possibly murder.
(I took the unanimous advice of three psychologists/psychiatrists and got the heck out of the marriage)
I think skeptics should take the same advice before these things escalate. Seeing this new post scares the… out of me! This would allow any and all attacks on skeptics with no hope of legal protection.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/03/24/where-theres-a-need-for-immunity-theres-a-crime-green-climate-fund-looking-to-un-for-diplomatic-immunity-protection-from-lawsuits/

sherlock
March 24, 2012 9:25 am

Did I miss a mention of Gleick’s claim that he was sent the document in question by a mystery informant, not Heartland, and that his motivation in going phishing was to validate that document? If I recall correctly, he offered this (after the fact) as an explanation of why its format was uniquely distinct from the documents sent to him by Heartland. But strangely, he never mentions the document he is “trying to validate” in his any of his email requests, and which is thus the motivation behind the whole episode, if we are to believe Gleick. Yes, that sounds pretty bizarre to me too.
“Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we assay to deceive.”

LazyTeenager
March 24, 2012 3:13 pm

while (eventually) acknowledging that the other documents were legitimate
———–
Yeah I noticed this. I didn’t think that the Heartand documents were particularly damaging either. But it seemed to me Joe Bast was doing a bit of dodging and weaving by playing games and trying to obscure the apparent fact that the other documents were legitimate.

LazyTeenager
March 24, 2012 3:33 pm

michael hart says:
March 23, 2012 at 6:32 am
“Is the science right or is it really a hoax like Rush Limbaugh says?”
My standard reply, is to ask yourself two questions:
1) What successful predictions has the science made? [note: Predictions, not hindcasts]
————
For goodness sake. Rising temperatures due to increasing industrial CO2 were predicted back in the 1970s.
Checking checking – 1970s verified. See this history
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/summary.htm

March 24, 2012 5:32 pm

Peter Gleick to speak at Oxford – as far as I know, this is going ahead:
The Human Right to Water, lecture by Peter Gleick
By Oxford Amnesty Lectures
Tuesday, 24 April 2012, 17:30 until 18:30
The Gulbenkian Lecture Theatre, St Cross Building, Manor Road, Oxford OX1 3TU.
Protect the Human: Protect the Planet, Oxford Amnesty Lectures 2012
You can verify this at:
http://www.oxford-amnesty-lectures.org/index.php?p=Lectures

March 25, 2012 5:50 am

LazyTeenager says:
March 24, 2012 at 3:33 pm
For goodness sake. Rising temperatures due to increasing industrial CO2 were predicted back in the 1970s.
Checking checking – 1970s verified. See this history
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/summary.htm

They were predicting global *cooling* due to increasing industrial CO2 back in the ’70s. The heating was supposed to lead to increased atmospheric water vapor, which in turn was supposed to lead to an increase in cloud formation, which in turn was supposed to lead to an increase in the Earth’s albedo, which in turn was supposed to lead to a decrease in insolation.

Gail Combs
March 25, 2012 9:33 am

michael hart says: March 23, 2012 at 6:32 am
“Is the science right or is it really a hoax like Rush Limbaugh says?”
My standard reply, is to ask yourself two questions:
1) What successful predictions has the science made? [note: Predictions, not hindcasts]
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LazyTeenager says: March 24, 2012 at 3:33 pm
For goodness sake. Rising temperatures due to increasing industrial CO2 were predicted back in the 1970s.
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No the rising temperatures were predicted by the 88 year Geissenberg cycle (1944) (1967)(1973) It is political expediency that linked the rise to industry. The earth was still in the cooling part of the cycle when Maurice Strong started hawking CAGW at the first earth Summit in 1972.
I remember all the “Ice Age is coming” hype from that time period and the switch to CAGW.

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 108, 1003, 15 PP., 2003
doi:10.1029/2002JA009390
Persistence of the Gleissberg 88-year solar cycle over the last ∼12,000 years: Evidence from cosmogenic isotopes
ABSTRACT
Among other longer-than-22-year periods in Fourierspectra of various solar–terrestrial records, the 88-year cycle is unique,because it can be directly linked to the cyclic activity of sunspot formation.Variations of amplitude as well as of period of the Schwabe 11-year cycleof sunspot activity have actually been known for a long time and a ca. 80-yearcycle was detected in those variations. Manifestations of such secular periodicprocesses were reported in a broad variety of solar, solar–terrestrial,and terrestrial climatic phenomena. Confirmation of the existence of the Gleissbergcycle in long solar–terrestrial records as well as the question of itsstability is of great significance for solar dynamo theories…. http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2003/2002JA009390.shtml

The article then goes on to say “… Attempts have been made to explain 20th century global warming exclusively by the component of irradiance variation associated with the Gleissberg cycle. These attempts fail, because they require unacceptably great solar forcing and are incompatible with the paleoclimatic records…”
But as William Astley, and Vukcevic and even NASA point out TSI is not the be all and end all of solar activity though CAGW proponents keep trying to tell us it is.
The science is in its infancy, the variables are numerous and unknown, and the interactions are complex. Only the super naive could possibly believe there is one control knob CO2. If Runaway Climates were possible the earth would already be dry as dust with no H2O or an Ice Ball by now. The fact that it is not is ample evidence that the system contains negative feedbacks balancing it in two steady states; the present warmth and Ice Ages.