By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley
Mr. Obama’s remarks at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy’s Commencement May 20 demonstrate the extent to which his advisors are keeping him divorced from the facts.

DoD screen shot
The bulk of his speech was devoted to what is now becoming more and more obviously a non-problem: “the challenge … that, perhaps more than any other, will shape your entire careers – and that’s the urgent need to combat and adapt to climate change.”
Some facts. In the 11 years 2004-2014, the rate of global warming taken as the mean of the three terrestrial datasets was one-twentieth of a degree. The ARGO ocean dataset shows warming of one-fortieth of a degree. The mean of the two satellite datasets shows no warming at all. Subject to formidable uncertainties, the ARGO database gives perhaps the best guide to the underlying warming rate. None of these real-world measurements is the stuff of what Mr Obama called “a peril that can affect generations”.
Next: “Climate change is real”. Well, yes. So is the M31 galaxy.
The question is whether it’s a threat. On the evidence to date, the answer is No for global warming, and Yes for M31, which already occupies ~ 3 degrees of arc in the sky, making it bigger than the moon (but it won’t hit us for 4 billion years or so – much like manmade global warming at the present rate). [UPDATE: recent findings show the ‘halo’ of the galaxy to be even larger]

Next: “Our analysts in the intelligence community know climate change is happening. Our military leaders — generals and admirals, active duty and retired — know it’s happening. Our homeland security professionals know it’s happening. And our Coast Guard knows it’s happening.” Me too! Me too! The question is how fast it’s happening (not very), and how much it is to do with us (not much) and whether it will get worse (no) and whether it will be cheaper to act today than to act tomorrow (a unanimous No from almost every economist who has written a peer-reviewed paper on the subject, and even from the IPCC).
Next: “The planet is getting warmer: 14 of the 15 hottest years on record have been in the past 15 years.” No. 14 of the 15 hottest years since 1850 have been in the past 15 years. So what? The “n out of n+1 years were the hottest evaaah” is how babies do statistical trends. Yes, the planet is getting warmer, but at a glacial and unthreatening rate. The medieval (1400 AD), Roman (300 BC), Minoan (1400 BC), Old Kingdom (2250 BC) and Holocene (4000-8000 BC) warm periods were all warmer than today. Yet here we all are.
Next: “Our scientists at NASA just reported that some of the sea ice around Antarctica is breaking up even faster than expected. Not exactly surprising, given that at present it has reached the greatest extent for the time of year observed in the 35-year satellite era. Why did Mr Obama not mention that (or any) fact, by way of balance?
Next: “The world’s glaciers are melting, pouring new water into the ocean. Over the past century, the world sea level rose by about eight inches. That was in the last century; by the end of this century, it’s projected to rise another one to four feet.” Actually, most of the world’s glaciers are in Greenland and Antarctica. There are 160,000 of them. Most of them have never been visited, measured, or monitored by Man. And the rate of sea level rise according to tide gauges shows little acceleration compared with the past 150 years. The laser-altimetry satellites, the only ones that purport to show accelerating sea-level rise, have inter-calibration errors that exceed the sea-level rise they purport to measure. The GRACE satellites showed sea level falling from 2003-2008 and only showed an increase when an entirely artificial “glacial isostatic adjustment” was added to make the results conform. The Envisat satellite, during its eight years in operation from 2004-2012, showed sea level rising at a rate equivalent to just 1.3 inches per century. And why would we expect more, given the fact that the sea is barely warming?
Mr Obama talked of climate change as “the most severe threat” that “will impact every country on the planet … a serious threat to global security, an immediate risk to our national security. And, make no mistake, it will impact how our military defends our country. And so we need to act – and we need to act now.” No, we don’t. The evidence just isn’t there.
Then we get the “D” word: “Denying it, or refusing to deal with it, endangers our national security. It undermines the readiness of our forces.” No, it doesn’t. The mean rate of warming on the terrestrial datasets since 1979 is 0.14 degrees. On the satellite datasets, 0.11 degrees. In the oceans, we don’t know: the measurement method that immediately preceded the ARGO network, the XBT network, showed ocean cooling and had to be adjusted to make it fit the story-line. Same with the ARGO network, which originally showed cooling and had to be adjusted. Even then, it only shows warming at a rate equivalent to a quarter of a degree per century.
These adjustments to the sea temperature records, like just about every other adjustment ever made to the terrestrial or ocean networks, have always been in an ever-upward direction. The probability that so many measurements on so many different systems over so long as a century (for the terrestrial records) and a third of that (for the satellite records) and a third of that (for the ARGO record) would all have erroneously understated global warming is as near nil as makes no difference.
Next: “Confronting climate change is now a key pillar of American global leadership. When I meet with leaders around the world, it’s often at the top of our agenda – a core element of our diplomacy.” So much more congenial than dealing with real problems, like the murder of Christians in Muslim war zones, the trafficking of children by the million to compensate for the distorting effects of the one-child policy in China, the subsidies by Russia to anti-fracking groups in Europe to keep the gas price artificially high, the stupefying expansion of the U.S. national debt under Mr Obama, the failure of the U.S. Coastguard and border farce to control her own borders, the abandonment of millions of poor people to substandard health care thanks to “Obamacare”, the exaggerations about the supposed “threat” of climate change …
Next: “The effects of climate change are so clearly upon us. It will shape how every one of our services plan, operate, train, equip, and protect their infrastructure, their capabilities, today and for the long term.” No, it won’t: not once one foreign-born occupant of the White House is replaced by another less scientifically illiterate.
Next: “Rising seas are already swallowing low-lying lands, from Bangladesh to Pacific islands, forcing people from their homes. Caribbean islands and Central American coasts are vulnerable, as well.” No, on all counts. In Bangladesh a site survey by Professor Nils-Axel Mörner showed that the only loss of sea shore was caused by erosion after the natives grubbed up mangrove trees to make way for shrimp farms. Sea level was actually falling there. Surveys of Pacific islands show no sea-level rise for long periods – in the Maldives, none for 1500 years. Corals, after all, grow to match sea-level rise.
Next: “Globally, we could see a rise in climate change refugees.” In 2005 the U.N. said there would be 50 million climate refugees by 2010. When there weren’t, a Professor Christina Tirado said in 2011 it would happen by 2020. It won’t. Betcha.
Next: “More intense droughts will exacerbate shortages of water and food, increase competition for resources, and create the potential for mass migrations and new tensions. All of which is why the Pentagon calls climate change a threat multiplier.” Hao et al. (2014), publishing the most comprehensive survey of global land area under drought, found that there had been little change over the past 30 years, and the change had been in the direction of less land suffering drought.
Next: “Severe drought helped to create the instability in Nigeria that was exploited by the terrorist group Boko Haram.” But the IPCC, in its special report of 2012 on extreme weather, and in its 2013 Fifth Assessment Report, says one cannot yet ascribe such individual events to global warming. And that is particularly true given that the area of the globe under drought is in decline.
Next: “It’s now believed that drought and crop failures and high food prices helped fuel the early unrest in Syria, which descended into civil war in the heart of the Middle East.” Same applies. There’s no evidence that particular droughts are attributable to climate change, particularly when the incidence and prevalence of drought are both somewhat declining worldwide. And the doubling of world food prices in recent years was chiefly attributable to taking millions of acres out of growing food for people who need it and using them to grow biofuels for clunkers that don’t.
Next: “Around the world, climate change will mean more extreme storms.” No, it won’t. Extreme storms are caused not by “more energy in the system because of climate change”, but by temperature differentials between adjacent regions of the climate system. Those temperature differentials will decline if and when global warming resumes, certainly reducing extra-tropical storminess and arguably reducing it in the tropics too. No surprise then, that the Accumulated Cyclone Energy Index has shown the combined frequency, intensity, and duration of hurricanes and other tropical cyclones to have been at or near the lowest level in the satellite era over the past five years; there have now been seven or eight years without a major hurricane making landfall in the U.S., the longest hurricane deficit in more than a century; and even the IPCC admits that there has been no particular increase either in tropical or in extra-tropical storminess to date.
Next: “No single weather event can be blamed solely on climate change. But [blaming a single event on climate change] Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines gave us a possible glimpse of things to come – one of the worst cyclones ever recorded.” The weather, like the cricket, will keep setting new records regardless of whether the world is getting gently warmer, gently cooler or not changing at all. Besides, we know that Haiyan and other recent extreme-weather events, such as Sandy, were not caused by “global warming”, for the good and sufficient reason that for more than 18 years there has been little (terrestrial datasets), a smidgen (ocean datasets) or none at all (satellite datasets). That which has hardly happened is far less likely to have caused Haiyan or Sandy than the natural and mathematically-chaotic variability of the climate.
Next: “Climate change means Arctic sea ice is vanishing faster than ever. By the middle of this century, Arctic summers could be essentially ice free.” Not that again. Al Gore said in Bali in 2007 that the Arctic would be ice-free by 2013. Nope. The accident-prone Vicky Pope (what is it with Popes and climate change?) of the accident-prone Wet Office said in 2009 that all the Arctic ice would be gone by 2014. Double Nope. So now it will all be gone by 2050. Any advance on 2050, anyone?
Next: “Climate change, and especially rising seas, is a threat to our homeland security, our economic infrastructure, the safety and health of the American people. Already, today, in Miami and Charleston, streets now flood at high tide. Along our coasts, thousands of miles of highways and roads, railways, energy facilities are all vulnerable. It’s estimated that a further increase in sea level of just one foot by the end of this century could cost our nation $200 billion.” But that’s not much more than the previous century’s established, pre-global-warming rate of sea-level rise. And has no one told Mr Obama of the tectonic subsidence of the South-East coast of the United States?
Next: “In New York Harbor, the sea level is already a foot higher than a century ago – which was one of the reasons Superstorm Sandy put so much of lower Manhattan underwater.” Now, given that sea level rose 8 inches globally in the last century, following a long-established rate of rise, there were bound to be some places, depending on local tectonic displacements, among many other factors, that would see a little more sea-level rise than others. So what? Sandy was not caused by climate change in any event: it was an unusual confluence of three storms from different directions in exactly the wrong place. And Sandy would have done just as much damage had sea level been a foot lower.
Next: “Around Norfolk, high tides and storms increasingly flood parts of our Navy base and an airbase.” Regional subsidence again. On only one measure – the poorly inter-calibrated laser-altimetry satellite series – has there been any “acceleration” in the rate of sea-level rise, and even that modest “acceleration”, suspiciously, occurred precisely in the very year when the satellite altimetry record commenced, suggesting that it was not a real change but an artefact of the altered method of measurement. As noted earlier, the GRACE gravitational-anomaly satellites only show rapid sea-level rise after the addition of a monstrous and unreal “glacial isostatic adjustment”, which was introduced at the very moment when even the official sea-level record was about to dip below 3 mm a year.
Next: “In Alaska, thawing permafrost is damaging military facilities.” And is reopening to agriculture lands not cultivated since the Middle Ages. What’s bad about that? Besides, there was more thawing in the 1920s and 1930s than today. Was that caused by manmade global warming? No.
Next: “Out West, deeper droughts and longer wildfires could threaten training areas our troops depend on.” And that, like so much of Mr Obama’s speech, is a manifestly inappropriate argument from the particular to the general – the fallacy of converse accident, or argumentum a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, as the medieval schoolmen called it – that Aristotle excoriated as one of the commonest among the untutored and sophistical 2350 years ago. Globally, the land area under drought has been declining gently throughout the satellite era. In that context, blaming a regional drought on global warming is unsound.
Next: “Helping American communities prepare to deal with the impacts of climate change: we have to help our bases and ports, as well. Not just with stronger seawalls and natural barriers, but with smarter, more resilient infrastructure – because when the seas rise and storms come, we all have to be ready.” According to Professor Mörner, who has written more papers about sea-level than anyone alive, during a career spanning half a century, sea level will rise this century by 5 ±15 cm – that’s 2 ±6 inches. Not much wall-building needed, then.
Next: “It can be just as important, if not more important, to prevent threats before they can cause catastrophic harm. And [the] only way – the only way – the world is going to prevent the worst effects of climate change is to slow down the warming of the planet.” Which begs the question: What is the ideal global mean surface temperature? Is it the temperature of the Little Ice Age (a couple of degrees below today, when people died of famine because the summers were too cold)? Or is it the temperature of the beginning of the 20th century? Or today’s temperature? Or several degrees warmer than today? Without even addressing that question, there is simply no scientific basis for taking any action on global warming. Another question: Is it cheaper to mitigate today than to adapt the day after tomorrow? The IPCC concedes that adaptation is cheaper than mitigation. So why mitigate, even if the supposed problem is as big as the IPCC profits by having us believe? Mitigation is not the rational economic choice: therefore, the cost of that incorrect choice will fall, as the cost of all such inappropriate economic choices inevitably falls, disproportionately on the poorest.
Next: “Some warming is now inevitable.” And that is just about the only statement about climate change in the entire speech that is more likely than not to be objectively true. But Mr Obama spoils the moment by adding: “But there comes a point when the worst effects will be irreversible. And time is running out.” Well, no, it isn’t running out. Our position is no worse than it was 18 years 5 months ago, because there has been no global warming for that long. The rational economic choice, given CO2 concentration rising to levels unprecedented in 810,000 years, and yet to the nearest tenth of one per cent there is no CO2 in the air at all and far less warming than predicted is occurring, is to wait and see. Indeed, since it ought to be obvious that a few degrees of cooling would be far more destructive to life on Earth than a few degrees of warming, it would make more sense to prepare for the former, which might otherwise cause real harm, than to prepare for the latter, which is now unlikely to happen and would not cause either widespread or sudden harm if it did.
Next: “The world has to finally start reducing its carbon emissions – now. And that’s why I’ve committed the United States to leading the world on this challenge.” There’s no need for any such action. CO2 – not that Mr Obama would ever mention this fact – is plant food. More of it would increase the net primary productivity of all trees and plants, which has grown by 2% per decade in recent decades, thanks to our sins of emission. Yet, even with all the extra CO2 in the air, global temperature is hardly changing. That is why the IPCC has all but halved its medium-term global warming predictions. Rationally, it should have all but halved the long-term predictions too: but that would make it clear to all that there is no manmade climate problem. We are a bit-part player.
Next: “We’re using more clean energy than ever before – more solar, more wind. It’s all helped us reduce our carbon emissions more than any other advanced nation. And today, we can be proud that our carbon pollution is near its lowest levels in almost two decades. But we’ve got to do more.” Wrong on every count. Solar energy fries birds and bats by the million. Wind energy swats them out of the sky. That’s not clean: it’s cruel, and the so-called “environmental” movement looks the other way and cheers as it banks its checks and the birds fall dying at its feet. The cost of so-called “renewables” is an order of magnitude greater than real power, and in most conditions “renewables” cause more CO2 emission than if one generated the power with fossil fuels. Also, real power works all year round. Solar power has been proven not to work at all well at night. Wind power doesn’t work when the wind is blowing too little or too much, which is three-quarters of the time. The poor are the sufferers, for electric power and gasoline are poll taxes. Rich corporations and landowners are the gainers. Strange that the “Democrats” are the ruthless capitalists now, and have no time or care for the poor. And CO2 is not “carbon pollution”. It’s a naturally-occurring trace gas essential to all life on Earth, and trees and plants would be up to 40% more productive, and more drought-resistant, if we could double its concentration. Let us hear no more of “carbon pollution”. Besides, it’s “carbon dioxide”, not “carbon”.
Next: “We have to move ahead with standards to cut the amount of carbon pollution in our power plants.” That childish Al Gore neologism, “carbon pollution”, again. This is not presidential language: it’s baby talk. And no, we don’t “have to move ahead” with any such “standards”. The correct policy would be to abolish the EPA. It is too powerful, too self-serving, too costly, too ambitious for more power, too totalitarian, too anti-scientific, and too partisan.
Next: “Working with other nations, we have to achieve a strong global agreement this year to start reducing the total global emission – because every nation must do its part. Every nation.” This is a reference to the establishment of an unelected, global “governing body” (a.k.a. government) and its associated bureaucracies, including an “international climate court”, at Paris this December. But Mr Obama, at a meeting in Peking in December 2014, unilaterally exempted China from “doing its part”. China decided in its 2000 five-year plan that it would build one or two new coal-fired power stations a [week] from then till at least 2030. By 2003 the first stations came on stream and China’s emissions began rising fast. By 2007 China overtook the U.S. as the world’s largest emitter. Now, just a decade later, China emits twice as much as the U.S., and accounts for half of all coal combusted globally. In another few years, China will emit 40% of the world’s CO2: she is already at 30%.
Next: “The Air Force F-22 broke the sound barrier using biofuels. And the Navy runs an entire carrier strike group – the Green Fleet – with biofuels.” Just one problem with that. As the U.N.’s right-to-food rapporteur, Herr Jean Ziegler, said a few years back, “The diversion of food to biofuels is a crime against humanity.” Why? Because millions of acres that once grew food are now growing inefficient biofuels. The consequence is a net addition to global CO2 emissions, vitiating the original purpose of biofuels. But the still worse consequence is the resultant doubling of world food prices. Yet again, it is the poor who have been hardest hit. Who knows how many millions have died of starvation because – in Haiti, for instance, – even the price of the mud pies made with real mud on which the very poorest subsisted has doubled?
Next: “Our Marines have deployed to Afghanistan with portable solar panels, lightening their load and reducing dangerous resupply missions. So fighting climate change and using energy wisely also makes our forces more nimble and more ready.” The use of portable solar panels by the military has nothing whatever to do with climate change and makes no detectable contribution to reducing it. Besides, the CO2 emissions in the manufacture and installation of solar panels exceed the saving during their short lifespans – typically just five years in the military, and 10-15 years in civilian use.
What is breathtaking about this serially inaccurate and prejudiced speech is that practically every factoid uttered by Mr Obama was either flat out untrue or in need of the heaviest qualification. That the supposed “leader” of the free world should have allowed himself to be so ill informed, and to breach the iron convention that the supreme commander of the United States’ Armed Forces does not, repeat not, preach partisan politics to them, is a measure of how far he has fallen below the necessary minimum standard of political conduct and scientific knowledge and honesty of exposition expected of the occupier of his office. If this speech was the very best that the narrow faction promoting the extremist line on global warming could muster for their mouthpiece, then the skeptics have won the scientific, the economic, the rational, and the moral arguments – and have won them hands down.
Thanks, Christopher, Lord Monckton.
Totally correct, but a little verbose.
Like in Saglieri to Mozart, too many notes.
It’s probably a typo, but I’m sure you meant Salieri.
Saglieri is Salieri in his twilight years.
By the way, for a nice change of pace, may I recommend the true giant among classical composers, Franz Josef Haydn:
It starts with his Symphony 45, I think, AKA “Farewell Symphony”
In all, Haydn wrote over 100 symphonies, and was Mozart’s master in every respect, but Mozart was a Mason.
Steve P,
Thanks for that! I’m always on the lookout for great new music in my life.
Boko Haram was unleashed by Obama’s toppling of the al Qaeda suppressing Ghadaffi in Libya. For Obama to attribute the rise of Boko Haram to non-existent global warming is like Susan Rice blaming the 9/11 terrorist attack in Benghazi on a supposed spontaneous protest against an obscure You Tube video when she and Obama and Hillary Clinton had all just received definitive intel that the attack had been planned by al Qaeda at least 10 days earlier in revenge for the Obama-drone killing of a local al Qaeda leader and to commemorate 9/11. Both are shameless lies to the American people and the world about the most important matters of national interest and national security.
“Don’t blame me. Blame uh…. that guy over there! (who just coincidentally happens to be someone I hate anyway).” This is actually the pre-planned strategy of the Alinsky-communist “community organizing” that Obama was trained to do: make as big a mess as possible and use that mess (in Rahm Emmanuel “never let a crisis go to waste” fashion) to blame the opposition and extort more “gains” for the Alinsky-communist agenda (meaning to make yet more mess). Obama used the Benghazi attack as an excuse to purchase a very expensive advertising campaign in Pakistan attacking American free speech rights. Now he uses the rise of Boko Haram that his policies initiated to attack global warming “deniers.” Free form destruction and attack, based entirely on disinformation and misdirection, as Obama was literally trained to do.
Alec,
Agreed. Blaming everyone else is an art form with him:
http://tpc.pc2.netdna-cdn.com/images/Obama_Excuse-o-meter.jpg
Obama has too many inconsistencies. Where there’s smoke there’s fire:
http://errortheory.blogspot.com/2008/07/new-yorker-nails-maximum-likelihood.html
The US Navy will assault the next cat 3+ hurricane headed for the US mainland with heavy artillery, bunker busters, lasers, tasers – everything in their arsenal (except of course nuclear – after all, they are not stupid).
http://www.au.af.mil/au/ssq/digital/pdf/spring_13/Kiefer_Long_Version.pdf
Mike Maguire,
That is a fascinating report. A sample:
…the cheapest price the Navy has paid for any biofuel to date is $1,080.66 per barrel ($25.73 per gallon). Since 2007, the military has spent $67.8 million on 1.35 million gallons of biofuel, averaging more than $50 a gallon or $2,100 a barrel, and costing the taxpayers $60 million more than if conventional fuel had been purchased (Table 1).
What a waste of taxpayer money. And Obama brags about his “Green Fleet”.
Some folks are getting very rich off the biofuels scam.
Thanks Christopher. The characteristics of Obama’s inner circle are known. But he appoints these folks. So it is his responsibility. We might assume that Coast Guard graduates have studied weather, climate, and oceans. They know, or should know, the President has taken a wrong path.
I’ll add this:
“Out West, deeper droughts and longer wildfires could threaten training areas our troops depend on.”
Where I live, I can hear the sounds when our troops use the Yakima Training Center. At night I can see flashes. Average precipitation on this land is about 7 inches [178 mm] (+/-) per year. The environment is called –
sagebrush steppe
Put the above in an images search box to see pictures of what this sort of landscape looks like. One of the regular occupants of these areas is the sage grouse. The army is more concerned with this than with CO2. See:
http://www.armytimes.com/story/military/2015/04/29/army-protecting-sage-grouse-could-hurt-military/26580367/
What’s this about millions being abandoned to substandard healthcare by Obamacare? I don’t know a single person whose healthcare declined due to Obamacare, and I know a few who were enabled by Obamacare to get health insurance.
Donald, you can count me for one. We lost our medical insurance of many years and could not pay for ACA (no subsides for me, wife is too old and not a USA citizen).
You can add me to the list.
My premiums and deductibles had been going up for about 30% per year ever since ACA law had came to pass. I am now have very expensive insurance with $60 deductibles for doctor visit, $600 for tests and something over a $1000 for emergency room.
i am self employed, so I have no subsidies if any kind, BTW
But in addition to costs, more and more doctors add monthly fees just so you can see them – because reimbursement rates are going down so much.
Donald,
My wife’s healthcare insurance almost doubled under Obamacare. Also, her doctor visits went from $10 to $50, exactly matching the rise in her prescription costs.
I don’t know about ‘substandard’ care. I suspect that is coming. But what we pay for what we get has skyrocketed.
Spoken like a true useful idiot on the latest bogeyman. They keep trying for one to stick and so far….I think with the help of the internet….this one has legs and without nature’s answer to their arrogance and deceit it may have been successful already.
Attitudes like Obama’s are the problem. Climate change is a political battle not a scientific one. A non issue fabricated from opinion with government grant dollars based on severely flawed climate models.
I tell you what people: once the climate change canard is defined as a threat to national security, those that question that assumption will be defined as a threat to national security. And you know what happens to them (at least if your domestic and on the wrong side of the current zeitgeist).
Nothing goofier than American politics. “Foreign-born occupant of the White House”… Really? Jesus. I come here for the science but when you start up with this ridiculous tea-bagger rhetoric it makes it pretty hard to pretend that this is supposed to be a rational argument about facts and science.
Monckton’s stated position is he does not know the truth of where Obama is born. However Obama is the first birther. For over a decade his publicist claimed Obama was foreign born.
With labels like “tea-bagger”, you lost any credibility you might otherwise have had. Take your filthy references elsewhere.
Whoever Obama’s handlers are, are
making him look mighty silly.
Obama is the best example of the progressive Liberal, that is righteous and closed minded.
…and absolutely no sense of humility.
In answer to youir question; “Does the ‘leader’ of the free world really know so little about climate?”
The answer is yes.
What is really disturbing is that this moron was elected twice by an even more ignorant electorate.
Wiind power is great for the coyotes.
Our presidents are not leaders. They are the elected president of the executive branch of our government. It is when they believe they are also leaders that all of them fail miserably. The current one failed sooner and harder than most and is typical of people who don’t know they’re clueless.
+10
The presidency was a rather residual function (as was the function of the federal government relative to the states). The president was an administrator.
The presidency has been artificially promoted to the top of the heap. Now we really have a Cult of the Emperor.
Nothing good will come from this distortion.
“President of the United States” didn’t even make Thomas Jefferson’s short list of what to put on his tombstone.
I am waiting peer-reviewed research that shows the optimum climate for our biosphere. The first question that would naturally flow would be where is our current climate and trend in relation to this finding.
Strangely, nobody seems interested in this vital comparison. Not so strangely, the solutions that are frequently demanded in the most urgent voice, all converge on a socialist worldview: statism, bigger government, higher taxes, less personal liberty, even fewer people. That bigger picture tells me all that I need to know about “climate science”.
For some real-world evidence of climate change, you could point to the wonderful tourist must-see destination at Mesa Verde, the largest national park of its kind.
http://www.nps.gov/meve/historyculture/cliff_dwellings_home.htm
“The cliff dwellings of Mesa Verde are some of the most notable and best preserved in the North American Continent. Sometime during the late 1190s, after primarily living on the mesa top for 600 years, many Ancestral Puebloans began living in pueblos they built beneath the overhanging cliffs. The structures ranged in size from one-room storage units to villages of more than 150 rooms. While still farming the mesa tops, they continued to reside in the alcoves, repairing, remodeling, and constructing new rooms for nearly a century. By the late 1270s, the population began migrating south into present-day New Mexico and Arizona. By 1300, the Ancestral Puebloan occupation of Mesa Verde ended.”
We could turn to Wikipedia to read:
“By 1300 AD prolonged drought had caused the fragile adaptation to collapse and the Mesa Verde area was abandoned. The surviving Mesa Verde people retreated to the south and east.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesa_Verde_National_Park
So we have a national park that exists due to climate change that nobody in his right mind would attribute to human activity.
Elsewhere, we could read how the ancient city of Rome was fed by wheat raised in areas of North Africa that are now desert, but people who scold the rest of us about what we must do right now to address climate change aren’t interested in ancient changes in the ever-changing climate.
Grain supply to the city of Rome
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grain_supply_to_the_city_of_Rome
Or this from the Wikipedia entry on Tacfarinas, who was a Numidian deserter from the Roman army who led his own Musulamii tribe and a loose and changing coalition of other Ancient Libyan tribes in a war against the Romans in North Africa during the rule of emperor Tiberius (AD 14-37):
…
The war lasted for about 10 years (from ca. AD 15 to 24) and engaged four successive Roman proconsuls (governors) of the province of Africa (modern Tunisia), which, although a small part of the empire, was economically vital as the source of most of Rome’s grain supply….
“The direct consequence of the war was the registration of the entire Tunisian plateau for land tax and its conversion to mainly wheat cultivation. The Musulamii and other nomadic tribes were likely permanently excluded from what had been their summer grazing grounds and forced to lead a more impoverished existence in the Aures mountains and the arid zone. The war also probably sealed the long-term fate of the client kingdom of Mauretania, which was annexed in AD 44 by the Emperor Claudius (ruled 41-54).”
From the Wikipedia article on Tacfarinas
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacfarinas
Now that the topmost idiot of the self-styled free-world has drawn our attention to the subject matter of the energy-efficiency of our armed forces, I think that it might be useful to perform a Lomborg style analysis of the cost (energy expended in kilowatt-hours) versus the gains (maybe, in land surface area acquired and held in “area-months”).
I do not have the required data at my fingertips, but I’m pretty sure that we would discover that U.S. territorial gains in Iraq and Afghanistan will turn out to have been phenomenally costly.
Especially when compared to the successes of a budget military outfit such as ISIS.
Of course, the all-time leader in the energy efficiency stakes must surely be Vietcong, who transported their troops and equipment by bicycle whilst America expended phenomenal quantities of energy in it’s failed attempts to bomb them and their bicycles into oblivion.
ISIS have recently taken to travelling by motorcycle, in order to reduce their own carbon footprint whilst increasing the carbon footprint of the drones and strike fighters targetting them from the skies above.
In both these examples the most energy-efficient outfit appears to have made substantial military gains.
Whilst the energy and technologically wasteful side seems to have only exhausted itself in a tragically foolish adventure.
“In war, each side is kept busy turning its wealth into energy which is then delivered, free gratis and for nothing, to the other side. Such energy may be muscular, thermal, kinetic or chemical. Wars are only possible because the recipients of this energy are ill prepared to receive it and convert it into a useful form for their own economy. If, by means of, say, impossibly large funnels and gigantic reservoirs, they could capture and store the energy flung at them by the other side, the recipients of this unsolicited gift would soon be so rich, and the other side so poor, that further warfare would be unnecessary for them and impossible for their opponents.”
– Norman Dixon, in On the Psychology of Military Incompetence
It was the North Vietnamese army, not the Viet Cong, who transported supplies by bicycle from the North to the South. The VC were guerrillas already in the South.
The attempted conventional invasions of the South by the North, the last of which in 1975 succeeded largely due to the oil crisis, however were with fossil fueled armored and thin-skinned motor vehicles, to include diesel and gas-guzzling tanks and self-propelled artillery and tow trucks.
sturgishooper. Thanks for the corrections. I’ll be more careful next time!! My comment was of course, only faux serious. As was the Dixon quote. On the other hand, Obama’s references to the green credentials of P.V. bearing troops and bio-fuelled fighters/bombers were presumably intended to be taken seriously.
It would be hard to come up with satire that was more ludicrous than the speech itself.
Personally, I find that the best way to make war more energy efficient is to ask the all important question: “is this war absolutely necessary?”
That and registering with a tank sharing scheme.
What’s particularly galling to this investor is that the Royal Dutch Shells, the BPs, the Chevrons, the Totals and the Statoils couldn’t care less what policies government imposes. They’ll simply pass through whatever costs arise to the public.
All of them are tired of dealing with continuous harassment by the CO-2 Klimate Krazies and are perfectly willing to go along with anything that relieves them of the annoyance.
If you own shares in these companies, you should insist that managements resist the temptation to surrender to the enviro-nutters.
If you own shares in any of these companies, be sure to vote your proxies against any shareholder proposals suggesting acquiescence to the Enviro-Extortionists.
The list of topics the leader of the free world “Knows so little about” would likely stretch from here to the moon and back.
It has been said that Western leaders used to become more and more obsessed with foreign policy as an escape from domestic political impotence as their political tenure inevitably shuffled off its mortal coil.
It gave them something irrelevant to talk about, something irrelevant to make claims about, even praise from irrelevant foreign leaders (who had exactly the same problems back home). That it was largely removed from the problems that most voters cared about was what provided release from the real problems and pressures of the job.
Climate and weather fits that bill nicely. Certainly in the UK, if you want to have an irrelevant but pleasant conversation with a complete stranger, you talk about the weather.
Well the one scary part of Obama’s speech is that the US military has in fact wasted 100s of billions on plans integrating “global warming” and fantasy future conflicts into its responses at the behest of the same “thinkers” that brought you the EPA and Homeland Security. Joint Chiefs have been pretty much floor mats since the retirement of LeMay. You will notice though that the Navy still resists Solar and wind powered propulsion!
The president’s attempt to fight climate change and extreme weather that he believes is due to man generated greenhouse gases is like fighting an enemy (Nature ) who has nuclear weapons level forces and he only has pitch forks . Does he really think that a 2 % reduction in greenhouse gases generated by man will have any measurable effect on extreme weather events like the number and severity of global hurricanes , tornadoes , snow storms , snow falls , thunderstorms ,floods , storm surges ,droughts , heat waves , cold waves , landslides, volcanic ash, forest fires and changes in ocean currents and levels . If he does, he is in for a big surprise because these events were happening naturally well before there was significant population to generate such greenhouse gases and these events will continue to occur in the future despite this president’s actions..
One of his basic problems is an undefined and open ended mission. What constitutes a safe, acceptable or normal level of extreme weather events that he is trying to achieve? What is “normal “? Is it average weather and over what base and during what time in our history is it based on? Or is it regular, common or standard weather and who defines it for what part of the globe and during what time of the year? How do you distinguish natural extreme weather events from those caused by man if there is even such a thing?
. Instead of leading his nation to adapt to regularly changing and natural major forces beyond the control of man, he seems to be leading the country to even worse situation in the future , by wasting valuable funds and leaving the nation unprepared for what really lies ahead., namely cooler weather during the next 2-3 decades
Obama is an alarmist partly because so many of his followers are alarmists too, so as leader he must get out in front of them. But an equally strong reason is that he, like them, sincerely believes the alarmist template / narrative, especially the purported rebuttals of contrarian claims on sites like SkS. The alarmist story sounds convincing, It has persuaded many warmists that it that the alarmists have said the last word. (The Science is Settled, etc.)
To counter it, Heartland (or somebody) should produce apoint-by-point collaborative collection of counterpoints to SkS’s rebuttals. It should be sent to leading contrarians for their input. There should be several rounds of such reviewing, to ensure thoroughness and anticipate responses. Care should be taken to avoid claiming refutation when only undermining has been accomplished.
PS: Lubos Motl has created such a set of counterpoints, but it needs to be fleshed out and refined.
http://motls.blogspot.com/2010/03/john-cook-skeptical-science.html