Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
Dear Dr. McNutt:
As a somewhat unwilling subscriber to Science, let me start by welcoming you as the latest editor of Science magazine. You’ve stated “Thirty-five years ago, when I was a graduate student and my very first research paper was published in Science, I do not think I could ever have dreamed that one day I would have the honor of becoming Editor-in-Chief of this most distinguished journal.”
And in addition to your most impressive resume, you do get huge props from me for this part of your Wikipedia biography, which I certainly hope is true, viz:
McNutt is a NAUI-certified scuba diver and she trained in underwater demolition and explosives handling with the U.S. Navy UDT and SEAL Team.
Indeed you do have an unparalleled opportunity, which is to turn what has become just another glossy advocacy magazine back into a distinguished scientific journal.
Unfortunately, during the intervening 35 years of your remarkable scientific career since you were a graduate student, a once-stellar magazine has fallen on hard times. Starting with Donald Kennedy, and continuing under Bruce Alberts, it has become a shabby vehicle for strident climate activism … and that experiment has proven once again that Science can’t be both an activist journal and a scientific journal. Science magazine has thrown its considerable (but rapidly decreasing) weight behind a number of causes. And yes, some of those causes are indeed important.
The problem is that you are convinced the causes are hugely important, and you want to convince us of the same. But once you convince people that your causes are more important to you than your science, that’s it for your authority regarding the science. You either get to have activism, or you get scientific authority. You don’t get both. And the past actions of your magazine have clearly demonstrated that these days your activist causes are much more important to you than the science.
The problems have involved two main issues in the field I’m involved in, climate science. The first issue is that despite repeated requests, past Science Magazine editors have flouted your own guidelines for normal scientific transparency. You continue to publish articles about climate science without requiring that the authors archive their data and code as required by your own rules. It appears that the rules about archiving data and code are enforced for the little people like myself, but when the Editors of Science want to promote a point of view, the rules don’t apply … funny how that works.
The second issue is that in climate science, far too often Science magazine editors have substituted pal review for peer review. As a result, people laugh at the bumf that passes for climate science in your pages. They don’t disagree with your articles. They laugh at your articles. I’m told that in some scientific circles, it’s only the glossy unabsorbent nature of the magazine’s paper that keeps the climate science articles from being used, perhaps more appropriately, for hygienic purposes … seriously, you have published some really risible, really shabby, grade-school level studies in climate science. It’s embarrassing.
With a new Editor-In-Chief, I’ve been hoping that might all be in the past. Unfortunately, after taking over at the helm, you’ve chosen to reveal your … umm … well, let me describe it as your newness to the concept of “scientific journal editor” by following in the foolishly activist footsteps of your immediate predecessors. I’d hoped you might be smarter than they were, and indeed you might still show yourself to be. But to jump into the middle of the climate debate and stake out a position for Science magazine? Why? That’s suicide for the magazine. Science magazine should never have an editorial stance on the science it is discussing and overseeing. Leave that to Mother Jones magazine, or to National Geographic, or Popular Science. Your magazine taking a strong activist position on climate science is just evidence that you have abandoned all pretense of being concerned with climate science itself. When the science is strong it doesn’t need defenders … and if the Editor-In-Chief of Science feels it’s necessary to defend some part of science, that simply proves that the “science” involved must be of the weakest.
And regarding you personally taking a position? Well, that’s interesting. The problem is that you are extremely well educated, strong, strikingly good looking, and a wickedly-smart woman by all accounts … and while those are all good things, that’s a scary combination. One downside of that particular melange is that as a result, it’s very possible that people, particularly men, haven’t told you the unvarnished truth in years. So some of what I have to say may be a surprise to you.
Here are your climate claims from your recent Editorial, based presumably on your research into the flexural modes of the earth’s crust:
Researchers have turned to the geologic record to obtain ground truth about patterns of change for use in climate models. Information from prior epochs reveals evidence for conditions on Earth that might be analogs to a future world with more CO2. Projections based on such previous evidence are still uncertain, because there is no perfect analog to current events in previous geologic epochs; however, even the most optimistic predictions are dire. For example, environmental changes brought on by climate changes will be too rapid for many species to adapt to, leading to widespread extinctions. Unfortunately, I view these predicted outcomes as overly optimistic.
Now, the uninitiated might not notice the subtle change of tense there, from the subjunctive to the declarative. But those of us who are used to the pea-and-shell game will have seen that you’ve done something curious. You’ve started by saying that “Projections based on such previous evidence are still uncertain”. That is true, and not only true, it’s a huge understatement.
Here is the current state of climate science, the understanding of past climate changes, and the prediction of future climates.
• Not one climate scientist on either side of the aisle predicted the current ~ 15-year hiatus in warming. This lack of warming was highlighted as early as 2009 in a widely-circulated article called “What Happened to Global Warming? Scientists Say Just Wait a Bit”. In that article, various scientists were quoted as saying the warming would resume in a few years.
Well, we’ve waited a few years, Dr. McNutt. Their predictions, once again, haven’t come true … and despite that, here you are to lecture us. And where did this most seditious article entitled “What Happened To Global Warming” appear?
Why, it appeared in Science magazine … you want to be taken seriously in the field of climate science, yet you don’t mention this lack of recent warming at all?
• Not one climate scientist on either side of the aisle can explain the century or two of cooling leading up to the Little Ice Age in the 1600s. Why did the world slowly get colder back then? Oh, some folks claim it’s the sun, maybe so, maybe not … but really, no one knows.
• Not one climate scientist on either side of the aisle can explain the three centuries of slow general warming that have followed the Little Ice Age. What changed to gradually warm the planet, after it had been cooling for centuries?
• None of these things are explicable as the results of CO2, which supposedly is the secret control knob that regulates the global temperature.
So no one can explain the past climate changes, the CO2 explanation fails miserably at the hindcast, and you tell us that predictions based on the past are “still uncertain”, which is a big understatement and is certainly true.
But despite that uncertainty, despite that lack of knowledge, in the very next sentence you assure us breathlessly that predictions that “ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES WILL BE TOO RAPID FOR MANY SPECIES TO ADAPT TO, LEADING TO WIDESPREAD EXTINCTIONS” are not alarmist enough for you …
Changes “will be” too rapid? “Will be”? And that’s not alarmist enough for you?
I truly hope you don’t realize what you are saying. I truly hope that you do not understand that that sentence of yours is nothing but strident alarmism that you are presenting under the guise of science.
Because you don’t know what the unknown environmental changes WILL do the species of the planet, that’s incredible hubris. More to the point, you have absolutely no evidence for your claim of “widespread extinctions”. Not one modern species has ever been shown to have gone extinct from climate change. Even Nature magazine has given up on the goofy idea of the “sixth wave of extinctions” that you are trying to sell. There is no evidence for your “extinction by climate change” claim at all.
Let me take a bit of a detour, and discuss the idea of a “natural experiment”. People always say we can’t study climate in a laboratory, and that’s true. We can’t use the lab to see how a big ecosystem full of real-world species might react to changing temperatures, for example. But we have natural experiments. And we’ve just conducted a very interesting experiment. Here’s the record of the experiment.

According to the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature dataset shown above, the global land is two and a half degrees warmer than it was around 1810. Two and a half degrees of warming in two centuries. That’s well beyond what is supposed to be the huge danger change of two degrees of warming … where are the corpses?
You seem to be concerned about the speed of the changes. Two and a half degrees in two centuries is fast, it’s well over half the speed of the changes you are concerned about. As a result, we should have seen at least some evidence for your claim that warming causes extinctions … perhaps you could name the species that have gone extinct from warming during that natural experiment? I ask, because I’ve looked very hard, and I haven’t found even one.
You continue with your litany of unsubstantiated worries:
Even species that might tolerate the new environment could nevertheless decline as the ecosystems on which they depend collapse. The oceans will become more stratified and less productive.
The oceans WILL become more stratified? They WILL become less productive? And you say species “could” decline, but the ecosystem collapse is presented without qualifiers? My dear lady, you just told us that all of these “projections” are very uncertain. Let me suggest that you lose the “will become” and the “will happen”. You don’t know if warmer oceans will be more or less productive, and that kind of puffery just makes people point and laugh. I implore you, stop with the pronouncements from on high. You just got appointed, it’s true, but only to the editorship of Science, not to a more celestial and all-seeing post.
In addition, perhaps you could point to an example of a thermally-caused “ecosystem collapse” from the two and a half degrees C warming of the last two centuries? You know … evidence?
You go on …
If such ecosystem problems come to pass, the changes will affect humans in profound ways. The loss in ocean productivity will be detrimental for the 20% of the population that depends on the seas for nutrition. Crops will fail more regularly, especially on land at lower latitudes where food is in shortest supply.
The first part is good, you preface your statements with “IF the ecosystem problems come to pass”. The rest of it, however, is just more unsupported, uncited, unverified, and untrue fears. You have no evidence that a couple of degrees of warming will make the crops “fail more regularly”. Again, we’ve just run a natural experiment. We’ve just seen what happened when the land temperatures went up two and a half degrees from 1810 to the present. So please tell us, Dr. McNutt …
Where is the evidence of any loss in ocean productivity from that two and a half degrees C of warming? I say that you don’t have even a scrap of evidence that warming per se causes a decline in oceanic productivity. I certainly have never seen any.
Where is the evidence of any tropical crop loss from the last two centuries of warming?
Where is the evidence of any cities submerged by sea level rise?
Where is the evidence of the claimed spread of diseases?
Where are the climate refugees? You are aware, I hope, that the UN Environmental Programme climate specialists, part of the “97% consensus”, confidently predicted 50 million climate refugees by 2010 … perhaps you could point those refugees out for those of us who can’t find them?
Or perhaps you’re not aware of the dozens of such failed predictions by members of the fabled “97% consensus”. There’s no problem if you’re not aware of those unsuccessful “scientific” forecasts, I mean after all you’re a geologist, not a climate scientist … but if you lack that kind of basic knowledge of the climate field, then why are you attempting to lecture us on the subject?
Sadly, it seems that like many other good honest folk, you are simply parroting claims of danger that you have swallowed without ever thinking critically about them. Reconsider the natural experiment. We’ve had two and a half degrees of warming, and from everything I can find, it wasn’t harmful to the planetary denizens. There were no climate refugees. The coral atolls didn’t go underwater, we still have them. According to the IPCC, there’s been no increase in extreme weather events. No cities had to be evacuated because of sea level rise.
Two and a half degrees C, and not only were there no catastrophes from that warming, quite the opposite. Overall, it was beneficial to plants, animals, and humans alike. Expanded growing seasons and milder winters provided larger and more stable crops. Longer ice-free periods on the northern harbors and rivers allowed increased commerce. Milder winters killed fewer people … what’s not to like?
Now, you claim to be a scientist, Dr. McNutt. And I’m happy to be proven wrong when I say that your climate fears are not based in reality. To prove me wrong, you need to provide evidence. Not claims. Not solemn warnings of future disasters unencumbered by any historical parallel. You need to provide evidence.
So if you’d be so kind as to point out the past catastrophes that came from the last two and a half degrees C of rapid warming, your alarmism about the possibility of another two and a half degrees might at least contain a hint of realism, even if it’s only a Hollywood “based on a true story” kind of realism.
If you can’t find any thermal catastrophes from that 2.5 degrees of warming, on the other hand, an honest scientist would change her views accordingly … your call.
Heck, you’re so new to the field that you don’t even have your alarmist talking points straight. Al Gore gives classes in this stuff so his minions will all be singing from the same hymnbook, you might borrow a copy. Because according to the alarmists, the effect of the CO2 warming will be greatest in the extra-tropics and the polar regions. In those areas it’s supposed to affect mostly nighttime temperatures, and particularly in the winter.
So your claim that crops will fail “at lower latitudes where food is in shortest supply” is in direct disagreement with the alarmist predictions of danger at the Poles.
Not only that, but your uncited claim of tropical losses is also in direct disagreement with the historical data, which shows that the tropics has warmed the least of all of the latitudinal zones. The tropical warming since 1900 is lost in the noise, your claim of tropical crop loss is a sad joke. You should at least switch latitudes and join up with your co-religionists and Al Gore’s minions in trying to scare people about a warming Arctic … at least that was happening, although unfortunately for alarmists like yourself, Alaska cooled substantially over the first decade of the 21st century, so now the evidence is mixed.
And in any case, where are my minions? I want the government to use their Solyndra funds to provide me with minions, like the ones Al Gore trains using petrodollars he pocketed from the oil companies for his TV station. How come Al has minions and I don’t? I guess the moral is, first get the oil million$, then you’ll get the minions. I’m obviously a slow learner regarding the first part of that … and how come Al gets the petrobucks and nobody says a word, but skeptics get tarred as being on the oil companies payroll but don’t get a dime? … however, I digress. You go on to say:
This unfavorable environmental state could last for many thousands of years as geologic processes slowly respond to the imbalances created by the release of the fossil carbon reservoir. The time scale for biodiversity to be restored, with all the benefits that it brings, will be even longer.
Tertullian says that the Roman Emperors had a slave whose job was to whisper in the Emperor’s ear “Respice post te! Hominem te memento!” In that respect, Dr. McNutt, let me be the slave who reminds you that you are merely the latest future ex-Editor-In-Chief of Science, a once-great magazine.
And while that post still swings a certain (although sadly diminished) amount of weight, it does not confer upon you ex oficio the ability to see “many thousands of years” into the future. You are attempting to channel Cassandra, and you are failing at it spectacularly. I cannot say this strongly enough. Activism is not your friend. The stronger the Editor-In-Chief of Science is as an activist, the less authority the Editor-In-Chief has as a scientist, and the less authority Science has as a scientific journal. What part of “conflict of interest” do you and Bruce Alberts and Donald Kennedy not understand? You cannot be both the peer-reviewer, the gate-keeper who arbitrates which science is worth publishing, and at the same time be a strong scientific alarmist pushing a particular belief as well.
So please, don’t bother us with any more of your unsupported fears about what a bit of warming might do. You’re actually in good shape yet. Yes, you struck out badly in the first inning, but there’s lots of the game left before you’re an ex-, and that just means don’t repeat your mistakes when you come up to bat again.
What you need to be concerned with is what your magazine does, not what the climate does. Lecturing people when your own house is in such bad order does not make you look wise, it makes you look hypocritical. You need to attend to the very poor quality of the studies you are publishing before you start lecturing people about climate science. How about giving us an editorial about how your predecessors didn’t enforce the “archive your data and code” policy, and whether you plan to continue the now time-honored tradition of ignoring the policy? That’s something you can speak about with authority.
After that, perhaps you might give us an editorial about how you are renouncing the anti-scientific practice of using co-authors to review each others’ work? That would be interesting. Or how about an editorial review of the ethical implications of Peter Gleick’s actions, and what their general acceptance by mainstream climate scientists reveal about the nature and extent of Noble Cause Corruption? That would be more than welcome.
But please … no more schoolmarmish lectures, and no more channeling the Ehrlichs and Holdrens. We’ve had enough failed serial doom-casters to last us for decades. You do not want to add your name to that list of unsuccessful catastrophe-mongers.
I say all of this to you for several reasons. First, I can’t stand to see someone driving the bus off the cliff without warning them. You’re doing both your reputation and that of Science magazine great damage through your alarmism, and in my world I am obliged to say something.
Second, there’s an old adage that says “It is better to light one little cylinder of fossil-fuel-derived wax with a wick in it, than to curse the darkness,” or something like that. I’m not the man to sit idly by when something I care about is imperiled.
Next, I say it because as an amateur scientist, I’m a huge fan of the process we call science, and I hate to see the journals flouting scientific transparency and blatantly shilling for one side or the other in a scientific debate.
And curiously, I say it because I truly wish you well. You do have an amazing opportunity, one I’d love to have. You have the chance to turn Science back into a serious, reputable scientific journal.
Plus scuba divers get my support, and women divers who’ve done underwater explosives training with the SEALS get my unalloyed, albeit somewhat jealous, awe and respect.
The main issue is, I’d like to see Science magazine become what it once was—a science magazine without an axe to grind, and without an agenda other than to be the best scientific journal on the planet.
Because as soon as you start grinding that axe and pursuing that agenda, you’ve become an axe-woman on a mission, not a scientist … and although the world needs good axe-women on missions, and I’m sure you’re a very good one when the situation arises, both Science the journal and science itself suffers when the Editor-In-Chief of Science magazine takes up axe-grinding. It destroys your credibility as a major arbiter of what science should be published.
My very best regards to you, and my best wishes for your tenure as Editor-In-Chief, and for the magazine in your hands,
w.

Get off Willis’ back. Knock off this pride of authorship crap. He went into a fight and gave it a darned good shot. As a biker, I know a bit about fights and I can tell you, you rarely get to edit any of them. It’s like a debate, you rarely get the chance to polish what has been said. He did an extremely credible job and we should all be thankful he is on the side of truth, our side.
Form letters? http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/02/21/an-open-letter-to-dr-linda-gundersen/
Willis, your “not one climate scientist predicted…” is not quite accurate.
Back in 2008: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7376301.stm
As I said during our last AGU dinner, climate scientists on the warmey side have made so many predictions, that whatever happens, they can dig out a study and say “we predicted that”. When just about every possible outcome has been predicted by endless researchers who have risen up to suck on the almost limitless funding teat, you create a shell of unfalsibility. The shell is easily pierced with any modicum of critical analyses, but is considered inpenetrable by those suffering from advocacy overcoming rationality-otherwise known as Noble Cause Corruption.
From a retired HS Physics/ Chem teacher who now acts as a mentor to many.
!) If Climate Science is the only subject she talked about (I do not know) then she is obviously on a singular mission, substituting propaganda for science.
2) I hope she reads all this. A few decades ago I ordered Science Mag.- for the school but dropped for reasons other than Climate Science. We really emphasized uncertainty and the scientific process in our department, the magazine gradually became less of a good example.
3) When I talked to those in the ivory halls and elsewhere, I just ask scientists to be scientists.
4) Our local newspaper, circulation of about 70 – 75,000 did a survey within the last week and the editors were shocked that less than half believe there is significant ACC. The main reason for doubt was they have seen to many cry wolf too often. Outlandish predictions, unsubstantiated, do just the opposite of the intended purpose.
5) I am still am impressed with the diving career. (I dive)
I’ve had the advantage of reading this after a round of editing has taken place, but I find most of the criticisms of Willis’ piece to be off-putting. An open letter is open for a reason. The intended audience is not just Dr. McNutt but all readers who are likely to share the concern about the non-science exhibited by a formerly respected organ called Science. If others wish to pursue the subject differently they are free to do so.
Keep up the good work Willis.
A woman that likes to blow sh*t up has possibilities in my book. Let’s see if she can clean things up.
Jeremy Das says:
August 4, 2013 at 7:01 pm
Jeremy, thanks for your opinion. You share what seems to be a common misconception, that my intention was to convince her of the error of her ways. Nothing could be further from the truth.
I was perfectly sincere in my compliments, just as I was perfectly sincere in everything else I said. But I didn’t write it to try to be her friend, or to be nice to her, or to get her to see it my way.
I wrote it because I want her to know that people out here are angry about the unending bullshit. I wrote it because she needs to know that people are watching her actions. I wrote it to show her that mindlessly parroting the party line is not seen as science out here in the real world. I wrote it as a deliberate affront to her beliefs.
I wrote it to remind her that science is about evidence, not endless repetition of warnings of future disasters. I wrote it to try to get her to pull up short.
But I’m under no illusions as to the odds of her doing that, so it’s not my real goal. As I said, your misunderstanding is the idea that I wrote it to convince her. Nothing of the sort.
I wrote it to expose her.
I didn’t want to convince her of the error of her ways.
I wanted to expose her to the consequences of her ways, which is that the magazine will continue to sink, and people will point and laugh.
w.
Dr. Marcia McNutt
As a research engineer, I second Will’s observations.
Please restore Science from activism to the scientific method.
David L. Hagen, PhD
Ah, not so, my friend, never futile. I write to the good Doctor, but I write for everyone else … and there’s no telling what effect my words will have there.
Amen…
Good job W.
HI Willis, excellent job! Yes, there is a short bit where it is drifting off topic and imho too emotive, but if I wanted a better job I should have taken the effort and done it myself. I think that is what a lot of your critics forget when they toss off a hasty dismissal. To all of them: Do it yourself, then criticise. Thank you Wilis for spending the time to expose the problem, regardless of whether your missive is heeded.
Has any group seriously considered starting a new scientific rag with digital as well as hardcopy options? It takes money, but give it some catchy title that involves the words “Climate Change” and apply for a government grant.
For those doubting the SEAL training in the bio, since she was at Scripps Institute of Oceanography getting her PhD in the late 70’s, this is very very likely to be true. Scripps ran the Glomar Challenger, and (I think) fronted for the CIA earlier with the Glomar Explorer. In the 70’s, UCSD which overseas Scripps, was in the top 3 schools for Federal funding despite its small size and relative obscurity. The big funding was all poured into Scripps and these exploration vessels.
Scuba training at Scripps was grueling, frigid maskless dives, simulated equipment failures and more. Considering the exploratory work being done with those research vessels it would make perfect sense for some of the training to have been performed by specialists from the SEALs and the US Navy UDT for a seminar or two.
I went to UCSD during that period and worked with some of those trained at Scripps. The stories of the training were quite fierce..
============================================================================
I had to look the word up. I haven’t been on WUWT all that long. Only about 1 1/2 years. I haven’t read every post, let alone every comment. I’ve seen people say Willis was mistaken. I’ve seen people say Willis was flat-out wrong. I’ve seen him admit he was wrong about something.
But implying he was being dishonest? I’ve only heard something like that from those who envy his checks from “Big Oil”.
I consulted for instrumentation for USGS NCER (National Center For Earthquake Research) when she was the. I was not impressed. At least she had the intelligence to leave that impossible and unrewarding project. She probably figured out early on that most science was difficult and decided to go into science management. In other words it became clear that the career path for an apparatchnik is more rewarding than that of a lab hunchback (researcher.)
She now finds herself in another impossible project, like at the beginning of her career. The outcome will be interesting.
Willis writes “I wanted to expose her to the consequences of her ways, which is that the magazine will continue to sink, and people will point and laugh.”
I suspect her primary focus is on increasing sales, not maintaining scientific integrity. If heading back towards scientific integrity increases her sales, then I’m sure thats what she’ll be doing. Meanwhile I also suspect the decrease in readership is affected by many factors in an information rich world, and perceived changes in scientific integrity isn’t necessarily the main one.
Well, this started strong, but quickly went off the rails, stylistically off the rails and rhetorically off the rails..
by the time I reached this point I was wincing for the author, rather than his target:
“And regarding you personally taking a position? Well, that’s interesting. The problem is that you are extremely well educated, strong, strikingly good looking, and a wicked smart woman by all accounts … and while those are all good things, that’s a scary combination. ”
Reading through the whole thing it struck me that the author liked the sound of his own voice.
never a good sign when you can sense that.
And in the end we find
“I wrote it to expose her.
I didn’t want to convince her of the error of her ways.
I wanted to expose her to the consequences of her ways, which is that the magazine will continue to sink, and people will point and laugh.”
That is all well and good, as long as you don’t expose yourself.
Lets put it another way. You went a good ways toward exposing her flaws, but in the end the over personalizing, the holier than thou tone, the pulpit thumping, the indignation, exposed more about you than your target. It wasnt enough to expose her flaws, you also seem to want to send a message about who willis is. We get that. By the end, I had more sympathy for her than I did at the beginning. I went from being on your side to wanting to get the hook and pull you off the stage.
Now of course that doesnt mean you want to remove all the personality you display here, but in the end, she’s not the only one who is exposed.
Actually I find this is a rather common flaw with all the “open letters” I read at WUWT. They end reminding me of peacocks displaying their tail feathers.
And yes I’m entitled to my own opinion . others may have different views. They will get no argument from me.
Putting my PC hat on this would read better without the references to the fairer sex.
I believe Willis and others misunderstood Christoph Dollis’ use of the word ‘probity’. Here is a quote from Tertullian that gives a hint as to how I think Dollis meant it: “So, too, the sea has an ill repute for honesty; while at one time, the breezes equably swaying it, tranquillity gives it the semblance of probity, calm gives it the semblance of even temper; and then all of a sudden it heaves restlessly with mountain-waves”.
I know the quote mentions ‘honesty’, but I think Dollis is equating ‘probity’ with ‘even temper’ . I believe he was advising patience and an even temper vs. too much haste and emotion.
To all who are critical of the letter by Willis, but still think Science Magazine can do with a shakeup, then please do the right thing and write your own personal letter to Dr. Marcia McNutt.
Thank you in advance…
It’s time the world realized how un-scientific Science has become. Sad to see they’ve become a propaganda rag with impunity.
So whatever McNutt’s response might be, the ball is in her court and her response, should it ever come, will be interesting indeed.
(I’m predicting it will just be some legalese rejoinder.)
Passionate, personal & factual.
Nice work Willis,
please keep it coming.
Cheers,
JD.
PS: For those calling for Willis to be more dispassionate, I would say you need to get some perspective. The Lefty “Environmentalists” of the CAGW crowd are actually Eugenicists bent on culling this planet’s population. & they’re succeeding.
The disgraceful banning of DDT as (falsely) carcinogenic has let malaria run riot & has cost 50,000,000 lives, by some reports. That’s more people than were killed by Hitler. When we get back to sanity this will be seen by history as a major tragedy of the 20th century.
This climate change/global warming thing is not just a gentlemanly? scientific debate, vast numbers of human lives are being lost.
Wildavsky, Aaron. ‘But is it True? A Citizen’s Guide to Environmental Health & Safety Issues’
Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995.
Actually, DDT was never formally banned. Countries were just told that they would receive no foreign aid if they continued it’s use.
Way to go America.
http://www.thrivemovement.com
First: The Problem, a fairly lengthy essay.
Next: The Movie, 2 hrs 13 mins.
Then: John Anthony on UN Agenda 21
ANY reference to a woman’s physical appearance in a “public letter” such as this is entirely inappropriate and counter-productive.
It drives feminists nuts, and rightly so. There’s no correlation with physical beauty and intelligence, honesty, creativity, talent, wisdom, or any other positive attribute.
If anything, physical beauty can lead people to overlook cupidity, greed, dishonesty, and all the other usual human failings.
So leave all references to her looks out! Focus on the issues, not the person or the personality.
Please.
I apologise for using the word “probity”, Willis. I simply used the wrong word. I did not intend to question your honesty in the slightest, but I see that I did that inadvertently in my misunderstanding the meaning of the word.
I meant to use a word similar to decorum or composure. Basically, I meant to use something meaning the opposite of excess “emotion” in the same way that “patience” was the opposite of “haste”.
Ian says:
August 4, 2013 at 7:15 pm
You misapprehend the changes that have happened in the last decade. WUWT has not replaced Science magazine. But WUWT is like the newspaper of the climate world, read daily by everyone on both sides of the climate question. The skeptics read it to find out what’s new, and the global warming supporters read it to find out what kind of new arguments are being put forth, and what kind of lunacy I’m propounding today.
And one thing I can say for my own writing is, it rarely leaves people unmoved. I have to laugh when I publish something, and the next day it’s being roundly excoriated all over the blogosphere. And the Climategate emails showed that Phil Jones and Michael Mann and the rest avidly (albeit secretly) reading the postings from Steve McIntyre and myself.
So yes, this piece will make it to Dr. McNutt’s desk, either because she finds it, or because a friend of hers reads it and sends it to her. That’s the way the 21st century is, only a couple degrees of separation.
w.
Christoph Dollis says:
August 4, 2013 at 9:50 pm
Sir, you are a gentleman, and your explanation is gratefully accepted.
Best regards,
w.