'Tabloid climatology' may be the real reason for the Marcel Leroux – William Connolley Wikipedia dustup

As WUWT readers know, a climatologist who bucked the consensus trend had his profile summarily deleted at Wikipedia thanks to the William Connolley effect as outlined in “Death by Stoat“. It appears that Connolley had to justify his own guilty feelings on the issue by posting an explanation on his own blog titled “Death of a Salesman”. I’m only a bystander in all this, but the Wikipedia deletion did pique my interest and I went looking for some references about Leroux simply out of curiosity over “what do this guy do/not do to merit this”? I think I found the answer; Connolley and his friends simply didn’t like the stinging criticisms Leroux made and sought ways to diminish them. I think WMC and friends have now invoked the Streisand effect instead.

We have a new (but coined long ago) term thanks to a review of Leroux’s book. The reviewer coined the phrase: “Tabloid climatology”.  Pierre Gosselin touched on the label last year as well. This is an excerpt from his book, as documented by Thayer Watkins at San Jose State University, reposted below:

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The Critique of Tabloid Climatology by Marcel Leroux

Marcel Leroux, a French climatologist, has written a very interesting and valuable exposé of the climatology that has come to dominate the attention of the media and government policy makers in this era of global warming hysteria. Leroux is an empirical climatologist and thus a real climatology who is a professor at a university in France and the head of a climatological research institute. His book is entitled in translation Global Warming — Myth or Reality? : The Erring Ways of Climatology.

Leroux is outraged at what has happened to the respectable field of climatology in the past twenty years since the U.S. federal government started pouring about a billion dollars a year into global warming research. This level of funding provided the climate modelers each with several million dollars a year and what the U.S. government got was tabloid climatology because those research grants were dependent upon producing sensationalistic, apocalyptic pronouncements. The tabloids do not have to exaggerate these sensationalistic pronouncement; they only have to assert that the apocalyse is coming next summer instead of fifty years in the future.

Leroux’s book is solid empirical climatology but in the introduction he allows himself to express his outrage in some fine rhetoric. For example, he says

Recent happenings in the field of climatology give cause for complaint, as do the approaches of some of its practioners, especially those who, lacking any real qualification, claim to belong to the climatological community, but give it an erroneous image. It is galling to see the media ‘hype’ which ensues every time a meeting of the IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change] is announced, every time an extra drop of rain falls here, or fails to fall there, or every time a door slams because the wind is blowing a bit more strongly than is ‘normal’. How irksome it is to hear the simplistic slogans, and sometimes barefaced lies, churned out yet again; to have to put up with the Diktat of an ‘official line’ and the parroted pronouncements of the ‘climatically correct’, numbing all reflection. It becomes over more difficult to stomach the kind of well-intentioned naïvety or foolishness which, through the medium of tearful reportage, tugs at our heart strings with tales of doomed polar bears, or islanders waiting for the water to lap around their ankles …Hardly a week goes by without some new ‘scoop’ of this nature filling our screens and the pages of our newspapers. ‘Global warming’, caused by the ‘greenhouse effect’, is our fault, just like everything else, and the message/slogan/misinformation becomes ever more simplistic, ever cruder! It could not be simpler: if the rain falls or drought strikes; if the wind blows a gale or there is none at all; whether it’s heat or hard frost; it’s all ‘because of the greenhouse effect’, and we are to blame! An easy argument but stupid! The Fourth Report of the IPCC might just as well decree the suppression of all climatological textbooks, and replace them in our schools and universities with its press communiqués!

Leroux is not impressed with the output of the IPCC:

We do have to resort to complicated models to tell us that an increase in CO2 brings about, theoretically, an increase in temperature, a simple of rule of thumb, a ‘back-of-the-envelope’ calculation, will suffice.

Leroux might have noted that the IPCC managed to leave out all negative feedback effects while included the positive feedback ones. It also manages to justify leaving out dissident opinions. After referring to an example of the suppression of alternate climatological views by a French government official, Leroux says

This process of the elimination of opponents, which is general at all climatic conferences, has been denounced, notably at an IPCC meeting at the Moscow Academy of Sciences in July 2004. Some British scientists, great proponents of the official doctrine, committed ‘intellectual terrorism’ by excluding ‘climato-skeptics’ from the proceedings even though they were internationally recognized: modeller R. Lindzen, entomologist P. Reiter, oceanographer N.-A. Mörner and meteorologist R. Khandehar. One of the principal advisors to the Russian government, A. Illinarinov, called it ‘totalitarian ideology’! And is not the idea of censorship unacceptable in so-called democratic regimes?

Because Leroux knows that the standard ploy of the tabloid climatologists and the religio-political movement they have spawned is to assert that any critic is either a crackpot or in the pay of the oil companies or both. He therefore gives some personal information that ordinary would not appear in a scholarly work. As he puts it:

I was going to omit certain facts, but the passionate nature of the debate suggests that they be mentioned. [I am] Doubly a doctor, from University and from the state, in Climatology, I am a member of the Société Météorologique de France and the American Meteorological Society. As a Professor of Climatology, my employer is the French Republic, which has adopted the official religion of ‘climate change’, to which I do not adhere. I am not beholden to any ‘slush fund’, and my Laboratoire de Climatologique, Risques, Environment (LCRE), in spite of its links with the Centre National de la Rechererche Scientifique (CNRS), has never received any funding from this state institution, certainly by reason of heresy. I am neither a militant nor an armchair ‘eco-warrior’, but I live in the countryside, near the littlel village of Vauvenargues, near Aix-en-Provence, on the ‘Grand Site Sainte Victoire’ (immortalized by the painter Paul Cézanne), a listed and protected area of mountains and wild forests. I grow vegetables in my (small) ‘organic’ kitchen garden. I am naturally inclined to question things, and I am basically a Cartesian, living by Réne Descartes’ primary precept of ‘never assuming anything to be true which I did not know evidently to be such’ (Discours de la Méthode, 1637).

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I think WMC and his friends just didn’t like this critique, and so decided that Leroux must be marginalized. After being marginalized (and dead, unable to defend himself) they made a case for deletion which now appears to be backfiring on them because I have no doubt now that this will be picked up elsewhere.

The deleted Wikipedia page about Leroux continues existence at Lucy Skywalker’s page here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Lucy_Skywalker/Marcel_Leroux.

You can also get Leroux’s book from Amazon here, but be prepared for sticker shock. Perhaps his estate will find a second publisher so more people can read it.

We also have WMC’s efforts to thank for helping bring ‘Tabloid climatology’ to the forefront of the discussion. Perhaps someone can attribute it’s soon to be widespread use to him on WMC’s Wikipedia page.

Better yet, ask the people who run Wikipedia why WMC was allowed to return after being banned. Nothing has changed and he’s still acting as a self righteous gatekeeper, just as before.

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October 12, 2012 7:04 pm

Followup on IPCC mentioning a negative feedback:
http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/wg1/ar4-wg1-chapter8.pdf
Look on the page labelled 630, 2nd last paragraph.
Same is said in:
http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data/ar4/wg1/en/ch8s8-6-2-3.html
Hint at getting these: My web browser gets stuck at reporting only a few 10’s of K of data loaded for maybe 20-30 seconds, until all or nearly all is received.

Brian H
October 13, 2012 1:41 am

Ace says:
October 11, 2012 at 10:14 am
Curious to know if indeed Connolly was banned from comment here? If so, what was the reason? I know that it typically takes an awful lot.

Briefly, for all the right reasons on the surface, but his “friends” did his work for him during the hiatus, and then he was quietly restored as Editor.

Brian H
October 13, 2012 1:42 am

Ace;
Oops, misread, thought you were talking about his Wikipedia suspension.

October 13, 2012 8:45 am

I’ve just voted to have my sandbox WP copy of Leroux’ bio deleted. What a to-do there has been at WP over all this. I’ve never had so many visitors to my page there. Gosh WMC got busy, tiring me out. He did, usefully, discover my Primer and picked up some small incorrect details about the IPCC MWP diagram – and in dealing with that, I was delighted of course to insert references to Steve McIntyre’s recent articles on Deming’s famous words about someone in IPCC who said “we have to get rid of the Medieval Warm Period”. More Streisand effect.
I have kept records of the pages as of now, both textfiles and screenshots with clock – there is some very revealing material in them.

TomRude
October 13, 2012 1:55 pm

W.M.C. climate research work must have suffered too… /sarc off

October 13, 2012 6:34 pm

So, we’ve gone from “Hide The Decline”, to “Hide The Deceased”!
What’s next to be disappeared? There is always “Hide The Desperation”, but they don’t seem to be able to do that nearly as well as the other two.

Lightrain
October 13, 2012 11:04 pm

I nominate William Connolley for deletion!

Brian H
October 15, 2012 5:27 pm

Lucy S.;
Absent any obvious way to get in touch with you, an OT heads-up:
There is an article which may be relevant to your adiabatic investigations in New Scientist:
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21628861.700-the-surprise-theory-of-everything.html?full=true
Requires registration, etc., etc., so here’s the crucial stuff:

Home |Physics & Math | In-Depth Articles
The surprise theory of everything
15 October 2012 by Vlatko Vedral
Magazine issue 2886.

Falling into disorder
While thermodynamics seems to float above the precise content of the physical world it describes, whether classical, quantum or post-quantum (see main story), its connection with the other pillar of modern physics, general relativity, might be more direct. General relativity describes the force of gravity. In 1995, Ted Jacobson of the University of Maryland in College Park claimed that gravity could be a consequence of disorder as quantified by entropy.
His mathematical argument is surprisingly simple, but rests on two disputed theoretical relationships. The first was argued by Jacob Bekenstein in the early 1970s, who was examining the fate of the information in a body gulped by a black hole. This is a naked challenge to the universal validity of thermodynamics: any increase in disorder in the cosmos could be reversed by throwing the affected system into a black hole.
Bekenstein showed that this would be countered if the black hole simply grew in area in proportion to the entropy of the body it was swallowing. Then each tiny part of its surface would correspond to one bit of information that still counts in the universe’s ledger. This relationship has since been elevated to the status of a principle, the holographic principle, that is supported by a host of other theoretical ideas – but not as yet by any experiment.
The second relationship is a suggestion by Paul Davies and William Unruh, also first made in the 1970s, that an accelerating body radiates tiny amounts of heat. A thermometer waved around in a perfect vacuum, where there are no moving atoms that can provide us with a normal conception of temperature, will record a non-zero temperature. This is an attractive yet counter-intuitive idea, but accelerations far beyond what can presently be achieved are required to generate enough radiation to test it experimentally.
Put these two speculative relations together with standard, undisputed connections between entropy, temperature, kinetic energy and velocity, and it is possible to construct a quantity that mathematically looks like gravity, but is defined in terms of entropy. Others have since been tempted down the same route, most recently Erik Verlinde of the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
Such theories, which are by no means universally accepted, suggest that when bodies fall together it is not the effect of a separate fundamental force called gravity, but because the heating that results best fulfils the thermodynamic diktat that entropy in the universe must always increase.
Vlatko Vedral is a professor of quantum information theory at the University of Oxford and the Centre for Quantum Technologies, Singapore. He is the author of Decoding Reality (Oxford University Press, 2010)
Issue 2886 of New Scientist magazine

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