My one-on-one meeting with Bill McKibben

UPDATED 6/8/15 (comment added by Bill McKibben, see end of article) About a month ago I got an e-mail from Bill McKibben telling me that he would be in my town to do a presentation on June 5th. He wanted to know if he could meet with me and just sit down over a beer and talk about things. I jumped at the chance. This photo below was taken yesterday, June 5th, at the Sierra Nevada Taproom in Chico, CA just before 6PM PDT after I had a two hour conversation with Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org.

mckibben-watts-06-05-2014
Bill McKibben at left, Anthony Watts, at right

One of the most interesting things about Bill McKibben is that he has always been civil and courteous to me unlike some others that are on the other side of the climate debate aisle. So, I didn’t think twice about meeting him because I knew that despite our differences we would likely have a very interesting and productive conversation.

My prediction came true. We had conversations that spanned everything from stories about our families and how we grew up to the current debates over climate and energy. We also spoke of the personal challenges that each of us face due to who we are and how we are perceived by others.

I didn’t make any recordings and I didn’t make any notes, I also did not tell anyone I had a time of this meeting and I don’t think Bill did either. I really didn’t want to because the last thing I wanted was to have someone come along and disrupt it. As I mentioned to Bill that some of the local environmentalists have what I would describe as a “severe hatred” of my position on climate change and because I have the to temerity to dare write about it. In fact, he was going to be addressing a number of environmentally oriented people right after our meeting at an event cosponsored by our local alternate radio station and the Butte Environmental Council. I suggested to Bill that perhaps he should mention that we had a pleasant and productive meeting to see if a “groan” might erupt from the audience. He said he would but I have not heard back from him yet as to whether or not my prediction came true.

Bill and I both had a couple of beers and we shared a dessert all the while chatting away as if we’d known each other for years. Essentially we have, but we just never met in person before.

Below are a few highlights that I remember from our conversation.

What we agreed upon:

We both agreed that tackling real pollution issues was a good thing. When I say real pollution issues, I mean things like water pollution, air pollution, Ocean plastics pollution, and other real tangible and solvable problems.

We both agreed that as technology advances, energy production is likely to become cleaner and more efficient.

We both agreed that coal use especially in China and India where there are not significant environmental controls is creating harm for the environment and the people who live there.

We both agreed that climate sensitivity, the response to a doubling of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, hasn’t been nailed down yet. Bill thinks it’s on the high side while I think it’s on the low side neither of us thought the number had been correctly defined yet.

We both talked about how nuclear power especially Thorium-based nuclear power could be a solution for future power needs that would provide a stable base electrical grid while at the same time having far fewer problems than the current fission products based on uranium and plutonium.

We both agreed that the solar power systems we have put on our respective homes have been good things for each of us.

We both agreed that there are “crazy people” on both sides of the debate and that each of us have suffered personally at the hands of some of the actions of these people (you know who you are). We both spoke of some of the hatred and threats that we have endured over the years, some of which required police intervention.

We both agreed that if we could talk to our opponents more there would probably be less rhetoric, less noise, and less tribalism that fosters hatred of the opposing side.

We both agreed that we enjoy the musings of Willis Eschenbach on WUWT, and we spoke about his most recent essay describing the self-regulating mechanism that may exist due to albedo changes in the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ).

We both agreed that it would be a great thing if climate skeptics were right, and carbon dioxide increases in the atmosphere wasn’t quite as big a problem as we have been led to believe.

What we disagreed upon:

Climate sensitivity was the first issue that we disagreed about. While we both thought the number has not been nailed down yet, Bill thought the number was high, while I thought the number was lower such as the kind of numbers we were getting from the recent climate sensitivity analysis of Judith Curry and Nicolas Lewis. I spent a fair amount of time explaining to Bill how I believe, as do many others, that the effect of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere is now approaching saturation point, such that a doubling of CO2 from this point forward might not be as catastrophic rise problematic as we have been told.

Bill seems to think that carbon dioxide influences along with other man-made influences have perturbed our atmosphere, which he considers “finally finely tuned”, enough to create some of the severe weather events that we have witnessed recently. He specifically spoke of the recent flooding in Texas calling it an “unnatural outlier”, and attributed it to man-made influences on our atmospheric processes. I pointed out that we only have about 100 years or so of good weather records and that we don’t really know for sure what the true outlier bounds are for such kinds of events. For example I told him of the great 1861 flood in California, followed by an exceptional drought within a few years. At the time, both events seemed like fantastic outliers. I also spoke of studies that have been attributing more extreme rainfall to the effects of cities.

And there just doesn’t seem to be any significant trend as this graph shows:

Global Precipitation, from CRU TS3 1° grid. DATA SOURCE

[Willis Eschenbach writes] As in all of the records above, there is nothing at all anomalous in the recent rainfall record. The average varies by about ± 2%. There is no trend in the data.

As does this one:

https://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/09/us-rainfall-events-trend.jpg

Bill also seem to think that many other weather events could be attributable to the changes that humans have made on our planet. He was quite sincere about this belief and cited many examples of events he witnessed or saw the aftermath of. I could tell that his perspective was one of empathy as were many of his concerns. But I came away with the impression that Bill feels such things more than he understands them in a physical sense. This was not unexpected because Bill is a writer by nature, and his tools of the trade are to convey human experience into words. I can’t really fault him for feeling these things and expanding on them but I did note he seemed quite resistive to factual rebuttals because they didn’t assuage the feelings he harbored.

For example I tried to explain how the increase in reporting through cell phones, video cameras, 24-hour cable news, and the Internet have made severe weather events seem much more frequent and menacing than they used to be.

Bill and I disagreed about the usefulness of computer models and I pointed out how models have been diverging from the measurements. Bill seemed concerned that we have to act on the advice of the models and the people who run them because the risk of not doing so could be a fateful decision. I pointed out that mankind has been quite adaptable and resilient, and thrived on warmer periods of Earth’s history than cooler ones, while he seemed to think that we are more fragile especially when it relates to crop production then one might think.

A few other points that we discussed:

Bill and I talked about how government can sometimes over-regulate things to the point of killing them, such as some of the problems I had with the California Air Resources Board and my attempt to start an electric car company in 2008. He was surprised to learn that electric cars in California have to be emissions tested just like gasoline powered cars, instead of simply looking into under the hood and noting the electric motor and checking a box on a form. He laughed all the way through my tales of woe trying to deal with that insane bureaucracy, and was quite sympathetic.

I told Bill that up until recently I had trusted (but considered misguided) the climate scientists at NOAA/NCDC, but with the recent publication of the Karl 2015 paper and some of the data manipulation shenanigans that I witnessed, I no longer have that trust. Bill responded with he doesn’t know those people but he believed that Dr. James Hansen had integrity. I asked Bill that if the people at NOAA/NCDC had the same integrity he believed Jim Hansen has, why would they have to adjust data that had been previously considered okay, and why would they not publish data from the most state-of-the-art Climate Reference Network in our monthly and yearly US. State of the Climate reports, but instead rely on the old and problematic surface temperature network that is full adjustments, assumptions, and biases – none of which exist in the Climate Reference Network? He didn’t have an answer.

Bill and I both lamented how some people perceived us on opposite sides of the aisle. He was annoyed that some people see him as an “idiot”, while I spoke of my annoyance of being called a “denier” when I don’t deny that the climate has warmed; I just don’t think it’s as big a problem as some others do. I can tell you this: I don’t think Bill McKibben is an idiot. But I do think he perceives things more on a feeling or emotional level and translates that into words and actions. People that are more factual and pragmatic might see that as an unrealistic response.

Bill was amazed at my ability to keep WUWT going all these years without having any budget, sponsor or funding. I explained to him, as I have many times to readers that doing this is little more than an extension of all my years in broadcasting. In broadcasting we never allow for “dead air”; we always have to keep fresh content going and thanks to the help of many people who contribute their time for moderation, in the form of guest articles, and in the form of comments I am able to keep this enterprise fresh and relevant. Bill says he reads every day and I took that as a compliment.

In closing:

I offered Bill the ability to inspect what I was going to write about our meeting before I published it. He declined saying it’s okay, that he’ll just comment on whatever I write.

All in all it was a good meeting and while we might fervently disagree on some (but not all) issues, I can say that Bill McKibben was a pleasant individual to talk to and that I could count him among one of the more friendly people in the climate debate.


 

UPDATE: 6/8/15

In comments Bill says that he really isn’t for nuclear power of any kind. I got the impression that he was against conventional fission reactors, due to the problems and costs, but because he voiced no strong opinions to me about Thorium power,( that Jim Hansen also agrees with me on) I got the impression he was open to such new technology. Apparently, he isn’t. His comment is reproduced below:

Just a couple of points

1) It doesn’t actually bother me when people call me an idiot–I’m used to it, and it’s always possible it’s true

2) I don’t think thorium or cold fusion or anything like it is the future of power; I’d wager all things nuclear are mostly relics of the past, in no small part because they cost like sin. But the point I was trying to make is that the new fact in the world is the remarkably rapid fall in the price of renewable energy. That solar panels cost so much less than they did just a few years ago strikes me as a destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view

3) Sierra Nevada beer is even better fresh out of the tap at the brewery than it is in a bottle

I had a fine evening at the Masonic Hall in Chico following with a large crowd of local environmentalists, celebrating the week’s many big divestment victories. For the record, I mentioned my drink with Anthony and no one hissed or groaned. A few did chuckle.

 

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P. Wayne Townsend
June 6, 2015 8:04 pm

Anthony, I cheer on you and McKibben for doing the good and civil thing. Perhaps this small step can help others make steps toward civility.
I did wonder how long it would be before the Texas floods would be added to the repertoire of those listing the consequences of CAGW. Living here in Dallas-Fort Worth I was curious about our flood history and my dear wife found these two enlightening webpages.
The first webpage is interactive showing the previous high flood marks in Dallas and in Forts Worth (separately) compared to the downtown levies. http://trinityrivertexas.org/trinity_fla/swfs/worst_floods.swf
Clearly the 1908 flood stands head and shoulders above all others in Dallas (including this years, though it is not illustrated.) Downtown Fort Worth did not flood this year as clearly it has in 1922, 1949, and 1989.
If we just take the pre-1950 floods, (those before the IPCC says CAGW began) this flood is within the natural variation presently known.
The second webpage is the Army Corps of Engineer “Dallas Floodway Timeline”. http://www.swf.usace.army.mil/Portals/47/docs/PAO/DF/PDF/Dallas_Floodway_Timeline_1908-2013.pdf
Among the interesting tidbits of all the various horrific floods (see the pictures and descriptions) is that the downtown Dallas levy was built in response to the 1908 flood to withstand an “800-year flood”. Since the 1908 flood would barely be held by today’s levies we can assume that 1908 was at least a 500-year flood. Again, nothing like it has been seen since so everything afterward, including this year, falls within natural variation.
Bottom line — There is no reason to believe that this year’s floods as they occurred in Dallas-Fort Worth are anything out of the ordinary. I suspect the same could be said for all other areas around Texas.

David Springer
Reply to  P. Wayne Townsend
June 7, 2015 8:52 am

I called what happened the Texas Pineapple Express. I watched all those fronts live on local radar approach and pass either over or around me like a cars on a train. They all blew in from southwest to northeast on fronts that occasionally stretched to Ohio. It happens predictably when there are large warm areas in the Pacific. The other way our droughts in south and central Texas get cured is rain bands from hurricanes. There haven’t been any of those in quite some time now. Probably a decade since any stretched a hundred miles inland to Austin.

June 6, 2015 8:13 pm

A little bit tangential but, since it came up, is the plastic soup problem real or another piece of phony environmental BS? Has anyone seen it?
Bill may be surprised to know that many posters on here are actual real environmentalists and, since I spend most of my life developing clean processes for chemical manufacturing, I number myself in that category, not to mention my weekends and vacations appreciating nature.
Cleaning up the plastic soup is something I could get behind, but I can’t even be bothered to Google it anymore, given the tsunami of lies that will most likely fly from my screen

TonyL
Reply to  philincalifornia
June 6, 2015 10:27 pm

I take it that you mean the “plastic sea” out in the middle of the North Pacific. I recall reading a MSM article about a ship that went on a cruise to take data and samples out in that sea. Perhaps it was as recent as last summer, I do not recall. The ship had the usual collection of researchers on one hand, and environmentalists looking for a scary story on the other. When the ship got on station, it was revealed that the plastic particles were were all in the sub-millimeter to micron range, all well dispersed through the water column. Sample collection involved the collection of very large water samples and careful filtering. The plastic was obviously well on it’s way to being degraded back to infinity. The enviros were shocked and amazed at the reality. The propaganda they studied had led them to believe the “plastic sea” was a large scale floating waste dump so thick a ship could barely sail through. The enviros were sore disappointed that there were no photo-ops, and no story of the apocalypse to bring home.
It can not help but to remind one of a notorious cruise to Antarctica to observe the destruction of the ice sheets there. The ship got trapped in sea ice instead, and needed much maritime aid to escape. In a rarely seen modern day magic trick, the “researchers” who largely caused the crisis, were magically transformed into “tourists” who had nothing to do with it.

Reply to  TonyL
June 7, 2015 3:02 am

A link to this failure in finding the plastic sea would be greatly appreciated, if you have one. Thanks in advance!

Reply to  TonyL
June 7, 2015 8:22 am

Right Tony, that’s what I was talking about. There was an article on WUWT a few years back where it was called “plastic soup” and that stuck in my memory. Thanks for the update.
Maybe Mr. McKibben could give a brief update on what he thinks the status of this issue is right now from his perspective.
I would also be interested in hearing how one brain could hold two hugely dissonant thoughts at the same time, namely:
1) 350 ppm CO2 in the atmosphere is a worthy goal to aim for
2) 402 ppm CO2 in the atmosphere causes massive flooding in Texas
I suspect that the answer is that Mr. McKibben doesn’t believe either.

Yirgach
Reply to  TonyL
June 8, 2015 3:20 pm

A large Wiki article on the plastic garbage patch in the Pacific.
A lot of info on the disintegration and assimilation into the food chain or the polymers.
Doesn’t sound too good, but a lot of it also sounds like hand waving.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Pacific_garbage_patch

M Seward
June 6, 2015 8:15 pm

It is somewhat encouraging to see that Bill McKibbon is still capable of a civil and even friendly chat over a beer with someone of opposing views.
Am I extrapolating or is it conceivable that when ‘the pause’ becomes ‘the downturn’ over the nex 5 – 10 years that Bill will drop his head in his hands and, shivering with self scahdernfreud, admit that he got it horribly wrong, that he projected the shortcomings and faults of western society to some sort of satanic curse that would destroy the planet, and ring Anthony up and say “I am so sorry, you were right, I let my emotions guide me. BTW, I might pop over to your way, you good for a beer again?”
I think I am extrapolating but hope I am not. This whole ‘debate’ is becoming pretty tedious, to be frank. Surely there are more pressing matters we could focus our God given intelligence upon.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  M Seward
June 7, 2015 3:32 pm

On the other hand, there are still Cargo-Cult believers in the South Pacific.

Russ R.
June 6, 2015 8:26 pm

Very refreshing Anthony & Bill. If only everyone could be so respectful.
Kudos to you both.

masInt branch 4 C3I in is
June 6, 2015 8:34 pm

[snip – over the top -mod]

Reply to  masInt branch 4 C3I in is
June 7, 2015 8:24 am

Indeed it was mod, but I did learn a lot from it from a historical perspective.

Juan Slayton
June 6, 2015 8:35 pm

A good read. And n the interest of further civility, perhaps “weepy” could be added to the moderation trigger list. I cringe whenever I see it.

June 6, 2015 8:40 pm

“Beware of altruism. It is based on self-deception, the root of all evil.”
— R. A. Heinlein

AntonyIndia
June 6, 2015 8:45 pm

`We both agreed that coal use especially in China and India where there are not significant environmental controls is creating harm for the environment and the people who live there.`
The above is only true for PR China. India, which produces one a fifth of China´s CO2 emissions has most of its coal power plans stalled in courts because of Green groups quoting Indian environmental laws.
If numbers really count here @WUWT this should be valid also for Asian data,

June 6, 2015 8:46 pm

On my view, McKibben is just another twisted, emaciated fanatic projecting his self-loathing on the whole of humanity.
How, exactly, he earned my “respect”? What did he do but preaching pure evil?
Some of the commenters here seem to be obsessed with asking for “respect.” The more you ask for it, the less you get. Respect must be earned.

takebackthegreen
Reply to  Alexander Feht
June 6, 2015 9:00 pm

Solution, meet problem.
If you call your opponent evil you destroy the possibility of a peaceful resolution. It is rarely justified.

Reply to  takebackthegreen
June 6, 2015 9:44 pm

There is no “peaceful resolution” of a robbery.
Non-resistance to evil is resistance to good.

takebackthegreen
Reply to  Alexander Feht
June 7, 2015 5:44 am

Nonsense. “Evil” is a religious/philosophical concept, not a defined and measurable property. If he’s your idea of evil, well… nevermind.
The man is wrong. He may use nonscientific argument and tactics. But so are you. He doesn’t seem motivated by evil. He believes he is doing good. He just needs to be educated. Maybe his reaching out is a sign that his mind is set to open. Mr. Watts may have planted the seed.
What is your goal? You won’t change a single person’s mind by calling them evil or idiotic.

Reply to  takebackthegreen
June 6, 2015 9:59 pm

P.S. Not to mention the fact that McKibben himself calls all skeptics (and not only skeptics — all who don’t share his religion) evil by default.
Who and what are you talking about? Think before posting.

takebackthegreen
Reply to  Alexander Feht
June 7, 2015 6:04 am

Thanks for the suggestion. I’ll try that next time.
I believe condescension was the favored rhetorical style of Feynman. People respond well to it.

David A
Reply to  takebackthegreen
June 7, 2015 6:58 am

Evil is, IMV, not merely an abstract concept. Thomas Jefferson said “Government is a necessary evil.” Jefferson was alluding to power. Not the power of individual liberty, but group power over OTHERS, in most any form,, religious, corporate, or Government. In individuals this evil is expressed in theft, assaults, rape, murder, etc.
Was Bill asked why he blew up children in a video?
It is a fair question, and not inflammatory. The video was inflammatory and not the mark of a
“Gentlemen” . The phrase, “The road to hell is paved with sincerity” does have an appropriate application,
I would have liked to see this question respectfully but directly asked, perhaps at he end of the conversation, as it is always best to understand those who wish to blow you up, but still it should have been asked.

takebackthegreen
Reply to  David A
June 7, 2015 1:38 pm

I don’t really know what to call it, without looking in a dictionary. I just know it’s not definable to a standard, measurable or observable… all of those things scientists love…

Doug S
June 6, 2015 8:52 pm

Good stuff, laughing out loud!
Anthony, you are a man of great discipline and charity.

patmcguinness
June 6, 2015 9:07 pm

“He specifically spoke of the recent flooding in Texas calling it an “unnatural outlier”, ”
Here in Texas, we call that ‘weather’.
And a mixed blessing; havoc was caused and many people impacted but the land is green and our lakes are now full.

mairon62
June 6, 2015 9:10 pm

This really is a morality play that has nothing to do with “science”. The priests of the enviro-left claim the moral high ground by fiat simply because they “care” more than you do (Those were real tears!). Just ask them. And there you are, driven back on your heels, to answer their charge as to “why” it is that you don’t. You’ve already lost a fight that you didn’t even know you were in. It’s the “disney-fication” of reality where 2-dimensional photos of fuzzy bears and foreboding smokestacks win the day. “Dirty” coal is bad because the producers are driven by greed and profit; not “care”. In this world, pollution isn’t the by-product of producing electricity it’s the whole point. So, now the stage is set. With the velvet glove of “care” fitted firmly to the iron fist of government force, the EPA will smite the evil, cartoon villains of pollution. Just wait to you get the bill.

June 6, 2015 9:21 pm

I can’t go along with this. I used to live in Vermont and I have seen first hand the nutty things Bill has done and said because he thinks that the weather has changed in his backyard. That may not make him an idiot, but sure the heck doesn’t make him smart. He once lead a discussion of global warming that started with the congregation singing “Amazing Grace” and then no discussion or questions about the science was allowed, I strongly suspect because Bill quite clearly doesn’t know any of the science. But he sure believes in the church of global warming.
He once help organize an art show outside side of The Helen Day Art Center in Stowe Vt, where children and adults too, drew pictures and wrote poems to mother earth telling “her” how sorry they were for what was being done to “her.” Most everything the that people who drew these pictures and wrote the poems, thought was being done to “mother” were in fact not happening. I am sorry, but that event was an idiotic event. Now, one doesn’t have to be an idiot to do idiotic things, but if one constantly does idiotic things one very well might be an idiot. At the very least doing such crazy things doesn’t lead one to conclude that the person doing them is smart.

George Devries Klein, PhD, PG, FGSA
Reply to  Tom Trevor
June 6, 2015 9:47 pm

Do you think it was the cold winters in VT that makes for this bizarre behavior? Or was it smoke inhalation from the wood stoves?

Reply to  George Devries Klein, PhD, PG, FGSA
June 7, 2015 6:51 pm

I remember once around 2005-7 Bill planned a big global warming event on the Stowe bike path for a day in May or maybe late April It was abnormally cold then, and we had a big snow storm. The event went on as if there was nothing odd about holding a global warming event in May with 2 ft of snow. Naturally they just said global warming causes cold. But Bill built his entire career out of saying it was warmer in his backyard than it was in the 1970s. If you don’t want be thought of as an idiot then try not to do or say idiotic things. Claiming that warmth causes cold without any proof sounds totally idiotic. If you want to talk about a scientific subject, then learn the science, If you know the science then don’t talk about just about the facts that support your belief, talk about the facts that don’t support it. Anything thing else makes you sound like an idiot. I have yet to see one fact that makes me believe that Bill is not an idiot. The fact that his writing ability got him a job at Middlebury College does nothing at all to make me think he isn’t an idiot. Writing skill is mainly the ability to turn a phrase it has nothing at all to do with intelligence. There are far too many total morons who write for The New York Times, they can all turn phrases, but they rarely can report the truth, or report a truly in depth article, using a lot of words is not the same as being in depth.

Ossqss
June 6, 2015 9:21 pm

Thank you both!
There is always hope……
Hope doesn’t happen without communication.

Reply to  Ossqss
June 6, 2015 9:48 pm

Communicate with the hungry predator as much as you wish.
Fat lot of good it will do to you.

June 6, 2015 9:28 pm

“catastrophic rise problematic ”
My speech to text software makes these sorts of errors too.
Should this have been “catastrophic or as problematic”?

Editor
June 6, 2015 10:09 pm

Anthony, many thanks for your account of the meeting. Well written, well lived, well done all ’round.
w.

michael hart
June 6, 2015 10:14 pm

Ask him to meet you in Versailles next time. December, perhaps?

Evan Jones
Editor
June 6, 2015 10:24 pm

Excellent.

Another Scott
June 6, 2015 10:56 pm

“In broadcasting we never allow for ‘dead air'” The words “dead air” echoed in my mind a few times when I read them – if you are ever guilty of dead air you will have at least 3-4 people let you know immediately by popping in the booth and saying “dead air”, even if they heard someone else say it to you milliseconds before…

Kev-in-Uk
June 6, 2015 11:47 pm

I personally would like to believe there is ‘good’ in everybody – sometimes buried under cynical or self-serving intentions, etc – but there nonetheless. However, when people such as Bill, on the opposite side, offer some form of dialogue – I naturally become suspicious. I don’t want to knock his efforts, but I am still suspicious.
Clearly, this guy is more of an emotive promotor of the cause, rather than an active contributor (in the scientific analysis/questioning kind of manner). Just thinking back to the exploding 350.org rubbish makes you remember the highly active (and presumably well funded) socio-political ‘moulding’ intentions of this type of organisation and the alarmist violent rubbish it presented.
The primary issue here is obviously his ‘feelings’ and ‘beliefs’ versus the skeptic stance based on the ‘science’ appraisal (or in fact the lack of science!). I don’t really care how bad it looks to the greens that I don’t believe their propaganda – or their precautionary requirements. Without the necessary correct and reasonably well proven science to back up their beliefs – they are nothing more than a semi-religious cult.
It is no different to TV adverts. How many folk buy this or that due to a TV advert? We know many do! What type of person takes advertising on trust? But here’s the real point – What kind of person makes a TV advert using knowingly false information? Do you blame the idiot who ends up ‘trusting’ the advert – or the fraudulent maker of the advert – or indeed, both? See – I blame the advert maker, because if he/she is using that position to falsely advance his/her position (or sales, whatever) and take advantage of ‘less able’ folk – that is really no different than mugging an elderly person in the street and demonstrates a lack of ethical responsibility!
McKibbens undoubted niceness and emotive position is no justification for false presentation and the ‘cult’ intimidation. So, yeah, he probably is a nice guy – but until he educates himself (scientifically, I mean) to properly question and challenge the stuff he is ‘told’, then he is probably being ‘used’ just the same as the people the 350.org propaganda aims to reach! Sad, really.

R. Shearer
Reply to  Kev-in-Uk
June 7, 2015 5:48 am

Good commentary.

rogerthesurf
June 7, 2015 12:52 am

If McKibbon operates on a empathy scale maybe someone should explain to him what will happen if or when the crazy attempts to lower anthropogenic CO2 to pre 1990 levels takes effect.
As an economist I know attempting the above will make the great depression seem like a love fest.
30% unemployed , not as much as one would think maybe, but still people starved.
If a government wants to depress an economy, just do what the greens and McKibbon want us to do. Its almost like a manual of how to kill an economy. Will kill people too, starting from the poorest and working its way up.
Cheers
Roger
http://www.rogerfromnewzealand.wordpress.com

Amatør1
Reply to  rogerthesurf
June 7, 2015 2:44 am

If a government wants to depress an economy, just do what the greens and McKibbon want us to do.

Think about that for a second. Why are these things happening?

Reply to  Amatør1
June 7, 2015 8:33 am

…. because some believe that this will be a success story ?
…. and when it isn’t, hey ho, it will be someone else’s fault.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  rogerthesurf
June 7, 2015 3:38 pm

Which great depression are you speaking of? The one in 1929, or the one we’re in currently, masked by the only-game-in-town stock market bubble?

June 7, 2015 1:59 am

More such meetings would be a good thing. A frenetic agitator and a calm thinker sitting down together is remarkable. Both are highly motivated and influential people within their own worlds, and for them to try to find common ground strikes me as a healthy development. Well done to them both.
I am particularly impressed by Bill McKibben taking the initiative to suggest the meeting. He has gone up in my estimation.
Some good comments in the discussion, especially those by ‘Crispin in Waterloo’ who is working to reduce or prevent some further harm being caused by the 350.org.

June 7, 2015 2:04 am

I sure hope this turns out better than the original “Beer Summit”:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/30/beer-summit-begins-obama-_n_248254.html

Reply to  J. Philip Peterson
June 7, 2015 2:37 am

Worth a read – Quote from the original “Beer Summit”:
“Obama said last week the episode could be a “teachable moment” on improving relations between police and minority communities.”
I sure hope this is a bad analogy, and commend Anthony and Mr. McKibben for their heartfelt efforts.

Alastair Brickell
June 7, 2015 3:33 am

Anthony…well done and thanks for some insight into Bill’s thinking. Your civility and willingness to hear both sides is one of the main strengths of WUWT. When both sides can talk like gentlemen there’s still hope for us all. It would be great if you could organise similar meetings with other CAGW promoters.

jamie
June 7, 2015 3:51 am

Bill needs to learn something about hydrology before he call the texas floods a natural outlier. The big storm memorial weekend was only about 7 inch plus one hour storm event. This is about the design 10 yr one hour event for this area. This is normally used for design of smaller drainage areas. Like the channels that run though your development. Something like a major watershed ….ie the blanco river. The design event would be the 100 yr 24 hour event or about 23 plus inches of rain. The 2015 event didn’t even come close to that. I remember in 2011 medina county had a 12 inch one hour event. Although flooding occurred not as bad as this 2015 event.
The reason it had been bone dry on the 2011 and most of the water will infiltrate into the ground. The 2015 event the ground was saturated by a 3 week series of small rainfalls. So almost all the 2015 event ended as runoff. There’s nothing unnatural that occurred this year. I guess he’s reading too much MSM

jvcstone
Reply to  jamie
June 7, 2015 8:40 am

years ago I was able to read through a publication titled Excessive Rain Fall in Texas–
http://www.worldcat.org/title/excessive-rainfall-in-texas/oclc/2561039
Some of the rain fall events it described, mapped, and tracked made the recent event look like a spring shower
JVC

JT in Houston
Reply to  jamie
June 8, 2015 10:51 am

Here is a good history of flooding events in Houston going back to 1837. Nothing new.
http://www.wxresearch.com/almanac/houflood.html