Guest essay by Brandon Shollenberger
Last week, John Cook published a piece in the Europhysics News magazine in which he, quite literally, fabricates a quote. You can see the details here, but basically, he took the old quote about a campaign to “reposition global warming as theory (rather than fact)” and changed it to “reposition fact as theory.” It’s mind-boggling.
Even if John Cook didn’t make the image himself, it’s hosted on Skeptical Science. He chose to publish it in this article. He is fully responsible for publishing a fabricated quote whether or not he created the fabrication.
In my first post here, I accused John Cook (the propietor of Skeptical Science) of lying about evidence. He had written an article which misrepresented multiple sources and even fabricated a quote. To this day, that fabricated quote remains in the piece. John cook has made no indication he thinks it needs to be changed (though he has fixed the quote elsewhere). This led me to observe:
Additionally, you have not apologized for fabricating the quote or explained how it happened. That is troubling. One may reasonably wonder what would have happened had I not happened to randomly read this piece and check your reference (something you apparently didn’t do). Had I not caught the mistake, would it ever have been fixed? Nobody will ever know.
Being accurate with facts, quotes and references is a fundamental aspect of reporting. If you are as apathetic toward such glaring failures in this regard as you seem to be, why should anyone trust what you say? Why should anyone trust you the next time you “quote” a source?
I can now confirm the answer to my question is, “We shouldn’t.” Almost exactly one month after that piece was published, John Cook published another article with a fabricated quote. Figure 2 of that piece includes a this blurb:
Western Fuels Association
$510,000 campaign to
“reposition fact as theory”
This quote is apparently a bastardization of an actual quote which suggested people “reposition global warming as theory (rather than fact).” A Google search for John Cook’s exact quote finds two results. A Google search for the actual quote finds tens of thousands of results, including a paper Cook was the lead author for. This shows Cook is aware of the actual quote, and had he done anything to check his figure, he’d have seen his version was wrong.
Cook fabricating two quotes in two months is bad enough, but nobody is catching him. I don’t read everything he writes, and I’m the only one who caught either of these. How many fabrications have I not caught? There’s no way to know.
And this isn’t a trivial matter like Cook claimed his last misquotation was. The difference between the quotes is enormous. Many people don’t believe global warming is a fact (by definition, it isn’t one). If they’re right, repositioning global warming as a theory rather than fact is a good thing because its true. Even if one doesn’t agree with those people, their behavior is still honest and well-intentioned.
John Cook’s quote requires the opposite. A person cannot seek to “reposition fact as theory” without seeking to intentionally mislead people. That means Cook accuses those people of being lying bastards by making **** up.
And it doesn’t end there. Cook’s piece says:
The result is a significant “consensus gap” between public
perception and the actual 97% scientific consensus (see Figure 3). Public polls have found that nearly half of the American public think climate scientists are still in disagreement [6]. In my own research, when I asked Americans what percentage of climate scientists agree on human-caused global
warming, the average answer was 55%.
Reference six links to this document. A figure on its seventh page and a data table on its eighteenth page provide data for how many people believe:
There is a lot of disagreement among scientists about GW
In both cases, the value given is 36%. This must be what Cook was referring to as no other part of the document discusses anything close to what he said, but 36% is not “nearly half.” 1/3rd is not 1/2th. Cook is, once again, making **** up.
Not only is that inexcusable, it should make wonder skeptical when Cook refers to what he found, “In [his] own research.” This skepticism should be further fueled by the fact Cook didn’t provide a reference for his work. Why would someone refer to work without any providing any reference for it? How can they get away with it?
I can’t answer the latter question. The former question is easy to answer though. John Cook didn’t provide a reference for his work because no reference exists. A copy of the Figure 3 can be found here on Skeptical Science. This is said about it:
Public perception (55%) comes from a survey conducted by John Cook on a representative USA sample, asking the question “How many climate experts agree that the global warming we are witnessing is a direct consequence of the burning of fossil fuels by humans?” Participants were requested through professional survey firm Qualtrics.
That’s it. No publication information. No link or reference. No data or supporting documentation. Nothing at all other than John Cook’s word.
I can’t imagine a world in which that should that be enough from anyone. I certainly can’t imagine why anyone should be expected to trust Cook’s description when he makes **** up time and time again, even in this one piece.
Two last observations. First, while these accusations of fabricating quotes are relatively new, I’ve accused Cook of lying before. Second, at the bottom of the piece’s first page, there’s an unmatched right parenthesis where it says:
As scientific consensus strengthened, efforts to confuse the
public about the level of agreement in the scientific community intensified as documented in Figure 2).
===============================================================
UPDATE/CORRECTION: Brandon Schollenberger writes in comments.
Welp, this is awkward. It turns out while criticizing Cook for getting the quotation wrong, I got it wrong too. The parenthetical should say “not fact” instead of “rather than fact.” A little time with Google shows this is a common mistake, and it’s even made in Al Gore’s, An Inconvenient Truth. I saw the phrasing I used on Wikipedia (which has had that phrasing for six years), used Google to search for it, found dozens of sources using it (including Al Gore’s), and copied and pasted.
This doesn’t change anything I said, and it is certainly understandable how I made the mistake. Still, it’s embarrassing.
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The most unfortunate part about this is that once these statements hit publication, they are out there, and most people, even academics will do nothing to follow a quote back to the source. My pet peeve is law reviews. Even highly respected professors use quotes that help them, no matter the source or the validity, and the only checking that is done by the student editors is to verify that the quote is accurate at the point at which it is quoted. So a mis-quote is perpetuated. This is the real problem.
How dare anyone make scientific certainty a primary issue!
@- Brandon Shollenberger
“Like it or not, people are listening to John Cook and Skeptical Science. Far fewer would if they knew he serially misrepresents his sources.”
You have yet to establish that the paraphrase he used is a misrepresentation of the source quote.
There is also the little matter that the original quote is apparently the sort of mis-characterisation of the science that the tobacco industry has used in the past to reject unwelcome science. And it parallels the debate in biology where evolution is a fact, the Darwinian theory of natural selection is the theory that explains it.
However misrepresenting the source will degrade the trust people have in the claims a person makes. It is what has damaged Lord Monckton’s reputation and reduced him to fringe crank.
Leo Geiger, I fail to see how that post diminishes this one. That post does not argue the misquotation in question was okay. It does nothing to say presenting a paraphrase as a quotation is appropriate. Aside from pointing out posts here make mistakes too, I don’t see what point you could be making.
That post argues a misquotation did not cause a significant difference in meaning. It also points out the misquotation is a relatively common one so it’s understandable someone might get it wrong. Neither of those is true in the case discussed in this post. As such, I can’t see what is supposed to diminish this post’s credibility.
But if it makes you feel better, I wrote this post on a different blog, never actually submitted it here (though I told Anthony he was welcome to use what I wrote, an offer I’d extend to anyone), and am a critic of the person responsible for the misquotation. Your concern could not possibly apply to my posting.
Anthony,
here’s an interesting item from the CryoSat people. Oct 2013 ice volume is about 9000 km3, up from 6000, in 2012.
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth/CryoSat/Arctic_sea_ice_up_from_record_low
Watching the 2010-2013 Oct. data presentation, it looks like it’s the highest in the 4 years of taking data.
Also definitely higher then the PIOMAS model predicts.
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth/CryoSat/CryoSat_reveals_major_loss_of_Arctic_sea_ice
This might put a kink in the Arctic ice “death spiral”.
What???
I don’t understand.
Somebody lying to enrich themselves??
rogerknights: There ought to be a convention to use something other than quotation marks when paraphrasing.
Roger, old boy, day before yesterday I had the interesting task of explaining to a class of 5th graders how to use quotation marks to distinguish direct and indirect quotes. A very interesting task–you should try it some time. And now you want to create more punctuation to set off the indirect quotes?!!! I can only say, “@ur momisugly!!%###!.” But don’t quote me.
: > )
It appears fantasy trumps science in the Church of Climate Change (TM)
Welp, this is awkward. It turns out while criticizing Cook for getting the quotation wrong, I got it wrong too. The parenthetical should say “not fact” instead of “rather than fact.” A little time with Google shows this is a common mistake, and it’s even made in Al Gore’s, An Inconvenient Truth. I saw the phrasing I used on Wikipedia (which has had that phrasing for six years), used Google to search for it, found dozens of sources using it (including Al Gore’s), and copied and pasted.
This doesn’t change anything I said, and it is certainly understandable how I made the mistake. Still, it’s embarrassing.
The author writes,
“This quote is apparently a bastardization of an actual quote which suggested people “reposition global warming as theory (rather than fact).” A Google search for John Cook’s exact quote finds two results. A Google search for the actual quote finds tens of thousands of results, including a paper Cook was the lead author for. This shows Cook is aware of the actual quote, and had he done anything to check his figure, he’d have seen his version was wrong.”
Not only did Cook cite the actual quote in a previous article, he cites in the very Europhysics News that is the basis of your essay here – the same article he fabricated the quote! (Halfway through the second to last paragraph on p26).
[CAGW] is a theory fraudulently presented as fact by the likes of Cook, and it’s is entirely proper to try to recast it as such. In this example, Cook is not only trying twist the meaning of the actual quote to reinforce the lie that CAGW is a fact, but he is also using both to promote the idea that special interests are trying to deceive people into believing its not a fact. This is a typical strategy of people like Cook when they know they are on the wrong side – point your finger at the other side and accuse them of exactly what you are doing. They do precisely because they know the media won’t call them out for “making **** up.” If anything, the media will back them up.
Cook knows exactly what he is doing, however given the myriad of examples of fraud by the promoters of CAGW, it’s hardly surprising behavior. That doesn’t make it any less frustrating though. What is mind-boggling is that such a large group of people are this dishonest.
I’m starting to think that most of the hard-core warmists suffer from some sort of personality disorder. The stuff they’re doing isn’t even rational anymore, not on any level.
A rational person, even if he meant ill, would realize that publicly telling easily discredited lies would destroy his own effectiveness. But I suspect that many of them, especially those like Cook, are now driven solely by their hatred. There’s nothing else left for them.
Alan the Brit: I’m not sure the colonies have been forgiven for that tea thing and the late 18th century unpleasantness. After all, you’ve exiled Piers Morgan over here.
Excellent post, Brandon. I gave up on Cook and skeptical science long ago because it read like a propaganda blog. I suppose we need to keep up with them because our leaders seem to pick up quotes from them. Otherwise “who is John Cook and why should I know who he is?”
@Bob Greene – if we pay the Brits for the tea, do you think they would take back Piers Morgan? 😉
But the Americans said Bagdad Bob was executed.
Who knew he survived and has a career as an obscure cartoon on a joke web site in Australia?
Thanks Brandon but persons using SS as a reference are self accused.
CAGW is an intelligence test, some have to fail.
As an Oz taxpayer (who contributes to Cook’s salary) I want to know what value I get for my money. With the exception of our halls of higher learning, lies and propaganda (aka ‘universities’) all other sheltered workshops are funded by charitable donations. Time to set Cook free from the public teat. Perhaps we could use him as a labrat in psychological studies into post-modern scientific thinking?
“Repositioning global warming as theory (rather than fact)” was scientifically legitimate and even necessary in 1992. The satellite temperature record maintained by John Christy and Roy Spencer showed a global cooling trend from late 1978 into 1998. When others persuaded them that orbital drift and decay had injected a cooling bias in their data, Spencer and Christy corrected the record, revealing a long-term warming trend of about 0.14C/decade. But in 1992, the most comprehensive dataset — and the only one not exposed to contamination by heat islands and other local factors — showed no warming. At that time, the empirical evidence for global warming was conflicted. It was still theory rather than fact.
Guys…. I’ve already covered this at length on several occasions. The original Western Fuels Association Information Council on the Environment (ICE) PR campaign memo phrase was “Reposition global warming as theory (not fact)”, but it was cleaned up a bit by right off the bat in a 1991 NY Times article (3rd paragraph http://www.nytimes.com/1991/07/08/business/pro-coal-ad-campaign-disputes-warming-idea.html ), and was ultimately streamlined and made famous by anti-skeptic book author Ross Gelbspan as “Reposition global warming as theory rather than fact” ( http://gelbspanfiles.com/?p=326).
As I’ve detailed at my GelbspanFiles.com blog and in online articles since 2010 (now collected here http://gelbspanfiles.com/?page_id=86 ), that the “reposition global warming” phrase was taken out of context and has numerous fatal faults within it as the a smoking gun indictment that’s supposed to prove skeptic climate scientists are paid to lie by ‘big coal & oil’. John Cook (no relation to me, thank God) is just one more in an endless string of people (Oreskes, Gore, Hoggan, Suzuki, Monbiot, Newsweek’s Sharon Begley, etc, etc) who derive that accusation straight from Gelbspan.
@jai mitchell December 18, 2013 at 5:06 am “… for more information on the PR organization that was contracted to perform this function, see ..wikipedia.org …”
Wikipedia, as a source of accurate information on global warming, can be trusted about as far as you can throw it. As it turns out, I’ve learned a decent amount about the PR agency that handled Western Fuels’ ICE campaign, and just how short and virtually unmemorable that it was. The sheer shortness of the ICE campaign and how limited it was ought to be the first clue to open minded journalists that there has been a MASSIVE problem in the way the “reposition global warming” phrase was so heavily pushed for around two decades as a means to smear the credibility of skeptic climate scientists.
Since when is 74 people out of 3000 a consensus?
“Cook, v.: To alter or adjust accounting or other records (“books”), evidence, statements, etc., usually fraudulently or unethically, in such a way as to make them take on a different meaning or appearance.”
Just wanted to make that clear, if anyone should be so foolish as to waste time on so-called ⚡keptical ⚡cience
Jai Mitchell writes: “IT is obvious that the “repositioning” is from “fact” to “theory”
so the quote is accurate.”
Reading comprehension isn’t your strong suit, is it? First of all, in order to use quotation marks you need to get the quotation correct. Paraphrasing like you’ve noted changes the meaning completely. The repositioning is from _perceived fact_ based upon individuals’ biases back to theory, which is correct. This repositioning is even more correct given the temperature record for the last 17 years…
@ur momisugly izen December 18, 2013 at 2:23 am ,
Climate of today is not more dangerous, slr is not more extreme, weather is not more extreme and temperatures are not higher than they have been in the recent past. Confusing your assertion with incontrovertible established fact is pathological in many of the climate obsessed. Perhaps you can get some professional counseling?
Papertigre:
“Steve Young passed for a record six touchdowns, and the 49ers became the first team to win five Super Bowls when they routed the Chargers”
American football is not football, that is a fact.
You do need to correct it. For the record. Ten years from now, the correction will offer a heads-up for researchers.
izen says:
December 18, 2013 at 2:23 am
Global warming is self evidently a FACT.
The measured rise from land, sea and satellite instruments all confirm that along with the rise in sea level from thermal expansion and ice melt it is unprecedented for thousands of years and well beyond unforced natural variation.
The fact of global warming requires a theory to explain the observations.
+++++++++
I beg to differ. And of course, the warmists agree with me to the point that they have largely replaced the term “global warming” with “climate change”. The latter term is not falsifiable, but I digress.
Time scales matter. Yes over some time scales the globe has apparently warmed. It’s also cooled over some time frames, and may continue to cool until it warms again. Using a term like “global warming” implies it will continue. The vast majority of “models” are programmed to only warm, so the models seem to agree with you and they may for some time to come, I predict.
Using what I believe is your logic, the last 5, 10, 15 years have warmed because you say it is a fact.
So pick a time and make your factual claim.
“Welp, this is awkward. It turns out while criticizing Cook for getting the quotation wrong”
We all do it, but take heart … according to marxist revisionalist conspiracy ideationism theories it doesn’t matter.