The Atlantic Magazine's '5 Charts About Climate Change That Should Have You Very, Very Worried'… Worried about scientific illiteracy.

Guest post by David Middleton

I ran into this gem on Real Clear Energy this morning…

Figure 1. The only thing to worry about here is the scientific and mathematical illiteracy of the authors of this article.

The article cites terrifying new reports commissioned by the World Bank and the CIA and then launches into a graphical cornucopia of nonsense.

The Five Charts of Doom

“1. Most of Greenland’s top ice layer melted in four days” (The World Bank)

Figure 2. Chart number one is a map.

I previously addressed this “chart” here: 2012: The Year Greenland Melted (AKA Alarmists Gone Wild).

The “melt” is based on measurements of albedo. These measurements date all the way back to the year 2000.

The “normal” summer melt season albedo minimum at 2500-3200m is in the range of 0.79-0.82. This year, it briefly dropped to just below 0.74.

Figure 3. Greenland ice sheet albedo 2500-3200m elevations (meltfactor.org)

So… We have barely a decade’s worth of data and no idea if the modern melt rates and albedo changes are anomalous relative to the early 20th century Arctic warming, Medieval Warm Period or any of the other millennial-scale Holocene warming periods.

I’m gonna go out on a limb and say that unless some alarmist can tell me what the albedo was in 1899, 1127, 1143 and 1939, during the vast majority of the Holocene or during the Sangamonian, my response is, “Very interesting. Now, move along, there’s nothing more to see here.”

Figure 4. Greenland temperature reconstruction since 1000 AD.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/09/29/warming-island-greenland-sea-regional-climate-and-arctic-sea-ice-reconstruction/
Figure 5. Late Pleistocene-Holocene temperature reconstruction for Central Greenland.
(After Alley, 2000)
Figure 6. North Greenland temperature reconstruction since Late Sangamonian.
(NGRIP)

2. America just had its worst drought in over 50 years (The World Bank)

Figure 7. Chart number two is another map.

They chose the U.S. Drought Monitor “map” to support the World Bank’s claim that the U.S. just had its worst drought in 50 years… The U.S. Drought Monitor only has a 12-year record length. If they had only bothered to look at the historical drought trend (or lack thereof) they would have found that we just had the worst drought in a bit over 10 years (not 50) and that droughts of this severity occur about once every 8 years.

The drought of 2012 was pretty bad, about as bad as the droughts of 2000-2001, 1988, 1981, 1963, 1940, 1925, 1917 and 1910… But not nearly as bad as the protracted droughts of 1953-1956 and 1933-1936. And there is no increasing trend of drought severity or decreasing trend in precipitation over the last 117 years.

Figure 8. No trend in drought severity or precipitation since 1895. Source: NOAA National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service (NESDIS). http://www7.ncdc.noaa.gov/CDO/CDODivisionalSelect.jsp#

3. Coral reefs are doomed (The World Bank)

This one is really funny!

Figure 9. Chart number three is a cartoon.

The Mesozoic Era atmospheric CO2 was pretty well always 2 to 4 times the level at which the World Bank cartoon indicates that coral reefs will dissolve, yet the Mesozoic Era was full of coral reefs.

Figure 10. Coral reefs of the Mesozoic Era seemed to like CO2.

For that matter, the modern Great Barrier Reef also seems to like a CO2-enriched diet…

Figure 11. The average calcification rate of the Great Barrier Reef seems to be increasing along with atmospheric CO2. Data from De’ath, G., et al. 2009 ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/paleo/coral/west_pacific/great_barrier/readme_greatbarrier.txt

A recent paper in Geology (Ries et al., 2009) found an unexpected relationship between CO2 and marine calcifers. 18 benthic species were selected to represent a wide variety of taxa: “crustacea, cnidaria, echinoidea, rhodophyta, chlorophyta, gastropoda, bivalvia, annelida.” They were tested under four CO2/Ωaragonite scenarios:

409 ppm (Modern day)

606 ppm (2x Pre-industrial)

903 ppm (3x Pre-industrial)

2856 ppm (10x Pre-industrial)

The effects on calcification rates for all 18 species were either negligible or positive up to 606 ppm CO2. Corals, in particular seemed to like more CO2 in their diets…

Figure 12. Coral seems to be A-OK with CO2 levels of 1,000 ppmv. This might explain how they thrived in the Mesozoic Era.

4. Wildfires are multiplying (NRC report for the CIA)

Figure 13. Chart number four is another map.

Are Colorado’s wildfires caused by global warming?

The wildfires devastating Colorado have been linked to a streak of unusually hot weather, but that does not necessarily mean that global warming is the culprit.

By Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience Senior Writer / June 28, 2012

[…]

“You can’t say it’s climate change just because it’s an extreme condition,” said Colorado state climatologist Nolan Doesken. So far, Doesken told LiveScience, the spring of 2012 looks much like the spring of 1910, when warm temperatures hit early. That year, he said, was a bad one for fires.

[…]

The immediate driver of these fires is a lack of moisture and a ridge of heat that has settled over the central United States, said New Jersey state climatologist Dave Robinson, who also directs the Global Snow Lab at Rutgers University. After record snowpack last year, the Rocky Mountains did a 180 this year, Robinson said, seeing little moisture and early snowmelt.

“March and April are supposed to be your snowy months [in Colorado], and they weren’t,” Robinson told LiveScience. “Thus, the fire danger.”

Meanwhile, a high-pressure system in the central part of the country is preventing cloud formation and allowing the sun to bake the ground, heating things up. On Tuesday (June 26) alone, 251 daily heat records were broken across the nation, according to the National Climatic Data Center. In the past week, more than 1,000 new daily heat records were put on the books.

[…]

“Some would say there is a pattern, because we have had several years with exceptionally large fires over western states, particularly the Southwestern states, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and Colorado in particular,” Doesken said. “Others would say, no, not enough data points yet to show that.”

This year has been extreme in terms of heat and dryness, he said, as was 2002 (a record-breaking year for fires in Colorado). So far, 2012’s weather looks very similar to the weather of 1910. That year, spring was warm and dry, which fed into a hellish fire season. Among the blazes was the Great Fire of 1910, also known as “the Big Burn,” which destroyed 3 million acres of forest in Washington, Idaho and Montana.

[…]

More recently, an analysis of 1,500 years of fire and tree-ring data revealed that a combination of climate change and human forest use could explain modern “megafires,” the kind that destroy large swaths of forest.

[…]

LINK

The modern climate is virtually identical to the Medieval Warm Period, yet the wildfires seem to be worse and humans may be somewhat responsible (just not in the way Warmists would like)…

[…]

Ancient Fires

The researchers combined previously collected fire data from Ponderosa Pine forests in the southwest United States during the Little Ice Age (from 1600 to the mid-1800s) with climate data derived from existing tree rings to determine the annual fire activity 1,500 years ago.

They discovered that this time period, the Medieval Warm Period, was no different from the Little Ice Age in terms of what drives frequent low-severity surface fires: year-to-year drought patterns.

“It’s true that global warming is increasing the magnitude of the droughts we’re facing, but droughts were even more severe during the Medieval Warm Period,” Roos said. “It turns out that what’s driving the frequency of surface fires is having a couple wet years that allow grasses to grow continuously across the forest floor and then a dry year in which they can burn. We found a really strong statistical relationship between two or more wet years followed by a dry year, which produced lots of fires.”

Changing Climate

The researchers found that even when ancient climates varied from each other — one hotter and drier and the other cooler and wetter — the frequencies of year-to-year weather patterns that drive fire activity were similar. Furthermore, the findings implicate as the increase in megafires is caused not only modern climate change, but also human activity over the last century, the researchers said.

These human activities include livestock grazing and firefighting, which combine to create more dense forests with accumulated fuels that make them more vulnerable than ever to extreme droughts, and these droughts bring on huge wildfires that wreak havoc on even the tops of trees.

[…]

LINK

The modern warming (AGW in Warmisteese) began in ca. 1600 AD, at the nadir of the Little Ice Age.

Figure 14. The ups and downs of climate change since the dawn of the common era.

Capitalism might be adding 0.1 to 0.3 °C worth of extra warming relative to what would have happened in a globally Third World; but our primary contributions to the change in wildfire patterns are land-use change and firefighting (and arson)… Not greenhouse gases.

The weather this year is “extreme.” According to NOAA’s Climate Extremes Index, the spring of 2012 set a new heat wave record. The previous record heat wave was 1910, the first year of the time series. The “anomaly” is the fact that it took over 100 years to set a new record. In a random time series, the 1910 record should have been broken 5 times by 2012. There is no correlation between climate change and extreme weather events.

The following chart is adapted from NOAA’s Climate Extremes Index

Figure 15. The NOAA CEI has no trend (Slope = R-squared = 0.0081). Using the same reference period as the Hadley Centre and East Anglia CRU (1961-1990), we can see that the CEI exceeded natural variability (2 standard deviations) during eight years from 1910-1954 and eight years from 1977-2011.

The NOAA CEI has no trend (Slope = R-squared = 0.0081). Using the same reference period as the Hadley Centre and East Anglia CRU (1961-1990), we can see that the CEI exceeded natural variability (2 standard deviations) during eight years from 1910-1954 and eight years from 1977-2011. The CEI is just for the contiguous USA and only goes back to 1910.

However, a recent paper coauthored by Gilbert Compo, of NOAA’s Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) also found no evidence that climate change was causing any increase in the atmospheric circulation patterns that would be indicative of such an increase.

Figure 16. Figure 16 from Compo et al., 2011.

According to Compo, “In the climate models, the extremes get more extreme as we move into a doubled CO2 world in 100 years. So we were surprised that none of the three major indices of climate variability that we used show a trend of increased circulation going back to 1871.”

Not only is there no statistically meaningful correlation between the climate changes of the last 40 years and extreme weather events, there’s also no evidence that the recent climate changes are unusual and no evidence that extreme weather events were less common when the climate was significantly cooler than it currently is.

These charts have enabled me to worry less about the CIA’s wild fire map.

5. Civil wars on the rise

Figure 17. Chart number five is actually a chart!!!

This is even funnier than the coral reef cartoon! Wikipedia’s List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll seems to indicate that the climates of the past were a lot more hazardous than the climates of the post-Cold War era.

Figure 18. War really was hell during the transition periods before and after the Medieval Warm Period!

I suppose one could argue that the frequency of wars is on the rise, they’re just smaller wars. A Malthusian would probably say that the world population has grown so large that 10-12% death tolls are now unachievable.

Articles like this one make me think of the old Eddie Murphy Saturday Night Live skit, “The mind is a terrible thing…”

Any and all sarcasm and humor were purely intentional.

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davidmhoffer
November 28, 2012 8:18 pm

OT, but is there some strange weather going on in the arctic?
The sea ice page is showing a sharp reversal in sea ice expansion on several of the graphs. Can’t blame warming because it doesn’t much matter if we’re talking -20 or -15, either way the ice should be growing not shrinking. I surmise that something else is happening to shrink it (which ought to be fun to point out to warmists once we know what it is).

Merovign
November 28, 2012 10:43 pm

oldseadog says:
November 28, 2012 at 2:25 pm
Seriously, where do they find people daft enough to write stuff like that? I’m worried that the World Bank actually believes this rubbish.

This is the tip of the iceberg as far as rubbish that people believe, very sadly.

garymount
November 28, 2012 10:48 pm

davidmhoffer says: November 28, 2012 at 8:18 pm
OT, but is there some strange weather going on in the arctic?
———-
I have been wondering about that myself. I have been doing some research and can only conclude that it is the Doha effect. Also known as the annual COP anomaly.

P. Solar
November 28, 2012 10:49 pm

“About David Middleton
I have been a geoscientist in the evil oil and gas industry for almost 30 years. ”
So David, with such a wealth of experience, why can’t you plot a 100y running mean without getting the result to plot 50y too late? Does not look good while lambasting other for scientific and mathematical illiteracy.
Your Warming Island reconstruction is very informative and would make the point even better if you got your runny means correctly aligned.

MonktonofOz
November 28, 2012 11:16 pm

u.k.(us) says: “If at some point you Americans wake up and retake your long worn mantle as leader of the free world … We will, and God help those that doubt it.
Good, but get a bloody move on ‘cos you are leaving your run awful late.

P. Solar
November 28, 2012 11:38 pm

“About David Middleton
I have been a geoscientist in the evil oil and gas industry for almost 30 years. ”
The NOAA CEI has no trend (Slope = R-squared = 0.0081).
http://i90.photobucket.com/albums/k247/dhm1353/NOAA_CEI.png
So why are you fitting a “linear trend” to data that is anything but linear and has a predominant cyclic nature. Surely someone with your experience knows the result depends on where you start and has no objective meaning.
Is that the best analysis you can offer with 30y of experience ?
What is much more to the point in that graph is that, whatever this index really represents, the longer term changes are correlated to temperature . It is very interesting to note that since 1998 the extreme weather has been reducing notably.
In the context of criticising the Atlantic article, why would this recent reduction in “extreme weather” in the US be “very,very worrying”. Looks like the opposite to me.

Steve C
November 29, 2012 1:00 am

We Brits feel left out. What about the fact that we’ve just lived through The Worst Flooding Ever In The History Of Human Civilisation Or At Least For Sixty Years? We’re dooomed too!
Seriously, a good post. The truly terrifying thing is that this rubbish continues to splatter all over the media, misinforming the public, and no scientifically literate correction of it ever appears other than on the better climate websites like this one. It is this complete, unacknowledged disconnect between propaganda and reality which will destroy our civilisation, not AGW.

E.M.Smith
Editor
November 29, 2012 1:03 am

So much propaganda for Warmistas to peddle …. so little time…

Jimbo
November 29, 2012 1:46 am

5. Civil wars on the rise

But what’s climate got to do with it? Just 9 days the University of Oslo research suggests number of countries at war will fall from one in six to one in 12 in 2050. It is to be published in the International Studies Quarterly.
I ask you WUWT???

“The number of conflicts is falling. We expect this fall to continue. We predict a steady fall in the number of conflicts in the next 40 years. Conflicts that involve a high degree of violence, such as Syria, are becoming increasingly rare,” says Hegre.
http://www.apollon.uio.no/english/articles/2012/peaceful-world-awaits.html

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/the-future-of-war-is-looking-bleak-8344462.html
http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2012-11/20/world-peace-in-2050

Jimbo
November 29, 2012 1:56 am

The next time someone tells you that water conflicts will increase due to global warming you point them to the evidence that shows water scarcity has triggered mostly resilient peace treaties, even among hostile neighbors. However, never mind the evidence, feel the width of the lies and speculation.

The datasets of conflict are explored for those related to water — only seven minor skirmishes are found in this century; no war has ever been fought over water. In contrast, 145 water-related treaties were signed in the same period. These treaties, collected and catalogued in a computerized database along with relevant notes from negotiators, are assessed for patterns of conflict resolution. War over water seems neither strategically rational, hydrographically effective, nor economically viable. Shared interests along a waterway seem to consistently outweigh water’s conflict-inducing characteristics. Furthermore, once cooperative water regimes are established through treaty, they turn out to be impressively resilient over time, even between otherwise hostile riparians and even as conflict is waged over other issues. These patterns suggest that the more valuable lesson of international water is as a resources whose characteristics tend to induce cooperation and incite violence only in the exception.
Conflict and cooperation along international waterways
Wolf, AT, Water Policy [Water Policy]. Vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 251-265. 1998.
http://tinyurl.com/4fm9f2p

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.0016-7398.2002.00056.x/abstract;jsessionid=09C0B0B75044DCFA92FDC4FE1455D989.d03t02

Ryan
November 29, 2012 2:14 am

There is a direct relationship between the number of televisions globally and the CO2 in the atmosphere. Clearly increasing CO2 cannot cause televisions, so we must assume televisions cause CO2.
We should ban television.

H.R.
November 29, 2012 2:26 am

Alberts says:
November 28, 2012 at 6:56 pm
“I can see Jesus in that Wildfire graphic.
Or maybe it’s Charles Manson…”

====================================================
You need your eyes checked, Jeff. Clearly it’s Elvis.
.
.
The power and money grab via “climate change” is back on. Gotta pay for bread and circuses for the masses somehow.

Carter
November 29, 2012 3:12 am

Arctic permafrost is melting faster than predicted
We may be closer to a major climate TIPPING POINT than we knew. Earth’s permafrost – frozen soil that covers nearly a quarter of the northern hemisphere and traps vast amounts of carbon – may be melting faster than thought and releasing more potent greenhouse gasses.
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) released a report yesterday reviewing the most up-to-date research on Arctic permafrost. It claims temperature projections due in 2014 from the International Panel on Climate Change are “likely to be biased on the low side” because the IPCC does not take into account the positive feedback cycle of permafrost melting and releasing greenhouse gases.

Bruce Cobb
November 29, 2012 5:26 am

Carter, you forgot to add a /sarc tag to your comment. Seriously, no one with half a brain could believe that pseudoscientific scaremongering nonsense.

November 29, 2012 5:59 am

Reblogged this on gottadobetterthanthis and commented:
GGood article. Good references for future reference.

David Cage
November 29, 2012 6:24 am

What the hell is the world bank having to do with this when it should have been monitoring the banking to see that didn’t screw up? Mind you looking at the standard of the work here as you say, perhaps if they had their eye on the ball the screw up would have been even bigger.

beng
November 29, 2012 6:57 am

****
The modern climate is virtually identical to the Medieval Warm Period, yet the wildfires seem to be worse and humans may be somewhat responsible (just not in the way Warmists would like)…
****
Got alot of warming to go to get to the same conditions in Greenland as they were when the Vikings were living there 1000 yrs ago. So unless some other regional areas are decidedly warmer now than then, that statement prb’ly isn’t true (yet).

Michael Bacigalupo
November 29, 2012 7:03 am

That “Wars” chart is clearly showing GOOD NEWS. Total conflicts are down!

Tom Jones
November 29, 2012 7:15 am

You really shouldn’t miss the youtube of Dave Roberts extrapolating a 12 C rise by 2300. Can anyone take seriously a forecast of the earth’s temperature 288 years in the future? This pretty much defies my imagination..

Roger Knights
November 29, 2012 7:28 am

Carter. Here are a few WUWT posts on permafrost to ally your concerns:

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/09/25/remember-the-panic-over-methane-seeping-out-of-the-arctic-seabed-in-2009-never-mind/
thepompousgit says:
December 30, 2011 at 1:50 pm
Logan in AZ said December 30, 2011 at 1:30 pm

“The feedback factors treated on WUWT are physical mechanisms. The dimethylsulfide feedback from the oceans is a major factor that is ignored by those who only study or think about physics.”

But of course the biological effects must be left out, or else there’s nothing to be alarmed about. I was amused when someone decided to test the release of clathrates from permafrost idea in situ. The plant growth shaded the ground enabling the permafrost and clathrates to persist under warmer conditions. And contra R Gates’ claim that paleoclimatology validates the models, we know that temperatures in the high latitudes supported trees where now there is tundra only three thousand years ago. Temperatures supposedly high enough to release the methane from the permafrost.
………………..
Bruce Cobb says:
December 15, 2011 at 4:31 am
Methane Madness? http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/methane-discovery-stokes-new-global-warming-fears-shock-as-retreat-of-arctic-releases-greenhouse-gas-6276278.html

Or not: http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/14/methane-time-bomb-in-arctic-seas-apocalypse-not/

Abstract of the AGU paper: http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2011/2011JC007218.shtml
………………..
Dave Wendt says:
November 30, 2011 at 7:43 pm
When I first viewed that video I assumed you were being sarcastic in recommending it, but after viewing some of your other contributions, it appears you were serious. I have a few problems with Ms Walters exposition. Most notably she spends most of it blathering on about melting permafrost killing off the trees around her, but anyone with even a rudimentary familiarity with Arctic environs would know that the very presence of those trees is strong proof that you are not in a permafrost area. Trees don’t survive in permafrost and so the only way that permafrost could be killing the trees is if it was advancing into an area which had been seasonally frozen, the only type of landscape where boreal forests can survive.
Also like most of those who prattle on about the coming methane cascade she seems to be under the illusion that permafrost means ground that remains permanently frozen year round. In a sense this is correct, but in almost all permafrost areas the actual permafrost layer lies beneath what is known as the active layer which thaws annually. There doesn’t seem to be a real “consensus” on the range of depths of this active layer, but in my explorations on the topic I’ve come across estimates of a minimum of 2 ft ( which seem to be fairly consistent) to maximums everywhere from 7 ft to 20 ft. What this means is that when you hear discussions of melting permafrost what is actually being talked about is ground somewhere between 2 and 6 meters below the surface which for a brief part of the summer season is going from being a degree or two below freezing to a degree or two above, hardly enough of a change to generate a wholesale methane cascade. The ground above the permafrost layer has already experienced innumerable annual thaw cycles and has thus had many opportunities to release whatever gas is there. Warming may accelerate the rate of release, but unless the warming of the atmosphere is well beyond anything that has been speculated about, its affect on the climate will be mostly immeasurable.
Molecularly methane may be many times more potent than other gases, but its concentration in the atmosphere is a thousand times less than even CO2 and what evidence that exists on the question suggests its present contribution to the GHE is almost negligible.

Gail Combs
November 29, 2012 8:53 am

Dr T G Watkins says:
November 28, 2012 at 4:55 pm
…. Please can some of our computer literate rationalists find out the real power behind this scam.
____________________________________
Try the Fabian Society and the London School of Economics both founded by the Webbs with the clear intent of remaking the world. The stained-glass window designed by another founding member, George Bernard Shaw, is pretty blunt about the Fabian Society goals. As he is in his political writings.
The Fabian Window was hung at LSE in 2005 at a ceremony over which Tony Blair presided. The window shows beneath the line Remould it nearer to the heart’s desire Shaw and Webb striking the earth with hammers. Behind them is a shield with a wolf in a sheepskin. Under them is the masses kneeling and praying to a stack of books on socialism.
From the New World Encyclopedia: Organizing knowledge for happiness, prosperity and world peace (gag)

Anthony Giddens, the former director of the LSE, was the creator of the ‘Third Way’ followed by both Tony Blair (who unveiled the Fabian Window at LSE in 2005) and Bill Clinton. His policy created a balance between the traditional welfare state and the belief in total free market economics. This policy is being put into effect by governments all across the world as free market economies continue to deal with wealth inequalities and bettering the welfare of the general population….

WIKI

Recent speakers at the LSE have included Kofi Annan, Hilary Benn, Ben Bernanke, Tony Blair, Hazel Blears, Cherie Booth, Gordon Brown, David Cameron, Noam Chomsky, Bill Clinton, Alistair Darling, Niall Ferguson, Joschka Fischer, Vicente Fox, Milton Friedman, Muammar al-Gaddafi, John Lewis Gaddis, Alan Greenspan, Tenzin Gyatso, Will Hutton, Paul Krugman, Richard Lambert, Jens Lehmann, Lee Hsien Loong, John Major, Nelson Mandela, Mary McAleese, Dmitri Medvedev, John Atta Mills, Mario Monti, George Osborne, Robert Peston, Sebastián Piñera, Kevin Rudd, Jeffrey Sachs, Gerhard Schroeder, Carlos D. Mesa, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Costas Simitis, George Soros, Lord Stern, Jack Straw, Aung San Suu Kyi, Baroness Thatcher, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Rowan Williams.
LSE has a long list of notable alumni and staff, spanning the fields of scholarship covered by the school. Among them are seventeen Nobel Prize winners[127] in Economics, Peace and Literature. The school currently has over 50 fellows of the British Academy on its staff, … the current Governor of the Bank of England, is also a former professor of economics.[129]
Many alumni of the school are notable figures, especially in the areas of politics, economics and finance. Indeed, with regards to the political arena, as of February 2009, around 45 past or present heads of state have studied or taught at LSE, …Internationally, John F Kennedy (former US President), Óscar Arias (Costa Rican President), Taro Aso[128] (Prime Minister of Japan), Queen Margrethe II of Denmark,[128] B. R. Ambedkar[128] (Father of Indian Constitution) K. R. Narayanan[128] (Ex-President of India) and Romano Prodi[128] (Italian Prime Minister and President of the European Commission) all studied at LSE. As of August 2010, the present heads of government and/or state of seven countries studied at the School – Colombia, Denmark, Ghana, Greece, Kenya, Kiribati and Mauritius. Moreover, in President Barack Obama’s administration, LSE has more former students than any other university outside the US, with the White House Chief of Staff, Deputy Chief of Staff, Budget Director, and Secretary for Homeland Security, all having studied at the school. In fact, LSE is more represented than Yale, Princeton, Stanford and MIT.
Successful businesspeople who studied at LSE include Tony Fernandes, Delphine Arnault, Stelios Haji-Ioannou, Spiros Latsis, David Rockefeller, Maurice Saatchi, George Soros and Michael S. Jeffries….

LSE is a real ‘Good Ole Boys Club’ for world leaders (see the long list at the bottom of the page) even Gaddafi’s son went there. (Tony Blair helped Saif Gaddafi with his PhD thesis.)

Tad
November 29, 2012 9:07 am

Please, someone take my money and save me from global warming! Here, here it is, every last penny, just please don’t let me burn up in the fires!

Gail Combs
November 29, 2012 9:08 am

davidmhoffer says:
November 28, 2012 at 6:09 pm
While a lot of people are making fun of what looks like them to completely incompetent science, I see the World Bank entering the debate in the manner they have as one of the most alarming changes to world politics regarding CAGW that we have seen since Kyoto itself.
________________________________
Do not forget Robert Watson worked for the World Bank when he was the IPCC chair.

David Larsen
November 29, 2012 9:23 am

Ferdberple: Thanks for your response. My question in inquiry is what are the total amounts of carbon and oxygen on the earth and what is the total percentage in relation to total amount being released by coal plants? The ratio of total carbon from coal plants to total carbon and oxygen within and on the earth are on the order of -20 in scientific notation or greater. In other words, the amount released by coal plants, let’s say, is virtually nothing in relation to all the carbon and oxygen already on the earth. In other words, there is no correlation, no greenhouse from some of the most common elements in/on the earth. Not statistics, real math and science.

RobW
November 29, 2012 9:28 am

Just saw a headline that Britain forecast for coldest winter in 100 years. But it must be the warm-cold they are talking about. 😉