A review of Craig Rosebraugh's documentary “Greedy Lying Bastards”

Michael Moore for Dummies

Guest post by Rod McLaughlin

Unlike many readers of this site, I have environmentalist sympathies. I think green anarchist turned film-maker Craig Rosebraugh once did some good. When he organized the “Liberation Collective” in old town Portland, or organized protests against police excesses, he was doing something useful. When he was a spokesman for extreme environmentalists, this was not “eco-terrorism”. Burning down an empty building in the middle of the night is not terrorism: it doesn’t terrorize anyone.

The only genuine eco-terrorist is Ted Kaczynski, the “Unabomber”. One of the most effective bits of Rosebraugh’s new documentary, “Greedy Lying Bastards”, is when it shows a billboard put up by the skeptic Heartland Institute, with a picture of Kaczynski, and the legend “I still believe in Global Warming. Do you?”. But Heartland’s idiotic mistake has nothing to do with the facts of global warming. It doesn’t show that the medieval warming period didn’t happen. It doesn’t prove that the warming in the last century was unprecedented and man-made.

clip_image002Rosebraugh is shameless in using guilt by association. He tries to give the impression that global warming “deniers” tend to be American knuckledraggers, ignoring sane, smart people around the world who doubt the global warming hysteria. For example, he forgets to tell us that the three most prominent Canadian skeptics boycotted Heartland because of the above-mentioned own goal.

Left-wing American documentaries, like this one, or Michael Moore’s, or one I saw about the evils of Walmart, tend to insult the viewer by bombarding her with one side of the story, and words like “lying”, “greedy” and “bastards”. Watching Rosebraugh’s movie, every time the narrator said that there is lying and greed on the skeptic side of the debate, I wondered whether he’d consider if these vices occur among the promoters of climate change “theory”. He did not.

Unflattering shots of one’s opponents, selective information about funding, tear-jerking anecdotes about sea level rise, and shots of hurricanes and fires, with no statistical analysis to show if these events really did increase during the 20th century. All this Rosebraugh learned from Michael Moore, who has been criticized for “dumbing down the left”. Rosebraugh does the same with environmentalism.

To be fair, Rosebraugh did mention billionaire George Soros funding warm-mongering organizations, as well as the mega-rich Koch brothers backing “climate change deniers”, but only in passing.

It doesn’t matter if the CEO of Exxon says global warming is not unprecedented and anthropogenic, because it’s in his company’s interests. This has no bearing at all on whether or not it’s true. It’s the old “self-serving argument” fallacy. Just about any argument and its opposite serves someone: you have to figure out whether it’s right or wrong independently of interests.

Rosebraugh chooses the most plausible-sounding defenders, and implausible critics, of the anthropogenic global warming position. Worse, he almost avoids citing any of the numerous scientifically-trained skeptics. An honest approach would be to interview Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKittrick, who first broke Michael Mann’s “hockey stick”. Or Joanne Nova, or Anthony Watts, the creator of Watts Up With That. Or Judith Curry, a scientist of whom Michael Mann revealingly wrote “I don’t know what she thinks she’s doing, but its not helping the cause”. Skeptical professor Richard Lindzen does appear, but not for long enough to explain his rejection of climate change hysteria.

For his leading climate skeptic, Rosebraugh chooses Christopher Monckton, who, by carefully selecting from his presentations carefully, is made to look like a nut. In reality, he’s merely eccentric. If you read his stuff, Monckton has a grasp of logic unheard of among warm-mongers, misanthropists and fluffies. Rosebraugh tries to refute Monckton’s views on the grounds that he isn’t “a scientist”. This is a variant of the logical fallacy of “argument from authority”.

This implies that you must accept what scientists say. So what do you do when they disagree? Two giants of science, Richard Dawkins and Edward Wilson, recently had a debate about kin selection theory. Dawkins used the number of scientists who support him as an argument. Wilson showed no mercy: “It should be born in mind that if science depended on rhetoric and polls, we would still be burning objects with phlogiston and navigating with geocentric maps.”

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Michael Moore

I’m not a scientist either, but I understand logic, and the work of Karl Popper on scientific method. I know that ad hominem, post hoc ergo propter hoc, ad populam, and ad verecundiam arguments have no validity.

I first became a skeptic when I read climate “scientists” using the word “consensus”. Anyone with even a cursory familiarity with scientific method knows that that word is not in a scientist’s vocabulary.

In contrast, the argument of Rosebraugh’s documentary, like the global warming movement in general, relies on “scientific concensus”. It can therefore be dismissed out of hand.

Rosebraugh deals with the “Climategate” revelations of 2009 as follows:

· he presents the scandal as a conspiracy to derail the Copenhagen climate talks

· he claims, without evidence, that the emails were “stolen” from the CRU in East Anglia

· he uncritically accepts Michael Mann’s assurance that the emails were quoted “out of context”

· he fails to mention that all the emails are online, so we can judge if phrases like “Hide the decline”, “Can you delete any emails you may have had with Keith?”, “Can you also email Gene and get him to do the same?” and “We have to get rid of the medieval warming period” are less damning in context – they aren’t

· he claims that the various inquiries exonerated the warmists, without saying how

Another technique he borrows from Michael Moore, is showing crowds of conservatives waving flags, wearing garish outfits, and holding up signs with ridiculously exaggerated warnings about Obama introducing communism. And rejecting climate change panic. The implication is, if you disbelieve in anthropogenic global warming, next thing, you’ll be in favor of waterboarding.

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March 10, 2013 8:36 pm

Lars P. said: This is a bit ot…. but John, then I am sure you will enjoy this comment:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/03/09/open-thread-weekend-17/#comment-1243960
Thank you Lars! I would have missed that. A truly wonderful compilation of excellent comments!
Cheers!

March 10, 2013 10:23 pm

Folks
Thanks for your kind words. This has been evolving in my brain for a while, I will turn it into a longer missive soon and the “choice” between a Mad Max and Star Trek future is before us today.

March 10, 2013 10:34 pm

says:
March 9, 2013 at 10:58 pm
“Good review, but a bit unfair to Michael Moore… I think he’d be ashamed to be associated with “Greedy Lying Bastards”. Maybe someone should ask him?”
++++++++
I only wish Mikey were ashamed. He has no shame, and has done more harm than good in his works.

papertiger
March 10, 2013 11:31 pm

geoffchambers says:
March 9, 2013 at 10:58 pm
Good review, but a bit unfair to Michael Moore. His first film was all about trying unsuccessfully to interview someone he disagreed with – as if Rosebraugh had made a film called “Looking for Anthony” about his unsuccessful attempt to interview the champion of climate scepticism.
Turn it around and make a movie about the biggest names in the climate alarmist gaggle, and how they dodge the interview. Think about it. Every one of them will walk through a coal fire to avoid an interview by someone who disagrees with global warming.
Make them all look like chumps. Because they are.
The worst that could happen, one of the names could break down and for the first time in his or her’s professional existence be confronted by an adversarial press.

wikeroy
March 10, 2013 11:33 pm

Dennis Ray Wingo says:
March 9, 2013 at 11:02 pm
” So why do they push it so? Why, at the end of the day, are their solutions exactly the same as the environmental movement’s was in the 1970′s? Why are people from their own world such as James Lovelock who have done the research and have come to the conclusion about nuclear energy on their own so pilloried after doing so?”
Answer these questions, and you have reached the root of the problem with climate science today.
Yes, why? I would love to hear your proposal to an answer. A very good post, D.R. Wingo.
Is it because they want us back to the stone age? Because they are Pol Potters ?

March 11, 2013 4:08 am

Burning down empty buildings at night is arson, a felony in Virginia. Burning down 64 buildings at night in the last three months, the current count on the Virginia Eastern Shore, threatens not only lives and property, but also the sensitive wet-lands of that region. You may not agree but it feels like terrorism to those who live here in SE Virginia.
BTW, the not so “Republican” Huffington Post called it an act of terrorism when the count stood at 38 in 45 days. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/12/27/virginia-serial-arsonist-accomack_n_2371736.html
You, my friend, are fishing in the wrong pond.

March 11, 2013 6:24 am

it’s a nice post!

xham
March 11, 2013 9:27 am

“Rosebraugh is shameless in using guilt by association”
Didn’t this very site attempt to apply the exact same principle to Rosebraugh’s association with 9/11 truth? I warned previously to Anthony about leaving that association out, especially knowing from a purely scientific perspective why he is absolutely wrong to believe the official account, and now we see in this article the exact reason why NOT to have included it.

March 11, 2013 1:13 pm

Greedy Lying Bastards — Greedy Al Gore

David, UK
March 11, 2013 1:44 pm

jim2 says:
March 10, 2013 at 1:12 pm
, UK says:
March 10, 2013 at 11:04 am
“Oh come on. You included the quote yourself. He didn’t say it wasn’t “wrong” – on any number of levels. What he said was that it isn’t “terrorism.””
I don’t care what he said. I say burning down something that doesn’t belong to you is wrong on a number of levels. I still say that!

Yeah, and you might say that. And I might say the price of oranges is too high. But much like your comment, it’s not the point.

iskoob
March 12, 2013 1:19 am

Geronimo:
“Oxburgh reviewed the science admitted to Steve McIntyre in writing that the science was not the object of our investigation, the UEA chose the papers for review, and no evidence was taken from critics. For reasons of complete transparency he asked his fellow reviewers to destroy all their notes and papers related to the enquiry.”
FTFY 🙂

March 12, 2013 8:47 am

Rod McLaughlin:
But it’s interesting how the right in this country is more open to discussion than the left, who often ban me from commenting.
Have you ever wondered why that might be?

pdxrod
March 19, 2013 5:56 pm

In the light of Climategate 3 – http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/03/13/climategate-3-0-has-occurred-the-password-has-been-released/ – I should make a slight correction to my article (above).
I said that the film presents the original Climategate scandal “as a conspiracy to derail the Copenhagen climate talks”. Technically, it’s still true that it wasn’t a “conspiracy”, but Mr. FOIA WAS trying to derail those talks. He did it because he believes spending billions combating global warming is harmful to the lives of “millions and billions already struggling with malnutrition, sickness, violence, illiteracy, etc.”. Again, his motives have no bearing at all on the truth or falsehood of the unprecedented harmful anthropogenic global warming (UHAGW) hypothesis.

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