Steyn versus the Stick Figure

Mark Steyn writes (and provides a cartoon caricature):

Good news for fake Nobel Laureate Michael E Mann. Iran is launching an Islamic Nobel Prize to be named after Mustafa (ie, Mohammed). Given that he wants it so badly, maybe we can nominate Dr Mann for a Mustafa Prize.

~Speaking of “climate change”, did you stay up all night to watch the all-night Senate “debate”? Me neither. Sitting in for Rush yesterday, I breezily compared the Senate’s so-called “talkathon” to Kim Jong-Un’s impressive 100 per cent of the vote on a 100 per cent voter turnout in his “election” to North Korea’s “legislative assembly”. Senators Barbara Boxer, Sheldon Whitehouse, Angus King and the rest of the “Senate Climate Action Task Force” were engaging in an act of parliamentary fakery quite as absurd as Kim’s “election”.

For a start, it was not a filibuster: Usually, when someone goes full Jimmy Stewart and stands on his feet and talks for hours, it’s to try to block a piece of legislation. But there was no legislation before the Senate. So the Democrats were just talking for the sake of talking. Which in turn raises the question of why there isn’t any bill to debate. After all, Democrats control the Senate. So, if they want to pass a climate-change bill, they can do so any time they want. Instead, they decided to engage in an act of theatre, using the chamber of the Senate as a stage set on which to act out their lame summer-stock let’s-do-the-show-right-here-in-the-Senate version of Mr Smith Goes To Washington.

And even then, unlike Kim Jong-Un with his ersatz election to a pseudo-legislature, the Democrats couldn’t get it right. Unlike, say, the Australian Parliament, which I always enjoy dropping in on when I’m Down Under, in Washington the so-called “world’s greatest deliberative body” can’t deliberate anything. There are no real debates there, ever. When you switch on C-Span, you’ll occasionally see a senator delivering a speech to an empty chamber. If you think watching a man reading a speech written by his staffers out loud to himself is the height of rhetorical panache, then last night was a triumph. Round about 1.30am, I tuned in and the Delaware guy, I think, was droning out a beyond-Oscar list of thank-yous to all the people who made his speech possible – senate staffers, senate pagers, senate janitors, senate busboys… Even if you genuinely take the climate-alarmism line, this was yawnsville stuff. Even Mustafa Prize nominee Michael E Mann found his enthusiasm, like his hockey stick, hard to keep up:

MA represented well by both senators… MT @LCVoters .@MarkeyMemo: we can #ActOnClimate in ways that help economy. #cleanenergy#Up4Climate

#TimeForBed.

~Meanwhile, back on Planet Earth, the divergence between the climate models and reality is ever greater. In other news, it may not all be the fault of your carbon footprint:

Changes in the sun’s energy output may have led to marked natural climate change in Europe over the last 1000 years, according to researchers at Cardiff University.

You don’t say!

Slight changes in the transport of heat associated with these systems can lead to regional climate variability, and the study findings matched historic accounts of climate change, including the notoriously severe winters of the 16th and 18th centuries which pre-date global industrialisation.

The study found that changes in the Sun’s activity can have a considerable impact on the ocean-atmospheric dynamics in the North Atlantic, with potential effects on regional climate.

Well, I never!

~On the subject of Dr Mann’s defamation suit against me, I see it’s the 50th anniversary of New York Times vs Sullivan. To be honest, the very words cause my heart to sink. When you’re in a libel case in the US, all you hear about from your lawyers are New York Times vs Sullivan and Hustler vs Falwell – and, while it’s tiresome to be compared to Larry Flynt for a year’s worth of legal pleadings, being compared to The New York Times isn’t much better. Nevertheless, these are the two landmark cases of recent American libel law, and this Associated Press piece on Sullivan’s half-century contains some interesting points:

“Today one of the reasons I think we don’t have as many libel cases is not just because the Sullivan rule is so widely accepted by everyone, but in a digital world there’s so much greater opportunity for response,” said Bruce W. Sanford, a Washington-based First Amendment lawyer.

If one person says something untrue online, the person being spoken about has many more avenues to reply, agreed David Ardia, a University of North Carolina law professor and the co-director of the school’s Center for Media Law and Policy. In the 1960s, the only way to respond to libel and “reach an audience was to get into the same newspaper, and that’s no longer the case,” he said, adding that the “megaphone” of the Internet is available to everyone.

If Michael Mann feels I said something “untrue” in my 280-word blog post, he has not only the megaphone of the Internet but the influential platforms of The Guardian and The New York Times in which to refute it, not to mention his TV show with Jessica Alba and all manner of other outlets. But his strategy, in America, Britain, Canada, Australia and elsewhere, is always to shut down the argument rather than win it.

More here: http://www.steynonline.com/6162/potemkin-parliament-pajama-party

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hunter
March 13, 2014 4:36 am

It is great that true believers like “Magma” do come out of the rocks, so to speak. It reminds people of how empty AGW dogma is when scrutinized. And it provides cheap entertainment. to boot.

Norman Woods
March 13, 2014 7:49 am

It’s empty when it’s not scrutinized. Do you guys know what the name of the over-arching field is, that
James Hansen
Phil Jones
Michael Mann
Keith Briffa
Kevin Trenberth
Tom Wigley
took over?
The “Infrared Cooling Model” computer modeling field.
That’s the name of the field itself, all these “infrared warming model” peddlers, work in.

H.R.
March 13, 2014 9:31 am

Paul Schauble says:
March 13, 2014 at 2:07 am
“>buy a gift certificate
Stores that sell gift certificates must keep most of the money in reserve against the future use of that certificate. The money isn’t available for other uses. […]”

==============================================
??? That make’s no sense to me unless a gift certificate is redeemable for cash which is (almost) never the case. ( caveat – California requires issuers to give cash back when less that $10 remains on the certificate. Other states’ laws vary)
Say you have a gift certificate. If the store (brick and mortar or online) is still in business when you decide to use the certificate, you drop in (in person or online) and choose something from their stock. Of what use is keeping most your cash if you can only buy merchandise? Then they wouldn’t have anything in stock but cash when you stop in to pick out a… oh say… a sweater.
What has changed is that laws are now on the books to eliminate ‘maintenance’ and ‘service’ fees that eroded gift card values to nothing and in most cases, the laws have eliminated any expiration dates on merchandise gift cards. Worthless gift cards used to be quite the scandal.
Anyhow, after a bit of Bing-ing on the topic – just because something makes no sense to me doesn’t mean a government wouldn’t do something non-sensical, right? – I couldn’t find much in the way of cash reserve requirements for merchandise gift cards. I’d welcome a pointer to that requirement if it is common and I missed it.

March 13, 2014 8:49 pm

I think the Mustaffa nobel prize comment was not warranted. However, this Magma, Anthony has his/her IP Address, so can check on where it is being sent from. He/she appears to be registering his/her disapproval of Mark launching a cross petition, that is threatening not only Mannies hockey stick theory, but also the credibility of his data collection. Well that’s up to Mark. And we are all backing him, on this site. (Nearly all) You reckon that there will be all the delays that Mann and his legal team will try. I don’t know about the American legal systems, but if you cross petition I believe this can not happen like in the Tim Ball court case. Good luck Mark. Shame – but if Mark wins, will this prompt a class action against Mann. Very interesting concept.

drumphil
March 15, 2014 6:30 pm

“I think the Mustaffa nobel prize comment was not warranted.”
If Steyn was capable of just sticking to the facts he wouldn’t be in the mess he is now.

Norman Woods
March 15, 2014 8:06 pm

Actually, if Mann ws capable of just sticking to the facts, HE wouldn’t be in the mess, HE is now.

March 15, 2014 8:13 pm

Norman according to the Prof. of University in Canberra, facts don’t matter.

Norman Woods
March 15, 2014 10:05 pm

I believe ya. Of course according to US Law neither does anything Steyn’s said. Mann’s a public policy advisory, public figure actively involved in trying to influence government thus government dollars, thus US Citizen dollars and the people of the Western World aren’t really into being told to shut up, their government employees decided they’re making decisions without others’ input.
Mann is so at the end of his rope, it’s just a matter of time till once again, in spite of all the alarm generator blogs will say, a kook is going to hit the end of his rope and it’s going to be ‘adios dumb&&s when the Democrats figure out crime and fraud cannot reign forever.
You watch. Mann’s a public figure. It was over before he ever even filed suit.

drumphil
March 17, 2014 12:09 am

Lol, I hope you don’t give out a lot of legal advice Norman. If you publish allegations of scientific fraud you’d damn well better be able to prove it.
Next up: cries of discrimination and incompetence of the courts when the case doesn’t go how you imagine it will. Of course it won’t be anything to do with you not having a clue, it will be the fault of the court and liberals.

March 17, 2014 8:04 pm

Drumphil, if the plaintiff doesn’t provide proof his data justifies not being defamed, then he is in affect hiding crucial evidence. But you are right in a way, as Steyn must provide proof that Mann’s research and data or computer model is flawed, and he received handsome funds to supply it.

March 17, 2014 8:28 pm

Anthony do you mean the MSM reaction. Well good I am feeling better already. (Been a bit off color lately)
Cheers everyone.

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