This quote from a WSJ article titled Springtime for Warmists (a hat tip to the satirical play Springtime for Hitler in Mel Brooks’ 1968 film The Producers ) is one of those “God help us” moments where we realize higher education has become an abject failure when it comes to teaching reality based science.
Yes, it has come to this. Americans are being urged to submit to “dictatorial” government because democracy is incapable of controlling the weather. “In college classes, climate change is taught as a textbook example of where democracy fails,” Graves asserts in the very first sentence of her column.
Oy!
Springtime for Warmists
Last month Rush Limbaugh remarked that the reason for “the re-establishment of climate change and global warming as a new primary impetus of the White House” is that “it offers the president opportunities to be dictatorial.”
A defender of the president might counter that “dictatorial” is overwrought. After all, whether or not his proposed regulations are wise, they are based on an act of Congress and an interpretation of that law that has passed muster with the Supreme Court. They won’t take effect until members of the public have had the opportunity to make their views known to the Environmental Protection Agency. And Obama will remain in office for only another 2½ years or so, after which his (democratically elected) successors will have the authority to revise the regulations. Congress also retains the authority to change the law.
But National Journal’s Lucia Graves takes a different approach. Instead of denying that Obama’s actions are dictatorial, she disputes Limbaugh’s implicit premise that there’s anything wrong with that. Lest you think we exaggerate, her piece is titled “Obama’s Thankfully ‘Dictatorial’ Approach to Climate Change.”
Yes, it has come to this. Americans are being urged to submit to “dictatorial” government because democracy is incapable of controlling the weather. “In college classes, climate change is taught as a textbook example of where democracy fails,” Graves asserts in the very first sentence of her column.
Well, that settles it. America might have been a noble experiment, but science has proven it a failure. “Science is science,” Obama tells the New York Times’s Thomas Friedman. “And there is no doubt that if we burned all the fossil fuel that’s in the ground right now that the planet’s going to get too hot and the consequences could be dire.” Friedman asked: “Do you ever want to just go off on the climate deniers in Congress? ‘Yeah, absolutely,’ the president said with a laugh.”
Hardy har har.
There are, to say the least, some problems here. Most important, appeals to scientific authority ought to fall on deaf ears unless the science is conducted honestly, which entails acknowledgment of uncertainty and respect for alternative hypotheses. In this regard, the demonization of “skeptics” should raise an alarm for anyone who takes science seriously. Skepticism is the essence of the scientific method.
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@- Bob Tisdale
“Our use of fossil fuels allowed man to move beyond hunting and gathering. But now hunting is a bad thing in the eyes of many. That leaves gathering. Oy!”
Man had already moved beyond hunting and gathering by the time industrial use of fossil fuels started. Agriculture and domesticated animal husbandry were long established before the industrial revolution.
What fossil fuels have enabled is the abandonment of slavery.
At this very moment research in proceeding at warp speed not only only new generations of nuclear reactors, but on exciting forms of unconventional nuclear power, commonly called “LENR” or Low Energy Nuclear Reaction”. If science teaches anything, it is that it is foolish to project current trends to infinity. This myopic ritual must pretend that humans cannot by themselves, adapt or innovate. Advocates of Global LukeWarming assume we will be burning coal forever. I look forward to the day when I can heat and cool my home and run my car by not burning anything.
Speaking of adaption and innovation, we didn’t get to usable LED light bulbs for $9.95 overnight., did we libs?