The rise of the peccatogenesists

An interesting new word came up this week on Twitter thanks to Hillary Rosner.

peccatogenic_tweet

It would seem to be a derivative of the word pecadillo:

peccadillo

I think this is the perfect word to describe many of the disingenuous activists like Al Gore, Joe Romm, Brad Johnson, Mayor Bloomberg, and Bill McKibben who see “human caused bad weather” in every cloud, and try mightily to make others believe the same.

To an extent, they are successful, just as others are able to fool people into crusades to find bigfoot, scan the skies for aliens, or take cover from imagined chemicals raining from the sky in ordinary jet exhaust contrails.

The peccatogenesists want us to believe that our supposed “misconduct” against Gaia, such as emitting to much CO2 over an imaginary “safe” level of 350 parts per million, or failing to care enough about an imaginary temperature target of 2°C which climatologist Phil Jones says was plucked out of thin air is the cause of bad weather.

Now, per that belief, any weather event that can somehow remotely be linked to global warming is used as a propaganda tool by the peccatogenesists, except of course, when that event doesn’t, in which case it’s “just weather”. For example, thousands of new record lows get nary a mention, but when there are a string of record highs, it’s just another example of  human caused DOOM even though it can be shown later that its just another weather pattern.

And then there’s severe weather. Yesterday, the great Al Gore declared that his views are being hindered by scientists. Politico reports:

Former Vice President Al Gore lamented today that scientists “will not let us link record-breaking” tornadoes in Oklahoma and elsewhere to climate change because of inadequate record keeping on the twisters.

Oh, the horror! It reminds me of the terrible mistreatment James Hansen claimed he got at the hands of NASA during the Bush era when they wouldn’t let him make unfounded claims.

Of course, some politicians like NYC Mayor Gloomberg Bloomberg don’t let pesky science or mathematics get in the way of a crusade, and embrace peccatogenics as a vehicle for hope and change:

The bad weather patterns should kick in as early as 2020, according to the findings released on Monday.

In that year, the city will see an average temperature of 57 degrees — up from the current 54 — and 10% more rainfall.

That rainfall will come with an alarming, nearly 1-foot rise in the already high sea level — which will likely increase the city’s flood risk.

Adding to the danger will be the amount of the rainy days.

Gosh, rainy days are dangerous?  I can’t wait for NOAA to come up with a bulletin type for that. Cue the invention of the urban safety umbrella. Wuebbles gone wild would like that I think.

Of course theses claims of Hell and High Water Fire and Brimstone appear just like an old time country preacher sermon, followed by the obligatory collection plate to fleece the flock. Michael Bloomberg, in his best preaching style, only asked for $20 billion at the end of his sermon yesterday. Surely, that’s a small price to pay for dissing Gaia.

Problem is, like most peccatogenic claims, when you examine them for detail, they fall apart just as easily as the latest bigfoot or UFO sighting. Anybody with basic math skills can see Bloomberg’s claim 1 foot of sea level rise will be lucky to be 1 inch at the present rate.

The reality about the supposed human induced bad weather is that if we are to believe the claims of “consensus” put forth by Oreskes, Cook, Nuccitelli, and other social activists, then the consensus is that there’s no way to connect global warming and severe weather. Some examples of the consensus that severe weather is not attributable to climate change include:

Nature editorial dashes alarmist hopes of linking extreme weather events to global warming:

Better models are needed before exceptional events can be reliably linked to global warming.

IPCC Special Report on Extreme Events and Disasters:

FAQ 3.1 Is the Climate Becoming More Extreme? […]None of the above instruments has yet been developed sufficiently as to allow us to confidently answer the question posed here. Thus we are restricted to questions about whether specific extremes are becoming more or less common, and our confidence in the answers to such questions, including the direction and magnitude of changes in specific extremes, depends on the type of extreme, as well as on the region and season, linked with the level of understanding of the underlying processes and the reliability of their simulation in models.

But, as Gore says, “it’s those pesky scientists” that are preventing the linkage.

I blame technology for the appearance that the weather is getting worse. See: Why it seems that severe weather is “getting worse” when the data shows otherwise – a historical perspective

With this essay, “peccatogenic” is now in the climate vocabulary. Go forth and multiply it whenever you get the opportunity. And, keep that handy Dr. Roger Pielke Jr. bullshit button at the ready.

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June 13, 2013 9:12 am

Thanks, Anthony; Keep up the good work!

stan stendera
June 13, 2013 9:12 am

I am happy you posted my last comment. I would be even happier if you restored my original comment. Or maybe it’s in the abyss.
[Reply: not found in the Spam folder. We always recommend saving your comment until you see it posted. WordPress is not perfect. — mod.]

OldWeirdHarold
June 13, 2013 9:12 am

Golden
June 13, 2013 9:23 am

The interesting thing is the peccatogenesists that dole out the peccatogenic theatre on others are themselves pachyderms impervious to any belief that any of it applies to them.

Jimbo
June 13, 2013 9:29 am

It’s nothing to do with extreme weather. It’s about shutting down the fossil fuel industry for some and getting lots of money for others. Greenpeace et. al. shut down. Bloomberg & Gore NY cash help and Gore more and more money the more he lies. Has the World ever created such a fibber?

Lou
June 13, 2013 9:31 am

Had to laugh at bigfoot. Thought it was all BS till I stumbled onto something that caught my attention a couple years ago. You probably will have to read The Locals by Thom Powell to understand the whole thing… and look at it differently. I was just ignorant of being ignorant because I never looked into it. Sometimes, I forget that I rely too much on scientists to “officially” prove that they exist.

Joseph Bastardi
June 13, 2013 9:32 am

How about Climatic ambulance chasers, or perhaps parasitic climatic ambulance chasers since their ideas are sucking the life out of our country with no return except to themselves where they are being gorged by grants and funding, as more and more people cant find jobs, gave up looking for them and have to go to the government for help and they simply make up lies about what is causing it, since we have seen all this before.
Interesting. The hardworking people that pay taxes to help others, also are forced to fund the very parasitic climatic ambulance chasers that are helping to lead to an increased burden that must be paid for. Since the definition of parasite is this:
a person who receives support, advantage, or the like, from another or others without giving any useful or proper return, as one who lives on the hospitality of others.
I dont think this is name calling as much as it is an accurate description of what is going on here

RockyRoad
June 13, 2013 9:35 am

Al Gore, Joe Romm, Brad Johnson, Mayor Bloomberg, and Bill McKibben are all afflicted with peccadosis–and even the best mouth wash won’t rid a person of that malady (although it might be a good start).
(“Peccadosis” is my new word–I just made it up; I can’t find it anywhere else.)
If they continue unabated, Al Gore, Joe Romm, Brad Johnson, Mayor Bloomberg, and Bill McKibben will all have bad cases of peccaditis.
(Peccaditis is another new term of mine–and I believe it’s aptly applied in the above sentence.)

stan stendera
June 13, 2013 9:40 am

On a roll this morning.
To the mods: I wrote ( I’m slightly paraphrasing ) “Most non NY residents could care less if NY slid into the abyss.”
For Dirk H.: What are you talking about??? I never mentioned Bigfoot and could care less what AW thinks about them. Do you have any clue what PC (political correctness) means?

June 13, 2013 9:42 am

But the New York Times said “climate is dominated by natural variability”. Mayor Bloomberg should read the Times for up to the date climate news. 😉

June 13, 2013 9:45 am

Pedadillatitotagenic
Caused by extremely small sins, like breaking wind silently during a sermon..

stan stendera
June 13, 2013 9:47 am

After more thought? Ha, me think?? My comment was: “What Bloomburg does not realize is that most non NY residents could care less if NY slid into the abyss.
Moderator???????

June 13, 2013 9:54 am

“How about Climatic ambulance chasers, or perhaps parasitic climatic ambulance chasers since their ideas are sucking the life out of our country with no return except to themselves where they are being gorged by grants and funding …”
Exactly so. All we see are activists and so called “scientists” who are making a good living promoting the scare story that the industrial revolution is bad for us. But then they go and live the high life style off the money they make from fraud. It is really way past time to hold them accountable to the real-world data and not the tales spun out of their desire to grow rich off of the irrational fears of the commoners.

stan stendera
June 13, 2013 9:54 am

Foe johnmarshall above: Try an a????

Bob
June 13, 2013 9:56 am

Chemtrails? Big Foot? Come on, guys. Your peccadilloes give you away.

stan stendera
June 13, 2013 10:07 am

For Dirk H. YOU groove on that idiot “Barry Cullen”. I suspect you missed where I was coming from on PC. Even the most intelligent have a brain fart once in a while.

Barry Cullen
June 13, 2013 10:12 am

@DirkH
“To an extent, they are successful, just as others are able to fool people into crusades to find bigfoot, scan the skies for aliens, or take cover from imagined chemicals raining from the sky in ordinary jet exhaust contrails.” – AW
I only count 3.
What do you mean by “the clipboard is your friend”?
BC

June 13, 2013 10:30 am

Another good word of the day: coprophagic. Insert/append right before ‘climate alarmist’.☺

stan stendera
June 13, 2013 10:41 am

dbstealey.
The comment of the YEAR. Hands Down, No Contest. WOW. I wish I could come up with something half as good!!!!

Duster
June 13, 2013 10:43 am

This is not a new view of things. The very same reasoning is inherent in such myths as the Genesis flood, similar myths from Greek and Roman sources, and just about any other “mea maxima culpa” myth from anywhere on the planet. If humans are responsible for things going to heck in a hand basket, then humans can, by living right, put things right. There’s no structural difference between the CAGW prophecy and the prophecies of global doom from religious sources.

Zeke
June 13, 2013 10:53 am

“To an extent, they are successful, just as others are able to fool people into crusades to find bigfoot, scan the skies for aliens, or take cover from imagined chemicals raining from the sky in ordinary jet exhaust contrails.” ~WUWT
That is not so harmless. In my experience, if you examine the message of the jet contrail haarpies, it is also highly associated with other messages of doom about everyday life. I can understand a personal phobia – my own mother went on a raw food diet to avoid “processed foods,” so I am inclined to feel indulgent towards fads and phobias as a part of life – but all the rest of the messaging associated with contrails is intent on clouding every aspect of the blessings of modern life with fear and doubt. Fear the airplanes that bring your parcel from ebay, and has enabled travel to take mere hours instead of weeks. Fear the food you eat. Fear the water. Fear cows. Fear sheep. Fear milk, fear eggs, fear hens. Fear possessing too much. Fear oil. Fear cars. Fear coal. Fear mining. Fear wheat. It is not harmless. It is irrational activism against reason and all advancements which lift human life from a primitive, low estate.

george e. smith
June 13, 2013 11:09 am

Well in California, that would be “peccadeeyo.”

u.k(us)
June 13, 2013 11:10 am

Barry Cullen says:
June 13, 2013 at 7:48 am
Anthony, your selection of the first 2 of your 3 examples of nonsense is based on ignorance of the evidence, both pro and con, on your part. Chemtrails, there is no evidence. This is the first time in the many years I have been following WUWT that I have experienced your closed mindedness. Sad!
BC
==========================
Start your own blog, you can talk about it all day long.
From what I infer, you’ll get lots of traffic.

June 13, 2013 11:13 am

… from imagined chemicals raining from the sky in ordinary jet exhaust contrails.

Loving how the minds of some conjure up the usually-banished look-alike from the the above-bolded ‘fully board-approved ‘ term … must be that human/quality the ‘power of suggestion’ working to the fourth power …
.

Gary Hladik
June 13, 2013 12:13 pm

omnologos says (June 13, 2013 at 7:29 am): ‘peccatum, Latin for “sin”’
Hmmm. I thought it was Latin for “tinfoil hat”. 🙂