September Panics and Smurphy's Law

A layman’s view of the strange period of history we are living through

Guest post by Caleb Shaw

During hot spells in the summer I often find it refreshing to click onto Anthony’s “Sea Ice Page,” and to sit back and simply watch ice melt. It is an escape from my busy, sweaty routine, as long as I avoid the “Sea Ice Posts” where people become anxious, political, and somewhat insulting, about the serene topic of ice melting. However by September there is no way to avoid the furor generated by melting ice. It reaches a crescendo.

I used to like the September Panic because I often could hijack a thread by bringing up the subject of Vikings. I’d rather talk about Vikings floating around during the MWP, than a bunch of bergs floating around and melting today.

The September Panic also entertained me because I used to learn about all sorts of things I didn’t know about. The debate always involved people clobbering each other with facts, and hitting each other over the head with links. In the process you’d learn all sorts of fascinating trivia about Norwegian fishermen in the 1920’s, and arctic explorers in the 1800’s, and even some science.

For example, fresh water floats on top of saltier water, unless it is the Gulf Stream, which is saltier water floating on top of fresher water because it is warmer, until it gets colder.

This science crosses your eyes, in a pleasant manner, and leads inevitably to discussions about thermohaline circulation, which is fascinating, because so little is known about it.

It also leads to discussions about how the freezing of salt water creates floating ice that is turned into fresh water by extracting brine, which forms “brincicles” as it dribbles down through the ice at temperatures far below zero and enters the warmer sea beneath. This in turn leads to discussions involving the fact that, with such large amounts of brine sinking, surface water must come from someplace to replace it, and in some cases this surface water is cold, while in other cases it is warm.

The fact the replacing waters can be warmer leads to discussions about the northernmost branches of the Gulf Stream, and how these branches meander north and south. This in turn leads to talk of the unpredictable nature of meandering, the further downstream you move from the original point where the meandering starts, and this, (if you are lucky,) will lead you to Chaos Theory and Strange Attractors.

(In the case of the Mississippi River, the subject of meandering leads you to the Delta, plus the topics of Engineers, New Orleans, and Murphy’s Law.) (In the case of psychology, the meanderings of the human mind leads to the conclusion humans are utterly unpredictable, unless they are psychologists, in which case they obey Smurphy’s Law, which states a psychologist will succumb to whatever ailment he is expert in.)

In conclusion, the September Panic can be a source of fascinating thought, providing you are willing to drift like a berg and wind up miles off topic.

I’ve been through this all before, during the Great Meltdown of 2007, and its September Panic. Those were great times, for in the period 2006-2007 the so-called “consensus” put forward a great propaganda effort, including the movie “An Inconvenient Truth,” and won Oscars, Peace Prizes, and a sound thrashing from Skeptics.

Congress debunked Mann’s “hockey stick” in 2006, an English Judge rebuked Al Gore for falsehoods in his movie in 2007, and also in 2007 Hansen had to back off his “adjustments” due to the work of McIntyre at Climate Audit. When Rush Limbaugh mentioned McIntyre’s victory, Climate Audit was overwhelmed by traffic, which was one reason the existence of WUWT came to be known by me, and many others.

In essence the “consensus” experienced a debacle in 2007, for its attempts at propaganda drew so much attention that all its flaws stood naked in a glaring spotlight, and ordinary people began to understand the emperor had no clothes.

All this happened before the 2007 ice-extent hit its record low, and added a quality of desperation to that year’s September Panic. Desperate for proof, Alarmists felt the low ice-extent proved Al Gore was right, and the IPCC was right, but, by using such dubious and refutable sources, they effectively were putting their heads on a chopping block. Or climbing out on a limb. Or swimming like fish in a barrel. (Take your pick.)

At this point a new word, a word most people had never used or even heard before, became quite common in the climate debates, and the word was “obfuscation.” (It would be interesting to compare how often that word was used in 2007 with how often it was used in 2005.)

The Alarmist’s obfuscation has now persisted for five years, which means that the melt-down of 2012 is a bit boring. It is a case of “been there, done that.” No longer do I often learn things I didn’t know about. One hears the same, tired, old arguments from 2007, and one knows it is hardly worth replying, because Alarmists are not interested in the vast and awesome complexity of a chaotic scientific reality, preferring the simplicity of a “belief,” which they grip with white knuckles.

About the only interesting and new approach on the part of Alarmists is their attempt to misuse psychology, and to make it a way of marginalizing and ostracizing those who point out their mistakes. Though appalling, this is interesting because it seems a perfect example of Smurfy’s Law.

Formerly the definition of “Liberal” was “generous,” and one thing that old-time Liberals were very generous about was giving minority viewpoints a fair hearing. In any discussion of Dams, Deserts and Droughts, they would hear the views of ordinary engineers, meteorologists, and hydrologists, but also insist upon hearing the views of extraordinary Native American rain-dancers. They desired “diversity,” and had contempt towards those who would not consider, or at least be considerate towards, “alternative views.”

Strangely, this concept has now vanished among some who formerly wore the tag, “Liberal.” Gone is their desire for “diversity,” replaced with a fawning regard for the “consensus.” The very same people who sneered at convention when young are now guilty of being the very thing they sneered at: Blindly conventional.

In a way this is a normal part of maturing. Churchill stated something like, “Those who were not Liberal when young had no heart; those who do not become Conservative when older have no brain.”

However there is a significant difference between the ordinary process of maturing, and people who enact Smurphy’s Law. In the ordinary process of maturing there are some core values which endure the battering of youthful idealism, as it gets hammered into the tempered steel of maturity. As the poetry of William Blake is subtly altered from “Songs of Innocence” into “Songs of Experience,” the poetry remains poetry; the heart remains a heart. However, in the case of Smurphy’s Law, those core values either are completely abandoned, or were abandoned in the beginning. (After all, psychology attempts to measure the human spirit with calipers and thermometers, and sometimes has a hard time conceding things such as “heart” and “poetry” even exist.)

At the risk of being poetic rather than scientific, I’ll state that our youthful ideals are like sails that haul us against the wind of a world that can be stormy and can leave our sails in tatters. Our core values are like a keel that keeps us from capsizing, so that even if we lose our hearing like Beethoven did, we still can produce a Ninth Symphony. Without such a keel of core values we can flip-flop, and end up enacting Smurfy’s Law, and see ourselves opposing the very free speech we once stood for.

This, and not the bergs bobbing about in the arctic, is the real melt-down that has occurred, and which we have been witness to. The very people who once were most adamant about free speech are now vehemently opposed to it. The very people who were most open minded to the most bizarre alternative-lifestyles now have minds clamped tighter than clam’s, (certain that they themselves are oysters and hold pearls.)

What a joke. Those who once were Liberals now are not, while those who never wished to be called Liberal now are.

It is a great struggle we are involved with, (defending free speech and open-mindedness,) but it does get tiresome, which is why I occasionally use Anthony’s “Sea Ice Page,” to flee to the North Pole, where I can serenely watch the bergs bob about and melt.

It is a great relief to escape the nonsense of Smurfy’s Law for a time, and to instead consider that which is awe inspiring: Creation is an incredible place, a chaos that has no business being orderly, but is.

Everywhere you look there are marvels too complex for even the hugest computer to handle: The vast meanderings of the Gulf Stream; the mysterious, pulsing appearances and disappearances of huge amounts of water into and out-of Thermohaline Circulation, the metamorphosis of a ripple on a front into the vast circulation of a huge storm with an eye, and so forth, from the deepest depths to the upper atmosphere, and on through solar winds to the sun.

Of course, even when you think you have escaped the bother of petty politics for a while, you’re liable to get dragged back to reality, even when hiding up in the Arctic.

For example, the Cryosphere Today map will show open ocean, as you read a news item about a fifteen-by-eleven-mile pack of bergs, containing ice as much as eighty feet thick, closing down a drilling operation in that area of “open ocean.”

http://www.adn.com/2012/09/10/2619205/shell-halts-chukchi-sea-drilling.html

At this point I always feel I am being dragged kicking and screaming from the sublime to the ridiculous. I “don’t want to go there,” but I have to.

In a way it reminds me of being the father of teenagers. They might tell me they were heading down to the Public Library to study, but I would get to thinking that such study seemed a bit out of character, so after a half hour I’d go check the Public Library to see if they really were there.

It is a sad state of affairs when you cannot take scientists at their word, and have to go check up on them as if they were teenagers, however some have earned this disgrace: They cannot be trusted. And this besmirches other scientists, good and honorable men who are just trying to do their work, but who suddenly notice a layman like me scowling over their shoulder. (Ever try to work with someone hovering over your shoulder? Half of the time it makes your hammer hit your thumb.)

Unfortunately science has earned such scrutiny. I no longer trust that the Arctic Ocean is ice-free just because Cryrosphere Today maps it as ice-free. I double check, using perhaps the DMI sea-surface-temperature map:

http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/satellite/index.uk.php

And I am then puzzled by the fact this map shows sea-surface-temperatures below the freezing point of salt water for large areas the Cryosphere map shows it as open ocean.

So I say the heck with maps, and resort to my lying eyes. The North Pole Camera has drifted far south of the pole, into Fram Strait. You can tell where the camera is by using the Buoy Drift Track Map at

http://psc.apl.washington.edu/northpole/DriftTrackMap.html

And this shows you that, according to various Cryosphere maps, the camera should either be showing half ice and half open water, or should show a nice view of fishes at the bottom of the sea. Instead it has a view of ice in all directions, with the summer’s melt-water pools freezing over, when the camera’s lens itself is not frosted over. When you check the site records you notice that, even though it has drifted south of 82 degrees north, temperatures have at times dipped below minus ten Celsius.

http://psc.apl.washington.edu/northpole/819920_atmos_recent.html

At this point you start to feel a bit like the father of a teenaged daughter who has discovered their child is not at the Library, who wonders where the heck the girl has gone.

One can continue on to the satellite view, which, if clouds are not in the way, shows the “open ocean” is remarkably dotted by white specks of ice.

Though one could perhaps then argue about whether the bergs amount to more-than or less-than 15%, and whether this means the water is officially defined as “open ocean” or not, such quibbling is a bit like discovering your teenaged daughter flirting at the ball field, and having her argue that the fact she has a book with her makes the ball field a “library.”

One simply has the feeling that truth is being stretched dangerously close to its limits.

Considering young scientists usually begin filled with idealistic zeal, and hunger and thirst for the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, it seems a wonder they can wind up stretching truth and resembling a psychologist suffering from Smurphy’s Law. How could they sell out to such a degree?

The reason for selling out is always the same: Money.

I can not say for certain that, when I was young and sleeping in my car, I would not have been tempted by a grant for 1.7 million dollars. Perhaps even Beethoven would have been tempted to make pizza, rather than the Ninth Symphony, if someone had offered him 1.7 million dollars. (One interesting short piano work of Beethoven’s is entitled, “Rage Over A Lost Penny.”) Money is the root of all evil, and when we see scientists swayed by their patrons we should perhaps say, “There but for the Grace of God go I.” (And also, “Blessed are the poor.”)

In any case, it seems we live in a time when some scientists are working under the thumbs of benefactors and patrons who desire results presented with a certain political “spin.” If it is possible to present data concerning the melt of the Arctic Ice Cap in a way that makes it look more extreme, because this may make a carbon tax more possible, the scientist will be under great pressure to do so.

The scientist is in essence working with a frowning boss scowling over his shoulder. The only way we can counter-balance this effect is to also look over his shoulder, and give the poor fellow the sense that “the whole world is watching.” This will likely make scientists miserable, and also make them yearn for the days when they were ignored and could work in peaceful obscurity, however it will also keep them honest, which is for the best for all, in the long run.

Even as we behave in this somewhat petty and parental manner, we should not forget what brought most of us to examine the clouds and seas and sunshine and storms in the first place: Our sense of wonder. Others may focus their thinking to the cramped line-items of musty, budgetary chicanery for a narrow political cause, if they so chose, however the vast truths of creation remains open for the rest of us to witness, and to wonder about, if we so chose.

For example, ice-melt in the arctic may be the sign of many different possible things, including the advent of the next ice age. Open water may not only lose heat to outer space, but might lead to arid regions having increased, glacier-creating snowfalls. There are all sorts of ideas and realities to discuss and wonder about, starting with the surprisingly early snows that just buried the sheep in Iceland.

This September, the farmers of Iceland have something real to panic about. And perhaps that is the most important thing about dealing with truth: To stay real.

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seriously doubt the mental processes of those involved
October 1, 2012 7:17 am

I live in Arctic North Norway. This does not make me any kind of expert, but I can tell you this, it is not getting warmer where I live. We have just had an unusually cool, wet summer. The vegetable garden has been a complete bust this year. We are wondering, living where we do, where is all this warming?

Merrick
October 1, 2012 7:29 am

No. It’s love of money that’s the root of all evil.
But great post.

David Bailey
October 1, 2012 7:36 am

Celeb,
Thanks for that piece! I used to believe the global warming scare, and it was obfuscation that helped to open my eyes. I read about Mann’s Nature graph with the truncation hidden under many other curves. Then I read a link that purported to explain how this was legitimate. The issue was so stark, but the ‘explanation’ went on for page after page, and brought in endless other data sets! I realised that this was just a deliberate attempt to befuddle anyone trying to get at the truth!
I was shocked, but I shouldn’t have been, because in 1975, as a young post doc, I left science because I realised that the group I had joined was far more interested in papers and results, than it was in the accuracy of those results. Software development looked far more interesting and honest – either what you created worked or it didn’t!

SAMURAI
October 1, 2012 7:38 am

Well done Caleb! A very enjoyable and entertaining read.
As we soon enter the 16th year of a zero global warming trend, it’s becoming painfully obvious the Warmunistas got it all terribly wrong, and even their feeble attempts to re-calibrated Hadcrut4 to get the line moving again from lower left to upper right, won’t save their failed models and theory.
So, in the interim, we’ll all just listen patiently (or not so patiently) to the newest model or study that “conclusively shows” the Warmunistas are right and Warmageddon is just around the corner, while hoping our ocular muscles don’t cramp up permanently from all the constant eye rolling…
Again, nice job Caleb.

philincalifornia
October 1, 2012 7:45 am

Excellent essay Caleb. Thank you.
Seeing Lazy Teenager’s gut reaction to being forced to look in a mirror and denying what he saw was a priceless added bonus.

October 1, 2012 7:50 am

I enjoyed Caleb Shaw’s ruminations, but even more these two remarkable comments they stimulated:
– wayne (October 1, 2012 at 6:18 am) on Arctic-ice physics, and
– Hoser (October 1, 2012 at 6:42 am) on The Road to Serfdom
Though ostensibly on different topics, they neatly clarify the illiberal morass into which, as Caleb notes, free scientific inquiry seems to be plunging, thanks to the increasingly oppressive role of the State, and the concomitant oppression by its supporters and sycophants, who under the guise of ‘political correctness’ want to punish anyone who does not toe the line. How far are we from Stalin—and Lysenko?
/Mr Lynn

October 1, 2012 7:52 am

May I suggest vanity is a greater factor than greed in this scientific corruption? Who doesn’t want to be a Planetary Savior, and know what is good for other people’s grandchildren? Especially now when we have doubts that there is an old man in the sky?

Steve Keohane
October 1, 2012 7:59 am

Thanks Caleb for an enjoyable read. Thanks too to wayne says:October 1, 2012 at 6:18 am for a great perspective.

Urederra
October 1, 2012 8:03 am

TinyCO2 says:
October 1, 2012 at 1:48 am

… The official predictions are however more serious. …

They always are, Tiny. That is one of the things Caleb mentioned in his beautiful assay, which you haven´t read, apparently.

fjpickett
October 1, 2012 8:05 am

JAFSupO

“The LOVE of money is the root of [all kinds] of evil.”

I was going to pick Caleb up on that, but he wasn’t quoting St Paul or anyone else. It’s his statement, so he can say what he likes!

u.k.(us)
October 1, 2012 8:13 am

If I might be so bold.
This post is deserving of being a “sticky” for a day or two.

October 1, 2012 8:16 am

AndyG55 says October 1, 2012 at 1:18 am
Sorry to be off topic, but has anyone been able to get onto the JoNova site the last couple of days?

Could be that the Domain Name Server (DNS) you’re using (the address pointing to a preferred and usually a secondary DNS are defined in Linux or Windows) is sl-o-o-o-o-w in updating their tables or still caching old addresses; she has bounced around from wordpress blog back to another server under her normal format the last couple of days.
Here’s what her ‘name’ (her URL or uniform resource locater) in the ‘link’ resolvers to presently:
http://223.27.18.253/
Just checked that IP address above worked okay from the central US!
.

ferd berple
October 1, 2012 8:25 am

Bernard J. says:
October 1, 2012 at 2:47 am
So, how much of the Arctic sea ice needs to melt away before you start sitting up and taking notice?
==============
An ice free arctic would generate trillions of dollars in economic development and jobs. A lot of unemployed Americans and Europeans would probably sit up and take notice at that point.
Many of those folks have been praying for a change in climate for quite awhile; from the politicians that believe the solution to all problems is to pass a law, create a new regulation, and add another tax.
Forgetting that businesses are free to move under trade laws, while people are kept in place by immigration laws. Thus jobs move freely to avoid tax, while people cannot avoid tax except by losing their jobs. Exactly as we are seeing in the US and EU.

dvunkannon
October 1, 2012 8:30 am

Thanks for an entertaining obfuscation.
I found it obfuscating to argue by anecdote. If you have a problem with the methodology and protocol of passive microwave satellite measurement of the ice, man up and say so. If you don’t trust one grid square or buoy, why trust the whole system? If you do trust the whole system, don’t cherrypick for rhetorical advantage.
I found it obfuscating to equate links to newspaper accounts to links to the peer-reviewed literature. It is fun to learn science and history, but they aren’t the same. One Skate does not a science make. Or refute.
I found it obfuscating to focus on the reaction rather than the news – yes, there is less ice, dramatically less ice, than previously in the Arctic. And why is that?
I found it obfuscating to wring the hands and clutch the pearls over tenured professors, and overlook the scientists who work for commercial and lobbying interests directly, whose work is spun and suppressed. Were you paying any attention during the whole Big Tobacco, “smoking doesn’t cause cancer” thing?
But nice writing! Good luck with staying off cigarettes! Excellent way to reduce your carbon footprint.

John F. Hultquist
October 1, 2012 8:31 am

Jon says:
October 1, 2012 at 4:49 am
“What? No female scientists involved?

Wordsmithing is tough as those quibbling with Caleb’s text show. Recently, someone mentioned “Sand County Almanac” as a good read (compared to Silent Spring) but I know a person that won’t suggest “Sand County” to anyone because of its sexist tone. Leopold (1887-1948) was an environmentalist before it was p. c. to be one, and he wrote using the conventions of his era.
So, Jon, in the quote above, makes a similar point to that of the anti-“Sand County” person. We are sure Caleb was unintentional in his slight, as was Leopold in his excellent essays.
So here is a link to a female of exceptional talents (just to balance the issue):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmy_Noether

Stephen Rasey
October 1, 2012 8:34 am

Caleb, a wonderful essay. If the curing took a month, the final polish was lustrous.
Thanks for the head’s up that the North Pole Web Cam is now far from the North pole! This past week I was a) surprised that it was still quite light on some of the images, and b) not working on others. Thanks to you, I find out that the web cam is at 80.202°N 2.338°E. It seems to me that in addition to the data and time in the upper left of each image, they need to add the GPS position.
We are the first generation to witness the changes the Arctic goes through. Caleb, this is certainly not true. The settlers of Viking Greenland could write volumes about Arctic environment changes if they weren’t fighting for their survival. Perhaps they did witness and record those changes in a jounal that didn’t survive the glacier. The Inuit also have observed Arctic changes over the centuries, but their record of that history, too, is missing. We are the first generation where billions of people can bear witness.
To pretend we understand the complexities of that chaotic system seems both presumptuous and arrogant. No argument with you there, sir.
** Resquest to Anthony and Mods: On the Ice Page, at the “Drifting ‘North Pole’ Camera.” Please change “Source” to “Source and Location Map” or add a Location Link to the full scale map.

beesaman
October 1, 2012 9:09 am

Great post, and yes it is about time we had some way of verifying the satellites open Arctic water claims as they seem to be having problems with anything between 0-70% ice on cloudy days. And no I don’t mean another stupid model, I mean actual, real verification. The occasional overflight would do…

Phillip Bratby
October 1, 2012 9:12 am

An excellent read. Well put Caleb.

Warren in Minnesota
October 1, 2012 9:16 am

Smurfy or Smurphy?
But I enjoyed the article.

Thomas T.
October 1, 2012 9:59 am

“I used to like the September Panic because I often could hijack a thread by bringing up the subject of Vikings. ”
Please link. Because, you are preaching to the choir on this website, and it would be interesting to see how you held up with a critical audience. By your words, you did well.

TinyCO2
October 1, 2012 10:19 am

Urederra says October 1, 2012 at 8:03 am
They [official predictions are however more serious] always are, Tiny. That is one of the things Caleb mentioned in his beautiful assay, which you haven´t read, apparently.
Oh I read it, poetic meanderings and all. The words model and prediction weren’t mentioned. The climate models aren’t wrong because the ice hasn’t melted, they’re wrong because it’s melted too fast. In essence he was mocking the warmists for making too much of the September low. I think the hysteria extends to the sceptic community.
It was a fine essay but made the same mistake that the warmists make – denying the bleedin’ obvious. The ice has melted folks. It’s not a trick of the climate scientists or a matter of interpretation, it’s melted. The other side don’t win just because the Arctic melts. They do win if you start denying the facts.
They make too much of the ice melt, but be fair, it’s their only enduring red flag.
We try too hard to pretend the ice hasn’t melted. Like many of you, I’ve been hoping the ice would return since the tales of baby ice on Climate Audit. Unfortunately it remains stubbornly endangered. Those ice pods are losing too many adult members to fill the Arctic. Like the warmists we can speculate why the ice isn’t returning and or make unskilled predictions about how soon it will return but to retain credibility, sometimes you have to concede the point to the other side.
For those who doubt there’s a lot of open ocean use the satellite images, not the interpretations. Now we don’t have images going a long way back to compare the current situation with the past but why shouldn’t there be less ice now than at any time since the MWP? Why is it a problem to you that after hundreds of years of warming, we would be at a minimum? Do you know for sure that the short cooling period of the 50-70s was enough to reset the ice to the durability of pre 30s ice?
http://lance-modis.eosdis.nasa.gov/imagery/subsets/?mosaic=Arctic.2012274.terra.4km

Editor
October 1, 2012 10:36 am

Lazy teenager,
a) are you still a teenager? Guess so, you still sound like one.
b) if there were a baseball game going on at the park, you could tell your parents you were studying physics with Calebs’ daughter.

Sun Spot
October 1, 2012 10:46 am

Lazy thought this article was all about him, isn’t that just like the spoiled brat teenage !

October 1, 2012 11:45 am

From where I live, I can look at the glaciated peak of Mt. Baker, a 10,700 foot volcano not far from Bellingham, WA and Vancouver, BC. I’ve been looking at for over 1/2 a century. During that time, there has been precious little change in that glaciation.
This article is excellent, timed as it is to meet the seasonal onslaught from the warmists. An entertaining side light this year, the antarctic sea ice is setting new records daily for increased extent. http://www.energytribune.com/articles.cfm/11760/Cold-Hard-Fact-Antarctic-Sea-Ice-is-at-Record-High
Thank you very much, Anthony Watts, for this excellent article, bordering as it does on the poetic.

MarkW
October 1, 2012 11:47 am

TinyCO2 says:
October 1, 2012 at 10:19 am

You would have a point. Had the ice melted because it was getting warmer.