Earlier, I had mentioned Assistant Professor Lawrence Torcello’s despicable climate ugliness and offered some links to addresses on where to complain to. Monckton took the lead on that. I urge others to write such factual and courteous letters.
14 March 2014
The Provost and Senior Vice-President for Academic Affairs
Eastman Hall
Rochester Institute of Technology
New York, New York, United States of America
asenate@rit.edu, stp1031@rit.edu
Sir,
Breaches of Principles of Academic Freedom (Policy E2.0) and of the mission statement of the Institute by Assistant Professor Lawrence Torcello
Principle of public law relied upon
The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States applies to all. It says:
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
Principles of private law relied upon
The Institute’s policy on academic freedom applies to all faculty members, including Assistant Professor Torcello. The Institute declares that its policy is “guided” by the principles of academic freedom promulgated by the Association of University Professors in 1940, and, in particular, by the third such principle:
“3. College and university teachers are citizens, members of a learned profession, and officers of an educational institution. When they speak or write as citizens, they should be free from institutional censorship or discipline, but their special position in the community imposes special obligations. As scholars and educational officers, they should remember that the public may judge their profession and their institution by their utterances. Hence they should at all times be accurate, should exercise appropriate restraint, should show respect for the opinions of others, and should make every effort to indicate that they are not speaking for the institution.”
The Institute’s mission statement includes the following paragraph:
“Respect, Diversity and Pluralism: Provides a high level of service to fellow members of the RIT community. Treats every person with dignity. Demonstrates inclusion by incorporating diverse perspectives to plan, conduct, and/or evaluate the work of the organization, department, college, or division.”
Alleged breaches of the said principles of law
On 13 March 2014, Assistant Professor Lawrence Torcello published a blog posting[1] entitled Is misinformation about the climate criminally negligent? at a tendentious propaganda website, “The Conversation”. In that posting, he committed the following breaches of the Institute’s policies:
1. Mr Torcello describes himself as “Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Rochester Institute of Technology” and makes no effort to comply with the explicit requirement of the principles on academic freedom by indicating that he writes neither on behalf of the Institute nor in his capacity as an assistant professor there but as a private citizen.
2. Mr Torcello offends against the requirement of accuracy stated in the principles of academic freedom in that his posting falsely said “the majority of scientists clearly agree on a set of facts” about “global warming” on which they do not in fact agree. Mr Torcello links his cited statement to a reference to three papers each claiming a “97% consensus” to the effect that most of the global warming observed since 1950 was manmade. However, as Legates et al. (2013)[2] have demonstrated, a review of 11,944 papers on climate published in the 21 years 1991-2011, the largest such review ever published in the scientific literature, had marked only 64 papers, or 0.5% of the sample, as explicitly endorsing that proposition. Though it may well be that 100% of scientists publishing in relevant fields accept that – all other things being equal – our returning CO2 to the atmosphere from which it once came will be likely to cause some global warming (though the record amounts of CO2 we have emitted recently have not caused any warming at all for up to 17 years 6 months[3]), legitimate scientific doubt remains about the quantum of future global warming that may be expected, with an increasing body of peer-reviewed papers moving towards a climate sensitivity of only 1-2 Celisus degrees per CO2 doubling[4], and the IPCC itself drastically reducing its predictions of global warming over the next 30 years.
3. Mr. Torcello offends not only against the Institute’s requirement to treat every person with dignity, including those persons with whose views he disagrees, but also against the Constitution’s assertion of the right of free speech, which includes the right to fund those who wish to exercise it in opposition to what he falsely regards as the prevailing scientific opinion, when he says: “We have good reason to consider the funding of climate denial to be criminally and morally negligent. The charge of criminal and moral negligence ought to extend all activities of the climate deniers who receive funding as part of a sustained campaign to undermine the public’s understanding of scientific consensus” – a “consensus” which, as the three papers on the subject that Mr Torcello has linked to his posting define it, does not in fact exist.
4. Mr Torcello offends against the requirement of accuracy stated in the principles of academic freedom in that he links the statement in his posting that “public uncertainty regarding climate science, and the resulting failure to respond to climate change, is the intentional aim of politically and financially motivated denialists” to an allegation, long demonstrated to have been fabricated by one Peter Gleick, a climate change campaigner, that the Heartland Institute had circulated memorandum stating that Heartland intended to persuade schoolteachers that “the topic of climate change is controversial and uncertain – two key points that are effective at dissuading teachers from teaching science”. In the interest of accuracy Mr Torcello ought to have made it plain, but did not mention at all, that Gleick had been suspended from his post at an environmental campaign group for several months as a result of this incident, in which he had corruptly posed as a member of Heartland’s board so as to obtain access to its private documents, to which he had added documents of his own when the private documents he had obtained proved to be disappointingly innocent.
5. Mr Torcello shows no respect for Constitutional freedom of speech, or for the principles of academic freedom for those with whom he disagrees, when falsely alleges that all who fund those who dare to question what we are (inaccurately) told is the “consensus” position on global warming are “corrupt”, “deceitful”, and “criminally negligent in their willful disregard for human life”.
6. Mr Torcello, in perpetrating his me-too hate-speech about the alleged “loss of life” from “global warming”, fails yet again to comply with the requirement of accuracy in the principles of academic freedom, in that he departs from the “consensus” to the effect that a global warming of up to 2 Celsius degrees compared with 1750, or 1.1 degrees compared with today, will be not only harmless but net-beneficial to life on Earth. He also ignores the fact that the very heavy additional costs of energy arising from arguably needless subsidies to “renewable” energy systems make it impossible for poorer people to heat their homes. These energy price hikes may, for instance, have contributed to the 31,000 excess deaths in last year’s cold winter in the UK alone – 8000 more than the usual number of excess winter deaths.
7. By looking at only one side of the account, and by threatening scientists who disagree with him with imprisonment for criminal negligence, Mr Torcello offends fundamentally against the principles of academic freedom that he will himself no doubt pray in aid when he is confronted with the present complaint, and against the principle of tolerance of diverse opinions – including, horribile dictu, opinions at variance with his own – that is enjoined upon him by the Institute’s mission statement, and by common sense.
The academic senate will, no doubt, wish to consider whether Mr Torcello is a fit and proper person to hold any academic post at the Institute, and whether to invite him not only to correct at once the errors of fact that he has perpetrated but also to respect in future the academic freedom of those with whom he disagrees as though it were his own freedom – a freedom that, in his shoddy little posting, he has shamefully and ignorantly abused.
Yours faithfully,
Viscount Monckton of Brenchley
[1] https://theconversation.com/is-misinformation-about-the-climate-criminally-negligent-23111
[2] Legates, D.R., W.W.-H. Soon, W. M. Briggs, and C.W. Monckton of Brenchley, 2013, Climate consensus and ‘misinformation’: a rejoinder to ‘Agnotology, scientific consensus, and the teaching and learning of climate change’, Sci. & Educ., August 30, DOI 10.1007/s11191-013-9647-9.
[3] Least-squares linear-regression trend on the RSS monthly global mean lower-troposphere temperature anomaly dataset, September 1996 to February 2014 inclusive.
[4] See e.g. Lindzen, R.S., and Y.-S. Choi, 2011, On the observational determination of climate sensitivity and its implications, Asia-Pacific J. Atmos. Sci., 47:4, 377-390, doi:10.1007/s13143-011-0023-x.
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Jones: It is with a quiver in my hands that I would like to take issue….
Jones, old boy, better look around and see if you can find your bow….
: > )
strike
Maybe that is your oppinion, I don’t agree
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
You’ve missed the point. It doesn’t matter what your opinion is, nor what mine is. What matters is that world governments and the UN have funded the IPCC reports, and they do not say what Torcello claims they say. If his institution understands that, and only that, then they can see the absurdity of pressing criminal charges against anyone who disagrees as this would be the IPCC and all their contributors.
Poor Yorek: The problem is not that Dr. Torcello is a philosophy professor, but that he is a bad one.
Right on. John Gardner’s observation is obliquely relevant:
The society which scorns excellence in plumbing as a humble activity and tolerates shoddiness in philosophy because it is an exalted activity will have neither good plumbing nor good philosophy: neither its pipes nor its theories will hold water.
juan
“Jones, old boy, better look around and see if you can find your bow….”
.
Arf and not a little bit of chortle…:-)
@blackadderthe4th, Nobel Prize expert
In case no one else bothers to respond to your rubbish:
“…lets put the dukes up as we say, the real test of science is get out there and publish, if you don‘t you are wasting everybody’s time…”
Why don’t you put up your dukes and publish something here (which is easy enough to do) that conclusively proves CO2 has some net influence on climate and specifically, drives up the average global temperature (however you choose to define it) as the atmospheric concentration increases. Then, you remain here, defend your works and we will peer review it.
If you succeed in getting past the WUWT gatekeepers, we will support publication in a Journal. Following that you will be nominated for a Nobel Prize because you will have provided the elusive leaven for the AGW-CO2 bread that has for 17.5 years failed to rise. Believe me, the scientific world is waiting, nay praying that someone will rid them of the hair shirt they donned in 1988 by providing a better garment cut from scientific cloth that can render them immune to the raging torrent of disproof that assails them on every side.
It is worthless ad homs like yours and He Who Shall Remain Nameless at some podunk university in New York State that discredit modern science and engineering in the eyes of the thinking public.
– – – – – – – – – –
davidmhoffer,
Your point is well articulated.
Still, I would view it as a supplemental argument against the troubled RIT faculty member. The primary argument against him is the fundamental sovereignty of the concepts of individual thought and speech by all human beings, including all skeptics. By that as a primary argument one concedes nothing. With line of argument you suggest, though valid, I think it can potentially concede ground to the various idealological pre-conditions of the complex IPCC history and its troubling opaqueness; one is most likely to get mired down into minutiae of the beast; the general citizen would wander away dazed from that potential discussion.
Regards.
John
“Simon” digs up the bad behavior of a university in New Zealand as though that somehow justifies bad behavior on the part of an institute in the United States. Universities generally try to ignore, suppress or divert complaints against their personnel: however, every time they are reminded of their intolerance and scientific ignorance they retreat a little in the general direction of normal science. After all, the Austrian professor who called for the death penalty for skeptics was induced to back off. And about half the universities where I am asked to speak allow the meetings to proceed. The other half respond to the team of paid propagandists who pester them to prevent me from appearing by backing out, much as they did to those who disagreed with Nazism in the late 1930s.
To prevent any recurrence of totalitarian brutality, it is necessary to resist, even if one is sneered at or vilified, as all of us who dare to question the Part Line are sneered at or vilified. But the truth will prevail, whether the pseudonymous totalitarians so many of whom blog their hate speech here like it or not. It would be so much more comfortable to look the other way and let the lies of the new High Priests prevail: but that way lies slavery.
Monckton:
Although you stated the case eloquently, I am cynical about any treatment or reply you may get. I believe that attitudes at the Rochester Institution of Technology are just like the cover-up mentality at Penn State. Whatever lies are convenient for the staff are automatically approved by their management. So, Torcello is probably just another shallow, miserable copy of his administration.
Torcello just has to ignore the warming from 1910 to 1940, the general warming since 1800, the Mediaeval, Roman and Bronze Age warm periods, the global temperature of the Earth for much of the past 4 billion years, and the lack of warming for the past 17 years.
In fact he can only look at the warming from 1976 to 1998, just 22 years! And this is his magnificent and incontravertible evidence for CAGW!!!
Who wouldn’t be overwhelmed by such evidence?!
I suspect the response will be the usual one of a long silence.
The issue of climate change is no longer about the science (if it ever was) but about politics.
That means that Professor Torcello, and the many other pseudo-Liberals who spout this kind of rhetoric, are essentially calling for the imprisonment (or worse) of their political opponents.
That puts them in extremely odious company……..
@Anything
Maybe he is a political philosopher keeping company with others of their historical ilk.
As I learned at Small Dead Animals
http://smalldeadanimals.com/
An often used article header.
What’s the opposite of diversity? University!
It’s rampant in American educational institutions.
For example– http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/archives/whats-the-oppos-54.html
Lucky England! They have Lord Monckton, but we in the US have Lady Gaga 🙁
I want to puke on her too…
pottereaton: “What’s tedious is people focusing on stylistic differences when very important issues are being discussed.”
You miss my point which was not about style. It was about wasting his opportunity to make a memorable point forcefully, something he does a lot.
I won’t read his stuff and I’m “on his side”. Imagine how he is received by the other side.
I wouldn’t mention it except that we’re all being asked to write with complaints. If we write great prolix screeds modeled on his we’re just gonna get ignored. As you point out these are important issues; we can’t expect our opponents to work at listening to us ‘cos they won’t.
Wackademics!
The World seems to have a chronic (and dangerous) shortage of Constitutional Philosophers.
When I looked recently, I couldn’t find a single course (I was somewhat interested, given the lack of intelligent debate on the subject these days, and the dire need of the application of some common sense in the World).
So this guy is supposed to be a ‘philosopher’? Of what, exactly? Extremism, despotism, tyranny, and the lawless State?
Lovely your Lordship. Thank you.
Now if we could all each identify one or more further recipients for this letter and have the name and address suitably changed, perhaps we could get them to back off the vitriol.
First up could potentially be insulting and threatening Democratic senators who participated in the recent warmist sleepover in the Capitol. They have sworn to uphold the constitution which guarantees our 1st amendment rights to free speech. However, there were dozens of cases where they used the word Denier which is clearly meant to invoke the imagery of Holocaust denial and denigrate and threaten those citizens who would disagree with them.
Poor Mr. Torcello is simply not a very bright or very scholarly man.
A sorry little man who looks like Lewandowsky and with the fatuous arrogance of Michael Mann.
I think that there is a kind of stupidity that cannot, ever, understand itself. …..Lady in Red
Anthony,
the links in references [2], [3] and [4] are broken – pages not found.
Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel? I don’t think he’s right, of course, but I DO jibe at the hate-fest generally here apparent. When I was his age, I was probably as stupid as he seems to be now. I got better, I hope! Did you?
To JDN, Steven Mosher, and others:
As a matter of constitutional law, although the 1rst Amendment specifies limits on “Congress”, the “Due Process Clause” of the 14th Amendment extends most Bill of Rights limitations to state and local officials.
I agree that as a private institution the Bill of Rights cannot be fully applied to actions of RIT’s professors. Yet the law is complicated here, too. For example, the Supreme Court has made clear that academic institutions that accept federal financial aid must comport with federal law with respect to civil rights.
Freedom of Speech is a strong part of American culture. The intolerant, such as Mr. Torcello, attack it at their peril.
@ur momisugly oldspanky
March 14, 2014 at 2:00 pm
You are obviously in the minority here.
Why don’t you write your own letter and publish it here. That way we can compare them.
Earwig 42 says:
An often used article header.
What’s the opposite of diversity? University!
It’s rampant in American educational institutions.
Thanks you just brightened my Friday.
@ur momisugly Gold minor my dialogue with one of them ended when the last answer I got was that I had a comma in the wrong place.
the original academic “Conversation” website in Australia. there are now more than 70 instances of denier/denial etc on this single page (incl comments):
13 March: The Conversation: Rod Lamberts: Facts won’t beat the climate deniers – using their tactics will
(Rod Lamberts, Deputy Director, Australian National Centre for Public Awareness of Science at Australian National University
Disclosure Statement: Rod Lamberts has received funding from the ARC linkage program)
We can decry climate deniers for their unfair, lowbrow tactics, but their tactics are getting them exactly what they want. Ours are not…
So, what now?
There’s no profit in trying to change the position of deniers. Their values and motivations are fundamentally different to those of us who listen to what the weight of scientific evidence tell us. So forget them.
Forget the Moncktonites, disregard the Boltists, and snub the Abbottsians. Ignore them, step around them, or walk over them. Drown them not just with sensible conversations, but with useful actions. Flood the airwaves and apply tactics advertisers have successfully used for years.
What we need now is to become comfortable with the idea that the ends will justify the means. We actually need more opinions, appearing more often and expressed more noisily than ever before…
https://theconversation.com/facts-wont-beat-the-climate-deniers-using-their-tactics-will-24074
The Conversation – Australia – Partners
Founding Partners
Without the support of Founding Partners The Conversation would not have started. So it’s hats off to University of Melbourne, University of Technology, Sydney, CSIRO, Monash University, and University of Western Australia who saw the value of helping us develop a new independent information channel that would also showcase the talent and knowledge of the university and research sector..ETC ETC ETC.
https://theconversation.com/au/partners
UK Conversation – Who We Are
The Conversation launched in Australia in March 2011…
Now we’ve launched in the UK to bring our brand of trusted, evidence-based journalism to a new audience…
Sincere thanks go to our Founding Partners who gave initial funding support: University of Aberdeen; University of Birmingham; University of Bradford; Bristol University; Cardiff University; City University London; Durham University; Glasgow Caledonian University; Goldsmiths, University of London; Lancaster University; University of Leeds; University of Liverpool; University of Nottingham; the Open University; Queen’s University Belfast; University of Salford; University of Sheffield; University of Surrey; University College London (UCL) and University of Warwick.
Thanks also to strategic partners HEFCE (Higher Education Funding Council for England); HEFCW (Higher Education Funding Council for Wales); Scottish Funding Council; Nuffield Foundation; Wellcome Trust, Esmée Fairbairn Foundation and Macfarlanes…
https://theconversation.com/uk/who_we_are