Bethlehem and the rat-hole problem

rat, mousetrap and cheese

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

In the closing minutes of the final plenary of the U.N.’s Doha climate summit, when no one else had anything further to add, I spent a few seconds telling the delegates something that the bad scientists and the malicious media have done their level best to conceal. There has been no global warming for 16 years.

In the real world, this surely welcome news would have been greeted with cheers of relief and delight. Since the beginning of 1997, despite the wailing and gnashing of dentures among the classe politique, despite the regulations, the taxations, the carbon trades, the windmills, the interminable, earnestly flatulent U.N. conferences, the CO2 concentration that they had declared to be Public Enemy No. 1 has not stabilized. It has grown by one-twelfth.

Yet this startling growth has not produced so much as a twentieth of a Celsius degree of global warming. Any warming below the measurement uncertainty of 0.05 Cº in the global-temperature datasets is statistically indistinguishable from zero.

The much-vaunted “consensus” of the much-touted “ensembles” of the much-heralded “models” has been proven wrong. The much-feted “modelers” had written in 2008 that their much-cited “simulations” ruled out, to 95% confidence, intervals of 15 years or more without global warming. To them, 16 years without warming were as near impossible as makes no difference.

Yet those impossible years happened. However, you would never have known that surely not uninteresting piece of good news from reading the newspapers or watching ABC, BBC, CBC, NBC, et hoc genus omne. The media are not in the business of giving the facts or telling the truth any more.

Precisely because journalists no longer bother to provide the inconvenient truth to their audiences, and because they are no longer willing even to provide the people with the straightforward facts without which democracy itself cannot function, the depressingly ill-informed and scientifically-illiterate delegates in Doha can be forgiven for not having known that global warming stopped a long while back.

That is why they should have been excited and delighted when they heard the news – nearly all of them for the very first time.

But this was the alternative reality that is the corrupt, self-serving U.N. Howls, hoots and hollers of dismay and fury greeted my short, polite announcement. This absurdly inappropriate reaction raises a fascinating question.

How are we to dig a rat-hole wide enough to allow the useful idiots and true-believers to escape as each passing year makes it more and more obvious that their fatuous credo has all the plausibility of the now somewhat discredited notion that the world was to be snuffed out at this year’s winter solstice?

Every student of the arts of diplomacy in the civil-service and staff colleges of the U.K. hears much about the rat-hole problem. How does one let the other side off some hook on which they have imprudently impaled themselves, while minimizing their loss of face?

A cornered rat will fight savagely, even against overwhelming odds, because it has no alternative. Give the rat a way out and it will instinctively take it.

The first step in digging a diplomatic rat-hole is to show that one understands how one’s opponents came to make their mistake. One might make a point of agreeing with their premise – in the present instance, the long-proven fact that adding a greenhouse gas to an atmosphere such as ours can be expected, ceteris paribus, to cause some warming.

Then one tries to find justifications for their standpoint. There are five good reasons why the global warming that they – and we – might have expected has not occurred for 16 years: natural variability in general; the appreciable decline in solar activity since the Grand Maximum that peaked in 1960; the current 30-year cooling phase of the ocean oscillations, which began late in 2001 with the transition from the warming phase that had begun in 1976; the recent double-dip la Niña; and the frequency with which supra-decadal periods without warming have occurred in the instrumental record since 1850.

The next trick is to help them, sympathetically, to focus the blame for their error on as few of their number as possible. Here, the target is obvious. The models are to blame for the mess the true-believers are in.

We must help them to understand why the models got it so very wrong. This will not be easy, because nearly all of our opponents have no science or math at all.

We can start our deconstruction of the models by pointing out that – given the five good reasons why global warming might not occur for 15 years or more at a time – the modelers’ ruling out periods of 15 years or more without warming shows they have given insufficient weight to the influence of natural variability. We can poke gentle fun at their description of CO2 as “ the tuning-knob of the climate”, and help them to put things into perspective by reminding them that Man has so far altered only 1/10,000 of the atmosphere, and may alter 1/3000 of it by 2100.

We cannot altogether avoid the math. But we can put it all in plain English, and we can use logic, which is more accessible to the layman than climatological physics. Here goes.

The fundamental equation of climate sensitivity says temperature change is the product of a forcing and a climate-sensitivity parameter.

The modellers’ definition of forcing is illogical; their assumptions about the value of the climate-sensitivity parameter are not Popper-falsifiable; and their claims of reliability for their long-term predictions are empirically disproven and theoretically insupportable. Let us explain.

The IPCC defines a forcing as the net down-minus-up flux of radiation at the tropopause, holding surface temperature fixed. Yet forcings change that temperature. A proposition and its converse cannot simultaneously be true. That is the fundamental postulate of logic, and the models’ definition of forcing manifestly offends against it.

No surprise, then, that since 1995 the IPCC has had to cut its estimate of the CO2 forcing by 15%. The “consensus” disagrees with itself. Note in passing that the CO2 forcing function is logarithmic: each further molecule causes less warming than those before it. Diminishing returns apply.

We can remind our opponents that direct warming is little more than 1 Cº per doubling of CO2 concentration, well within natural variability. It is not a crisis. We can explain that the modelers have imaginatively introduced amplifying or “positive” temperature feedbacks, which, they hope, will triple the direct warming from CO2.

Yet this dubious hypothesis, not being Popper-falsifiable, is not logic and, therefore, not science. If a hypothesis cannot be checked by any empirical or theoretical method, it is not – stricto sensu – a hypothesis at all. It is of no interest to science.

Not one of the imagined feedbacks is empirically measurable or theoretically determinable to a sufficient precision by any method. As an expert reviewer for the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report, I have described its strongly net-positive feedback interval as guesswork – and that, in logic and therefore in science, is exactly what it is.

There is a powerful theoretical reason for suspecting that the modellers’ guess that feedbacks triple direct warming is erroneous. The climatic closed-loop feedback gain implicit in the IPCC’s climate-sensitivity estimate of 3.3[2.0, 4.5] Cº per CO2 doubling falls on the interval 0.62[0.42, 0.74], though you will find no mention of the crucial concept of loop gain either in the IPCC’s documents or – as far as I can discover – in any of the few papers that discuss the mathematics of temperature feedbacks in the climate object.

Process engineers building electronic circuits, who invented feedback mathematics, tell us any loop gain much above zero is too near the singularity – at a loop gain of 1 – in the feedback-amplification equation. At a gain as high as is implicit in the models’ climate-sensitivity estimates, the geological record would show violent oscillations between extremes of warming and cooling.

Yet for 64 million years the Earth’s surface temperature has fluctuated by only 3%, or 8 Cº, either side of the long-run mean. These fluctuations can give us an ice-planet at one moment and a hothouse Earth the next, but they are altogether too small to be consistent with a feedback loop gain anywhere near as close to the singularity as official estimates imply, for homeostatic conditions prevail.

The atmosphere’s lower bound, the ocean, is a vast heat-sink 1100 times denser than the air. Since 3000 bathythermographs were deployed in 2006 no significant ocean warming has been found.

The upper bound of the atmosphere is outer space, to which any excess heat radiates harmlessly away.

Homeostasis, then, is what we should expect, and it is what we get. Accordingly, the climatic loop gain – far from being as impossibly high as the IPCC’s central estimate of 0.62 – cannot much exceed zero, so the warming at CO2 doubling will scarcely exceed 1 Cº.

It is also worth explaining to our opponents the fundamental reason why models cannot do what the modelers claim for them. The overriding difficulty in attempting to model the climate is that it behaves as a chaotic object. We can never know the values of its millions of defining parameters at any chosen moment to a sufficient precision to permit reliable projection of the bifurcations, or Sandy-like departures from an apparently steady state, that are inherent in all objects that behave chaotically. Therefore, reliable, very-long-term prediction of future climate states is known a priori to be unavailable by any method.

The modelers have tried to overcome this constraint by saying that the models are all we have, so we must make the best of them. But it is self-evidently illogical to use models when reliable, very-long-term weather forecasting is not available by any method.

This fundamental limitation on the reliability of long-term predictions by the models – known as the Lorenz constraint, after the father of computerized or “numerical” weather forecasting, whose 1963 paper Deterministic Non-Periodic Flow founded chaos theory by examining the behavior of a five-variable mini-model of the climate constructed as a heuristic – tells us something more, and very important, about the climate.

Bifurcations (or, in our opponents’ intellectual baby-talk, “tipping-points”) in the evolution of the climate object over time are not a whit more likely to occur in a rapidly-warming climate than in a climate which – like our own – is not warming at all.

Sandy and Bopha, and the hot summer in the U.S., could not have been caused by global warming, for the blindingly obvious reason that for 16 years there has not been any.

However, there are many variables in the climate object other than CO2 concentration and surface temperature. Even the tiniest perturbation in any one of these millions of parameters is enough, in an object that behaves chaotically, to induce a bifurcation.

Nothing in the mathematics of chaos leads one to conclude that “tipping-points” are any more likely to occur in response to a large change in the value of one of the parameters (such as surface temperature) that describe an object than in response to an infinitesimal change.

The clincher, in most diplomatic discussions, is money. Once we have led our opponents to understand that there is simply no reason to place any credence whatsoever in the exaggerations that are now painfully self-evident in the models, we can turn their attention to climate economics.

Pretend, ad argumentum, that the IPCC’s central estimate of 2.8 Cº warming by 2100 is true, and that Stern was right to say that the GDP cost of failing to prevent 3 Cº warming this century will be around 1.5% of GDP. Then, at the minimum 5% market inter-temporal discount rate, the cost of trying to abate this decade’s predicted warming of 0.15 Cº by topical, typical CO2-mitigation measures as cost-ineffective as, say, Australia’s carbon tax would be 48 times greater than the cost of later adaptation. At a zero discount rate, the cost of action will exceed the cost arising from inaction 36 times over.

How so? Australia emits just 1.2% of Man’s CO2, of which Ms. Gillard aims to cut 5% this decade. So Australia’s scheme, even if it worked, would cutting just 0.06% of global emissions by 2020. In turn, that would cut CO2 concentration from a predicted 410 μatm to 409.988 μatm. It is this infinitesimal change in CO2 concentration, characteristic of all measures intended – however piously – to mitigate future warming that is the chief reason why there is no economic case for spending any money at all on mitigation today.

The tiny drop in CO2 concentration would cut predicted temperature by 0.00006 Cº. This pathetic result would be achieved at a cost of $130 billion, which works out at $2 quadrillion/Cº. Abating the 0.15 Cº warming predicted for this decade would thus cost $317 trillion, or $45,000/head worldwide, or 59% of global GDP.

Mitigation measures inexpensive enough to be affordable will be ineffective: measures expensive enough to be effective will be unaffordable. Since the premium exceeds the cost of the risk, don’t insure. That is a precautionary principle worthy of the name.

When the child born in Bethlehem ~2012 years ago grew up, He told His audience the parable of the prodigal son, who had squandered his inheritance but was nevertheless welcomed by his father with a fatted calf when he returned and said he was sorry.

However vicious and cruel the true-believers in the global-warming fantasy have been to those few of us who have dared publicly to question their credo that has now been so thoroughly discredited by events, we should make sure that the rat-hole we dig for their escape from their lavish folly is as commodious as possible.

If all else fails, we can pray for them as He prayed looking down from the Cross on the world He had created.

Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.

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Neil
December 25, 2012 8:45 am

Dear Christopher,
You are far too kind to those that want to destroy Western civilization.
Merry Christmas and thanks for all the good work you have done.
Neil

tmlutas
December 25, 2012 8:47 am

You have set me a pretty problem Lord Monckton. I write (behind a paywall) in a collective of analysts for Wikistrat. This is a perfect source document for analysis of the anti-side of the CAGW issue viewed as a strategy piece. The emotions thrown up by this issue actually challenge the underlying business model of the firm. Can a few hundred analysts from all over the globe and from disparate fields apply the “wisdom of the crowd” to your thesis? Are there public policy issues too hot for this model to work?

S. Meyer
December 25, 2012 8:49 am

quote Lord Monckton:
“Dr. Burns says Julia Gillard, described as a Prime Minister of Australia, has declared it unlawful on pain of a $1.1 million fine to speak out against the carbon dioxide tax. I shall be going to Australia and New Zealand on a three-month speaking tour from January to April, and I shall be saying exactly what I think of the carbon dioxide tax, whether Ms. Gillard likes it or not.”
A gag order like the one implied above would be very, very disturbing. However, we must not exaggerate, or we loose credibility. I googled this and found this link.
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/1053734
It seems to me that the Australian government is asking businesses not to exaggerate how much prices have risen due to the carbon tax. Australians? Did I get this right, or can you really be fined for talking about the carbon tax in a critical way?

commieBob
December 25, 2012 8:56 am

E.M.Smith says:
December 25, 2012 at 12:44 am
… The rat that makes it to the hole comes back. …

You are right. As Machiavelli points out in his Discourses, there are two choices when dealing with vanquished foes: kill them or make friends of them. Any other course of action ensures that they will come back later and cause you problems. Humiliating the vanquished is particularly dangerous but, on the other hand, it is absolutely necessary that the vanquished actually feel vanquished.

Bill H
December 25, 2012 9:00 am

Pamela Gray says:
December 25, 2012 at 7:54 am
Got everything right except the Sun part. The direct solar influence on temperature waxes and wanes with the solar cycle producing only a smidgen of temperature difference here on Earth that cannot be seen or deducted from the temperature record. It can only be mathematically construed it is so small. The indirect variable components of the sun’s interaction with Earth (cosmic rays, magnetic influence etc) produce far less temperature-forcing capability and cannot even be remotely considered as an agent in the past century’s warming record.
The sun can be considered, in comparison with Earth’s significant intrinsic variability, to be a constant. It is Earth itself which produces warming trends, cooling trends, and nada trends in the temperature record we debate.
=====================================
The total output of the solar fusion reaction is indeed fairly constant. However, that is only 1/2 the story. It is the Infrared bands of light/heat hitting the earth which have the warming effect on earth. Depending on which band happens to be passing from the suns reaction in strength as measured on the surface of the earth it can indeed have major control over earths systems.
Lower UV bands carry less energy/heat and are reflected by sea water tension or absorbed by the air and particulate matter. Higher UV bands pass these barriers (much like the difference between FM-108mhz line of sight and 2ghz or higher frequencies which will pass through solid objects) which then pass through surface tension of earth oceans and warm the upper layers.
While the suns total radiance and total output changes little, its that subtle change in strength within certain bands which have major effects on the earths surface.

Lord Leach of Fairford
December 25, 2012 9:03 am

I suspect the best rathole is to express understanding with them for the 25 years warming in the run-up to 1998, which naturally misled them into believing that a quarter of a century’s correlation with the model projections was proof that the models were accurate predictors of the future.
Rodney Leach

thingadonta
December 25, 2012 9:23 am

I am of the view that no amount of logical argument will persuade the ‘true believers’ in catastrophic global warming, because they didn’t arrive at their beliefs by logical argument in the first place, they arrived there by faith. As my geology professor used to say about creationists, “you can’t argue with someone’s belief”. However, there is hope for those within science who still basically understand the nature of objective scientific evidence, who may well come around with persuasive, empirically based, arguments.
I would go further though, and say that alot of the ‘faith’ that pervades climate alarmism is based on a certain type of fundamental assumption that is somewhat immune from certain forms of logical analysis and argument. That is, there is an assumption, in the first instance, of a ‘constant’, so to speak, that ultimately over-rides all other parametres, and all longer term trends, and this ‘constant’, is also particularly immune from such notions as internal variation, change, and ‘evolution’ to a new form, or system, or kind, (which is also why the bureaucratic elite couldn’t accept evolutionary theory and the importance/concept of variation in populations in biology for thousands of years, until around 1859, when Darwin and Wallace’s idea of evolution by natural selection directly challenged a then-prevailing assumption of ‘constancy’ of species). This tendency to assume an over-riding and prevailing ‘constant’, or ‘always dominant factor’, is also a fundamental assumption, dare I say, of stronger forms of socialism, i.e. that ‘social order’ over-rides all other internal social variations and trends. That is also partly why the left tends to accept the idea of c02 easily over-riding natural variation, much more so than the right, as it is an idea that is more attuned to their basic assumptions about the world.
I would go even further again, and say I think human beings as a species are pre-disposed ideologically to a tendancy to assume some form of ‘constant’, or ‘over-riding’ ideological parametre, most likely because it is ultimately a means to power, a subtle indication of a deeper Darwinian struggle for power and resources, that goes on in all cultures amd societies. It is biological evolution itself which has, unfortunately, left us this legacy, (e.g. many biologists have come to the opinion that our brains, rather ironically, are predisposed by evolution to have great difficulty accepting and understanding the very processes of evolution that created it, llargely because it conflicts with a tendancy to e.g. bureaucratic stability, and non- tolerance of significant minorities and/or strangers).
Human beings and societies will always have an irrational tendancy, even amongst the educated and elite, to assume certain forms of ‘immutable’ and ‘over-riding’ ‘non-changeability’, which is ultimately for their own personal interest and benefit within the Darwinian struggle for power and resources. And because it is a legacy of powerful forces derived from biological evolution itself, it is both rather pervasive, and strongly immune, from logical analysis and reason. One of the best ways to fight it, is by the historically tried and tested, empirically based, experimental, scientific method, which must also be verifiable, reproducable, and falsifiable; ‘models’, ‘projections’ and untested ‘scenarios’ are hopelessly prone to capture by human predispositions, politics and human bias.

December 25, 2012 9:29 am

mpainter says:
December 25, 2012 at 7:44 am
Mike says: December 25, 2012 at 2:59 am
………………………………….
Once again, if you wish to comprehend this issue you must learn to think for yourself, or you will end up as a cow in a stampede.
Or a rat in a hole…….

December 25, 2012 9:32 am

In reply to Monckton’s response: Your math is too incomplete to be veri- or falsifiable, but it seems that your argument was already addressed in general terms in the footnote included in my original post. Of course, the models are based not just on one number – the feedback factor – but on a set of them; and, of course, if the whole set of assumptions conficts with observation, one might blame any one of the assumptions, alone or in combination, or introduce additional fudge factors. This technique of using “ad hoc hypotheses” (Popper’s term), of sacrificing the pawn to save the bishop, cannot change the fact that the whole of the initial hypothesis has failed.
You cited a prediction made by some modelers in 2008, which amounted to their willingness to stand or fall with the prediction of observable warming within any period of 15 years. That claim is falsifiable, and it has been falsified; it may not have been based on good science, but it certainly did meet the Popper criterion.
As for Popper’s “celebrated paper”, it was indeed a book of some 300 pages, published originally under the title “Logik der Forschung”. I have read the whole thing (in German) and enjoyed it, although its main ideas would have fit neatly into a fraction of the space, and could indeed have been sufficiently presented as a paper. Maybe all the additional elaboration was needed to properly display the classically educated writer’s erudition 😉 Indeed much space in the book is taken up by Popper’s struggle with the prevailing philosphical fashion of the day, which sought to develop rules for establishing statements of empirical science as indubitably certain. Against this prevailing fashion, Popper maintained that science progresses through the falsification of hypotheses, not their “inductive verification”, and that our knowledge of the world remains always hypothetical; or in other words, that “the science” is never “settled”. To which I add, notwithstanding my classical education: Amen, bro’.

icarus62
December 25, 2012 9:41 am

The data shows that Hansen was correct to cite a figure of 350ppm as an initial target for atmospheric CO₂ concentration. With the current global energy imbalance of 0.6W/m², we would have to reduce CO₂ to 345ppm just to halt global warming where it is now. That means sequestering 350 billion tons of CO₂ from the atmosphere immediately, and another 30 billion tons every year (barring successful reductions in emissions) to stop the warming and buy us time to work on alternative, zero-carbon technologies. Instead of disputing the evidence, wouldn’t it be smart to start proposing mechanisms to actually achieve that?

Rex
December 25, 2012 9:44 am

I always thought it odd that global (sic) warming (sic)
was being blamed for heat waves, when, to the contrary,
I would have thought that a series of heat waves would have
some effect on the mean global temperature.

Rob
December 25, 2012 9:52 am

The Lord, as always, brings Logic and Common Sense to a debate frequently lacking in such. A Christmas Present indeed! However, I would caution all sides in this issue to be careful about assuming what we “know”.
Logically, we should agree that our confidence about what we “know” decreases with time going forward, or backward. Furthermore, we are using models going forward and mostly indirect indicators for temperature going backwards to tell us what we “know” a “global” temperature. I have some experience with indirect indicators of temperature and statistically analyzed the data but would be cautious about claiming “know” especially to the fractions of a degree. Statistics are no substitute for Logic and Common Sense! We are even using our near-to-present direct indicators of temperature (which are fraught with questions) to distill and tell us that we “know” the temperature of the globe as a single, discrete number. We have hooked all of these “known” whole-Earth discrete data points, generated by a variety of methodologies, massaged statistically and created a chart that tells us that we “know” global temperature going back thousands, even hundreds of thousands of years and going forward for hundreds of years. Some not only “know” it, but “know” it quantitatively!
Now, tell me, do we really “know” what we think we “know”? Logically?
Certainly, we can observe many things. Glaciers growing or retreating, sea ice extent, solar data, etc. We have recorded temperature data in a number of places and have satellite data since 1979. And, as humans we want a way to summarize information into as small a space as possible but we should be careful about what we “know”.
Most everyone will agree that our satellite data are the best that we have but these data are short-term, particularly considering geologic time. These data are also reduced to a single “global” temperature. Now let me say, as a scientist and a biologist, that I applaud theorizing, research and analyzing data to the best of our ability to generate, hopefully, useful conclusions; however, we may need some humility relative to the quality of our data and what conclusions can be drawn.

GlynnMhor
December 25, 2012 9:55 am

Allan MacRae suggests: “Fifty years ago, a rat infestation was discovered near Alsask, in central Alberta.”
My mother was born in Alsask, and it actually lies barely outside Alberta on the other side of the Saskatchewan border, just south of the highway between Calgary and Saskatoon. It’s one of many many prairie towns that is slowly withering away.
However the rest is true; successive Alberta governments have made it a point to stop rats from entering the province, and to stop them from setting up shop here. Any farmer or rancher who suspects the presence of rats need only make a phone call or email, and the rat Patrol will be at the premises in short order to expunge the nasty critters at no cost to the owner.

mbw
December 25, 2012 10:06 am

There was no global warming from 1940-1960. Therefore the warming that has occurred since then did not happen.

Steve Oregon
December 25, 2012 10:11 am

“A cornered rat will fight savagely, even against overwhelming odds, because it has no alternative. Give the rat a way out and it will instinctively take it.”
Lord Monckton does a fine job but isn’t he leaving out what may be three of the most germane problems?
One, that they are not cornered.
Two, the rats have piled up an immense heap of observations they can falsely use as evidence so they don’t really need the models. It’s too easy for them to point at everything as prove of their claims.
Three, the rats have already made their own way out.
That being that even if the models and their observations are wrong, all of the measures they are pushing are still worth doing. Even the endless “monitoring” & “measuring” of all things must continue to in order to avoid the unknown, right?
And after all, they only want to cut pollution, promote conservation, reduced reliance on foreign oil, encourage sustainability, create livable and walkable communities, preserve fresh water, feed the masses and advance environmental and social justice for all.
Is that not the large hole the rats are already using, big time?
So I fear they cannot be baited or lured into using Lord Monckton’s hole. It will appear as a trap they can easily avoid by using their own large and friendly hole.

D Böehm
December 25, 2012 10:13 am

icarus62 says:
“With the current global energy imbalance of 0.6W/m², we would have to reduce CO₂ to 345ppm just to halt global warming where it is now.”
Icarus, wake up. Global warming halted a decade and a half ago, and it has been declining for the past ten years.
That is pretty strong evidence that CO2 does not have the effect that Hansen claimed. Who are you going to listen to? The always-wrong “Coal Trains of Death” James Hansen? Or Planet Earth?
There is only one correct answer.
•••
Steve Oregon,
The fact remains, they are still rats. ☺

john robertson
December 25, 2012 10:18 am

Thanks for the posting Lord Monckton, while I agree that your proposal might be the civilized and realistic way of allowing this scam to fizzle, I want retribution.
The leaders and major benefactors of this scheme are well cloaked in govt institutions and wealth and may be un touchable via the legal systems available to us.
But the true believers who infest our local governance are the persons who have done us the most harm. Through their vicious stupidity and I cannot think of a softer term, the do-gooders have done everything in their power to destroy the society that supports them, to force funds from my pocket into insane energy schemes, to tax the air and control every aspect of our living.
Fools charge in where angels fear to tread, indeed.
And these folk have raised a righteous clamour, demeaning any who dare to question the sanity of their faith. Blind to the consequences of their bylaws, totally secure in their closed loop thinking, they are our betters and know how best we should live our lives, for only they have seen the truth.
Rat holes are useful, napalm comes to mind. I for one intend to rub their blind gullibility in on every opportunity.

David, UK
December 25, 2012 10:33 am

John Brookes says:
December 25, 2012 at 3:05 am
Overblown and pretentious, but all in all a very entertaining piece of misinformation. But one would expect no less from Mr Monckton.

G’day John.
“Overblown and pretentious” I would grant you. “Entertaining,” definitely. But “misinformation?” I note that as usual with your ilk, you provide no substantiation.

GlynnMhor
December 25, 2012 10:36 am

MBW writes: “There was no global warming from 1940-1960.”
Yet the models in ‘predicting the past’ show global warming occurring then…
http://www.ipcc.ch/graphics/ar4-wg1/jpg/fig-10-4.jpg
(with the exception of the little blip due to the Agung eruption)

mpainter
December 25, 2012 10:50 am

icarus62 says: December 25, 2012 at 9:41 am
Instead of disputing the evidence, wouldn’t it be smart to start proposing mechanisms to actually achieve that?
==========================
You have no evidence to give, because there is none. AGW is only unproven theory, and unproven theory is not evidence. Bald assertion is not evidence. A failed hypothesis is certainly not evidence. If you do get some evidence, please share it with us here at WUWT. WUWT has a standing invitation to any who would provide evidence, but so far no one has done this and I don’t expect you to show any, either.
Propose mechanisms? Absolutely not. Actually atmospheric CO2 is entirely harmless and even beneficial. Do not let yourself be frightened by the panic talk. Learn to think for yourself instead of citing bald assertions as science.

Mark Bofill
December 25, 2012 10:50 am

Lordship is a hereditary title, an accident of birth. In my amateur opinion, the actions of the man determine the emptiness or merit of the title. Further, in my amateur opinion, Viscount Monckton of Brenchley continues to live up to his title via writing this. I wish the elected leaders in the United States had half as much sense.
The alarmists aren’t going to just disappear. From both a coldly practical perspective and a compassionate one (whatever their ‘sins’, I don’t accept that any of the CAGW advocates are evil incarnate) it’s important to consider that by making it as painful as possible for CAGW advocates to eventually admit error, it minimizes their motivation to do so, at no profit to anyone.
Thank you Lord Monckton, Merry Christmas.

Zeke
December 25, 2012 10:57 am

Thank you Lord Monckton. Merry Christmas and Happy Hanukkah to all of you.
Always remember to take time away from the battle and enjoy. “Keep a weather eye to the chart on high.” (:

michael hart
December 25, 2012 11:04 am

You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink.
Having said that, the most “honorable” exit-strategy might be an admission that the carbon-cycle has been misunderstood, which is not difficult. This would allow the hard core radiative-physics modelers to still claim they are 100% correct, while acknowledging that the human impact due to fossil-fuel combustion is small because anthropogenic CO2 emissions are still trivial by comparison..
Models are “biology-lite” and the effects of the bio-sphere are easy to underestimate over time once the exponential growth rates of living organisms is considered. Oceanic photosynthesis and carbon-fluxes are much greater than realized back in Jim Hansen’s day, and carbon isotope fractionation processes even less well described. Someone looking for excuses could find no shortage of suitable candidates in the bio-chemical world.
The IPCC consensus can then say they didn’t get sufficient biological and biochemical input, and the biologists/biochemists can truthfully say they were never asked. The best ones never needed to put “global-warming” or “climate-change” in their grant applications.

DirkH
December 25, 2012 11:14 am

mbw says:
December 25, 2012 at 10:06 am
“There was no global warming from 1940-1960. Therefore the warming that has occurred since then did not happen.”
CO2AGW believer, that’s pretty weak. It’s not even funny. Can’t you do better? Everybody here knows the data. You’re not on grist.

dmacleo
December 25, 2012 11:16 am

Well done sir, well done.
honestly I do not know if I am capable of being that forgiving though.
the whole eco warrior setup has wounded us in so many ways (land use, zoning, tree harvesting, oil production, etc) over the past decades I just do not have it in me to be that nice a person.

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