Every once in a while a new reporter arrives onto the climate scene that immediately thinks they know everything there is to know about climate, and therefore doesn’t need to interview the people he/she writes about, ask questions of them, research the facts, or get any other points of view to reflect balance whatsoever, because you know, Science! Let me introduce you to Zoë Schlanger.
I direct you to the article with the words “global cooling” circled.
Now if it had been just some other blog or some minor local newspaper I would not have paid any attention to this because what was written recently by Ms. Schlanger was so laughably bad it merits ignoring it in such venues. But, unfortunately she writes for Newsweek where they’re supposed to require a modicum of “high-quality journalism”, as they advertise to their readers:
This all came about because science writer Michael Bastasch picked up my article Despite attempts to erase it globally, “the pause” still exists in pristine US surface temperature data and expanded on it at The Daily Caller with: America’s Most Advanced Climate Station Data Shows US In A 10-Year Cooling Trend.
That article on The Daily Caller got picked up by the Drudge Report where it was a top billed article for about 36 hours giving it a hugely wide circulation. And as we know when such things happen people who believe they have a duty to “crush” dissenting views, such as Matt Ridley recently pointed out about how a principal (Rob Honeycutt) of the antithetically named website “Skeptical Science” pushes such labeling:
Rob Honeycutt and his allies knew what they were doing. Delingpole points out that Honeycutt (on a different website) urged people to “send in the troops to hammer down” anything moderate or sceptical, and to “grow the team of crushers”. Those of us who have been on the end of this sort of stuff know it is exactly like what the blasphemy police do with Islamophobia. We get falsely labelled “deniers” and attacked for heresy in often the most ad-hominem way.
And labeled “deniers”, we were. Schlanger writes in her article: (bold mine)
The author quotes Anthony Watts, a former meteorologist who runs a blog dedicated to climate change denial. For the graphs on which The Daily Caller article focuses, Watts used monthly temperature data from the U.S. Climate Reference Network (USCRN) from 2005 to 2015. The USCRN is a system of temperature monitoring stations around the country, managed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Watts plotted the average temperature data from those stations over 10 years on a graph and found an almost-stable trend line that indicated slight cooling. This, he writes, “clearly” shows that a “‘pause’ or ‘hiatus’ exists in this most pristine climate data,” pointing to the much-referenced argument in “skeptic” circles that there has been a global warming “pause” in recent years.
Gosh, “dedicated to climate change denial”? I guess she didn’t bother to read my FAQs or the masthead on my About page:
About Watts Up With That? News and commentary on puzzling things in life, nature, science, weather, climate change, technology, and recent news by Anthony Watts
Maybe she never noticed that I carry almost every press release about climate, even though I might disagree with the findings. Maybe she never noticed that with WUWT’s broad global reach, those findings often get a wide distribution.
Maybe, while she’s thinking “denier”, she also missed how I tell readers about my solar power project on my home, my electric car, and my energy and water saving upgrades to my home in her zeal to label me as “dedicated to climate change denial”. After all, I’m sure the life of a twenty-something aspiring writer living in New York City who just graduated from college two years ago must be a whirlwind of social nirvana – so apparently there’s no time left to research people you write about or ask them questions. Maybe she’s also missed my writings where I make it clear that I agree that there’s been warming observed in the last century, that CO2 has a role in some warming (as does a bunch of other drivers). I wrote then:
For the record:
I don’t “deny” climate change or global warming, it is clear to me that the Earth has warmed slightly in the last century, this is indisputable. I also believe that increasing amounts of CO2 in Earths atmosphere are a component of that warming, but that CO2 is not the only driver of climate as some would have us believe. However, what is in dispute (and being addressed by mainstream climate science) is climate sensitivity to CO2 as well as the hiatus in global warming, also known as “the pause”. Since I embrace the idea of warming and that CO2 is a factor, along with other drivers including natural variability, the label “denier” is being applied purely for the denigration value, and does not accurately reflect my position on climate.
Maybe she also missed that I lambast those who think CO2 doesn’t have any effect at all. Yes, she must have missed all those things doing that “high-quality journalism” from Newsweek.
That’s strike one.
Note that I circled the phrase “global cooling” in the graphic above showing Schlanger’s title on Newsweek. I’ll point out that the phrase “global cooling” does not appear anywhere in my article on WUWT, nor in the Bastasch article on The Daily Caller. It is important to note that the use of the phrase “global cooling” is a construct known as a “straw man argument“, and it only appears in Ms. Schlanger’s article so she can easily knock it down. Both my article on WUWT and Basatsch’s article on The Daily Caller focused on pointing out that the temperature record (and slight cooling trend) was only about the contiguous United States.
Neither article suggested “global cooling” was observed, nor was there an extrapolation of the U.S. temperature trend to the world. We both pointed out it was a curiosity in a warming world, and that the difference looks to be attributable to the high quality measurement environment and state of the art technology (requiring no adjustments) of the US Climate Reference Network (USCRN).
That’s strike two.
Then there’s the claim of “cherry picking”, the most laughable Schlanger failure of all:
First, in 2005, the USCRN was far from complete. As of January 1, 2005, only 69 of its 114 temperature monitoring stations, or just 60 percent of the ultimate total, had been installed, according to NOAA’s Howard Diamond, who is the program manager of USCRN. The last and 114th station wasn’t installed until September 2008, which means that comparing the data from 2005 to 2008 with data after 2008 produces a severely lopsided analysis. This is especially important because of the geographic nature of temperature monitoring: Since only stations in certain areas of the U.S. were up and running before 2008, there is a lot of information missing from the averages of those early years.
If Watts had chosen to exclude the data from before the USCRN was complete and start his analysis on, say, January 1, 2009, to the present, he’d actually see “a slightly increasing trend of temperature anomaly data in the contiguous U.S.,” according to Diamond, as shown in the graph below. “So the same upward trends in temperature data we have seen have been and continue to be the case.” In other words, the U.S. is still getting warmer.
Then she presents a graph from the NCDC plotter tool citing “as shown in the graph below” combining three data sets, but that graph has no trend line.
From the Newsweek article:

Note the caption saying “A graph showing the trends in temperature anomalies monitored by USCRN from 2009 to 2015”. There is no trend line plotted, just the data.
Tell me Ms. Schlanger, how does one determine a trend in a graph without actually plotting a trend line? I find this hilarious that she didn’t take this most basic step, especially since I gave all the tools, including a link to a free trial program, DPlot, in my WUWT article to allow complete replication of my findings. This should have been simple enough for anyone to do, even a journalist.
And the claim of “cherry picking” is doubly hilarious because I plotted the entire available USCRN dataset as published by NOAA, making no choices of any kind on start dates or data omission, while she advocates:
If Watts had chosen to exclude the data from before the USCRN was complete and start his analysis on, say, January 1, 2009, to the present…
The hubris on display here by Ms. Schlanger is breathtaking, especially since it was predicted at WUWT in comments:
That’s strike three.
At The Daily Caller, Mike Bastasch notes in an update to his story, essentially the same issue with her report:
Update: An article published in Newsweek claims TheDCNF misused temperature data “to fabricate an argument that opposes the scientific consensus on climate change.” Newsweek basically argues that TheDCNF used incomplete temperature data to give a “lopsided” analysis of the U.S. temperature record over the last decade. Newsweek then quotes an environmental lawyer who talks about how skeptics like to “cherry-pick” data to disprove global warming. Ironically, Newsweek’s article makes the very error it accuses TheDCNF of making by further limiting the scope of the USCRN temperature record.
TheDCNF’s article uses the full data set presented by NOAA on its online database for the USCRN. Newsweek says it’s “lopsided,” but it was data NOAA saw fit to plot that data on their website even though the USCRN wasn’t fully completed until Sept. 2008. If this data is so lopsided, why does NOAA even bother plotting it? If it’s not reliable, why display it in conjunction with post-2008 data without some sort of disclaimer?
Newsweek also notes that starting USCRN data in Jan., 2009 shows a slight warming trend. That seems true, but here Newsweek is simply doing some “cherry-picking” of their own. For example, the USCRN temperature trend beginning in Oct. 2008 (the month after the final station was added to the network) shows virtually no trend in the temperature, while starting in Nov. 2008 shows a slight cooling trend. Same thing with Feb. 2009. What TheDCNF did was show the entire temperature record for the USCRN instead of “cherry-picking” a start date
Yes, please tell us Ms. Schlanger, why NOAA/NCDC sees fit to include this USCRN data from 2005, for public use, alongside other data sets on the same NOAA/NCDC website? I’d really like to hear that explanation.
And of course, she doesn’t show the graph she’s criticizing in her Newsweek article so that people can make a comparison. Here it is:
That’s strike four.
So since she couldn’t do it herself, let’s help Ms. Schlanger do the trend line. I’ve taken her advice “If Watts had chosen to exclude the data from before the USCRN was complete and start his analysis on, say, January 1, 2009, to the present…” and cherry picked that set of data, and used the DPlot program I provided to plot it.
Of course, Ms. Schlanger’s demand to plot the data in the way she says will show a warming trend is entirely replicable, using the data provided by NOAA and the DPlot program, yet she didn’t do it to demonstrate her own skills while criticizing others.
That’s strike five.
Ms. Schlanger stated in her Newsweek article:
“So the same upward trends in temperature data we have seen have been and continue to be the case.” In other words, the U.S. is still getting warmer.
Well, maybe not. You see if you use the other tool that NOAA/NCDC provides, the “climate at a glance” tool, using the Climate Division Data instead of the pristine USCRN data, you also get a cooling trend for the period set in the controls, shown below:
That’s strike six.
Granted, this is annual, not monthly like I originally plotted, but NOAA doesn’t allow a month by month plot of data, though they do allow specific months. So, if I “cherry picked” a dataset, why would a cooling trend for the Contiguous United States also show up in another data set?
We can go back to the plotting tool provided by NOAA/NCDC and look at that same Climate Division data on a month by month basis:

Here is the data provided by NOAA/NCDC, so that you can replicate these graphs yourself.
USClimDiv-time-series 2005-2015 (Excel worksheet)
The trend line will tell us whether there is a warming, a pause, or a cooling in the last decade in the Contiguous United States using the other dataset, from the U.S. Climate Division:
It clearly looks like there is a cooling for the past 10 years of U.S. Climate Divisions data, and it agrees with the cooling trend seen in the USCRN data for the exact same period.
So, it seems no matter what data set you use, The “pristine” U.S. Climate Reference Network or the U.S. Climate Divisions based on the entire “non-pristine” Cooperative Observer Network consisting of thousands of stations, there does seem to be a “pause” or even a slight cooling in the Contiguous U.S. Surface Temperature Record for the past decade.
That’s strike seven. But, I saved the best for last:
But, what about the claims that I used the wrong start point, i.e. “cherry picking”? As Steve McIntyre famously says: “you have to watch the pea under the thimble“.
Compare these two excerpts from Ms. Schlanger’s Newsweek article:
“…according to NOAA’s Howard Diamond, who is the program manager of USCRN. The last and 114th station wasn’t installed until September 2008, which means that comparing the data from 2005 to 2008 with data after 2008 produces a severely lopsided analysis.”
and…
“If Watts had chosen to exclude the data from before the USCRN was complete and start his analysis on, say, January 1, 2009, to the present…”
Wait, what? The dates don’t match. If the USCRN was complete in September 2008 (as they assert) why would we wait until January 2009 to plot the data? I plotted that too:
Why Yes, there is a slight warming trend as Mr. Diamond and Ms. Schlanger assert. Both climate networks show this.
But, so what? Isn’t this use of a partial dataset cherry picking too? You’d think Ms Schlanger would have suggested starting in October 2008 when the USCRN was commissioned, (see NOAA October 2008 press release here) not when the last station was installed.
Now, all this is splitting hairs, but it still leaves the question of why if NOAA’s collective science team thinks the USCRN data was not spatially representative of the contiguous United States in 2005, the date they allow for the start of data plotting on their own web page, and they cut off earlier dates– why did they allow the public to use it?
Why did NOAA’s Mr. Diamond have to assert that we should not have used it, and why did Ms. Schlanger suggest I instead start in January 2009? I await their explanation but I don’t think either Ms. Schlanger and Mr. Diamond will answer that. In the meantime,readers can draw their own conclusions.
In any event, since the USCRN data from January 2005 and the US Climate Division data both essentially match, their argument about start dates for plotting trends in USCRN (due to it supposedly not being spatially representative of the contiguous USA until 2008) is moot:
It will be very interesting to see how the USCRN data plays out, because right now, just like the satellite temperature record, it shows no warming trend over the past decade or for that matter, several years longer:
So to sum up what we learned about Ms. Schlanger’s article, borrowing from Ms. Schlanger’s subtitle for her story:
The Daily Caller Is 100 Percent Wrong on Global Cooling
Don’t believe everything you see in graph form.
Based on her lack of research skills, I’d modify that to say:
Don’t believe everything you read in Newsweek.
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newsweek doesn’t deserve a capital to its name. It is garbage.
Well, from that graph I’d say they were showing about a 0.5°f drop from 1940 to 1970 (about 0.25°c)
http://woodfortrees.org/plot/gistemp/from:1880/to:1970/plot/gistemp/from:1940/to:1970/trend
Odd. Now they don’t seem to show hardly any drop during those 3 decades. It’s almost like someone hide the decline.
<. <
…”what to do about the blip” (Oh and it was .6 F
and it continued until the late 1970s. So when the alarmist talk about the adjustments of only a tenth or two in the entire record, they are simply wrong.
(I have no idea how a portion of this posted while I was typing)
This plot is for the northern hemisphere only. Even back then Newsweek knew that cherry-picking was important to enhance the message. Global temperatures did not reflect the drop to a sufficient degree.
How many strikes does one get in climate reporting whiffle ball?
I was surprised to to see that Newsweak still existed..
It’s just online now.
cold in tropical Darwin today. Stopped reading Newsweek shortly after the Global Cooling scam articles, complete with diagrams and science expert opinion.
If you publish politically correct but scientifically inaccurate stories, people stop reading. Wasn’t just me.
19C is cold?? At night?? (According to Weather Channel)
I don’t her education history but I am supposing math, graphing, and science where not her strong points.
Nor logical rebuttal. Wouldn’t want her on my debate team.
Remember – many journalists are no longer in the business to report facts; they’re there to “make a difference”, thus aggrandizing themselves.
Didn’t Newsweek run a story saying the Nepal earthquake was because of global warming? Anyhow, here they are pontificating on global cooling in the 1970s. They really should save the ink. http://denisdutton.com/newsweek_coolingworld.pdf
Oops, sorry, did not se this already posted.
Newscheat.
Anthony, one more strike and she would have retired the side for the inning.
Cheers.
She’s a political hack, wading in an area she thought she could provide cover for. It failed.
I quit reading Newsweek years ago. Their news coverage is a shadow of their former self. They became more interested in the social scene on the west and northeast coasts and essentially stopped any in-depth news analysis. They are no longer relevant.
Poor Zoe, she doesn’t even realize that she is being used as cannon fodder by being told what to say and how to say it. She will take the brunt of the backlash, as AW has done, while behind the scene the real warmists will be able to get their misinformation out without repercussion. She will then be cast aside and another dimwit will take her place and the process will be repeated.
Blather, wince, and repeat.
+1.001
This would-be journalist appears to have graduated from NYU. It’s a pity they didn’t teach her that the US isn’t the world, and NY is not the center of the universe.
I have noticed over the years that reporters, in general, have a very weak understanding of math, statistics, and logic. Percentages are especially beyond their comprehension, as illustrated by a Baton Rouge Advocate reporter who once wrote that crime had dropped 106%. I could only surmise that some thieves from previous years had returned some of the items they burgled, resulting in negative crime, so to speak.
At any rate, I think today’s definition of a journalist is an advocate with mediocre or better writing skills. Research? Facts? Why? They may not support what I choose to believe.
I live right next to a major University with international science cred
lots of highly educated folk (excluding me)
all those I have contact with buy the climate change story completely
few, check that, none, could say what IPCC stands for
they call me ignorant
this post is proof of what I’m sayin’
this is one heck of a state of affairs
“Lots of highly educated folk…”
That’s why I prefer the description, “Highly trained,” unless they demonstrate otherwise. 😉
Try ‘Highly Indoctrinated’.
Most of them won’t even realize it’s not a compliment ^_^.
Education: The intended sequence of events is:
Student studies the theory
Student practices the task
Student demonstrates proficiency in the task
Student passes examination, and is awarded certificate
Student gets job on strength of certificate
Student does task for real.
But, educators have realise that simpler and less costly approach exists:
Student is trained directly to pass exam, through memorisation by rote.
Student passes exam and gets certificate
Student gets job on strength of certificate
Student makes balls of job
Student gets promoted out of harm’s way into management role
Student has no idea how to manage, makes balls of that too.
You are correct, sadly. I experience the same and esp from North American friends.
I have a FB page with about 350 people on it. Of those aroundt 200 are university/college educated, professional people inc several teachers, and probably 185 of those are convinced by the AGW theory. They get their ‘info’ from the MSM, mainly left-leaning outlets. Several people have put me off their FB pages for my views on climate, esp when I’ve pointed out that they don’t have a clue what they are talking about since they have done no primary research.
I regularly share posts from here, but I know hardly anyone takes the trouble to read them: they already ‘know the truth’ you see.
Almost all those on my page who left school and went straight into work think AGW is a crock of youknowwhat. And the only PhDs there in a scientific discipline or economics, are equally sceptic on climate. The liberal media has a great deal to answer for: it’s greatly hindering any clarity in this area.
I sympathize with you fully.
I too struggled with facebook. Almost everyday, there would be some popular meme about AGW or renewables. For example, “Scientists in Australia are developing a wind turbine that will be 1000 times more efficient”.
Or the gloriously retarded Solar Roadways scam.
And time and time again, I watched as normally “skeptical” educated people fell, hook line and sinker, for the most inane bullshit, providing that is was pro-renewables or AGW alarmist.
In the end I started to wonder how such people had made the transit from one end of the education system to the other.
Isn’t the education system supposed to inculcate intelligence of some sort.
Or at least, weed out the complete imbeciles?
Something has gone terribly wrong.
I have now abandoned facebook.
I do miss the small number of savvy individuals who kept their bullshit detector switched on.
But. they were a very small minority.
Dear Mrs Schlanger,
You have just been fisked!
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Fisking
“…a point-by-point debunking of lies and/or idiocies.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Robert_Fisk#Fisking
“…savaging an argument and scattering the tattered remnants to the four corners of the internet.”
FD
The global temperature peak of a millennial temperature cycle is shown nicely in the RSS data. The land and sea data sets have been so manipulated as to be unusable.
.http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-JVvSFvACeJY/VYS8i51Cs1I/AAAAAAAAAWw/g-B0x8ouSJg/s1600/may2015trendrss.png
For forecasts of the timing and amplitude of the coming cooling ,methods and supporting data see
see
http://climatesense-norpag.blogspot.com/2014/07/climate-forecasting-methods-and-cooling.html
I think she is too young to have read or too lazy to research the past Newsweek articles on the coming ice age. On the other hand she should be more careful as she has a good chance of one day eating her own words when the hysteria shifts again to the coming of another ice age.
This is what comes out of the current educational system…And then hired at Newsweek. They should change their name to Weaknews or News weak, which would be more fitting.
Dumb play on words, I know, but things are really going down hill if even a political hit on Anthony isn’t done very well. Mz. Schlanger needs to go back to school it seems.
D
And another thing. Big news hires fact checkers. Or they used to anyway. Perhaps they only check facts when the facts agree with the political bent of the news organization. Otherwise, if the “facts of the story” don’t fit their political agenda, they fill their pages with crappola. They have “special” crappola reporters for that, hired just for such purposes.
D
Newsweak need I say more.
News…weak.
Newsweek is pretty much bankrupt so I doubt they can afford competent staff.
Why the hell should only competent people contribute? We need diversity.
A perfect example of the pompous incompetence of NewSpeakand its acolytes.
Good work, Anthony. She deserves to be hided. Maybe she’ll be more prudent in the future (one doubts it). This, and Bob T’s post today, are the kind of thing a real scientist will read, consider, and think on, and maybe do some real work to see if it is thus and so. The ones shouting “denier” will happily march to their meeting with Big Brother – unless we can stop them.
Well if you live in NYC and you are about 19 you should know just about all their is to know about the natural environment. They usually [know] how it goes in climate journalism.
It is way past time that everyone understands that it is not about data, or science or truth. It is about propaganda and they still have the loudest voice.
Result
You entered the following data set:
1.597.13−0.45−1.53−0.75−1.13−2.094.320.45−1.241.262.54−0.57−2.99−0.71.37−3.6−2.362.11−0.63−3.11−2.43−0.81−0.54.54−1.26−0.250.45−0.057.29−2.21−2.622.250.513.5−1.22−1.36−0.841.480.22.92−2.08−0.11.48−1.241.481.53−1.440.85−0.92−1.672.650.050.470.020.21.740.860.59−0.471.470.811.531.380.561.352.450.740.12−1.330.752.182.810.25−0.70.460.661.9−0.46−0.851.312.261.060.25−0.512.18−1.891.240.021.191.30.91.121.770.971.23−1.562.53−0.17−3.651.990.94−0.26−0.712.742.271.341.271.183.1−0.431.011.27−1.13−3.5−0.523.350−1.35−3.58−0.752.182.7−2.163.57
The standard deviation of the data set is:
σ=1.927
Thus, only a 6 degree F variance qualifies as 3 Sigma and of any significance. Only happens, barely 3 times in the last 18 years? DANG, the “Climate Scientists” are such statistical morons! IF they have their precious PHD’s (which they DON’T DESERVE), imagine a mental midget of a writer trying to assess anything rationally!