While pro-warming political pundits like to demonize climate skeptic research by comparing it to that of tobacco company research and marketing, it seems there is a parallel between the story of global warming and marijuana demonization. This story is about the parallels in research, and does not represent any position on drug use by WUWT – Anthony
Guest Essay by Dr. Robert G. Brown, Duke University (elevated from a comment)
Judith Curry’s remarks [Scientists and motivated reasoning], as usual, are dead on the money.
Here’s an almost perfectly analogous problem: CNN recently completely reversed its editorial policy and now calls for the legalization of Marijuana. Sanjay Gupta, its “resident physician editorialist”, who had previously somewhat vigorously led this opposition from the scientific point of view completely reversed his own position, and explained why in considerable detail both in text and in online video.
Historically, marijuana was both legal and considered to be a useful medicine all the way up through the beginning of the twentieth century. At that point, William Randolph Hearst had invested heavily in pine forests in Mexico, intending to sell them to his own newspapers to make newsprint. The Dupont family were discovering petrochemicals including plastic and oil-derived pharmaceuticals. A machine was invented that was the equivalent of a “cotton gin” for hemp — it mechanically stripped down the hemp plant and turned it into useful fiber, oil, and vegetable waste that could be used as an animal fodder (yes, we can imagine some very happy cows, can’t we?:-). One of many uses for the now inexpensive hemp fiber was to make equally inexpensive newsprint paper that was clearly superior in quality and cost to wood pulp paper. Another was that the oils and fiber could be used to synthesize various chemical products. Both Dupont and Hearst were suddenly hundreds of millions of dollars at risk.
They turned to Harry Anslinger, who happened to be Hearst’s brother in law. Anslinger was a suddenly idle ex-prohibitionist working for the FBI, and he created a propaganda campaign that portrayed hemp as literally maddening those that actually smoked it, leading them to commit acts of rape and robbery and moral turpitude. At the same time, political revolutions in Mexico (funded and fought by a private army belonging to Hearst) and a negative portrayal of blacks and Mexicans as common users of hemp for recreation purposes added a useful racist hook. Between these, congress outlawed hemp.
So matters remained until the Viet Nam war and the 1960s and early 70s. As part of the quiet “revolution” against what many perceived as a military-industrial complex with a life of its own that was fighting a series of expensive and pointless wars, pot had become “the” recreational drug of choice among young hippies and freaks as well as the military draftees who fought the war. Its use was so prevalent that Texas dropped the question about cannabis use from its entrance exam to police academy, because “asking a vet of they had ever smoked pot was like asking them if they smoked Camels”. Suddenly a large fraction of an entire generation of U.S. citizens had smoked pot and discovered that no, it does not turn you into a crazed rapist, and usually does not make you insane unless you are most of the way there on your own already. They also discovered that it is neither physically addictive nor dangerous in the sense that it is literally impossible to overdose on marijuana — it is literally one of the safest compounds we know of, with no meaningful fatal dose.
However, Ronald Reagan took office in the 80′s, an immediately declared a “War on Drugs”. Marijuana was reclassified as a schedule 1 narcotic by the federal government [in 1970], trumping communities that had already begun to experiment with decriminalization or even legalization. This once again gave law enforcement agencies lots of useful work (helpful if you are trying to build a police state), gave cops everywhere the ability to selectively enforce drug laws and thereby control the populace, and caused us to rather suddenly need to build enormous numbers of prisons because it rapidly turned out that by making marijuana trafficking a felony and putting even mere users in jail (just like heroin, cocaine, and actually dangerous drugs) somewhere between 1/3 and 1/2 of all prison sentences were being handed down for low grade drug offenses. Our expenditure on controlling pot went from next to nothing to tens of billions of dollars a year. Obviously, many profited from this, including (as usual) the money launderers and organized criminals that made fortunes providing marijuana on the black market, and the politicians and bankers that provided well-paid-for top cover.
And now to the interesting bit (although I think all of the above is interesting:-). One of the reasons given for making marijuana a schedule 1 felony class drug [in 1970] was that we didn’t know about the harm it might cause, and there was no known medical benefit. Yes, it had been used as a medicine for centuries, the founding fathers literally “mandated” the growing of hemp on American farms because it was so useful a plant both industrially and medicinally, but we had entered the era of double blind placebo controlled drug trials, and there were now enormous pharmaceutical companies whose billion-dollar products were at risk, dwarfing even the Duponts’ complaint back in the 30′s. Its risks were similarly unstudied.
A period of research then ensued. If you wanted to study pot, you had to both get funded and get the experimental marijuana from a single, small farm in Mississippi that grew “legal” pot for this purpose. The government itself was in complete control, in other words of what research got conducted, because even if you could find outside funding, you couldn’t get legal pot to do the research with without approval.
Gupta initially opposed marijuana legalization because a review of the medical literature showed him that 96% of all published articles found some sort of negative effect of marijuana, and almost no articles showed a benefit, especially compared to existing approved medications. However, a couple of anecdotal cases coming out of the states that had legalized medicinal marijuana in SPITE of the federal governments laws caused him to go back and reexamine the funding model. In retrospect it shouldn’t have been surprising, but he learned that 96% of all funded research was to look for negative effects of marijuana, and that to get funded and permission to get government grown pot was so difficult that there simply weren’t all that many papers in the first place. In well over thirty years of intensive examination, all of the examination was literally preselected to find problems, almost none to find benefits, and one had to walk on water and push much paper to do either one (and relatively few scientists had bothered).
That caused him to examine the body of emerging, still anecdotal, evidence from the states that had legalized medical marijuana. They showed that — again unsurprisingly — marijuana is a rich pharmacopeia with multiple legitimate medical uses that could survived double blind placebo controlled investigation, while at the same time having minimal side effects and no known lethal dose. Perhaps he came to realize that its negative effects might, conceivably, have been a bit exaggerated or might arise from confounding uncontrolled elements. Confirmation bias is, after all, the bete noir of science.
This situation almost perfectly matches the evolution of “climate science”. Nobody cared about it for decades, but suddenly a group of individuals emerged that all benefited from the demonization of carbon. This included environmental groups, that hated civilization itself and the burning of anything (as long, of course, as their own lifestyle was preserved), energy producers that saw in this the opportunity to triple or quadruple their profits by creating artificial scarcity of a plentiful resource, politicians that saw in this the opportunity to raise taxes, get elected on a world-saving “issue”, and perhaps line their own pockets along the way, and a United Nations that saw an opportunity to transform it into a way to tax the rich nations and transfer money to developing nations (while again lining various pockets along the way). The role of Anslinger was admirably met by one James Hansen, a True Believer who never stinted and does not stint today in exaggerating the data and claims of disaster (five meter sea level rise! temperatures like that on Venus!). And suddenly, quite literally all funded research was on how burning carbon was bad for the climate.
Even completely ethical scientists have to eat, and if the only way they can eat is to get funded, and the only way they can get funded is to submit proposals that seek to prove that CO_2 is bad, guess what they will propose to study? And if they want to get funded AGAIN, guess what they will find? Climate science has been effectively corrupted beyond any hope of objectivity.
On the good side of things, scientists are actually usually pretty ethical. Also, in the end data talks, bullshit walks. The hypothesis of CAGW or CACC could, in fact, be true (across a wide spectrum of the meaning of “true”, in fact). However, recent data is not in good correspondence with the theories that have predicted it, and many good scientists are in the process of reassessing their conclusions. As is the almost simultaneous case with regard to marijuana, the confounding evidence is starting to overwhelm to narrowly funded and directed arguments to date. We will see where the future takes us, in both cases.
======================================================
Addendum by Anthony:
1. I have added links to historical references into the essay along with some small edits [in brackets] for clarity.
2. This paragraph:
A period of research then ensued. If you wanted to study pot, you had to both get funded and get the experimental marijuana from a single, small farm in Mississippi that grew “legal” pot for this purpose.
Has a parallel with source data for global warming research. If you want to study the surface temperature record, there is one source: NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) who is not only the administrator, collator and keeper of the surface temperature record for the United States, but also the world via their Global Historical Climatological Network (GHCN). All other surface temperature datasets, HadCRUT, GISS, and even the supposedly independent BEST, are derivatives and/or custom interpretations of this source data, which as we know, is custom blended with NCDC’s own set of adjustments.
Like with pot research, the government is again the only source for data to study the surface record.
And people wonder why I spend so much time and effort to examine weather stations and adjustments.
Steven suggests: “The world is warmer than it was in the LIA.”
I doubt you’d find very many people who would dispute this, but simply because it is warmer now than it was well over a century ago does not mean A- that the globe is still warming, nor B- that the difference in temperature can be predominantly attributed to human activities.
M Simon says:
August 22, 2013 at 11:10 am
“Jay Davis,
The same effect can be had from alcohol consumption. Which leads me to ask: “and your point is?””
One difference: Flashbacks. Really really bad when the flashback eliminates your 3D perception instantly while you’re driving in the middle lane of a highway at high speed, or somesuch.
See also Sam Burroughs “Junkie” – he says you can always take a ride with a driver whom you know to be a junkie but never do it with a pothead. I can’t attest personally for the driving skills of junkies; but I trust Burroughs in that regard.
Jimbo says:
August 22, 2013 at 10:55 am
“The ‘Declining Effect’ is one of the most worrying thing for researchers.
The New Yorker – December 13, 2010
“And just because an idea can “be proved doesn’t mean it’s true.””
Let me put it this way: That statement is false.
We call a statement X true EXACTLY when it is
a) an axiom
or
b) has been proven as true.
ergo;
“Statement has been proven as true” implies “Statement is true”.
No bad effects from recreational marijuana use? How about nodding off when you’re on the OP/LP (observation/listening post), allowing the VC or NVA to infiltrate your perimeter and kill your buddies? Sorry Dr. Brown, I don’t buy it.
I did not assert “no bad effects”. I stated that — in fact — marijuana is far safer than many drugs you take without thinking about them twice, especially when one considers immediate risk to life. As I also stated in a reply, smoking ANYTHING is bad for you. Putting almost ANY chemical or substance into your system can be bad for you, including innocuous things like wheat gluten, milk, honey, salt, sugar, water. Everybody’s body and brain chemistry is a bit different. In addition, marijuana comes in a dazzling array of strengths and different strains have very different mixtures of different isomers and cannibannoids that bind to different receptors in the brain and body. So sure, nodding out can be a bad side effect from smoking too much, too strong weed just like drinking a single beer too much can cause you to wreck your car or kill someone. However, society’s response to this is disproportionate at historically ill-founded.
Two simple remarks. One is that a symptom of an overcontrolling society is one where the legal consequences of performing any action are worse — often far worse — than the supposed or known consequences of performing the action. Smoking weed may or may not be particularly dangerous, but getting arrested for smoking weed is very definitely very dangerous and can have an enormous negative impact on one’s life beyond any possible damage the pot per se might have been causing provided that one isn’t getting high as an air traffic controller.
The second is that in a libertarian society, victimless crimes aren’t. You can argue all that you like that marijuana, like tobacco, alcohol, hydrogenated fats, high fructose corn syrup, various sexual proclivities, and many other things are bad for a person that indulges in them (at least if indulged to excess or if one has the wrong genes or simple bad luck) but that is not sufficient reason to make them illegal. It is when alcohol is in a person driving drunk, when a sexual sybarite has unprotected sex with multiple partners and infects them with venereal diseases, when the gambler gambles away the house and fortune his or her family need to survive, that vices affect others and the law is justified in stepping in, and even then there is little point in stepping in a manner that is so draconian that the cure is worse than the disease — fining the gambler of the REST of their fortune, for example, executing the drunk driver who has not yet harmed anyone, deliberately giving HIV to or castrating the sexually profligate STD vector.
Prohibition really doesn’t work, and our society is already far too fascist and controlling.
So no, I’m not claiming that marijuana is harmless any more than I’m claiming that CAGW is proven to be NOT true. I’m claiming that there has been substantial bias and an ongoing media smear of pot that is entirely disproportionate to its known risks and that this bias and smear has made the search for its possible benefits far more difficult. I’m claiming that it has been badly infected with the confirmation bias bug, that further it has long since become a cure that is worse than any possible cost of the disease, and that in both regards it is remarkably similar to the CAGW hypothesis. You get what you pay for, and our government has long since been paying for marijuana to be demonized far, far out of proportion to its risks, just as its proponents probably exaggerate its benefits. Objectivity is long gone in both discussions, and what matters is much less reason and the facts than morality and religious beliefs. Objectively, we’d outlaw alcohol and tobacco both long before we outlawed pot.
If you want to compare and contrast the immediate risks of pot and tobacco, eat an equal weight of marijuana — any variety — and tobacco. When you stop projectile vomiting from the tobacco, and assuming that it didn’t make you seize and stop your heart, then come back and tell me which one is comparatively harmless.
rgb
This post is clearly not intended to be a post. It is a conversational aside (a comment) that is full of hyperbole and unchecked rumour.
But it makes a fine point about how a politically useful norm leads to..
funding that directs the subjects of research that leads to…
support for the politically accepted norm that leads to…
Good point.
Yet the analogy with cannabis is wrong as the biggest problem with cannabis is that it is a waste of time when you could be working.
Using fossil fuels is a sign of industry. That is working.
Personally, I’d legalise all drugs and advertise the deleterious effects. If people knowingly make that choice, let them.
After all, they may be right and I may be wrong.
Increased levels of CO2 make marijuana plants grow faster.
We’re on to you, Anthony! Your cunning plan is hereby exposed.
David Smith says:
August 22, 2013 at 9:45 am
“Personally, I feel that all recreational drugs should be legalised (even the hard ones such as crack and heroin).
[…]
Many addicts die because they have switched dealers”
First you want Heroin and Crack legalized and only 2 sentences later you call the users “addicts”. Now; in fact; Crack, Heroin or Meth users are physically addictive.
So in your drug utopia, it would be perfectly fine for a supermarket to hand out free samples of Meth with a bar of candy. Maybe you’ll like it? You can always come back for more…
I would expect ANY society that hands out highly addictive psychotrope substances like candy to collapse within a decade and be replaced by a saner one.
DirkH says:
August 22, 2013 at 12:07 pm
“First you want Heroin and Crack legalized and only 2 sentences later you call the users “addicts”. Now; in fact; Crack, Heroin or Meth users are physically addictive.”
Correction
“physically addicted”
Yeah you can stop laughing now…
RGB, you commit calumny against Reagan. It was Nixon who perpetuated Johnson’s anti drug policies under the name “War On Drugs”. Carter sought to decriminalize mary jane, yet instituted asset forfeiture. Nancy and Ronald Reagan appealed to intellect and personal responsibility with “Just Say No”. Reagan, being more libertarian, appealed to the power of the individual. Nixon, a statist, looked to the coercive power of the state and created the DEA. The war on drugs has been an abysmal failure in which all of our recent presidents have been complicit. Prohibition Doesn’t Work, but it sure is lucrative for all the players. Sorta like the war on climate.
One of the founders of hipster shock jock magazine Vice now regularly appears on Greg Gutfeld’s “Red Eye” show on Fox News. Today Vice is running a story on the Marcott hockey stick today. Hipsters and geeks who are suddenly suspicious of Big Brother due to the NSA/Apple/Google/Facebook scandal and who are actively rebellious about the Drug War represent libertarian liberals who could drag the whole left wing into skepticism if only more skeptics did outreach beyond the blogroll here….
http://www.vice.com/read/near-term-extinctionists-believe-the-world-is-going-to-end-very-soon
@DirkH
“I would expect ANY society that hands out highly addictive psychotrope substances like candy to collapse within a decade and be replaced by a saner one.”
I would expect the Darwin effect to take care of any of these problems sooner than a decade…
This article makes the same mistakes the warmists make when they bring up the tobacco lobby. CAGW is a problem like no other. By drawing parallels you just stir up connections and feelings that have nothing to do with the debate at hand. The only thing that comes close to AGW is obesity and even that is a two dimensional problem in comparison. Fossil fuels aren’t just something we might want, like pot, they’re something we need, like food. There is an argument to be made that we’re too energy greedy and we are a generation that hates to say no to ourselves – whether it be fossil fuels, food or drugs. Do we need regulating? Hard to say but in the history of mankind I can’t think of a time where making something we want easier to get made people use it less.
I don’t resent governments trying to restrict fossil fuels because I want the freedom to choose, I resent it because there is no other option.
TinyCO2 says at August 22, 2013 at 12:32 pm…
Yes.
I completely agree.
It was what I was trying to say when I wrote,
But you put it better.
Working is good and essential.
Not working is for the scrapheap. Or In human terms, for suffering.
Regnad Kcin says:
August 22, 2013 at 12:29 pm
“@DirkH
“I would expect ANY society that hands out highly addictive psychotrope substances like candy to collapse within a decade and be replaced by a saner one.”
I would expect the Darwin effect to take care of any of these problems sooner than a decade…”
So… when the drug sellers have run through the first batch of customers, what do you think will they do next? Darwinian only insofar as the libertarian anarchist who allows everything becomes the prey of the drug peddler until only drug peddlers are left. A hunter – prey scheme. Two subspecies. Morlok and Eloy. One of them would survive. That one would have a more stringent approach to the consumption of highly addictive substances.
TinyCO2 says:
August 22, 2013 at 12:32 pm
“Fossil fuels aren’t just something we might want, like pot, they’re something we need, like food. There is an argument to be made that we’re too energy greedy and we are a generation that hates to say no to ourselves”
You will use exactly as much or as little energy as you can pay for.
When the price rises, all activities who deliver less marginal value than the marginal cost of energy needed to do them will automatically cease.
Every time WTI went above 100 USD the US went into recession. The US is in one now (the GDP deflator is a lie).
Anthony,
You can find GHCN-Monthly unadjusted data here: ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/ghcn/v3/
Just click on the QCU (quality-controlled unadjusted) files. NCDC does not publish a non-quality controlled unadjusted GHCN-M v3 dataset to the best of my knowledge, but the QC process simply involves removing extreme outliers (Mosh’s aforementioned 15000C measurements) rather than any sort of homogenization.
You can also find so-called Stage 1 un-QCed data in the new Internal Surface Temperature Initiative databank, available here: ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/globaldatabank/monthly/stage1/
Their stage system is set up to provide data files from Stage 0 (digital images of log books) to Stage 5 (fully homogenized), so that folks can look at the data along each step of the way.
Hope that helps,
-Zeke
REPLY:Ah the ‘ol Zeke-Mosh 1-2 BEST punch. Oh, I’m quite familiar the with NCDC FTP site and its data, my point has to do with data prepared for public consumption, and how it shifts to warmer, such as July 2012 shifting 0.7 degree warmer when going from GHCNV2 to GHCNV3 in NOAA’s “State of the Climate” report.
So far nobody has been able to show me where a version change in USHCN or GHCN has resulted in a correction that made publicly reported temperatures cooler, they always seem to go up. There’s a clear warm bias.
While GISS gets a lot of blame, I blame NCDC for most of the problem. When temperatures of the past keep changing based on the latest versioning, it tends to leave one without much respect for the veracity of the work.
– Anthony
@TinyCo2, M Courtney; Both of you are missing the point. By a mile. The comparison was made solely based on the WAY the campaigns were waged, using government-funded propaganda and mass media marketing to sway people emotionally. The motivation, as always, is money and power. These forces are decidedly anti-democratic, and constitute a war on freedom, and on people. It matters not one whit what you think you know about marijuana and, just as importantly, hemp. Perhaps you should educate yourselves though.
DirkH says:
August 22, 2013 at 12:07 pm
==========================
Your post is fatuous. Nobody is suggesting that “a supermarket [would] hand out free samples of Meth with a bar of candy”. Does any supermarket hand out free samples of vodka like that? Or aspirin?
Oh and, I haven’t stopped laughing yet. When I do, I’ll just go back and read you post(s) again.
David Smith says:
August 22, 2013 at 9:45 am
Personally, I feel that all recreational drugs should be legalised (even the hard ones such as crack and heroin). Why? Because people will never stop taking drugs and we’ve been taking them since we first walked the Earth. Legalising it all would take the trade out of the hands of gangsters and third-world despots and into the hands of regulated and monitored retailers.
I agree David remove the profits and reduce the crime.
Anthony,
If you want a quick example, NCDC’s PHA-based homogenization in the U.S. (in USHCN) cools minimum temperatures relative to the TOBs-only data. Globally, the effects of homogenization to GHCN are pretty small, but they end up being rather large in the U.S. due to the combination of biases in MMTS transitions, 1940s station moves from city centers to airports/wastewater treatment plants, TOBs changes, and other factors.
I agree that GISS unfairly gets much of the “blame” for homogenization; these days they just use NCDC’s product as an input and do their UHI nightlight adjustment on top of it.
Gerry says:
August 22, 2013 at 9:48 am
“Based on 45 years of research I can state quite categorically that the negative aspects of marijuana are very hard to find”
Ever look in the Oval Office?
Yes I do every day and I see numerous negative aspects of Marijuana.
I hope I can remain skeptic to CAGW without having to accept this mix of conspiracy paranoia (if the US had grown enough marihuana to print the Hearst newspapers on hemp fibre paper there would be enough THCB to keep the country high 100% of the time and plenty to spare) and urban legends so lacking in precission and coherence. Its like claiming the big oil and/or car industries have bought up energy source and storage technologies and prevented their release to the public.
If the point is that both AGW and pot research has confirmation bias I agree, if the claim is that leads to both overstating their case I also agree. But as I see it we need to be tough on drugs and it starts marihuana. We have accepted the costs of living with alcohol and thats about all we can afford as a society.
AGW is in all likelyhood a costly folly but will eventually fold and go away as the facts come in, stopping well before the scale of drugs.
Bruce Cobb says:
August 22, 2013 at 1:28 pm
“@TinyCo2, M Courtney; Both of you are missing the point. By a mile. The comparison was made solely based on the WAY the campaigns were waged”
Which is exactly what warmists say when they bang on about Merchants of Doubt. I resent them using other, non related issues to argue for CO2 restriction as much as I resent this. CAGW is CAGW and drug liberalisaton is drug liberalisation. Mix the two and you narrow your audience.
RGB Thanks fr a very witty post.
/ikh
The drug war has to some extent destroyed Western Civilization, especially Latin Civilization. It converted banana republics to more profitable coca republics, financed the FARC, launched the careers of Chavez and Morales (a former coca growers syndicate boss), destroyed Columbia, left Mexico in shambles, and ratchets up gang warfare in the U.S. just like Prohibition did. It uses cannonballs to remove warts while trying to outlaw the principles of supply and demand. It is the law of Camelot. Our best hope of lowering the national debt is to legalize and subsidize the most popular drugs. Take the profit out of the hands of criminals. –AGF