A review of Steyn's scathing new book about Michael Mann: "A Disgrace To The Profession"

a-disgrace-to-the-profession

Yesterday, I received my advance copy of this book, and after spending about an hour with it, I Tweeted this:

Just received advance copy of book “A Disgrace to the Profession” from all I can say is: Mann, that’s gonna leave a mark!

And today, after spending a full day with it, that statement still holds true.

I remember when Mann decided to sue NRO and Steyn for defamation, and despite all the laughing at the time there was this prescient thought from Dr. Judith Curry:

“Mark Steyn is formidable opponent. I suspect that this is not going to turn out well for you.”

Well, Part 1, or should I say, Volume 1 of that prediction is now in press. It’s a scorcher, hilarity, and a tale of science and politics gone awry all in one.

Steyn realized the word of a political pundit like himself can only travel so far in certain circles, and in a brilliant move, he has gathered a compendium of what other scientists have to say about Mann’s work on the “hockey stick”. And of course, he’s had it illustrated by Josh. My favorite is Mann as Yoda, wielding a hockey stick rather than a light saber, seen in this collage below:

A-disgrace-to-the-profession-collage

The book has twelve chapters plus an introduction, prologue, and a postscript. In it. You’ll find quotes from scientists like this one:

no-no-steyn-book

and this one:

chylek-steyn-book

And there are many, many, more even harsher than that. Such as this one:

mann-curve-steyn-book

The final word of the last chapter goes to Dr. Judith Curry:

curry-styen-book

curry-styen-book-page2

And there’s even a final chapter called:

case-for-mann-steyn-book

…where you can read what the IPCC has to say about it. I’ll give Steyn credit, he strives for some balance here, but there’s just so few positive reviews that he could barely fill that chapter, much like there were no amicus curiae briefs filed with the DC Circuit Court on Mann’s behalf. I suspect many science professionals know what they are dealing with here, but fear coming forward. After all, who wants to be sued by Dr. Mann, and have discovery drag on for years?

I do like the chapter “Mann Overboard!” taken from one of our WUWT headlines by that name.

I quipped at the time this silliness with lawsuits all got started that “a Mann’s got to know his limitations” (With apologies to Clint Eastwood as Harry Callahan). We’ll know soon if any of this has sunk in to Dr. Mann’s understanding of what he is really up against.

So far, Mann’s predictable supporters haven’t weighed in, except for the borderline Harvard man, Dr. Russell Seitz, who didn’t bother to buy the book (Amazon notes “Verifed Purchaser” in such reviews), but has plenty to say about it on Amazon (see below). Like the hockey stick itself, Seitz’s review is done by proxy, not by actually reading it. It’s sad and yet hilarious that this sycophant posted a review for a book that not only he apparently didn’t read, but wasn’t even available yet for shipping!

That right there symbolizes the whole problem of climate zealotry in a nutshell: it’s what they believe is there, and they won’t look beyond their own beliefs to form rational opinions, and so cling to the irrational tribalism that has polarized the climate issue.

Russell-Seitz-steyn-mann-review

I recommend Steyn’s book highly, because it really gets to the heart of the matter about that lack of scientific rigor in climate science that has become a poster child for “noble cause corruption”.

You can pre-order it on Amazon here, shipping starts August 14 15th.

amazon-disgrace-styen
Click to pre-order

The text from Amazon says:

The “hockey stick” graph of global temperatures is the single most influential icon in the global-warming debate, promoted by the UN’s transnational climate bureaucracy, featured in Al Gore’s Oscar-winning movie, used by governments around the world to sell the Kyoto Accord to their citizens, and shown to impressionable schoolchildren from kindergarten to graduation.

And yet what it purports to “prove” is disputed and denied by many of the world’s most eminent scientists. In this riveting book, Mark Steyn has compiled the thoughts of the world’s scientists, in their own words, on hockey-stick creator Michael E Mann, his stick and their damage to science. From Canada to Finland, Scotland to China, Belgium to New Zealand, from venerable Nobel Laureates to energetic young researchers on all sides of the debate analyze the hockey stock and the wider climate wars it helped launch.

After you buy it and receive it, I recommend posting an Amazon review based on what you’ve read, unlike the irascible Dr. Russell Seitz, who apparently posts fake reviews by proxy.

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Margaret Smith
August 12, 2015 5:31 am

I received my copy yesterday and am fully involved in reading it at the moment. Very enjoyable. The infamous graph made me angry on behalf of the real scientists who have been working hard to discover our climate history as part of our general history.

William Astley
August 12, 2015 5:34 am

In reply to:

Adam from Kansas August 11, 2015 at 2:36 pm
Seriously, an entire book devoted to attacking a person, does civility in science exist anymore?

William,
The back drop for this surreal discussion, in response to an astonishing period/amount of scientific hanky-panky, countries are mandating forced spending on green scams that do not work to fight CAGW when the planet is about to abruptly cool (there is observational evidence to support the assertion we are going to experience a Heinrich event.)
There is evidence that the Hockey Stick graph was fabricated. There is evidence to support the assertion that incorrect ‘scientific’ analysis was done purposely to eliminate the medieval warm period, to create a hockey stick temperature rise. The scientific hanky-panky to push the CAGW agenda continues. There is evidence of inappropriate temperature adjustment of current temperature data (last 150 years). There is evidence of hanky-panky in the IPCC work concerning extreme weather, climate sensitivity to forcing, hiding of the fact that planetary temperature warms and cools cyclically correlating with solar changes, economic calculations concerning any warming, predicted future warming, and so on. The hockey stick fiasco is only one of the astonishing long list of fibs, lies, and, untruths done to push CAGW and to justify forced spending on green scams that do not work.
http://www.uoguelph.ca/~rmckitri/research/McKitrick-hockeystick.pdf

I will explain how the study got the results it did, examine some key flaws in the methodology and explain why the conclusions are unsupported by the data. At the political level the emerging debate is about whether the enormous international trust that has been placed in the IPCC was betrayed. The hockey stick story reveals that the IPCC allowed a deeply flawed study to dominate the Third Assessment Report, which suggests the possibility of bias in the Report-writing process.
In view of the massive global influence of IPCC Reports, there is an urgent need to bias-proof future assessments in order to put climate policy onto a new foundation that will better serve the public interest.

http://www.iceandclimate.nbi.ku.dk/publications/papers/pdfs/197.pdf

“A 2000-year global temperature reconstruction based on non-tree ring” proxies by Loehle, C. 2007
Climate histories are commonly reconstructed from a variety of sources, including ice cores, tree rings, and sediment. … ….The mean series shows the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) and Little Ice Age (LIA) quite clearly, with the MWP being approximately 0.3°C warmer than 20th century values at these eighteen sites.

http://www.iceandclimate.nbi.ku.dk/publications/papers/pdfs/197.pdf
http://www.climatechangefacts.info/ClimateChangeDocuments/LandseaResignationLetterFromIPCC.htm

With this open letter to the community, I wish to explain the basis for my decision and bring awareness to what I view as a problem in the IPCC process. The IPCC is a group of climate researchers from around the world that every few years summarize how climate is changing and how it may be altered in the future due to manmade global warming. I had served both as an author for the Observations chapter and a Reviewer for the 2nd Assessment Report in 1995 and the 3rd Assessment Report in 2001, primarily on the topic of tropical cyclones (hurricanes and typhoons). My work on hurricanes, and tropical cyclones more generally, has been widely cited by the IPCC. For the upcoming AR4, I was asked several weeks ago by the Observations chapter Lead Author—Dr. Kevin Trenberth—to provide the writeup for Atlantic hurricanes. As I had in the past, I agreed to assist the IPCC in what I thought was to be an important, and politically-neutral determination of what is happening with our climate.
Shortly after Dr. Trenberth requested that I draft the Atlantic hurricane section for the AR4’s Observations chapter, Dr. Trenberth participated in a press conference organized by scientists at Harvard on the topic “Experts to warn global warming likely to continue spurring more outbreaks of intense hurricane activity” along with other media interviews on the topic. The result of this media interaction was widespread coverage that directly connected the very busy 2004 Atlantic hurricane season as being caused by anthropogenic greenhouse gas warming occurring today. Listening to and reading transcripts of this press conference and media interviews, it is apparent that Dr. Trenberth was being accurately quoted and summarized in
such statements and was not being misrepresented in the media.
These media sessions have potential to result in a widespread perception that global warming has made recent hurricane activity much more severe. Moreover, the evidence is quite strong and supported by the most recent credible studies that any impact in the future from global warming upon hurricane will likely be quite small. The latest results from the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (Knutson and Tuleya, Journal of Climate, 2004) suggest that by around 2080, hurricanes may have winds and rainfall about 5% more intense than today. It has been proposed that even this tiny change may be an exaggeration as to what may happen by the end of the 21st Century (Michaels, Knappenberger, and Landsea, Journal of Climate, 2005, submitted).
It is beyond me why my colleagues would utilize the media to push an unsupported agenda that recent hurricane activity has been due to global warming. Given Dr. Trenberth’s role as the IPCC’s Lead Author responsible for preparing the text on hurricanes, his public statements so far outside of current scientific understanding led me to concern that it would be very difficult for the IPCC process to proceed objectively with regards to the assessment on hurricane activity. My view is that when people identify themselves as being associated with the IPCC and then make pronouncements far outside current scientific understandings that this will harm the credibility of climate change science and will in the longer term diminish our role in public policy.
Because of Dr. Trenberth’s pronouncements, the IPCC process on our assessment of these crucial extreme events in our climate system has been subverted and compromised, its neutrality lost. While no one can “tell” scientists what to say or not say (nor am I suggesting that), the IPCC did select Dr. Trenberth as a Lead Author and entrusted to him to carry out this duty in a non-biased, neutral point of view. When scientists hold press conferences and speak with the media, much care is needed not to reflect poorly upon the IPCC. It is of more than passing interest to note that Dr. Trenberth, while eager to share his views on global warming and hurricanes with the media, declined to do so at the Climate Variability and Change Conference in January where he made several presentations.

August 12, 2015 5:36 am

Reblogged this on gottadobetterthanthis and commented:

Yes, science has a black eye over all things related.

Coach Springer
August 12, 2015 5:50 am

The book should be included in climate education texts from “kindergarten to graduation.” A useful compendium of scientific thought on the subject.

JohnWho
Reply to  Coach Springer
August 12, 2015 1:03 pm
Man Bearpig
August 12, 2015 6:00 am

Duly purchased, now I have to wait for delivery ..

Bruce Cobb
August 12, 2015 6:10 am

Such Big Lies, for such a tiny Mann.

Chuck L
August 12, 2015 6:19 am

When you mess with Steyn
you play with a lighted stick
of dynamite. Boom!

JohnWho
August 12, 2015 6:29 am

Whoa! All the reviews for the book have been “disappeared” on Amazon as of the last few hours with the disclaimer:
“This item has not been released yet and is not eligible to be reviewed.”
Is this standard practice for Amazon?

Reply to  JohnWho
August 12, 2015 6:40 am

Dunno – but I’m a bit pissed off since I did an honest review based on the advance copy I ordered from Mark. Maybe Mann’s little helpers have been at work again.

JohnWho
Reply to  foxgoose
August 12, 2015 7:22 am

Agreed. Advance copies of the book are already “in the wild” and a review such as yours is reasonable.
Geez, the fact that you (and others) have actually seen the book puts you ahead of the absurdities of Russell S.

Aphan
Reply to  JohnWho
August 12, 2015 9:01 am

Lol! Knowing Amazon, since THEY can only sell “orders” at the moment, and THEY want the profits from book sales, they probably figured out that anyone who has a physical copy now could not have purchased it from THEM and didn’t want people reading reviews and hot debate to choose to order it from Mark instead of waiting for a pre-order copy.

Aphan
Reply to  Aphan
August 12, 2015 9:18 am

Out of sheer curiosity, I went to WSJ.com and searched both “Russell Seitz Book Review” and just “Russell Seitz”. Nothing came up. Zip. Nada. How odd…..

JohnWho
Reply to  JohnWho
August 12, 2015 1:06 pm

Unbelievable!
The reviews are back!
I guess it must be August 15th somewhere in Amazon land.
/huh?

JohnWho
Reply to  JohnWho
August 12, 2015 1:17 pm

Ah, but now there are only 12 comments to Russell S’s “review” and many of ours, including mine, are gone.
Strange, those Amazonians.

Reply to  JohnWho
August 14, 2015 11:08 am

Trying looking in your history on Amazon, maybe the comment is there and can be reposted.

August 12, 2015 6:54 am

Excellent review of another great book by Steyn.
I received my autographed advance copy a couple of days ago and am enjoying it immensely.
I encourage everybody to BUY a copy and support Mark Steyn in this vitally important defense of freedom of speech.

Sharon Terrell
August 12, 2015 8:57 am

Concerning the question about using Paypal because of a problem with personal account, I recommend taking cash to Walmart and purchasing a Visa gift card to use as a debit card. You can put up to $500 on the card, no monthly charges, and and they are good for 7 years after activation. Something that can get you through while waiting for an account to become available or for online purchases without making your other account details public.

Gregory Lawn
August 12, 2015 10:33 am

Seldom does anyone win anything of value in a Libel case, other than the attorneys. “Two lawyers will do well in a town where one would surely starve”. Sorry, it is not my quote and I do not know to who to attribute it.
Dr. Mann, if a fraud and it is my belief he is, will be defeated by his science or lack thereof. An excellent disclosure of Mann’s questionable science occurs here and I hope it will continue. No matter the outcome of Mann’s law suit, it will only be a legal decision on the issue of libel, not of itself a refutation of his “science”.

PaulS
August 12, 2015 2:16 pm

“A man’s gotta know his limitations” comes from Clint Eastwood as Josie Wales, but otherwise you are spot-on.

Gary Hladik
Reply to  PaulS
August 13, 2015 10:01 pm

Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry in “Magnum Force”, 1973.

james beam
August 12, 2015 2:49 pm

The “Mann Cards” should come in a set of just 26 — Because he’s playing with half a deck!
Or maybe the other half is Jokers!

August 12, 2015 4:42 pm

Mark Steyn operates in the realm of satire. A huffing and puffing “authority” cannot beat this adversary, especially when he calls himself a “scientist” who creates a graph by data snooping, eliminating real data that “doesn’t work” for his presentation, does sophisticated statistical procedures without asking any statistician to collaborate–Hey I don’t need a statistician on this statistical project.
People should look into Mann’s background. Extremely talented students at Berkeley enter at 16-17, and graduate at 19-20. They get into the top graduate programs in fields of their interests, and earn PhDs at age 23-24.
These students are rare. Less-gifted students graduate at age 21-22 and earn PhDs at age 25-27.
Mann graduated at age 23, and earned his PhD at age 32–attending school full-time.
This is despite having ample opportunity to take AP classes, and college classes in Amherst, MA, to get into college at age 16-17, and if he was brilliant, into Harvard, MIT (home-state schools for him), or Stanford, Caltech, Princeton, Cornell, Columbia, or Chicago.Or Berkeley, but he didn’t get in at age 16-17.
Then, entering Berkeley at age 18, he took 5 years, not 3, not 4 to graduate. He only earned “Honors”, one step above undistinguished, not “High Honors”, “Highest Honors” not “Highest Honors, nominated for the University Medal”, not “Highest Honors, University Medal Finalist,” not “Highest Honors, University Medal Winner.”
Michael Mann graduated-after 5 years, not 4-as one level above no honors.Did MIT, Stanford, Caltech, Harvard, Princeton, Berkeley, Cambridge or one-step-down Cornell, Chicago or two-steps down UCSB, or UCSD take him? No. But Yale did. Yale had ZERO Nobel Physics winners. It only had FOUR NAS-Physics Section members (currently 2). Yale had a third rate physics department.
Berkeley, whose faculty could place every one of their top students into the top-ranked programs, did not identify Michael Mann as a top or even “not our best, but still really good” student.
Yale, a not-top-school in physics or geophysics, also found Mann to be deficient. How do we know this? Postdoc at UMass, as opposed to MIT, Harvard or Stanford.. Also 9 years to get his PhD (not taking time off to do other work).
So at Berkeley and Yale, professors who judged him, judged him to not be altogether that bright.
If Mann disagrees, let him authorize Berkeley to release his grades and evaluations.
I resent Michael Mann’s referring himself as a Berkeley grad. I worked hard to graduate high honors, with another year it would have been highest honors. I graduated hs from a crappy-academics farm town in Cali. How did a dips hit from MA even get into Berkeley?
My spouse from a high-academic hs graduated University Medal Finalist.
As far as I can determine, Michael Mann got a lot of B’s. He can sue me, but that’s what “Honors” means. That’s also what a Berkeley Physics degree without going to Stanford, MIT, Harvard, Princeton, Caltech, Berkeley for your PhD means.

Power Grab
Reply to  lftpm
August 12, 2015 7:19 pm

Fascinating. I remember seeing an Ed.D candidate get denied permission to continue in the program because he was taking more than 7 years to complete it.

August 12, 2015 7:42 pm

How in the hell did he go from writing this to being a warmist troll in 8 years?
June 27, 2008
Climate Wars
The National Interest
Summer 1990
A War Against Fire
By Russell Seitz

The most savage controversies are those as to which there is no good evidence either way. -Bertrand Russell
AT THE TURN of the century, a Swedish Nobel Laureate, Svante Arrhenius, laid the cornerstone of what is popularly called “the greenhouse effect”-that one of the principal gaseous products of fire, carbon dioxide, can absorb radiant warmth and trap it in the earth’s atmosphere. In the hothouse environment of the popular media, this observation has blossomed into the most fiercely debated, and perhaps most widely feared, scientific phenomenon of the day.
As Science magazine observed in a March 30, 1990, editorial: “Virtually everyone, children included, is concerned about global climate change and especially about the greenhouse effect. They have learned of increases in carbon dioxide. They have been told repeatedly that temperatures will increase 9’F. Political pressure is mounting to take action regardless of cost, and to take action now.”
This much is familiar to any observer within reach of the popular media. But what follows is not : “But how good is the evidence, and how likely is substantial global warming? When might it happen? Applying the customary standards of scientific inquiry, one must conclude that there has been more hype than solid facts … Modeling of global climate is largely concentrated on examining effects of doubling the atmospheric content of greenhouse gases. As might he expected, the answers they get are functions of the models they employ. The spread is from 1. 5′ to 5’C; that is, there is great uncertainty. If one examines the subject, one finds virtually unanimous agreement that the models are deficient….What have been the warming effects, if any, of anthropogenic gases? The typical answer is 0.5’C.
But the answer depends on what time interval is chosen. There was substantial increase in temperature from 1880 to 1940. However, from 1940 until the 1960s, temperatures dropped so much as to lead to predictions of a coming ice age. New, precise satellite data raise further questions about warming. From 1979 to 1988 large temperature variability was recorded, but no obvious temperature trend was noted during the 10-year period.’ …A fashionable estimate of the time when doubling of atmospheric CO, will occur is the middle of the next century. But past predictions of energy usage have been notoriously inaccurate.. What should he the national response to the above uncertainties? … Whatever we do should he based on well-thought-out long-range goals. It should not result from a half-baked political response. ‘
–R.W. Spencer and J. R. Christy, “Precise Monitoring of Global Temperature Trends from Satellites , “Science 247 (March 30, 1990): 1558
Almost everything about this statement sits oddly with representations of the greenhouse effect in the popular media. Where Science speaks of conflicting studies and ambiguous results, the popularizers of the greenhouse effect deliver dire warnings with the utmost certitude. Where the one counsels a cautious political response, the other urges instant, even draconian intervention. In the name of the greenhouse effect, some environmentalists are demanding a 30 percent rollback in C02 emissions by the year 2000. They seem oblivious to the enormity of what they are demanding: a war on that most elemental of human discoveries-fire itself.
Why this enormous gap between what is known and what is urged? Why do most scientists lack conviction, where many laymen are full of passionate intensity? To answer, we might begin by way of reviewing a most important aspect of the greenhouse effect-the extent of our ignorance.
Why It’s Not So Simple
THE ATMOSPHERE is among the earth’s most complex dynamic systems: subtle in its chemistry, chaotic in its flow. It interacts with everything from the solar wind to the deep oceans. It is subject to insults great and small, brief and enduring, from men and meteorites, volcanoes and termites, wildfires and algal blooms-a list without end.
The scale of all this dynamism is more daunting still. Despite the burgeoning population of the earth, there’s still a million tons of air per capita. That’s a lot of inertia to work against, at least down here in the lower tier of the atmosphere, the troposphere (where it gets colder as you go up). But further upstairs, far above Everest, in the tenuous reaches of the stratosphere (where higher is hotter), lies only a thousandth part of that atmosphere’s mass. Our individual “share” of the stratosphere weighs about as much as a ten-yard cube of water and is laced with just a bathtub full of ozone. Hence the dichotomy between concern for an ozone layer that, liquefied, would he no thicker than the ink that you’re reading, and the authentic scientific confusion about our capacity rapidly to derange a lower ocean of air that’s comparatively as massive as a stack of bibles, the Apocrypha included.
The atmospheric sciences presently lie in limbo between the Newtonian rigor of classical physics and the realm of the un decidible. It is an uncomfortable time. The range of sincere expert opinion broadens with the complexity of the subject at issue. And at the interdisciplinary extreme–global climate expertise itself dissolves in that most universal of solvents, the theory of complexity.
Just as mathematicians found Kurt Gödel’s rigorous proof of the undecidibility of some formal propositions dismaying, there is presently no joy for atmospheric scientists in having to testify that the answers policy-makers seek are beyond the scope of the available data or the present limits of computational power. Nor is there consolation in the grim realization that their computerized global circulation models have but an ephemeral capacity to predict the future.
They can jump forward to model the climate of the distant future on a “what if” basis, but they can at best conjure up a coarsely realistic picture of global weather that lasts for a few weeks before beginning to disintegrate into gibberish. Even modeling the evolution of a single thunderhead’s birth and death is an absolute tour de force of today’s computer modeling.
By contrast, in reckoning what the whole ensemble of greenhouse gases is up to, we need to know about their transport and interaction with the atmosphere, sunlight, and each other over a range of time scales from microseconds to millennia. We need to measure reaction rates by the score and to ponder the quantitative meaning of feedbacks both positive and negative.
If there were world enough and time, individual atmospheric scientists might achieve a combination of physical and geometric intuition approaching certain knowledge of how the earth will respond in the long run to human intervention. But in practice such polymathy scarcely exists- scientists are reeling in shock at the information explosion they’ve touched off. Some causes are linked uncontroversially to eventual effects, but many phenomena, like the ozone hole, still get discovered, not predicted.
We have as well another major problem. While we have indeed driven carbon dioxide above the historical (hundred-thousand-year) range of its recorded natural fluctuation by about 20 percent (70 parts per million), we have a rather feeble understanding of the paramount greenhouse gas: water vapor. Its clouds fill a tenth of the sky. ts atmospheric concentration is so vastly greater than that of C02 as to obscure its effect. And in turn the rest of our significant effluvia-methane, chlorofluorocarbons (CFC’s), and nitrogen oxides–are dwarfed by the concentration of C02 itself.
It is one thing to understand a “straight-forward” issue like the destruction of stratospheric ozone by chlorine atoms that, being atoms, just don’t wear out. They can take decades to wander back to earth; and in the course of its prolonged residence in the stratosphere, each chlorine atom can slay a long succession of ozone molecules.
This is a scientific commonplace–given a pageful of photochemical reactions, and a few reams of hard data from the Antarctic, the conclusion that emerged was an uncontroversial one. High-flying U-2 and balloon-borne Instrumentation has already caught the culprit chlorine in flagrante reacting with some ultracold aerosols to bleach a hole in the polar sky.
So out of a growing scientific consensus, the 1987 Montreal Convention on the Reduction of Chemical Emissions was convened, and from it came an international protocol on reducing the release of chemicals that can loft long-lived chlorine into the sky. Ameliorating the problem of CFCs was relatively easy-the bill will come to only a few tens of billions of dollars, and the uncertainty factor was resolved to the point of sensible political engagement by” only’ a decade of research. Had CFC emissions continued unabated into he next century, they might have grown into a global problem. The existing local one will likely last for generations. But the Greenhouse Effect is a much rougher customer.
Tracking the Invisible Man
T0 BEGIN WITH, we’re wrestling with not just a dilemma, but the Invisible Man. The temperature records of the last century and a half are by no means geographically uniform and meticulous in their accuracy. Even today’s dense grid of meteorological observations is generally biased toward the land and troubled by the self-heating nature of urban areas. Science cannot offer a firm consensus without uncontroversial data, and the half-degree rise of the last century is neither continuous in its course nor a subject of unquestioned belief.
In recent years, three separate and significantly different scientific accounts of the same century-long record of “average” global temperatures, each peer-reviewed and each with its own set of statistical arguments in justification, have been published. They point up, down, and sideways. This is not the dismissal of a century of data, but rather a caution-the warming trend can only he proved by the data, not by a show of hands. The C02 is there, but has the atmosphere begun to notice?
Some say they are 99 percent sure they can perceive it in the data; some say those who say that are completely out of scientific bounds. Others say they see nothing, and many more that they just can’t tell-both nature’s static-ridden transmission and science’s still-crude receivers make the message far from plain. “What bothers a lot of us is, ” one modeler remarked, “telling Congress things we are reluctant to say ourselves.” Wittgenstein put it better: “Whereof we do not know, thereof we cannot speak.”
As a window for laymen to peer through, Global Change and Our Common Future, published in 1989 by National Academy Press, affords a startling contrast. At one end of the spectrum lies the rhetoric of uncertainty that dominates the hard sciences in the study of global change.
It is exemplified by the admission that it will take decades for a clear greenhouse signal to emerge from the noise of climatic variation-witness the dust-bowl drought of the 1930s and the abnormally high Great Lakes water levels of the 1980s-and by the confession that it will take 500 times more computer power to realistically model the course of the quarter-century to come. As one participant in the forum, which produced Global Change, J.D. Mahlman, noted, “Until such decadal-scale fluctuations are understood or are predictable, it will remain difficult to diagnose the specific signals of permanent climate change as they evolve. ”
At the other end of the spectrum lies the rhetoric of extinction- life scientists confidently predicting the climate-driven disappearance of species over the next fifty years. But the objects of their acute concern are the Norwegian mugwort, the Tibetan dung beetle (Aphodius hoderi), and other struggling refugees from the last Ice Age.
By the volume’s end, it is clear on which side Senator Albert Gore has enlisted: “My purpose is to sound an alarm, loudly and clearly, of imminent and grave danger, and to describe a strategy for confronting this crisis … the horrendous prospect of an ecological collapse. ” He delivered himself of this fine sermon on May Day 1989-the day before the forum started. So much for uncertainty.
No one doubts the existence of a dual trend-CO2 is surely rising. And so must its effect on the trapping and transfer of solar warmth between earth and sky. But global surface temperatures have not risen in lock-step with that rise. Given the ubiquity of water vapor, deciding this issue is rather like asking a panel of tasters to savor the difference between two big urns full of cafe au lait. One urn contains five lumps of sugar, the other six-not an easy matter, except to a diabetic.
Neither sugar’s sweetness nor its palpable metabolic effect is at issue. But it’s not an easy call. So too, scientific perceptions of both where the world is, and the timing of its rendezvous with climatic change, are still in part very much a matter of taste . As is the question of whether scientists from disciplines unrelated to the atmosphere should lend their authority to the promotion of policies that might not prevail on the objective strength-or empirical weakness–of the available evidence. It is a prerogative of the manifesto-writing classes to dragoon as many members as they can of the National Academy of Sciences into signing them (a task too often easier than getting them read).
But the resulting embarras de richesses can he a problem when the signatories outnumber the real experts in the field. The Union of Concerned Scientists got a majority of the membership to sign a declaration calling for a substantial reduction in global C02 emissions by the year 2000. Some members (notably MIT atmospheric physicist Richard Lindzen) were appalled and said so, but they failed to make it onto prime-time television.
Vexation and Videotape
THE MOST important arbiters of the environmental policy debate have accordingly become the public television producers whose products bear the Academy’s imprimatur when the credits roll. They have tools at their disposal to amplify and mute at will the discordant voices within the Academy. In a fair fight, a satellite or a supercomputer doesn’t stand a chance against the editing and special effects studios of New York and Hollywood.
So in terms of political clout, the real centers of power have moved from the locales of computer climate modeling, to the public television stations of Pittsburgh and Boston. We are being shown the planet’s future by design, in color and in stereo. Yet the production designers seldom condescend to listen to scientists arguing, calculating, and changing their minds. Intelligibility, not content, is the criterion the producers value most. Their goal is to fossilize a script on videotape, not to question the agenda it may compel, when it is reiterated like a commercial on good gray public television.
I have yet to see a computer climate model whose screen is framed by a proscenium, with a data display set to Vivaldi’s Four Seasons and an explanatory voice-over worthy of a network anchor. Yet in watching some of the most bizarre examples of video hype on climate change (e.g., “The Atmosphere in Crisis” episode of PBS’ The Infinite Voyage), even as my mind is repelled by what is being said, the hair on my head rises together with the rest of the audience’s when the clouds part and the music blares. This is semantic aggression run riot-sucking the audience into an hallucinatory Charybdis of swirling images of Gaia profaned.
Mere facts cannot prevail over the raw semiotic power of so excellent a medium, even when its masters may be leading us into a future that may be beyond economic repair-a future in which facts don’t count and perceptions of scientific authority can take precedence over mere evidence. I often find myself exhorting atmospheric scientists to concern themselves with this phenomenal mastery, horn of nature television of National Geographic caliber mated with prose worthy of Jonathan Schell. But they just smile ruefully-once was enough-they’ve seen the genre. In it, computer animated conceptions of Venus’s infernal surface vie with stark visions of all-but-airless Mars as alien stand-ins for earthly greenhouse warming and ozone depiction.
Television has little room for doubting scientists. They accordingly know the score. Who, for the sake of skepticism or the honor of the scientific profession, wants to go down in flames like Ceaucescu-locked in the sights of a hostile videocam? The TV crew has got the Maxim gun, and we do not.
So, riding on a wave of videotape, the usage “global warming” is entering the vernacular in the present tense as a mock synonym for “climate change.” If only the public read and knew more, and heard and saw less; if only more scientists (and fewer organizations purporting to represent them) endeavored to inform the electorate’s considerable curiosity-then we might face better odds in protecting objectivity from the heat of the greenhouse debate.
A DISTURBING reality confronts us: A the deliberate creation of a double standard, with one set of facts for internal scientific discourse and another for public consumption. Many who have contributed to it justify their actions by referring to their past diffidence which may have delayed action on ozone depiction. And agonized by the possibility of history repeating itself On C02, some have cast objectivity aside and openly made common cause with the eco-politicians. But this pathology of the sociology of science is not without a remedy. For the power of television to project unchallengeable images of environmental quality, real or imagined, is utterly undone when the public achieves even a minimal level of quantitative understanding; numeracy and skepticism go hand in hand.
In the absence of numbers candidly conveyed, it is all too easy to transmute supposedly quantitative scientific “facts” about the present into a qualitative legal fiction about the future. Popular coverage of the atmospheric sciences tends to neglect the enormous range of concentration (or dilution) of the various gases involved. That concentration ranges from almost 1 percent by volume in the case of water vapor, to hundreds of parts per million carbon dioxide, to 1 part per million methane, to parts per billion-total chlorine. And, finally, down to hundreds of parts per trillion-the individual CFCs.
This eight-order-of-magnitude range lends itself to rhetorical abuse on both sides of the debate. So beware equally of headlines proclaiming a fourfold increase in stratospheric chlorine (it has-from 1 part per billion in 1960 to nearly 4 parts per billion in 1990) or dismissing carbon dioxide with a blasé “Greenhouse a Humbug-C02 up by less than 1/100th of 1 percent!”
This, like “Stratosphere in Crisis–Chlorine Quadruples,” may respectively amuse energy lobbyists and substitute refrigerant salesmen, but it profoundly misrepresents the central problem posed by the interaction of climate and technical civilization.
That problem is deep time–deep not on a geological scale, but relative to the time-scale of politics. It has taken humanity ten generations to push C02 up by a bare 70 parts per million. The previous million years of using fire failed to budge it from its ambient range of fluctuation. The fossil record speaks plainly; as deep as we can drill into ancient ice, there is a clear (but how causal?) linkage of C02 and global climate. What wildfires failed to accomplish in the eons before human evolution, the Industrial Revolution has delivered-the acceleration of the history of our interaction with the very air-a bona fide change in the second most important greenhouse gas. And equally disturbing, it has delivered that fearsome engine of change, the chainsaw.
The drying effect of not-so-rapid deforestation on the climate of islands was noted by Columbus half a millennium ago. So there is nothing subtle or uncertain about regional climate change in Brazil-strip the land of a rainforest that literally makes rain, and suffer sunstroke in the dust .I wish C02-induced climate change were as simple. Clearly, a sharp-toothed carnivore is on the prowl. But we’ve yet to see a full-grown specimen. Are we dealing with Snoopy or Cerberus?
It’s hard to tell- it’s only just a foundling pup, and the question of its diet remains to he wrestled with-it might grow into either. But grow it will-slowly, and for a long while undetectably. One of these centuries, we’re going to have a real dog in our front yard. But what kind? And when? An interdisciplinary consensus on the magnitude of the “greenhouse effect” and its impact on sea levels in the next century won’t come cheap-or soon.
Nobody knows if the synergy of all the ill-defined feedbacks will coincide with high-side outcomes of the many inputs that global systems models require. So some will invoke the presumed prudence of assuming the worst. For others, there is Murphy’s Second Law: if everything must go wrong, don’t bet on it.
Changing the weather on a local scale is categorically a different matter than transforming the climate of the globe. The vast reservoir of CO, locked up in limestone dwarfs the atmosphere’s burden by many, many thousandfold. The geological unleashing of a fraction of it in the days of the dinosaurs created an atmosphere far richer in C02 (and some 5 C warmer) than that of today. The tricky question-how much fossil fuel must be burned to do likewise–has a brief answer: all of it.
The immensity of the world’s reservoirs of coal (like limestone) teaches the disparity of scale between what humanity can do in a single generation and what goes on in the course of geological time. We are but builders of pyramids and hewers of wood, not architects of mountains or choreographers of continental drift. For all the leverage our technology affords us, we are a species that fits into a single cubic kilometer,
with room to spare. In light of the minimalism its editors advocate, the motto of the Whole Earth Catalogue-
“We are as gods, so we’d better get good at it!”-
is stunningly hubristic. But what of the lamentations of those who decry what mischief we can and do see?
Turning Up the Heat
THEREIN LIES the political paradox: what we can perceive, we can endeavor to put right. That scar on the Soviet landscape, the vanishing Aral Sea, bears witness to the deranged power of central planning like the mark of Cain. Yet, the diverted rivers that caused it can he swiftly returned to their courses. But the action of the invisible hand of energy economics upon the world is imperceptibly slow.
Bear in mind the beaver. Without benefit of godhood, its mindless industry acting over eons has transformed the Canadian landscape into a wilderness of lakes. Likewise ,creating a brave new world with an atmosphere transformed by the total depiction of fossil fuel is a labor of generations yet unborn.
We cannot govern the actions of posterity, but we can teach by our example. We can plant trees and stay the hand of mindless deforestation. We can value the richness of biological diversity and recognize the intellectual poverty of sullen indifference to the majesty of nature. But any pretension to oracular foreknowledge of how, over the next quarter century, the earth will respond to our presence lies in the realm not of science but of intuition.
And just as surely, any denial that unrestrained C02 injection can transform the world within five generations lies beyond the pale of both-especially if China’s vast coal reserves are exploited at a per capita rate approaching that of the U. S. today.
Politically, I counsel constant vigilance. The salvation of the world affords an enchanting pretext for those predisposed to societal intervention . They have already raised the abolitionist banner, pointing to the prospect of Bangladesh awash and water skiing down the Mall to the Capitol-a prospect no more likely in my lifetime than nothing happening.
My personal expectation-and I reserve the right to change my mind if the evidence does-runs more to centimeter-per-year rises in sea level and a lot more climatic variability than actual temperature rise in that lifetime.
There is a precedent of sorts, at the periphery of human history, of a temperature change fully as large (5 to 6’C) as even the most pessimistic estimates for the century to come. It happened an eon ago, and its onset was so sudden as to raise the contemporary question of climate responding in an abruptly nonlinear way to humanity’s growth. Yet mankind muddled through the last Ice Age’s death throes and has done rather well since, despite a 100-meter rise in sea levels!
But unlike the regression of the glaciers, a reversal of the course of the Industrial Revolution is not to be meekly borne. An examination of the history of energy policy over the last two decades reveals some unexpected and paradoxical trends in the relationship between environmental awareness and actual emissions of the greenhouse gases.
In the aftermath of the Arab oil shock of the early 1970s, computer models not of climate, but of resource depiction and energy costs, played a major role in determining energy policies. The most egregious projections, immortalized in textbooks by neo-Malthusians like Paul Ehrlich, had the United States running out of natural gas in 1989. Yet they inspired the National Academy of Sciences to commission a massive study with conclusions (promote energy efficiencies and develop coal and oil shale resources) reflecting a belief in continuous energy cost inflation.
At the turn of the century, a coal-fired electrical station that was 8 percent efficient was a state-of-the-art wonder. A solid half-century of progress followed, at a rate of better than a half-percent a year. By the 1960s, such facilities had achieved new-plant efficiencies of over 40 percent. Back then, coal was literally dirt-cheap. But with the coming of the 1974 oil shock, it was assumed that as energy costs soared into the 1980s, market forces would compel heroic efforts to raise the thermodynamic efficiency of such plants to the limits of high technology-a process fuel cost savings would amply justify.
But the cost projections were wrong, and we got the Oil Glut instead. And, courtesy of Earth Day and its aftermath, a draconian regime of sulfur emission control. The enforcement of that regime did two things quite unrelated to acid rain. Installing the control systems reduced the efficiency of existing plants by five whole percentage points, and defunded the development of the next generation of more efficient combustion technology and power-generation systems.
So we are entering the 1990s about 15 % worse off in terms of C02 emission per kilowatt-hour than we were a generation ago. This is pretty close to a worst-case scenario whatever one’s view on the near-term effect of greenhouse emissions: the largest single term in America’s fuel equation-coal-fired electricity-has been running retrograde to progress in materials science and combustion technology for twenty years. Yet both here and in Japan, science has lately begun to deliver the Right Stuff for raising its efficiency-materials able to withstand higher temperatures and stresses for longer times. But they are being applied more to aircraft engines than to power stations.
Together with the realization that energy costs do show a shallow but steady inflationary trend, this suggests that we need not he idle while awaiting newer and more elegant generations of climate models and nuclear technology-or that Holy Grail of applied physics, hot fusion that truly emulates the power of the sun.
So there may indeed be a solution to the profound uncertainty that engenders reluctance when we are offered insurance against C02 bracket creep-at a trillion-dollar premium. Consider a double Scots Verdict: even if the verdict on global warming is not proven, we could still save a bundle of hard cash if a canny enough energy policy can be found.
Rather than mandating reduced consumption of fuel and its Luddite consequences here and in the growing industrial sector of the Third World, let us consider getting more Kilowatt-hours by literally turning up the heat. A policy that promotes raising the minimum thermodynamic efficiency of hotter-running fuel-burning power stations by say 8 percent (to around 44 percent) by the year 2000 might be paid for by the very fuel it saves. Neither we nor our posterity can object to saving ourselves some cash-thrift has as few enemies as prodigality in fuel consumption has friends outside OPEC. And should the presently hung scientific jury reach a Scots Verdict in the interminable trial of Earth v. The Greenhouse Gases, little macro-economic mischief will have been done.
But should nature follow art, and oblige the environmental televangelists with an unambiguously toasty third millennium — when I have spoken of uncertainty in this essay, I have meant what I said– the retrospective imposition of such a policy regime will he a source of some satisfaction to all, save hardened libertarians. But how will stewardship be redefined in the longer term-the century or so it would take to double C02 at the present pace?
OPTIONS DO exist. Given alternatives to power derived from fossil fuels, the whole fuel cycle can he redefined, with hydrogen replacing carbon. There is another major (and revolutionary) technical fix: we can liquefy air and burn fuels in pure oxygen, and condense the resulting C02 with the frigid liquid nitrogen that is the by-product of that liquefaction. But both hydrogen fuels and systems that recaptureCO2 are (like solar and wind power) dauntingly expensive.
So even today, in the midst of climatic ambiguity, even the most chlorophyllic environmentalists are having stirrings of conscience about their adamant refusal to acknowledge an unambiguous fact of physics.
As surely as C02 can absorb the warming infrared, the strong nuclear force is millions of times stronger than the chemical bonds that are burst in unleashing heat from coal. Rather than embarking down the soft energy path that leads back beyond the Industrial Revolution’s roots into a future dark age, the Greens should pause to consider the effect on the environment of renewing and perfecting our mastery of the atom’s pale fire.
The prospect of nuclear power’s second coming presents environmental millenarians with a real source of cognitive dissonance: it is they who are the problem. It is their delaying tactics that wasted years and squandered billions at Seabrook and elsewhere. And it is their past indifference to the environmental consequences of the fossil fuel that the reactor might have saved that makes a mockery of their present rhetoric.
The sooner their paranoia about nuclear waste disposal is laid to rest alongside that waste itself-deep in the and badlands, well secured, and as soon as the criminal mischief of Chernobyl is buried under the foundations of a reactor both safe and sanely contained, the sooner will civilization cease to he obliged to make a chemical waste repository of the sky.
So let all summon the courage to be kind to our environment. For if the bulk of the arsenals of Armageddon are indeed fading into historical irrelevancy, what better fate for them than to disappear as smokeless fuel into newer and more tractable nuclear furnaces? Better they light the world for a generation than heat it for a baleful instant.
And better too that cooler heads than those that dominate the hot media prevail in informing the Congress and the electorate. For this much is certain: science needs to see the illumination of today’s hot-tempered environmental policy debates. If light is to prevail over heat, many will have to simmer down and reflect they have lately been doing or counseling.
If candor prevails, climate professionals will realize once again that laymen too can recognize cant when they hear it and cartoons when they see them. Scientists would do well to recall that insight’s inevitable corollary-the neutrality of scientific institutions must first exist if it is to he respected.
For as the thaw continues in the Eastern bloc, we see emerging from beneath the glacial recent facade of science in the Soviet Union grim evidence of what happened when science was last subordinated to the true believer’s agendas for changing the world.
Whether the trial of Galileo or the tyranny of Lysenko, at all times and in all polities, science politicized is science betrayed.
Russell Seitz, from 1985 to 1989, was a visiting scholar and associate of Harvard University’s Center for International Affairs. His writings have appeared in Science, Nature, and Technology Review as well as the Economist, Foreign Affairs, the New York Times, and The National Interest
FOOTNOTES
‘Professor Alan Robock, University of Maryland, quoted in Science 244 June 2, 1989): 1041-43.]
‘To add to the confusion, the CFCs are roughly 1000 times more efficient than carbon dioxide as absorbers of infrared, making them significant greenhouse gases and major agents of stratospheric cooling: some scientists fear the Invisible Man might he hiding in his Doppelganger’s shadow! While stratospheric cooling is perhaps the least controversial of the effects at issue, it is conspicuously unpublicized.
‘I am indebted for both Columbus’s observation about Caribbean deforestation and the opening quote to a speech delivered by Presidential Science Adviser D. Allan Bromley before the National Press Club in April 1990.

Non Nomen
Reply to  Zefal (@zefalafez)
August 13, 2015 3:48 am

… Rather than mandating reduced consumption of fuel and its Luddite consequences here …

No, Sir. Of course, reduced consumption of fuel of any kind is beneficiary.
If the average U.S. citizen manages to save just 0.5 kwh/d that comes down to a saving of 45.625.000.000 kwh per anno.
It only requires some thinking.
Switch out the light if it is not needed.
Reduce fun-riding in a gas guzzler. Attention Detroit: build cars that deliver more miles per gallon. Have a look at Europe(the continental car manufacturers, not the so-calld “EU”). Spacious diese-fueled cars consume less than 7 liters per 100 km. That’s more than 30 miles per gallon.
Walk short distances. Or take a ride on a bike.
Better the insulation of your home. Bricks have been invented quite a while ago…
Use firewood occasionally.
Don’t throw away plastic bottles etc. There is energy in it comes from oil. And the seven seas don’t want to be converted into landfills…
Just some thoughts about savings. And even the coal will last longer if its consumption is reduced.
I am not talking about third-world-countries but the “first” world. The “first” world has the money to make savings.

rogerknights
Reply to  Non Nomen
August 13, 2015 10:39 pm

“Better the insulation of your home. Bricks have been invented quite a while ago…”
Eh?

Reply to  Non Nomen
August 14, 2015 11:58 am

So we should add some bricks to our homes? Burn some wood?
Plastic bottles will wind up in the ocean if thrown away?
Buy a new car, and make it a spacious diesel?
You sound like your last data point was 1990.
All cars and even SUVs get excellent mileage these days.
How about only buy a huge ride if you need one?
I need a truck five or six times a year. I do not want two vehicles…so I rent a truck when I need it, and use MY OLD CAR for getting around. Built in 1998, it gets 25 PH, and they built those Infinitis to last. Buying a new car when your old one works fine is part of the problem…it takes massive amounts of energy for every step from the mining of the metals to the assembly and transport of the vehicle itself. If you really need a new car, buy one, but do not get one just because you like to have a new car every few years.
How about these:
-Buy LED light bulbs. Bite the freakin’ bullet and shell out the cash. One tenth to one thrd the power usage…and the bulbs really do last.( The twisty kind, CFLs, do not last as long as claimed, but they can do. The will fail early if turned on while still warm…so turning off a switch every time you walk out of a room can cost you. Keep this in mind when buying and setting timers and motion sensors. LEDs are better, and way down in price.)
-Buy light switches with timers or motion sensors. Learn to install stuff yourself so it only costs the amount of the parts and a few minutes on a Saturday morning. Get dimmers at the very least. Preferably both.
-If your AC unit is more than 15 years old…buy a new energy efficient one. Especially if you live in the southern tier. Think about a heat pump, and have an analyst with good credentials do an analysis to let you know if a heat pump is a good idea for your house and area.
-If you have a pool, look at how long the pump runs…they do not need to stay on 24/7. Six hours a day is plenty. Change the filter, your pump will not work as hard.
-Buy a smart thermostat. A no brainer…it will pay for itself in a few months unless you are already constantly adjusting it. Keeping your heater or AC on at the same temp 24/7 is throwing massive amounts of money away.
– Switch whatever you can from electric to gas…heaters, water heaters included, and stoves and ovens. Cheaper to run and more efficient and cleaner burning. If there is no gas lines in your ‘hood (what up wit’ dat?), use propane in a big tank. Still better, but not as good as natty.
There are others, but these are a start.

Reply to  Non Nomen
August 14, 2015 12:05 pm

OH, yeah…FANS!
Underused, these save on cooling and heating costs, esp. if you have high ceilings. Running a ceiling fan during heating times prevents the hot air from staying up above where everyone is sitting.
And fans when an AC is in use reduces cooling costs dramatically. Moving air keeps a person much more comfortable and the temp can be adjusted accordingly.
It is incredible to me whenever I walk into a home with no fans running. And many of not most do not.
Weird and crazy.

Non Nomen
Reply to  Non Nomen
August 14, 2015 12:47 pm

Menicholas
August 14, 2015 at 11:58 am
So we should add some bricks to our homes? Burn some wood?
Plastic bottles will wind up in the ocean if thrown away?
Buy a new car, and make it a spacious diesel?
You sound like your last data point was 1990.
All cars and even SUVs get excellent mileage these days.
How about only buy a huge ride if you need one?
I need a truck five or six times a year. I do not want two vehicles…so I rent a truck when I need it, and use MY OLD CAR for getting around. Built in 1998, it gets 25 PH, and they built those Infinitis to last. Buying a new car when your old one works fine is part of the problem…it takes massive amounts of energy for every step from the mining of the metals to the assembly and transport of the vehicle itself. If you really need a new car, buy one, but do not get one just because you like to have a new car every few years.

You are quite obviously wilfully misunderstanding what I wrote.
If you had read with just a minimum of attention, you ought to have noticed that I didn’t promote adding bricks.
Bricks plus adequate insulation, not that plaster chemistry but wood, makes a reasonable internal climate of a home and saves heating costs.
Burning wood? Of course, wherever and whenever possible. You seem to forget that wood is sustainable. Rent a truck and collect it yourself.
Yes, plastic parts of all kind end up in the oceans: http://www.nrdc.org/oceans/plastic-ocean/
I never promoted buying a new car. That’s my wording: “Reduce fun-riding in a gas guzzler.”
What is your idea of “excellent” mileage? No Idea, I presume.
Your attitude towards buying, renting or whatsoever of a truck when needed is your own affair:
“Qoud licet bovi non licet iovi”.
Interesting as well that you obviously never considered walking or riding a bike, things that are really easy(for those who can ride a bike, can you?) and cheap.
Quite interesting that you made no remark about my proposal of saving jus .5 kwh/day per capita.
Just some of these proposals make it easy to save energy and money.

Theo buck
August 12, 2015 9:35 pm

@PaulS actually that quote comes from Magnum Force, the second Dirty Harry movie.

August 12, 2015 11:45 pm

I look forward to reading my own copy of Steyn’s book.
But what’s ironic about all this “warm” bashing by the warmists is that Global Warming is good. It’s almost as if they want to push climate toward Global Cooling. And in the middle of an Ice Age, yet! Are they purposefully attempting to end the Holocene? Personally, I’m not looking forward to 90,000 years of glacial conditions and perpetual winter.
With warming, life thrives. Of course, there are limits, but Earth seems to handle those quite well. Looking at the temperature record for the last 600 Million years, temperatures seem to be capped, for the most part, at about 25-degrees C (about 15-degr.C more than today). Water may be the key. So long as we have oceans, we may have the proper balance of positive and negative feedbacks.
With the Big Oil Rockefellers supporting this “climate change” hoax, and their penchant for eugenics, I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re licking their chops to trigger a sudden end to the Holocene. That’s about 7 Billion people they can eliminate with very little effort. This kind of puts the entire “Climate Change” debate on an entirely new level. “Mann the minion of evil who helped kill most of humanity.”
I know many people don’t like to talk about conspiracies, but they need to grow up and realize that conspiracies are dirt common. And some conspiracy theories are based on fact.

William Astley
August 13, 2015 4:27 am

The hockey stick will become part of the historical document of the climate wars. The climate wars are going to come to an abrupt end. There has been an abrupt change to the solar cycle which is going to cause abrupt planetary cooling.
Cycle abrupt climate change was discovered almost 20 years ago. One by one possible internal forcing mechanisms were eliminated (ocean current changes, changes to atmospheric composition, changes to planetary albedo and so on). As the planet resists forcing change –negative feedback – rather than amplifies forcing changes – positive feedback there must be a massive powerful serial forcing change to cause what has happened again and again and again and again in the paleo record, a powerful cyclic forcing change to cause cyclic abrupt climate change. The cyclic warming and cooling has a periodicity of 1500 years and every 10,000 years or so the 1500 year forcing becomes super large, a Heinrich event which is powerful enough to end an interglacial period.
1) Due to the observed 1500 years periodicity of the temperature changes in the paleo record (internal earth systems are chaotic and hence are not capable of warming and then cooling the entire planet cyclically) and as 2) it is a fact that the cyclic warming and cooling effects both hemispheres – supports the assertion that there is an external massive forcing agent (it’s the sun) that cyclically forces the climate.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/09/05/is-the-current-global-warming-a-natural-cycle/

“Does the current global warming signal reflect a natural cycle”
…We found 342 natural warming events (NWEs) corresponding to this definition, distributed over the past 250,000 years …. …. The 342 NWEs contained in the Vostok ice core record are divided into low-rate warming events (LRWEs; < 0.74oC/century) and high rate warming events (HRWEs; ≥ 0.74oC /century) (Figure). … ….The current global warming signal is therefore the slowest and among the smallest in comparison with all HRWEs in the Vostok record, although the current warming signal could in the coming decades yet reach the level of past HRWEs for some parameters. The figure shows the most recent 16 HRWEs in the Vostok ice core data during the Holocene, interspersed with a number of LRWEs. …. …The paper, entitled "Recent Antarctic Peninsula warming relative to Holocene climate and ice – shelf history" and authored by Robert Mulvaney and colleagues of the British Antarctic Survey ( Nature, 2012,doi:10.1038/nature11391), reports two recent natural warming cycles, one around 1500 AD and another around 400 AD (William: Same periodicity of cyclic warming and cooling in the Northern hemisphere), measured from isotope (deuterium) concentrations in ice cores bored adjacent to recent breaks in the ice shelf in northeast Antarctica. ….

Glacial/Interglacial cycle last 420,000 years from the analysis of Antarctic ice cores.
http://www.climate4you.com/images/VostokTemp0-420000%20BP.gif
Greenland ice temperature, last 11,000 years determined from Greenland ice core analysis, Richard Alley’s paper. William: The Greenland Ice data shows that there has been 9 warming and cooling periods in the last 11,000 years. There was an abrupt cooling event 11,900 years ago (Younger Dryas abrupt cooling period when the planet went from interglacial warm to glacial cold with 75% of the cooling occurring in less than a decade and there was abrupt cooling event 8200 years ago during the 8200 BP climate ‘event’).
http://www.climate4you.com/images/GISP2%20TemperatureSince10700%20BP%20with%20CO2%20from%20EPICA%20DomeC.gif

What do we mean by abrupt change? Alley et al. (2), in a seminal paper arising from a U.S. National Academy of Sciences report (5), followed on the original definition of abrupt change (6): an abrupt climate change occurs when the climate system is forced to cross some threshold, triggering a transition to a new state at a rate determined by the climate system itself and faster than the cause. Others have defined it simply as a large change within less than 30 years (7) or as a transition in the climate system whose duration is fast relative to the duration of the preceding or subsequent state (8).
Further analysis of diverse records has distinguished two types of millennial events (13). Dansgaard/Oeschger (D/O) events are alternations between warm (interstadial) and cold (stadial) states that recur approximately every 1500 years, although this rhythm is variable. Heinrich events are intervals of extreme cold contemporaneous with intervals of ice-rafted detritus in the northern North Atlantic (24–26); these recur irregularly on the order of ca. 10,000 years apart and are typically followed by the warmest D/O interstadials.
Cold-climate abrupt change occurs with a characteristic timescale of appro.1500 years, a feature that must be explained by any proposed mechanism. North Atlantic and the Greenland Ice Sheet Project 2 (GISP2) records exhibit a period of approx.1470 years (64, 65). However, the adjacent ice core isotope record from the Greenland Ice Core Project (GRIP) site exhibits periods closer to 1670 and 1130–1330 years, which is in agreement with the independently dated record from Hulu Cave (49, 66). Time series studies generally converge on a picture of a noisy climate system paced by a regular, perhaps external, forcing, with the sensitivity of the system to the forcing varying depending on background conditions or stochastic variability [e.g., (67– 69)]. Solar forcing, although subtle, is the leading candidate for external forcing and has been found to be consistent with either a 1450–1470–year period (70, 71) or the 1667- and 1130-year periods (66).

Sudden climate transitions during the Quaternary
Abstract
The time span of the past few million years has been punctuated by many rapid climate transitions, most of them on time scales of centuries to decades or even less. The most detailed information is available for the Younger Dryas-to-Holocene stepwise change around 11,500 years ago, which seems to have occurred over a few decades. The speed of this change is probably representative of similar but less well-studied climate transitions during the last few hundred thousand years. These include sudden cold events (Heinrich events/stadials), warm…
According to the marine records, the Eemian interglacial (William: Last Eemain is the name of the last interglacial period) ended with a rapid cooling event about 110,000 years ago (e.g., Imbrie et al., 1984; Martinson et al., 1987), which also shows up in ice cores and pollen records from across Eurasia. From a relatively high resolution core in the North Atlantic. Adkins et al. (1997) suggested that the final cooling event took less than 400 years, and it might have been much more rapid.
The event at 8200 BP is the most striking sudden cooling event during the Holocene, giving widespread cool, dry conditions lasting perhaps 200 years before a rapid return to climates warmer and generally moister than the present. This event is clearly detectable in the Greenland ice cores, where the cooling seems to have been about half-way as severe as the Younger Dryas-to-Holocene difference (Alley et al., 1997; Mayewski et al., 1997). No detailed assessment of the speed of change involved seems to have been made within the literature (though it should be possible to make such assessments from the ice core record), but the short duration of these events at least suggests changes that took only a few decades or less to occur.
The Younger Dryas cold event at about 12,900-11,500 years ago seems to have had the general features of a Heinrich Event, and may in fact be regarded as the most recent of these (Severinghaus et al. 1998). The sudden onset and ending of the Younger Dryas has been studied in particular detail in the ice core and sediment records on land and in the sea (e.g., Bjoerck et al., 1996), and it might be representative of other Heinrich events.

Timing of abrupt climate change: A precise clock by Stefan Rahmstorf
Many paleoclimatic data reveal a 1,500 year cyclicity of unknown origin. A crucial question is how stable and
regular this cycle is. An analysis of the GISP2 ice core record from Greenland reveals that abrupt climate events appear to be paced by a 1,470-year cycle with a period that is probably stable to within a few percent; with 95% confidence the period is maintained to better than 12% over at least 23 cycles. This highly precise clock points to an origin outside the Earth system; oscillatory modes within the Earth system can be expected to be far more irregular in period.

The peculiar solar cycle 24 – where do we stand?
http://iopscience.iop.org/1742-6596/440/1/012001/pdf/1742-6596_440_1_012001.pdf

The peculiar solar cycle 24 – where do we stand?
Solar cycle 24 has been very weak so far. It was preceded by an extremely quiet and long solar minimum. Data from the solar interior, the solar surface and the heliosphere all show that cycle 24 began from an unusual minimum and is unlike the cycles that preceded it. We begin this review of where solar cycle 24 stands today with a look at the antecedents of this cycle, and examine why the minimum preceding the cycle is considered peculiar (§ 2). We then examine in § 3 whether we missed early signs that the cycle could be unusual. § 4 describes where cycle 24 is at today.

Reply to  William Astley
August 13, 2015 8:19 am

Since you have omitted the last 155 years in your version of Alley’s graph it does not show the most recent warming period.

Reply to  Phil.
August 13, 2015 8:27 am

Since you have omitted the last 155 years in your version of Alley’s graph it does not show the most recent warming period natural warming cycle.
Fixed. You’re welcome.

robinedwards36
Reply to  William Astley
August 13, 2015 11:34 am

Really enjoyed this, William, and would like to preserve it somewhere, though not the the whole thread. Can’t find how to collect the very useful graphics. A pity! I guess that the actual numbers came from the Vostok and GISP data, which must be accessible somewhere. Can you help?
Robin – who spends most of his time examining climate time series.

Reply to  William Astley
August 14, 2015 12:10 pm

Mr. Astley,
I am certain that more than a few of the characters in this charade will be famous for a very long time…and not in a kind or good way.
I would not be surprised if at least one or two new words become part of the everyday lexicon, based on the names of people who performed particularly egregious duty to push CAGW.
Names synonymous with fraud, scientific incompetence, doubling down on a wrong idea even when it is known to be wrong, etc.
I am sure readers here can make some nominations for such new verbiage.

August 13, 2015 7:08 am

The error of the hockey stick that gets little mention is the long straight handle which promotes that there was no warming (or ice ages) before the 20th century. We should actually use the hockey stick and show photos of ice skaters on the Thames etc etc rather than focussing on the technical discussions of the uptick, which most lay people would not understand. After demolishing the straight handle as lies, then it is easy to say to people, “well, if that is not right, can you see that the uptick may also not be right?”

Reply to  xyzlatin
August 13, 2015 9:08 am

A ‘straight handle’ does not promote ‘no warming’, that requires a flat handle.
Good luck finding ‘photos’ of skaters on the Thames, the last Frost Fair was in 1814.
http://quotulatiousness.ca/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/Frost-Fair-of-1814-by-Luke-Clenell.jpg
A major reason for the freezing of the Thames was the Old London Bridge which obstructed the flow, this bridge was removed in 1831 and along with the embankment of the river changed the flow dramatically. Without that it is very likely that there would have been more Frost fairs, possibly as recently as 1962/3.

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Singapore
Reply to  Phil.
August 13, 2015 7:23 pm

Phil dot
You may have uncovered a new climate cooling mechanism! Just build shaped bridge and we can induce freezing temperatures, crop failures, snow and frozen devastation! I would never have thought that thermodynamics could be so easily overthrown. You really ought to put the proofs of your conjecture into a journal article. The City of London could hold annual frost fairs to boost tourism.

Reply to  Phil.
August 14, 2015 12:14 pm

Seriously! Tell him what is what Crispin.
So bridges and the shape of a rivers banks determine whether the water gets below freezing?
And putting a restriction or bottleneck in one spot will cause…wait, what? Cause the water to back up?
Amazing…this sounds a lot cheaper than a dam.

Non Nomen
August 13, 2015 11:45 pm

rogerknights
August 13, 2015 at 10:39 pm
“Better the insulation of your home. Bricks have been invented quite a while ago…”
Eh?

An optimal design/insulation is a combination of brick masonry faced/sheathed/revetted with wood. Adapt to the prevailing climate when building your home. Think. It will cost money if you don’t and buy off the shelf.

Reply to  Non Nomen
August 14, 2015 12:17 pm

Optimal is stone walls three feet thick. So what?
few build their own homes, or have them custom built.
Where do you live and how rich are you?
Us common folk need to buy a house as is for the most part.

Non Nomen
Reply to  Menicholas
August 14, 2015 12:58 pm

The house I live in is older than 100 years and of the brick-and-mortar-type with gas heating. The walls are not as thick as they ought to be, so insulation became an issue here at ~ 52° N. Wood did fine.

Reply to  Non Nomen
August 15, 2015 10:53 am

Burning wood? Obviously you must move toward the equator.

Non Nomen
Reply to  Menicholas
August 15, 2015 11:29 am

Warmer is better, but I dont think I should set the Congo basin ablaze…

JP
August 16, 2015 8:09 am

I’ve pre-ordered the book as well, looking forward to it. But Anthony, all those name jokes, are they really necessary, among grown-ups? That’s really one of the few things that MM *can’t* help.

Gary
August 17, 2015 6:57 am

Okay. I just pre-ordered on Amazon. $15 was kinda high for a paperback but I’m guessing it’s larger than standard with illustrations. I’ll pay extra for Josh 😉 I’m gonna promote this on facebook too.

gbees
August 17, 2015 10:10 pm

just placed my pre-order at Amazon. thanks. I look fwd to an entertaining read.

August 18, 2015 5:34 pm

I just finished the book last night and attempted to put a review on Amazon.
Amazon still says “This item has not been released yet and is not eligible to be reviewed.”
There’s still the original three reviews (two for and one against) that somehow were allowed.