Bizarre reactions to my PBS interview continue – PBS Ombudsman to publish criticism of my inclusion into PBS Newshour

UPDATE: 1:50PM – The PBS News Hour Ombudsman has posted his essay, you can read it here.

=============================================================

For the record, just now, I’ve called PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler to give him an opportunity to ask me questions before he publishes his article. I got voice mail, so we’ll see if he’s interested in hearing anything about my side before condemning me. I predict he will not return my call, but if he does I’ll report it here. UPDATE 11:50AM: Mr. Getler HAS returned my call and we had a pleasant conversation.

Via Tom Nelson:

PBS Ombud: NewsHour Climate Change Report Worth Criticizing | Blog | Media Matters for America 

A PBS NewsHour global warming report that allowed a climate change contrarian to “counterbalance” mainstream scientific opinion is worth criticizing, according to PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler, who said he received hundreds of emails and calls about the program.

Getler said he is penning a column on the issue that is likely to be posted late today or Monday, and hinted it will be critical.

“There’s just a lot of…hundreds of emails about it,” Getler said when asked why he is writing about the issue. “Commentary about it all over and it’s interesting.”

Getler declined to offer specific views on the NewsHour report, which aired last Monday. But when asked if he has found elements to criticize, he said: “Oh yeah, of course there’s material to be critical about.”

When Media Matters first called this morning, Getler said he had been contacted by many viewers since Monday about the issue: “It’s what everyone’s calling about, the global warming thing.”

Former CNN science reporter Miles Obrien:

PBS NewsHour Science Reporter Miles O’Brien: Climate Denier Segment A ‘Horrible, Horrible Thing’ | ThinkProgress

The general public has spoken out as well, with over 15,000 [aren’t there a lot more than 15,000 people in the general public?] people signing a Forecast the Facts petition to PBS ombudsman Michael Getler demanding an investigation of how this violation of PBS journalistic standards made it to broadcast.

And here’s some thinly veiled hate:

Warmist Doug Craig: You know what Anthony Watts is like? A dark figure with no wood who tears your home down every night

Redding.com Blogs: Doug Craig’s blog

Imagine you are building a house and at night while you are sleeping someone destroys all your work. Each day you return to build your home and each night, dark figures tear it down. Anthony Watts and others like him have nothing to build. They have no scientific “wood.” They create nothing while they destroy everything.

…Like the cancer victim who refuses treatment because they deny they are sick, Watts is that voice of denial that prevents us from decisive action on behalf of our children and their future. The lie lives. The saboteurs are free and in control of this false debate.

=======================================================================

For the record, this is what they are upset about:

Here’s the story/transcript from Spencer Michels, along with video that follows. I have not seen the piece that will be airing nationally yet, and I don’t know how much of me they use, but this just appeared on the PBS website.

One note: when they talk about “heat sync” they really meant to say heat sink. – Anthony

Conversation with global warming skeptic Anthony Watts  – Climate Change Skeptic Says Global Warming Crowd Oversells Its Message

From PBS:

It was about 105 degrees in Chico, Calif., about three hours north of Sacramento, when we arrived at the offices of one of the nation’s most read climate skeptics. Actually, Anthony Watts calls himself a pragmatic skeptic when it comes to global warming. Watts is a former television meteorologist, who has been studying climate change for years. He doesn’t claim to be a scientist; he attended Purdue. He’s the author of a blog, Watts Up with That?, which he calls the world’s most viewed site on global warming. For a story I was working on for the PBS NewsHour, Watts was recommended by the Heartland Institute, a conservative, Chicago-based non-profit that is one of the leading groups that doubt that climate change — if it exists — is attributable to human activities.

Watts doesn’t come across as a true believer or a fanatic. For one thing, he has built a business that caters to television stations and individuals who want accurate weather information and need displays to show their viewers. He has developed an array of high tech devices to disseminate weather data and put it on screens. He has several TV stations around the country as clients.

But Watts’ reputation doesn’t come from his business — IntelliWeather — but rather from his outspoken views on climate change. He says he’s been gathering data for years, and he’s analyzed it along with some academics. He used to think somewhat along the same lines as Richard Muller, the University of California physicist who recently declared he was no longer a skeptic on climate change. Muller had analyzed two centuries worth of temperature data and decided his former skepticism was misplaced: yes, the earth has been warming, and the reason is that humans are producing carbon dioxide that is hastening the warming the planet.

Watts doesn’t buy Muller’s analysis, since, he believes, it is based on faulty data. The big problem, as Watts sees it, is that the stations where temperatures are gathered are too close to urban developments where heat is soaked up and distorts the readings. So it looks like the earth is warming though it may not be, he says.

Read a transcript below.

SPENCER MICHELS: So let’s start out with the basic idea that there’s this debate in this country over global warming. There’s some people who call it a complete hoax and there are some people who completely embrace it and so forth. Where do you stand in that spectrum?

ANTHONY WATTS: Well, I at one time was very much embracing the whole concept that we had a real problem, we had to do something about it. Back in 1988 James Hanson actually was the impetus for that for me in his presentation before Congress. But as I learned more and more about the issue, I discovered that maybe it’s not as bad as it’s made out to be. Some of it is hype, but there’s also some data that has not been explored and there’s been some investigations that need to be done that haven’t been done. And so now I’m in the camp of we have some global warming. No doubt about it, but it may not be as bad as we originally thought because there are other contributing factors.

SPENCER MICHELS: What’s the thing that bothers you the most about people who say there’s lots of global warming?

ANTHONY WATTS: They want to change policy. They want to apply taxes and these kinds of things may not be the actual solution for making a change to our society.

SPENCER MICHELS: What are you saying? That they’re biased essentially or motivated by something else? What?

ANTHONY WATTS: [T]here’s a term that was used to describe this. It’s called noble cause corruption. And actually I was a victim of that at one time, where you’re so fervent you’re in your belief that you have to do something. You’re saving the planet, you’re making a difference, you’re making things better that you’re so focused on this goal of fixing it or changing it that you kind of forget to look along the path to make sure that you haven’t missed some things.

I started looking into the idea that weather stations have been slowly encroached upon by urbanization and sighting issues over the last century. Meaning that our urbanization affected the temperature. And this was something that was very clear if you looked at the temperature records. But what wasn’t clear is how it affected the trend of temperatures. And so that’s been something that I’ve been investigating. Anyone who’s ever stood next to a building in the summertime at night, a brick building that’s been out in the summer sun, you stand next to it at night you can feel the heat radiating off of it. That’s a heat sync effect. And over the last 100 years our country, in fact the world, has changed. We’ve gone from having mostly a rural agrarian society to one that is more urban and city based and as a result the infrastructure has increased. We’ve got more freeways, you know more airports, we’ve got more buildings. Got more streets, all these things. Those are all heat syncs. During the day, solar insulation hits these objects and these surfaces and it stores heat in these objects. At night it releases that heat. Now if you are measuring temperature in a city that went from having uh maybe 10% of um, non-permeable surface to you know maybe 90% over 100 years, that’s a heat sync effect and that should show up in the record. The problem is, is that it’s been such a slow subtle change over the last 100 years. It’s not easy to detect and that’s been the challenge and that’s what I’ve been working on.

SPENCER MICHELS: Well in a way you’re saying that the records aren’t accurate, the data isn’t accurate.

ANTHONY WATTS: I’m saying that the data might be biased by these influences to a percentage. Yes, we have some global warming, it’s clear the temperature has gone up in the last 100 years. But what percentage of that is from carbon dioxide? And what percentage of that is from changes in the local and measurement environment?

SPENCER MICHELS: I want to go back to what we were talking about a little bit earlier, the idea that there is, there are people who are sort of invested in promoting the fact that there is global warming. There’s money involved and grants. Is that what you were saying? Maybe explain that.

ANTHONY WATTS: Well global warming had become essentially a business in its own right. There are NGOs, there are organizations, there are whole divisions of universities that have set up to study this, this factor, and so there’s lots of money involved and then so I think that there’s a tendency to want to keep that going and not really look at what might be different.

SPENCER MICHELS: Now Dr. Muller at the University of California Berkeley had similar concerns. Went back and looked at the data, took much more data than anybody else had, and concluded, well maybe there was some problems, but basically the conclusions were right. There is global warming and it comes from carbon dioxide which is meant, made by man. Do you buy that?

ANTHONY WATTS: Unfortunately he has not succeeded in terms of how science views, you know, a successful inquiry. His papers have not passed peer review. They had some problems. Some of the problems I identified, others have identified problems as well, for example, he goes much further back, back to about 1750 in terms of temperature. Well from my own studies, I know that temperature really wasn’t validated and homogenized where everything’s measured the same way until the weather bureau came into being about in 1890. Prior to that thermometers were hung in and exposed to the atmosphere all kinds of different ways. Some were hung under the shade of trees, some were on the north side of houses, some were out in the open in the sun, and so the temperature fluctuations that we got from those readings prior to 1890 was quite broad and I don’t believe that provided representative signal because the exposure’s all wrong. And Dr. Muller did not take any of that into account.

SPENCER MICHELS: His conclusion though is that basically global warming exists and that the scientists, no matter what the problems were, were pretty much right on.

ANTHONY WATTS: I agree with him that global warming exists. However, the ability to attribute the percentage of global warming to CO2 versus other man-made influences is still an open question.

SPENCER MICHELS: I want to ask you a little bit about attitudes towards this among the public. We talked to a public opinion specialist at Stanford who says there’s been 80 percent belief in global warming and man-made global warming consistently over at least the last 15 years in this country. Do you buy his theory?

ANTHONY WATTS: Well I look at a number of opinion polls. You’ll find a lot of them on my blog and that we’ve covered. And depending on how you ask the question we’ll sometimes give you a different answer. My view is, is that the view of global warming peaked about at the time that Al Gore came out with his movie, An Inconvenient Truth. But ever since then other factors have kicked in. Climate Gate for example. And it has become less of an issue, in fact you hardly see politicians talking about it anymore, or pushing it as an issue. What’s been happening now it’s just become a regulation issue. It’s gotten away from the political arena and into the bureaucratic regulation arena. And so people I believe based on the polls I’ve seen, aren’t quite as believing as they used to be. And I think the trend is downward.

SPENCER MICHELS: What do you think is the upshot of your attitude toward this? Should the Congress, should the American public say, you know nothing’s been proven yet. We should wait. Or should we go ahead with trying to solve what many people consider a really scary problem?

ANTHONY WATTS: Hmm…You mentioned a really scary problem and I think that’s part of the issues. Some people don’t respond well to scare tactics and there have been some scare tactics used by some of the proponents on the other side of the issue. And that’s where the overselling of it comes in. But this is a slow problem and it requires a slow solution I believe. For example, our infrastructure for electricity and so forth and highways didn’t happen in 5 years or 10 years. It happened over a century. We can’t just rip all that up or change it in the space off five, 10 or 15 years because it’ll be catastrophic to our economy. We need a slow change solution, one that is a solution that changes over time at about the same rate as climate change. More efficient technologies, new technologies, the use of more nuclear for example. There’s a nuclear type of a reactor that’s more safe called a, a liquid thorium reactor that China is jumping on right now. And we should be looking into things like that.

SPENCER MICHELS: Has this issue, I know you think it’s been oversold and scare tactics have been used. Do you think it’s become too politicized?

ANTHONY WATTS: Oh, it’s definitely become too politicized. In fact, some of the scientists who are the leaders in the issue have become for lack of a better word, political tools on the issue.

SPENCER MICHELS: One final question, do you consider yourself a skeptic when it comes to global warming?

ANTHONY WATTS: I would call myself a pragmatic skeptic. Yes, we need to make some changes on our energy technology but more efficient technology’s a good thing. For example, I have solar power on my own, you know, I have done energy reductions in my office and in my home to make things more efficient. So I think those are good things. Those are good messages that we should be embracing. But at the same time I think that some of the issues have been oversold, may have been oversold, because they allow for more regulation to take place. And so the people that like more regulation use global warming as a tool, as a means to an end. And so as a result, we might be getting more regulation and more taxes that really aren’t rooted in science, but more in politics.

==============================================================

This article appears online here

The climate data they don't want you to find — free, to your inbox.
Join readers who get 5–8 new articles daily — no algorithms, no shadow bans.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
296 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jeff D
September 21, 2012 10:54 pm

When did it become mandatory to have the the little letters in your name to be called a “scientist”. Has practicing science become the sole domain of the elite? Did Galileo have those little letters? Aristotle? When my son won his first science fair was he not a scientist? Some of the greatest discoveries in science have been achieved by ” Amateur Scientists “. The whole idea behind science is to learn and question EVERYTHING.
Clods sitting in their high towers demanding praise for being the gatekeepers of knowledge only garner my contempt. This should be the golden era for science instead it has become the dark ages.
I know that I am only preaching to the choir with my rants but it really does tick me off. I consider each and everyone of you that attempts to follow and understand or heaven forbid add to the conversation a real scientist. I would gladly learn here as an amateur from the humble teachers that go out of their way to share their knowledge than from the pompous elites on high. If this is the current state of academia, you can have it.

Nigel S
September 21, 2012 11:03 pm

Lance Wallace, Santa Rosa, CA (the last comment at the end of the Ombudsman’s piece) sums it up very well. The amount of orchestrated heat generated is astonishing. One might almost imagine there was some sort of well funded conspiracy afoot. I guess the P stands for ‘Pure’ (BS we all know when we see it).

wayne
September 21, 2012 11:25 pm

PBS basically just tossed science, at least climate and atmospheric science, into the trash bin, and all because they received a coordinated e-mail barrage from flamed environmental activists (who are curiously the real culprits ruining our Earth through their unforeseen consequences using of course their own collective ‘peer reviewed’ ‘science’, both societal and physically).
The peer review process is broken. The large science journals are broken. Any science with contrary results cannot get funds for research from universities or government so the only avenue is out of their personal pockets. And even if they self-finance research, they can’t make into “accepted” journals to advance science because the content is now controlled to only one side.
This is really getting sickening watching this happen and above all being supported by individuals who should know better. PBS got one toe wet into “balanced reporting” to just roll over dead again at the commands of the other side of this one-sided issue.
Shame on you PBS! Any way I can get my $150 donation back?

September 21, 2012 11:56 pm

Here’s the way I read events:
PBS has a base of viewers who overwhelmingly believe humans are causing the planet to warm in some dangerous way. This belief seems to be at odds with the data. The ombudsman admits he doesn’t understand the subject material so defers to the opinions of those who stand to make a better living if AGW is accepted than if it is not accepted. We have had no significant warming of the planet since 2002 and temperatures since 2004 are trending down globally. We have had no significant sea level rise since 2009. Sea surface temperatures are also trending down. I am not seeing any alarming consequence of human activity.
The rate and magnitude of warming from 1975 to 2000 is nearly identical to the rate and magnitude of warming from 1910 to 1935. In other words, there is nothing in the modern record that stands out as being anomalous in the context of past temperature change events in the instrument record.
PBS appears to know which side of its bread has the butter and is in this case attempting to mollify the protestations of their viewers, facts notwithstanding.
Bottom line: They’re in the tank for AGW as long as their viewers are.

David Cage
September 22, 2012 12:15 am

Surely sound science is strengthened by answering questions and being given the oportunity of showing that every angle has been thought of and all aspect that seem to disprove the case can be shown to be irrelevant. If the climate science had been sound you would have been assisting it to spread the message of how clear cut the case was not how shoddy dishonest and utterly blinkered the viewpoint.

September 22, 2012 12:17 am

——————————————————————————–
Mark and two Cats says:
Okay, if PBS are upset about Anthony not being a sanctified scientist, give some air time to Steve McIntyre, John Christy, Timothy F Ball, Fred Singer, etc.
——————————————————————————–
What the heck is a sanctified scientist anyway? You know, there is no organization that “certifies” or “sanctifies” someone and they become a SCIENTIST. Anthony certianly is a scientist, in every definition I know of.
sci·en·tist (sn-tst) n. A person having expert knowledge of one or more sciences, especially a natural or physical science.
scientist-a person who studies or practises any of the sciences or who uses scientific method
(The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition . )

tallbloke
September 22, 2012 12:39 am

Roger Carr says:
September 21, 2012 at 8:51 pm
Remember “wisdom”? That is the old fashioned way of spelling “wi$dom”.

Wisdom is the domain of the Wis… which is extinct.
-Frank Zappa-

David Jones
September 22, 2012 1:05 am

I have sent an email to the ombudsman through the link on his website recording my surprise that he does not appear to have checked his sources before repeating the “97% of Scientists..” meme.
I pointed out to him that 97% of scientists..” amount to 75 individuals out of more than 3,000 who responded to a poorly worded survey, which made the claim less impressive than it was intended to sound and suggested that, as he would not wish to mislead his readers, he would wish to add an addendum to his blog. I included these links:
http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2010/12/30/lawrence-solomon-75-climate-scientists-think-humans-contribute-to-global-warming/
and http://probeinternational.org/library/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/012009_Doran_final1.pdf
As it comes from UK I doubt he will take any notice but he cannot say he isn’t aware.

Steve C
September 22, 2012 1:17 am

I’ve sent that Ombudsman an email congratulating PBS on your inclusion in the first place, and suggesting that, if your claimed “non-scientist” status is an issue, then a programme including a few of the ‘Petition Project’ scientists and/or Burt Rutan would surely count as a definitive answer. Not that I seriously expect them to follow my advice, of course, but the protests they’d get from that would really be something to see. Still, that’s politics.
Keep up the good work.

David Jones
September 22, 2012 1:24 am

Paul Homewood says:
September 21, 2012 at 11:46 am
“It is rather frightening to see free speech under such vitriolic attack. Unfortunately extrme left wingers have never had much respect for it.
I’m writing to the ombudsman too as D Boehm suggests.”
In my view we should inundate the Ombudsman’s inbox with POLITE, informative emails so he starts to feel uncomfortable with his support, even encouragement of, the anti-democratic cabal that writes vituperative emails.(see my earlier comment)
Surely a major part of his brief is support freedom of speech and as long as we give links to important sceptic sources he will start to understand.the issue is not as clear-cut as the warmista claims.

Justin Ert
September 22, 2012 1:54 am

If it has not been mentioned already, Media Matters continues to be funded by George Soros:
http://www.politico.com/blogs/onmedia/1010/Soros_gives_1_million_to_Media_Matters.html

Ian H
September 22, 2012 1:56 am

Anthony,
The fact that the critics can find nothing better to criticise than the fact that you were permitted to speak demonstrates the strength of your interview. Well done.

Peter Miller
September 22, 2012 1:57 am

A classic example of the Global Warming Industry/Cult at work.
1. Stifle debate.
2. Smear those with opposing views.
3. Dispute/ignore the facts.
4. Shrilly repeat total falsehoods, such as “97% of climate scientists agree…”
5. Employ rent-a-mob tactics.
Blogs like WUWT, JoNova and Climate Audit are starting to have a big impact: they are slowly forcing ‘climate science’ to become honest and the CAGW high priests do not like it, they really do not like it.
Eventually, being forced to become honest means recognising the mildly interesting phenomenon of recent global warming is mostly part of a natural cycle and is definitely not a threat to mankind’s future. This, of course, is a huge threat to the comfortable lifestyles of the self-proclaimed leaders of the Global Warming Industry/Cult and they will therefore fight the concept of honesty in ‘climate science’ by every method available.

Jimbo
September 22, 2012 2:57 am

Hi Mods.
The quote below is intended for any naive warmists and fence sitters who out of curiosity want to visit WUWT after the PBS reaction.

IPCC
The two most abundant gases in the atmosphere, nitrogen (comprising 78% of the dry atmosphere) and oxygen (comprising 21%), exert almost no greenhouse effect. Instead, the greenhouse effect comes from molecules that are more complex and much less common. Water vapour is the most important greenhouse gas, and carbon dioxide (CO2) is the second-most important one.
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/faq-1-3.html

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
September 22, 2012 3:36 am

I found the Ombudsman’s piece to be very well crafted.
It said what was necessary to mollify the critics, as the first job of an ombudsman is to make the critics feel their criticism has been noted. It did not attempt to directly challenge the critics, as expected.
Then came the letters, starting with the heading “Here Come the Judges”, as the ranting was released. Catering to the expectations of the PBS viewership, they used the coherent, non-rambling, and generally well-presented ones. Which still nevertheless revealed the frothing viciousness of the writers, with their harsh sneering smearing tones.
Plus I suspect there was a selecting of responses to note the inconsistencies. Anthony Watts is a denier of global warming, who clearly said there was global warming on the program. He also is a paid shill of the oil companies, paid by the US Chamber of Commerce, while being an employee of the Heartland Institute. Wow, he’s smart enough to get paid THREE TIMES for the same work!
Then the piece ended with the section “Don’t Let ‘the Alarmists’ Get You Down”, featuring calm reasoned words that thanked PBS and applauded their courage, in stark contrast to the previous letters.
The skeptics were given the last word. Finely crafted indeed.

Jimbo
September 22, 2012 3:39 am

Richard Muller a converted skeptic?
http://www.populartechnology.net/2012/06/truth-about-richard-muller.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/blackberry/p.html?id=1072419
97% of climate scientists agree on one thing or another.
Over 10,000 scientists failed to respond to that survey leaving 77 climate scientists (97%) against 10,000 scientists who could not care less about surveys. We have a consensus.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/07/18/what-else-did-the-97-of-scientists-say/

September 22, 2012 3:47 am

Wow – that ombudsmans tripe is about the most extreme example of a toad eating lickspittle begging to be forgiven that I have ever read.
Unfortunately in this life there are some people that it is better to have hate you and all you stand for. Better to be a man than like this cringing jobsworth!

Lars P.
September 22, 2012 4:35 am

Well our warmist friends are well aware of the theory that 10% can change the point of view of the whole society. This is why they keep on pushing their failed theories, keep a straight poker-face even when maintaining inconsistent thesis like the fake moon landing or fossil fuel conspiracies.
They do not debate with skeptics but chant their global warming religious incantations to the public.
This is why they are so disturbed when real debate occurs, as they know they cannot win such debate.
There is no catastrophy on the CO2 enriching path for the globe.
They are not saviours of the earth, as they would happily portray themselves with higher moral ground, the earth does not need saving, they are diverting large amount of money to their climate saving nonsense to satisfy their egos and hiding the failure of their theories, milking the society as long as it goes.
What has Germany achieved with 100 billion euro solar energy production? What will the EU achieve with many hundreds of billions “clean”-energy production?
Nothing for the environment, no “clean-energy” basis just a palliative with fake calculations looking at it only from the “renewable energy” pov and not as a whole energy generation – with indeed no carbon dioxide reduction through the measure, and actually no need for the reduction.
What could be achieved with 100 billion euros? A moon base? A flight to Mars? Europe’s ESA could be the leading space agency with a tens of the money wasted in Europe on combating Global Warming, but many other come to mind.
The 20th century saw the building of many nuclear power plants establishing a clean & strong energy basis combined with hydroelectric power and fossil fuels power which were gradually being replaced as how the resources were available, technological advances allowed for the planning of the Concorde, rapid trains (TGV), highways, “the chunnel” and many more energising projects.
And the US? The moon landings, Voyager missions – still sending data to the earth, the lead of global technology and manufacturing base.
It is through developing and gathering a base of good technological skilled people and putting them at work together for such projects that progress is achieved.
And the 21st? Today’s NASA is a pale replica of what the NASA was, the US has almost lost 40 years of space technological advance. Wind turbines imported from China generating energy when the wind blows and backuped with gas (from Russia in Europe’s case), Solar energy generating in the lucky May/June hours when its sunny over Germany or in Spain and Greece when and where it is not needed, whilst China has a pro head CO2 production equal to Europe’s. Scammers lighting solar cells to “produce” energy at night, billions of waste through carbon dioxide scams, not to talk about CFCs production in China and India only to “clean” it and so on.
These green projects are based on a lie with fake calculations. Reality is objective no matter how they try to look at it through their green glasses. This is what the warmista don’t understand in their make-up world (speaking here only of the true believers not the scammers).
The energy costs rise, dragging the industry away and the living standard shrinks, but worse the human technology basis gets lost, the further technological advance being then shattered with it. Teaching the scientific method is no longer a must in school so how do we expect people to understand it?
What will be next consequences? Is it difficult to see?
So yes, it is important to come out for debate and yes, I see why they go so feverishly against it, but we need to go through, even with the danger of breaking out their green dreams.
Thank you Anthony for the perseverance and the courage to be the face of reason in these times! Facing religious zealots is and was always difficult.

John Silver
September 22, 2012 4:40 am

Freedom of speech, eh?
*giggle*

Steve from Rockwood
September 22, 2012 5:26 am

kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:
September 22, 2012 at 3:36 am
I found the Ombudsman’s piece to be very well crafted.
————————————–
As did I. But don’t expect to get invited back to PBS for a follow-up.

DirkH
September 22, 2012 5:27 am

The ombudsman says Anthony didn’t get more time than other interview partners yet seemed to dominate the program. WHAT?
The ombudsman complains that he never heard of Watts before. WHAT? Is PBS’ mission to show only people and views the viewers already know?
I know how “public” media operate, I have a lot of them here in Germany – when they report from America they all sound like MSNBC. So, PBS seem to be typical in this regard, and as useless as our public media.

pat
September 22, 2012 5:35 am

bravo:
22 Sept: Businessweek: Michael Shepard and Jim Efstathiou Jr: Senate Moves to Bar U.S. Airlines From EU Emissions Trading
The U.S. Senate passed a measure that would effectively shield U.S. airlines from a European Union program designed to curtail aviation emissions.
The bill, supported by the airlines, was approved early today before lawmakers adjourned to campaign for the Nov. 6 election. Under the measure, which must be reconciled with similar legislation passed by the House last year, U.S carriers would be barred from participating in the EU’s emissions-trading system for carbon credits…
The expansion of the cap-and-trade program triggered opposition from countries including the U.S., China and Russia…
The Senate bill, sponsored by Senator John Thune, a Republican from South Dakota, has Democratic supporters including Bill Nelson of Florida and Claire McCaskill of Missouri. While Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said the Obama administration has not taken a position on the bill, in June he said the government “strongly opposes” the EU plan…
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-09-22/senate-moves-to-bar-u-dot-s-dot-airlines-from-eu-emissions-trading

Coach Springer
September 22, 2012 6:32 am

Considering the source (PBS) and its response to its base, the ombudsman’s editorial seemed to justify what the video article did using Anthony. But that they wouldn’t do it again. Only the annointed may speak, permitting an annointed journalist or an ombudsman to carry the message even if they aren’t an annointed scientist. Anthony, an ordinary Galileo (what this mathematician’s Phd in anyway?) is actually feared by the annointed and PBS got reminded of who they represent.
I am SpartaWatts!

Doug S
September 22, 2012 7:08 am


Jason Joice M.D. says:
September 21, 2012 at 10:23 pm

So well said Doctor, bravo! Indeed, the great Anthony Watts strikes fear into the beating hearts of the alarmists. The house of climate cards is being disturbed and is in danger of falling.
Good morning CAGW believers. It’s a great day for a false religion to be debunked. Enjoy!

DSOvercast
September 22, 2012 7:24 am

“Imagine you are building a house and at night while you are sleeping someone destroys all your work. Each day you return to build your home and each night, dark figures tear it down. Anthony Watts and others like him have nothing to build. They have no scientific “wood.” They create nothing while they destroy everything.”
Well, all I can say is that if “they” would not build their “house” out of straw, maybe the big bad wolf would not be able to blow it down. 🙂