I'm dead. Send flowers

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Recently my lovely wife and I visited a hotbed of British totalitarianism, Anglia Ruskin “University” at Cambridge, to gather evidence for the courts in connection with a death threat that the “University” and one of its students had made against me in the form of a widely-publicized tombstone with my name on it, under the hate-speech slogan “Lest We Forget Those Who Denied”. I should explain that there are two universities at Cambridge: the real one, my own alma mater, which tops the league-table of Britain’s 133 universities, and Anglia Ruskin, a jumped-up polytechnic which, from what we saw of it, ranks about 250th out of 133.

clip_image002

Anglia Ruskin “University” suffers from an identity crisis. So its public relations people recently spent some taxpayers’ money buying advertising signs at Cambridge railway station, which, like the “University”, is 1½ miles from approaching a real University. These hilarious signs have done much to damage what little reputation the joke “University” may have had.

clip_image004

Sure enough, in a dusty corner of a grubby gallery on a tatty campus (why do grime and the hard Left have such an affinity for one another?) stood the tombstone on which the “artist”, a student to whom the “University” had awarded a prize for it, had engraved my name and those of five other British climate skeptics:

Ø Christopher Booker of the Sunday Telegraph, the world’s best regularly-published climate-skeptic columnist in any mainstream news medium;

Ø James Delingpole, who has transformed Breitbart London into the news website that everyone in Britain wants to read;

Ø Melanie Phillips, the redoubtable and always trenchant Daily Mail columnist, writing for the only daily paper that regularly reports how much nonsense global warming is;

Ø Lord Lawson of Blaby, Margaret Thatcher’s former Finance Minister, and founder of the authoritative Global Warming Policy Foundation; and

Ø Owen Paterson, the affable squire who, like most country folk, does not believe a word of the urban-myth cargo-cult doctrine of global warming, and is a former Secretary of State for the Environment.

clip_image006

Now, to put a victim’s name on a tombstone while the victim is still alive is to make a death threat, the nastiest and most repellent form of hate speech. If the tombstone had been erected anywhere in Scotland rather than on a manifestly dysfunctional campus in England, I could have had Professor Michael Thorne, the “University’s” Vice Chancellor, tried, fined, and bound over not to repeat that or any suchlike offense.

Professor Thorne had caused or permitted a press release to be issued, promoting this unspeakable death threat. The release explained that the tombstone bore the words “Lest we forget those who denied”. The implication was that, if we were not already dead, the “artist” and the “University” that promoted his “work” would very soon see to it that we were.

Indeed, the press release reinforced the threat in several unpleasant ways. Like the tombstone, it used the word “denier” or its derivatives – and did so five times in a single page. The intent of this hate-speech word, banned throughout Scotland by the law against threatening communications, is to compare climate change “deniers” with Holocaust deniers.

It mattered not to the Vice Chancellor, nor to the “artist”, that I do not deny the existence of climate change, which has, after all, been happening for 6000 or 4.5 billion years, depending on your point of view. I do not even deny that Man may have some as yet unquantified but probably insignificant and even net-beneficial influence on the climate.

Indeed, I have recently published with three distinguished colleagues – Dr Willie Soon, Professor David Legates and Dr Matt Briggs – a scientific paper making that fact quite plain. It’s well worth a read. Go to scibull.com, click on “Most Read Articles”, and ours is the all-time no. 1 in the 60-year archive of the Science Bulletin of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Please download it now from scibull.com, and get all your friends to do the same. The more the Science Bulletin’s own ticker for our paper counts up, the more it will be realized that the scientific viewpoint we represent – the technical term for it is “the objective truth” – is widely supported.

The mere truth, however, did not stand in the way of the “University” or of the “artist”, who is recorded in the “University’s” press release as having said: “With this work [work?] I envisage a time when the deliberate denial of climate change will be seen as a crime because it hinders progress towards a low carbon future.” Kill them, kill them all!

To make the air of menace worse, “Dr” Aled Jones, the director of the “Global” “Sustainability” “Institute” at the “University”, said the “sculpture could be viewed in decades to come as a monument to a period of history that saw scientific knowledge battle to be heard above political ideologies.”

In the context, what this numpty meant was that climate “deniers” like me, even though our detailed and legitimate scientific objections to the climate scam have been reviewed and published in the Science Bulletin (have you and all your friends downloaded our paper from scibull.com yet?) and many learned journals, were mere political ideologues, while totalitarian true-believers like him, with little knowledge of and no interest in the scientific truth, were the sole repository of “scientific knowledge”.

In fact it is the other way about.

Every so often, I decide not to do what a couple of the other names on the tombstone did. I decided not to laugh it off. A death threat is a death threat. It is no laughing matter.

I have recently been reading Richards’ masterly three-volume history of the Third Reich. The first volume deals with the perplexing question how that monstrous regime came to be. And it is plain that the long, relentless campaign of intimidation by the Nazis of their opponents, with name-calling and death threats very similar to that perpetrated by the “University” and by all too many others over the past ten years, was an essential part of the process.

Most people laughed off the Nazi threats, at first. In Britain and in many other countries, full-on appeasement followed, in the hope that looking the other way would make the threats vanish.

It didn’t work. Tens of millions died because too few – the few including such honorable and courageous men as Popes Pius XI and XII and Cardinal Faulhaber of Munich – openly spoke out against the terror. Too many, including Britain and most European governments, went along with it and tried to appease it until it was suddenly too late.

The Nazis then, like their irrational, unlearned, hate-filled ideological successors at the “University” today, meant what they said. They killed those they had said they would kill.

So my clerk wrote to the Vice Chancellor, listing a couple of dozen previous instances, all of them in the past decade, where death threats and demands for trial, imprisonment and execution had been made, very publicly, against climate skeptics. This is by no means an isolated or exceptional incident. There is an increasingly dangerous pattern to it.

I also wrote to the police and the procurator fiscal in Edinburgh, warning them that if the “University” did not remove the press release from the web and the tombstone from the gallery I should expect them to prosecute the internet service providers who were carrying the threat into Scotland.

The “University’s” first instinct was to call in the shysters who are always willing, if paid enough, to come to the defense even of the nastiest totalitarian bullies. In this case, the shysters were Anderson Strathern LLP, of Glasgow. Don’t use them, ever, for any purpose. For they pretended there was no connection between the phrase “climate change denier” and “Holocaust denier” – though all they had to do was to Google the two terms together to see just how deliberate and how widespread that connection is. And they said the “University” had “no proposals to make”.

By then, however, the police and the Fiscal were in the picture, so the “University” found it expedient to ignore its shysters and to come to its senses. The press release has been removed from the web, both by the “University” and by another Cambridge website that had unwisely reproduced it. And the tombstone is now gone too.

The poisonous air of palpable menace remains. Dr Roger Pielke Jr., a scientist who has taken a gently sceptical view on some aspects of the climate question, has recently announced that he can no longer conduct climate research, because he fears for the safety of himself and his family.

No doubt many more scientists would have spoken out by now against the totalitarian profiteers of doom who are doing so much to destroy not only the economy but also the freedom of the West.

As the danger that an unelected world government will be inflicted upon us at the Paris climate summit this December draws ever closer, we are expecting more such malevolent attacks by the environmentalist Sturmabteilung. But we shall not be deterred by totalitarian thuggery. We shall continue to speak the truth as best we can discern it, whether today’s Nazis like it or not.

And if you are tempted to cite Godwin’s “Law” to the effect that he who calls his opponents Nazis has lost the argument, let me cite Monckton’s Law in return: those who cite Godwin’s Law confirm ipso facto that they are active supporters of today’s Fascists.

clip_image008

Whatever you do, don’t send your daughter to Anglia Ruskin “University”. And don’t ever send it so much as a dime. It is an unworthy institution. Send the money to Cambridge University (above) instead. We’re the real thing. We’ll put it to good and proper use: the advancement not of crude, Fascist propaganda but of learning.

I might have been tempted to leave the matter there, given that the “University” had had the sense to take down its press release and, eventually, the tombstone too. However, the shysters’ letter indicates a cast of mind I don’t like the smell of. I’m preparing a detailed report for the police in Cambridge, for under English law the tombstone and the press release together constitute – at minimum – conduct likely to cause a breach of the Queen’s peace, contrary to s.1, Justices of the Peace Act 1361, the most commonly-cited provision of English criminal law in the magistrates’ courts.

I’m going to have these wretches prosecuted: not the student, who is manifestly not adult enough to understand the seriousness of what he has done, nor even the dreadful “Dr” Aled Jones, who is arguably too blinded by Marxist prejudice and too ignorant of the true science behind the climate scam to think rationally at all.

But an outfit that describes itself, however implausibly, as a “University” ought at least to have made some attempt to behave like one, and not to have made death threats by way of press releases. It should have kept the peace. Now it will reap the whirlwind.

Ø This is an extended and illustrated version of my regular and unmissable Monday column at wnd.com. Click “Opinion”, then “Commentator line-up”.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

369 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
May 20, 2015 4:01 am

I can understand Lord Monckton being mightily displeased with this tasteless stunt but consider there have been many equally if not worse utterances all revealing a totalitarian mindset amongst many CAGW believers
eg In my nation Australia a failed Greens candidate for Parliament in 2010 Clive Hamilton once argued that if the public could not get it ( ie CAGW) right in whom they voted for in terms of climate policies then maybe it was time to suspend democracy!
Then there is the disgraceful use of the term “denier “which I had directed at me by a former Premier of the state of Victoria because I had the temerity to question the then carbon tax policy whose economic effectiveness I queried because the compensation to be paid partially negated the switching impact of the tax.
I also recall reading statements by some whose names I now can’t bring to mind demanding prosecution of climate deniers and one beauty which argued for compulsory psychiatric treatment for “deniers”-shades of the KGB and Siberian clinics
Maybe its time readers of WUWT collectively contributed such examples to make up a “shame file”
to be regularly updated to demonstrate the closed minds of many of our so called public intellectuals.
In conclusion it seems that the totalitarian left having abandoned religion still need a cause to believe in
In the 1940s and 50s it was belief in a dilute form of Marxism;now even the most boneheaded of those believers having seen the collapse of command economies,have turned their beliefs to CAGW which also has the double benefit of possibly bringing down their hated capitalism

Tucci78
May 20, 2015 4:25 am

…if you are tempted to cite Godwin’s “Law” to the effect that he who calls his opponents Nazis has lost the argument, let me cite Monckton’s Law in return: those who cite Godwin’s Law confirm ipso facto that they are active supporters of today’s Fascists.

That’s a keeper.
In actuality, of course, what Mike Godwin had proposed in 1990 regarding exchanges on Usenet newsgroups (there was no World Wide Web at the time) was simply that: “As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1.” This said nothing whatsoever about foreclosing further debate.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  Tucci78
May 20, 2015 10:37 am

You are correct. The statement says essentially nothing at all about the merit of such comparisons. Yet Leftists parrot “Godwin’s Law! Godwin’s Law!” endlessly, as if it constituted an actual argument. It is no more meaningful relative to the content than saying “As an online discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving a vowel approaches1.0.”

MichaelB
May 20, 2015 4:47 am

Did someone mention WWII? Perhaps you should watch this with an open mind.
http://thegreateststorynevertold.tv/portfolio/part-1-adolf-hitlers-childhood/

commieBob
May 20, 2015 5:24 am

Dr Aled Jones, the director of the “Global Sustainability Institute” at the University, said the “sculpture could be viewed in decades to come as a monument to a period of history that saw scientific knowledge battle to be heard above political ideologies.”

He’s absolutely right … just not the way he intended. It reminds me of:

Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!

Allan MacRae
Reply to  commieBob
May 20, 2015 5:49 am

“Ozymandias” was Ramesses 2 – who knew?
Also, there were two “Ozymandias” poems, by Shelley and Smith – who knew two?
In antiquity, Ozymandias was an alternative name for the Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses II. Shelley began writing his poem in 1817, soon after the announcement of the British Museum’s acquisition of a large fragment of a statue of Ramesses II from the thirteenth-century BC, and some scholars believe that Shelley was inspired by this. The 7.25-ton fragment of the statue’s head and torso had been removed in 1816 from the mortuary temple of Ramesses at Thebes by the Italian adventurer Giovanni Battista Belzoni (1778–1823). It was expected to arrive in London in 1818, but did not arrive until 1821. Shelley wrote the poem in friendly competition with his friend and fellow poet Horace Smith (1779–1849) who also wrote a sonnet on the same topic with the very same title. Smith’s poem would be first published in The Examiner a few weeks after Shelley’s sonnet. Both poems explore the fate of history and the ravages of time—that all prominent figures and the empires they build are impermanent and their legacies fated to decay and oblivion.
Shelley’s “Ozymandias”
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: “Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!’
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
Smith’s Ozymandias
In Egypt’s sandy silence, all alone,
Stands a gigantic Leg, which far off throws
The only shadow that the Desert knows:—
“I am great OZYMANDIAS,” saith the stone,
“The King of Kings; this mighty City shows
“The wonders of my hand.”— The City’s gone,—
Nought but the Leg remaining to disclose
The site of this forgotten Babylon.
We wonder,—and some Hunter may express
Wonder like ours, when thro’ the wilderness
Where London stood, holding the Wolf in chace,
He meets some fragment huge, and stops to guess
What powerful but unrecorded race
Once dwelt in that annihilated place.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozymandias

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  Allan MacRae
May 20, 2015 10:46 am

Poetically, Shelley’s is the better. But it’s Smith’s that is most relevant, most striking in its content a hundred years and more after it was written.

Allan MacRae
May 20, 2015 5:24 am

Thank you Lord Monckton – it is essential that death threats be prosecuted.
Some history – more to come…
Regards to all, Allan
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/11/27/a-big-goose-step-backwards/#comment-1800555
Note to Prof Richard Betts and Dr Tamsin Edwards:
Perhaps some history will help to put Tim Ball’s article into perspective – please see my post below from 2009.
Climate “skeptics” (aka “deniers”) have been the victims of vicious falsehoods, death threats (Tim Ball has received several) and actual violence. That is the reality.
Where were you good people when this was happening, and what did you do then to stop it?
By the way, Tim did not call you Nazis – that contention is a tactical diversion – those who believe he did so should actually read his article.
Regards, Allan
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2009/03/03/pielke-jrs-take-on-an-amazing-conversation-with-a-climate-scientist/#comments
[excerpt]
I am concerned that people are losing balance on this very serious issue of alleged humanmade global warming..
Having studied this subject for several decades, I have strong opinions.
For the record, I think the climate changes we have experienced in the past decades are predominantly natural, not humanmade, and probably cyclical, related to either oceanic cycles such as the PDO, etc. or solar cycles, or both.
I believe that Earth’s climate is insensitive to atmospheric CO2, and that recent increases in atmospheric CO2, of whatever cause, are not harmful to the environment, and could even be beneficial.
I believe that many carbon abatement programs are at best uneconomic, and a waste of scarce global resources that should be dedicated to solving real problems – not squandered on imaginary ones.
There is also the compelling moral issue of biofuels raising food prices, thus causing hunger among the world’s poor.
I have grown frustrated by warmists’ repeated attempts to shut down this debate and to bully so-called climate skeptics (aka “deniers”) into silence. This bullying is highly unethical, and has extended to threats of violence, and worse.
I have concluded, reluctantly, that some of the warmists’ research papers were not only in error, but were deliberately misleading.
Nevertheless, it is incumbent on all of us on this side of the debate to not emulate the worst aspects of the warmists and their arguments.
Specifically, hatred is self-defeating. So is excessive polarization.
I think we will win this debate based on science and economics, but only after many hundreds of billions have been squandered on foolish alternative energy programs such as wind power and fuel-from-food.
While this terrible waste is frustrating, it is not appropriate to drag ourselves into the mire in an attempt to compete with the other side.
Frankly, I see signs of mental instability in the wild, irresponsible statements attributed to several prominent warmists. Let us not join them down that self-destructive path.
Best regards to all, Allan

Allan MacRae
May 20, 2015 5:27 am

As promised above…
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2015/01/12/charlie-hebdo-climate-skepticism-free-speech/#comment-1835330
Recently sent to a friend who wrote an article critical of global warming alarmism:
You will know you have truly “arrived” when you receive your first death threat from the enviro-nuts. Dr. Tim Ball has received several. I feel somewhat slighted because I only received rather lame one – more than a decade ago.
Warmist violence has been minor – one scientist friend had the family dog killed, an oil industry colleague had his house fire-bombed – as was the Calgary Petroleum Club.
I was concerned that violence would ramp up as the warmists became more desperate – fortunately this has not happened (yet).
I did recommend many years ago that my friends take certain precautions – lock your office entrances, vary your routes home, etc. I still think this is prudent.
Environmental extremism appeals to the uneducated and the feeble-minded – fortunately most of these people are too lazy to take serious action.
Best regards, Allan
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/11/27/a-big-goose-step-backwards/#comment-1800850
Here is a list of those forced from their institutions by global warming thugs:
George Taylor – Oregon State Climatologist
Sallie Baliunas – Harvard University
Pat Michaels – University of Virginia
Murry Salby – Macquarie University, Australia
Caleb Rossiter – Institute for Policy Studies
Nickolas Drapela, PhD – Oregon State University
Henrik Møller – Aalborg University, Denmark
Q – others?

Reply to  Allan MacRae
May 20, 2015 6:32 am

How about adding Bob Carter, James Cook ‘University’, Townsville, Qld. Australia

Bruce Cobb
May 20, 2015 5:36 am

How about a “Lest we Forget Those Who Lied” monument with the likes of Mann, Hansen, Schmidt, Gore, IPCC, etc.

wws
May 20, 2015 5:42 am

And meanwhile, here in the States, in a few hours President Full’O’Crap is going to give a commencement speech in which he says that all “deniers” of Climate Change are Traitors to America, because National Security.
And yet there are still people who think this isn’t a purely political fight.

Non Nomen
Reply to  wws
May 20, 2015 6:23 am

And meanwhile, here in the States, in a few hours President Full’O’Crap is going to give a commencement speech in which he says that all “deniers” of Climate Change are Traitors to America, because National Security.

Saying this ‘ex cathedra’ that fellow becomes a schyzomycete of the nation beyond comparison.

commieBob
May 20, 2015 6:11 am

Anglia Ruskin, a jumped-up polytechnic which, from what we saw of it, ranks about 250th out of 133.

I wondered what kind of rinky-dink rat hole the university was, so I googled it. The wiki article paints a picture of a pretty reasonable school.
Christopher Monckton is carefully being nasty without exposing himself to legal action. It’s a bit shameful IMHO. He would be the first to point out the logical fallacy of an ad hominem attack on himself but he seems more than willing to employ it on others.

Reply to  commieBob
May 20, 2015 6:32 am

Ok, ok, on the official list it ranks 110th out of 133. It went after me with a death threat. My response has been entirely unthreatening. I’m under no obligation to be nice to the “university” in the circumstances. Their conduct had not been either “pretty” or “reasonable”.

Reply to  Monckton of Brenchley
May 20, 2015 8:14 am

Monckton of Brenchley
May 20, 2015 at 6:59 am
Matthew W should not be childish. In the head posting I had said the university ranked 250th out of 133. That was what we who are not Marxists or environmentalist extremist (the two political subsets seem coterminous these days) refer to as “a joke”.
====================================
My reply was to Commie bob and I didn’t think I actually needed the sarc tag

Reply to  commieBob
May 20, 2015 6:37 am

Oh dear !!
Your incredible intelligence and superior wit has just destroyed good Lord M’s credibility.

Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 6:59 am

Matthew W should not be childish. In the head posting I had said the university ranked 250th out of 133. That was what we who are not Marxists or environmentalist extremist (the two political subsets seem coterminous these days) refer to as “a joke”.

wws
Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 7:06 am

au contraire – Anglia Ruskin destroyed it’s own credibility when it allowed itself to be used as a venue for death threats for purely political purposes. In that, Anglia Ruskin has shown itself to hold the same standards as Heidelberg University in Germany, when that institution allowed itself to become the center of Eugenics Studies during the Third Reich.
The Holocaust began in a University classroom.

Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 8:40 am

I must apologize to Matthew W for having completely misunderstood him.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  commieBob
May 20, 2015 6:41 am

How about you google the difference between satire and ad hominem?

Fredb
May 20, 2015 7:00 am

Monckton’s accolade of Cambridge university, saying “… Cambridge University. We’re the real thing.” might perhaps remember a) “The Cambridge Five”, and b) the very necessary role of polytechnics such as the one he is disparaging.

Reply to  Fredb
May 20, 2015 8:33 am

I am disparaging A King’s Urinal not so much because it was formerly a polytechnic as because today it plainly has no understanding of the environment of academic freedom of scientific research and discussion that it is its duty to foster. That is why I treat it with the contempt it deserves. It is not behaving as a real university should. The fact that many other universities are similarly acting in dereliction of their duty to be places of light, of liberty and of learning is no excuse.

rabbit
May 20, 2015 7:12 am

So the question here is…

Did the tombstone constitute a death threat?

I would say not. Rather I interpreted it as political comment, the tombstone representing the purported deaths caused by looming global warming.
In the U.S., Moncton would almost certainly not have a case, as the courts bend over backwards to allow free speech. In Britain free speech is not so well protected, so we’ll see.
But as sympathetic as I am towards Moncton, I value free speech even more.

Reply to  rabbit
May 20, 2015 8:07 am

“Free Speech” in Her Majesty’s kingdom is not the same as in the Colonies

rabbit
Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 8:26 am

Sadly this is so. The very wellspring of individual liberty has forgotten what it means.

Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 8:39 am

“Rabbit” should not be pompous. Our democratically-elected representatives, in one of the very few areas of law in which they are permitted by the Kommissars of the European tyranny-by-clerk to make decisions and laws for us, have decided repeatedly on recent occasions that the citizen now needs protection from hate-speech and from being threatened or terrorized by malicious communications.
Do not pretend that there are no constraints on free speech in the United States. There is, for instance, a law of libel, under which Professor Fred Singer was able to extract an abject apology and retraction from a person who had made malicious and entirely baseless allegations against him. That person tried to plead the Constitutional amendment guaranteeing free speech, but the court snapped back that he was not free to lie to the detriment of another’s reputation. Same in the UK. If you don’t like that, then amend the Constitution to abolish the tort of libel.
There are other examples of the necessary marginal circumscription of free speech in the United States, but that will do to illustrate the point.

rabbit
Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 9:06 am

“Rabbit” should not be pompous.

I don’t care who you are, knock off the insults.

Do not pretend that there are no constraints on free speech in the United States.

First, I’m Canadian. Second, there are constraints of free speech everywhere, but the U.S. is particularly reluctant to limit speech, especially if it is political in nature. The tombstone was offensive, but it’s questionable whether it would be considered defamatory under British law, given that In 2013 parliament expanded the defenses against a claim of defamation.

richardscourtney
Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 9:19 am

rabbit
In reply to Lord M observing
You responded

I don’t care who you are, knock off the insults.

Cue Flanagan and Alan

Richard

rabbit
Reply to  Matthew W
May 20, 2015 9:49 am

richardscourteny:
Since my computer is mute, that clip fell a little flat.

richardscourtney
Reply to  rabbit
May 20, 2015 9:57 am

rabbit
In hope of helping, I suggest you would do well to follow the example of your computer.
Richard

rabbit
Reply to  richardscourtney
May 20, 2015 10:13 am

richardcourtney:
Too bad for you, I am difficult to shut up.
Pretty easy to support restricting the speech of those you disagree with.
But what happens when some political party in power want to silence “climate skeptics” for the good of society? Will there be anything left of freedom of speech to shield us?
It takes courage and foresight to defend those we find offensive, but it’s worth it.

richardscourtney
Reply to  richardscourtney
May 20, 2015 10:17 am

rabbit
I did not tell you shut up. I offered some helpful advice.
If you want to continue being a pompous ass then I will enjoy the laugh.
Richard

cheshirered
May 20, 2015 7:20 am

Lord M; Slightly O/T…..Have you seen Theresa May’s withering put-down towards the Police Federation today? It was quite the most impressive STFU from a politician who’d just had enough. The best part was she did it right to their faces, no messing about in a press-release. She listed ‘prediction’ after ‘prediction’ of doom from the police – all of which have totally failed to materialise.
Clearly there’s a huge case for the climate debate to match her efforts. The Greens / eco whack jobs have spent decades predicting doom – and all that’s happened is crop yields are up every decade, US storms are down, floods, draughts etc are showing no trend. In fact it’s hard to find anything of substance that the eco-nutters predicted that has actually occurred. Maybe you could compile the definitive list of ‘Climate STFU’, a list of their own predictions matched to failed, non-existent outcomes? Just a thought.

lbeyeler
Reply to  cheshirered
May 20, 2015 9:03 am

Start with the global cooling Hype from the 1970’s

May 20, 2015 7:23 am

Thanks, Christopher, Lord Monckton.
Please keep on fighting for us carbon creatures.

Capell
May 20, 2015 7:46 am

Searching Anglia Ruskin’s site today- 20/5/15- (don’t you just love that nod-among-equals to Ruskin?) it’s quite easy to find references to the magnificent artwork, and an image of it:
http://ww2.anglia.ac.uk/ruskin/en/home/news/slick_artwork_commemorates_journalists.html
and supporting text:
“‘Oil waterfall’ featuring names of climate change deniers wins Anglia Ruskin prize
The names of well-known climate change deniers feature in an ‘oil painting’ with a difference, which has gone on display at Anglia Ruskin University.
The new artwork includes the names of journalists Melanie Phillips, James Delingpole and Christopher Booker chiselled under the words ‘Lest We Forget Those Who Denied’, while a constant stream of engine oil runs over the 2.2m tall memorial.
Other names to feature on the memorial stone include politicians Nigel Lawson, Christopher Monckton and Owen Paterson, the former Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.
The work, by third year BA (Hons) Fine Art student Ian Wolter, is the winner of Anglia Ruskin University’s Sustainability Art Prize, which is an annual competition run by the Cambridge School of Art and the Global Sustainability Institute.

Just thought you should know it hasn’t been removed. It’s still on Anglai Ruskin ‘University’ website. It’s a sub-page of the lovely Dr Aled Jones (FSRA). Wonder how long this will stay there?

Solomon Green
Reply to  Capell
May 20, 2015 11:55 am

One small addition to Lord Monckton’spost, Nigel Lawson was not only Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance minister) but had also been Secretary of State for Energy, which is the position from which the disastrous Eds, Milliband and Davey, were able to do so much damage to Britain’s energy supplies (and countryside) in the name of climate change. Sadly, from press reports the new incumbent, Amber Rudd, seems to have studied at the feet of the Eds rather than learnt under Nigel.

Reply to  Capell
May 20, 2015 1:32 pm

Looks as though the offending press release is back up again. In that event, the “university” has sealed its doom, legally speaking.

Winnipeg Boy
May 20, 2015 7:49 am

I say go after them Monckton. Three cheers. It was not meant in good taste and it is potentially dangerous. US laws do not apply, and are meaningless in this situation. The public holds climate change somewhere below a steaming pile of whale pooh on the importance scale. If this event sheds some light on the venom that the left shoots at us daily that would be a plus.
It is a shame that you have to endure this, but facing it head-on is the right move in my opinion.

Tim
May 20, 2015 7:54 am

Why fight the foot soldiers, when their orders are coming from some of the highest offices on the planet?
The intent is to sow fear and fear is a precursor to anger. The foot-soldiers are angry because they have been subjected to fear- propaganda from on high.

Matt Skaggs
May 20, 2015 7:55 am

It was in these very pages that ridicule and scorn was heaped upon Australian climate scientists who made a somewhat overwrought claimed that they had received death threats. Yet when an even more overwrought death threat claim based upon the phrase “Lest we forget…” is launched by the ever-bilious Chris Monckton, everyone here lines up in support. You just can’t make this stuff up!

Reply to  Matt Skaggs
May 20, 2015 8:25 am

The remarks by Mr Skaggs are strikingly similar to those made by appeasers in the run-up to the Nazi dictatorship. They, too, did their best to divorces every death threat from its context and characterize it as harmless. The law on both sides of the Atlantic bears in mind the context within which a menacing statement is made. The context is of hate speech directed at us in the most vicious terms, and often by people who are paid to do nothing but try to discredit us. The context is of that hate speech embodied in a shameful but menacing press release issued under the name and with the authority of the “university”. The context is of increasingly frequent and public demands that we should be tried and executed for “high crimes against humanity” or “treason against the planet. These threats are made not only by intellectually-immature students but also by tenured professors and leaders of major scientific institutions, as well as by politicians.
If no one stands up against them, the danger that the “governing body” to be established by the Paris Treaty this December will gradually morph into a dictatorship that uses the proposed “international Climate Court” to put climate skeptics on show trial cannot be simply shrugged off. The rhetoric of hate and threat has become altogether too frequent, too persistent and – the greatest lesson from the Nazi era – too unchallenged.
Mr Skaggs should perhaps read the “University’s” press release before deciding that no offense has been committed. In UK law, threatening or malicious communications that are publicly circulated are a crime. He may wish that that were not so, but I am entitled to take protection from the monsters at the “university”, and I have decided to do so.
It is easy enough for Mr Skaggs to scoff. He has not been on the end of this hate speech for a decade, as I have. And imagine how poor Dick Lindzen must feel, after putting up with a third of a century of continuous malice from the intellectual pymies of the eco-Socialist Left.

Matt Skaggs
Reply to  Monckton of Brenchley
May 20, 2015 9:20 am

Thanks for the quick response, Chris, you’ve given me much to work with. Do you really think that eco-activists are the moral equivalent of Nazis? How do you distinguish between your phrase “nastiest totalitarian bullies” and “hate speech?” Are you aware that the statements “as the danger that an unelected world government will be inflicted upon us at the Paris climate summit…” and “increasingly frequent and public demands that we should be tried and executed for ‘high crimes against humanity’…” pretty much constitute the apex of hysterical conspiracy ideation? You are quite the piece of work, with your inherited money and your self-worship.

Ian Macdonald
Reply to  Monckton of Brenchley
May 20, 2015 11:42 am

Matt Skaggs: Just to clarify, I am an activist. I have in the past campaigned on environmental and human rights issues, so I guess that makes me a greenie of sorts. However, the global warming scare is NOT eco-activism. It is a scam, pure and simple. A scam with a political agenda behind it. We activists should not be wasting our campaigning efforts on this nonsense,
If a few more of my fellow activists (some of whom viciously disagree with me over this, even to the point of threatening to start a fistfight over it!) could see the wood for the trees, that they are being cleverly duped into lending their time and effort to spreading AGW propaganda instead of pursuing more worthy causes, then the driving force behind the scam would be taken away, and it would then collapse of its own accord.

Matt Skaggs
Reply to  Monckton of Brenchley
May 20, 2015 12:35 pm

Hi Ian,
You are preaching to the choir. Based upon what you wrote, it looks like we fit into the same lonely quadrant of the scatter plot showing belief in AGW vs. political alignment. I share your AGW skepticism, you can read the proof of that in my essay published at Climate Etc.
But as for “scam”…what is it with WUWT commenters and conspiracy ideation?

takebackthegreen
Reply to  Matt Skaggs
May 21, 2015 12:42 am

I believe there was a (laughable) published paper that addressed that very question…

richardscourtney
Reply to  Monckton of Brenchley
May 21, 2015 1:30 am

Matt Skaggs
You ask

what is it with WUWT commenters and conspiracy ideation?

People who frequent WUWT know that a coincidence of interests is usually more powerful than any conspiracy.
“Conspiracy ideation” pertaining to climate realists is a nonsensical idea promulgated by the most lunatic fringe of believers in man-made global warming.
Richard

Venter
Reply to  Matt Skaggs
May 20, 2015 9:01 am

Matt Skaggs,
The Australian climate scientists’ ” death threat ” ploy was ridiculed here as it was manifestly false, a lie. It was a completely made up and deliberately dishonest scare story intended t draw sympathy and it drew ridicule that it deserved. I suggest that you read up on that topic and what actually transpired before passing comments which show your ignorance on the specific subject.

Matt Skaggs
Reply to  Venter
May 20, 2015 9:23 am

Venter,
Dunno if you are an American, but we have a saying that is considered “Cowboy Wisdom:”
The first thing to do when you find yourself in the bottom of a hole is to stop digging.

Jay Hope
Reply to  Venter
May 20, 2015 3:46 pm

‘Inherited money’, Skaggs, that says it all………..Jealous???

Reg Nelson
Reply to  Matt Skaggs
May 20, 2015 10:00 am

There was no evidence to support the Australian climate scientists claims. These “threats” were never reported to the police. The scientists were asked to provide the emails and they refused.
In this case, the proof was displayed both on the “University’s” website and reported in the press.
Two entirely different situations.

Venter
Reply to  Matt Skaggs
May 20, 2015 10:12 am

Matt Skaggs,
The ” cowboy widsom ” is characterised by your bullshit. I have specifically stated facts of the so called Australian climate scientists’ ” death threats ” . That was a lie created by them. You dd not bother to read the thread you referred to which appeared here some time ago in WUWT and yet you quoted it without knowing what the thread was about. When I pointed out that you had your facts wrong, you are spreading BS.

rogerknights
Reply to  Matt Skaggs
May 21, 2015 5:01 am

RSC:
Here’s how it was put here about 4 years ago:
“A conspiracy is unnecessary if a carrot will suffice.”

Dodgy Geezer
May 20, 2015 8:16 am

Do we have a ‘hate-speech’ law in the UK yet? I would have thought this would count…

Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
May 20, 2015 8:27 am

Dodgy Geezer, as often, is on point.
The Justices of the Peace Act 1361, at s.1, prohibits conduct likely to besmirch the peace.
The Public Order Act 1986, at s. 4, makes menacing communications an offense.
The Malicious Communications Act 1988, at s. 1, also makes menacing or malicious communications an offense.

htb1969
May 20, 2015 8:52 am

There was a time when a man’s reputation was his life. In those days, you could only conduct business based upon reputation. Nobody would buy/sell to/from you without knowing your reputation. People would proudly display letters of reference as proof positive of their character, honor, and station in society. Any transgression could mean public embarrassment, and even the most trusted of friends could shun you for fear of being associated with you. Losing one’s reputation could cost one his living, his family, his friends, nearly everything.
So important was this notion that any challenge to one’s character could draw a demand for a duel. People would quite literally risk their lives in order to maintain their reputation by challenging the offending party to a fight to the death. Formal procedures and laws about how this was to be resolved were in place. Refusing to fight meant the assertion lacked conviction, and this in turn could cast doubts on the reputation of the accuser.
While this whole notion seems antiquated, there was an important societal benefit. Any accusation of dishonesty or attack upon character carried with it the weight and gravity of knowing how quickly and seriously such a charge could escalate. People therefore rarely attacked each other’s character, making society much more civil. And when such rare character challenges did occur, it was a serious matter which drew the attention of all concerned.
It is important to note the laws governing speech and the other freedoms were crafted in such an environment. People then valued their reputations and civility that these were underlying assumptions about societal behavior when the constitution was drafted. Unfortunately those assumptions no longer hold true. People no longer cherish their reputation on the same level as their life, and the absolute decay in character and civility is a result. One need only look at the political process to see the tragedy in this.
I applaud Lord Monckton’s attempt to demand civility. If you wish to take issue with his position, hold a civil debate and win your points in the arena of ideas. Assassination of character is a cowardly way to try to win a scientific debate, and particularly troubling for an institution of higher learning. Any amount of shame and ridicule he can heap upon them is only right and just. Good luck to you, sir.

Mickey Reno
May 20, 2015 9:01 am

Milord Monckton, although I’m a big fan, I hope you can dial back the worst of your more hyperbolic tendencies. This is NOT a credible death threat.
Furthermore, we should all welcome the use by alarmists of the term “denier.” As I once explained to Phil Plait and his silly sycophants, such smears will taint the smear mongers far more than it will impugn their targets. They didn’t listen, of course.

Reply to  Mickey Reno
May 20, 2015 1:27 pm

For evil to triumph, it is necessary only that good men do nothing. – Burke
The price of liberty is eternal vigilance. – Burke
This is true liberty, when free-born men
Having to advise the public, may speak free.
Which he who can and will deserves high praise.
Who neither can nor will may hold his peace.
What can be juster in a state than this? – Milton, Areopagitica
Bear in mind that Germany could have been stopped before World War II and wasn’t, because the appeasers said there was nothing to see here, move along, move along. And bear in mind that those who now say we should appease the political inheritors of mid-20th-century totalitarianism are as dangerous to the future of humanity as the appeasers then. It is so easy, so alluring, so fashionable to do nothing until it is too late. Well, not this time. The context within which the “university’s” menaces were made is a grave one. The environmentalists extremists mean to change the law to execute blameless scientists, just as the eugenicists of Germany and the Lysenkoists of the Soviet Union did. They are saying so, with increasing frequency.
In the United Kingdom, like it or not, such talk, if accompanied by threats, insults or inaccuracies, is against the law. If the law says the “university” is within its rights, so be it: but at least the “university will have had to face the fact of the offense its press release caused, and of how very close it came to a humiliating punishment. And if that humiliating punishment is administered – even if it is no more than a binding-over to keep the peace – the law will have put down a marker: don’t try to stifle the academic liberty and freedom of speech of genuine researchers with whose results you disagree.

Manos
May 20, 2015 9:13 am

I understand the gut reaction most readers have at fighting back at the warmists. Skeptics cheer that the laws are being used against their enemies. It reminds me of the reaction many had when OJ was found innocent. As someone who believes that the freedom of speech is just as important as knowing the truth about global warming (much to do about nothing), I can’t support this form of lawfare. We should be working to dismantle a system that allows our critics to be shut down because that system is much, much, more likely to be used against those with a hated minority opinion. Us.

Reply to  Manos
May 20, 2015 1:18 pm

And the first step in dismantling that system is to ensure that when the merchants of hate speech cross the line into law-breaking the law comes along and stops them. Manos’ argument is very similar to those that were put forward time and time and time again by the appeasers in Britain and throughout Europe before World War II. Have we learned nothing from their failure to stop Germany while there was still time, and for their endless statements that those making death threats didn’t really mean it or didn’t matter? Enough is enough.

Manos
Reply to  Monckton of Brenchley
May 20, 2015 2:24 pm

In 1995, Prince Charles famously prevented a book from being published that was about his personal life. That book was published in the US. Other famous works of art have suffered censorship in the UK, from Gilbert and Sullivan, Ulysses by James Joyce, Animal Farm by George Orwell, The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith, The Rights of Man by Thomas Paine and many others. Most of these books were banned because they offended elite sensibilities.
Clearly student art made in bad taste does not hold the asestic value of Ulysses. But the issue here is the same: a member of the peerage is using the power of the government to shut down speech that is critical of him. Censoring speech usually just draws more attention to the speech. This is known as the Streisand Effect. It’s already working. None of us at this site would have heard about the tombstone if there hadn’t been a criminal complaint made.
So while I support the work that Lord Monckton has done on climate change, I find his attitudes on speech to be foreign and unenlightened. I suspect the disconnect is due to the differing values of the English upper class and strong anti-authority attitudes in the States. I’m reminded of the French diplomat who asked a farm hand in Texas where his master was. The farm hand replied, “He ain’t been born yet.”

takebackthegreen
Reply to  Manos
May 21, 2015 1:33 am

Monckton: Please listen to Manos and hear what he is telling you.

John Whitman
May 20, 2015 9:14 am

Monckton wrote,
“And if you are tempted to cite Godwin’s “Law” to the effect that he who calls his opponents Nazis has lost the argument, let me cite Monckton’s Law in return: those who cite Godwin’s Law confirm ipso facto that they are active supporters of today’s Fascists.”

– – – – – – –
Christopher Monckton,
Johnny (moi) really likes that!
John

Berényi Péter
May 20, 2015 9:37 am

I am fond of this Queen’s peace thing from 1361.

Reply to  Berényi Péter
May 21, 2015 1:16 am

The Justices of the Peace Act 1361 is a model of what legislation should be. It describes a general principle – the king’s or queen’s peace – and leaves it to the common sense of the courts in each age and circumstance to decide whether an action, such as that of the “university”, is a breach of the peace. So different from today’s Talmudic approach, with every last sub-clause piously intended to provide for each particular individual circumstance, and instead each sub-clause creating a loophole through which the ingenious may wriggle.

climatereason
Editor
Reply to  Berényi Péter
May 21, 2015 1:34 am

It is worth remembering that Cambridge University was already old by the time of the 1361 Act having been established in 1209-six years before Manga Charta.
Their libraries are a treasure trove of ancient records and such material-together with Scientific papers-enable people such as myself to reconstruct historic English Temperatures drawing on work done before us by such greats as Hubert Lamb
The scholars of 1209 would not be phased by todays climate having experienced many warm years themselves. 1208 is recorded as a drought and a warm dry summer whilst a flood in 1209 gave way to another warm dry summer which required the deepening of the wells in parts of southern England according to manorial records.
tonyb

John Whitman
May 20, 2015 9:52 am

Monckton wrote,
“[. . .] I do not deny the existence of climate change, which has, after all, been happening for 6000 or 4.5 billion years, depending on your point of view. I do not even deny that Man may have some as yet unquantified but probably insignificant and even net-beneficial influence on the climate.”

– – – – – – –
Christopher Monckton,
Nor do I deny it. And I concur with your assessment of the anthropogenic effect on climate due to burning fossil fuels.
John

May 20, 2015 10:00 am

Just fyi:
The only thing Godwin’s Law says is that the longer a thread goes on, the more likely it is that someone will mention ‘Nazis’.

John Whitman
Reply to  dbstealey
May 20, 2015 10:20 am

dbstealey on May 20, 2015 at 10:00 am
– – – – – – – –
dbstealey,
Godwin’s law is intellectual comic book stuff.
Is there a Stealey’s Law?
There are two Whitman’s Laws,

Whitman’s First Law is that the longer a thread goes on, the more likely it is that some will initiate namecalling another commenter a troll.

and

Whitman’s Second Law is that the longer a thread goes on, the more likely it is that someone will initiate a discussion on religion.

What do you think of Whitman’s Two Laws?
John

Reply to  John Whitman
May 20, 2015 10:23 am

John,
Good. But the first one’s too easy. ☺

Verified by MonsterInsights