Climate activist: Flying to conferences lacks integrity

Green Pass
Nobody seems to mind, if a “Green” clocks up a lot of air miles.

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Religious scholar and climate activist Laurie Zoloth is concerned. She is worried about people who “deny” climate change. But she is also worried about the lack of integrity displayed by people who claim to believe, but who don’t reflect those alleged beliefs in their personal lifestyle choices.

According to the Pittsburg Post-Gazette;

Laurie Zoloth is deeply convinced that climate change represents a great moral challenge for modern times. But she doesn’t spend time complaining about those who deny the scientific consensus of human-induced global warming.

“What I want to think about is my denial, our denial,” she told a group of about 250 people Thursday at the conference, “Integrity of Creation: Climate Change,” which began Wednesday and continues through today at Duquesne University.

It is denial, she said, to acknowledge global warming but continue a lifestyle burning fossil fuels for nonessential travel and eating foods such as meat with a high-carbon footprint. While it’s difficult to make such changes all at once, as president of the American Academy of Religion last year, she proposed that her group take a sabbatical year in 2021 by skipping the annual conference that fills the jet streams with thousands of scholars converging on one city.

It would be just a step, but in reducing one’s fossil fuel use, “then we’re believable, then we have integrity.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/local/city/2015/10/02/Duquesne-to/stories/201510020146

I find Laurie’s quest for personal climate integrity refreshing. I don’t mind that she has a different view about the alleged risks of anthropogenic CO2. Integrity is a solid foundation, which will eventually lead her to climate skepticism.

Leading climate activists who spend their lives jetting to climate conferences, or who use enough energy to power a small town, to light and heat their houses, should be an utter laughing stock. The screaming hypocrisy of jetset climate activists should utterly invalidate their self righteous demands that the rest of us make sacrifices, to “save” the planet. But curiously this rarely happens – climate foot soldiers don’t often criticise the carbon profligacy of their heroes.

0 0 votes
Article Rating
194 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
kenwd0elq
October 3, 2015 8:43 pm

I’ve always said that any climate “activist” who isn’t absolutely at home on Webex and GoToMeeting is a complete phony.

Bryan A
Reply to  kenwd0elq
October 3, 2015 11:50 pm

Their laptops and cell phones should also be solar powered or solar rechargeable

Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 2:55 am

“Their laptops and cell phones should also be solar powered or solar rechargeable”
But it takes a lot of energy and materials to make the devices and you have to keep getting new ones to keep up. That and it takes a lot of energy to get the devices to you from the country of manufacture. On top of that, the energy to run the internet is huge to boot.
So even with a solar run portable device — you are still part of the industrial society and its release of CO2.

Goldrider
Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 6:13 am

Why aren’t they? I’ve done my books for 25 years with a tiny Sharp calculator than runs on a 1″ solar panel. How come all the mobile doohickeys aren’t charged that way? I also have a solar charge box than runs about 9 miles of electric fence for livestock. The panel is 18″ square. Seems to me ALL these tech nuts could be putting their money where their mouth is! Let’s see a solar-powered Tesla!

Billy Liar
Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 9:01 am

I think they should use vegan runners with messages held in forked sticks – that’s really sustainable!

Bryan A
Reply to  kenwd0elq
October 3, 2015 11:52 pm

In fact, they should be living entirely “off the grid” if they truly walked the talk

Jimbo
Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 1:52 am

That’s right! Whenever I hear a warmist get all high and mighty – I look into their lifestyle or carbon investments. The louder they are, the bigger their wonderful carbon footprint. Multimillionaire property owner David Suzuki, super rich multi-mansion owning Al Gore, uber rich Prince Charles with 4+ houses and staff of over 150, economist and multi-green investor Lord Stern who says climate change is much more serious than he previously thought (his investments need a boost he means) and so on…………….
What do they all have in common? Flights and more flights. They cannot help it, they need to spread the word about co2 emitting airplanes and cars. LOL and LOL.

Jimbo
Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 1:55 am

Here is a fraction of the scheduled flights of the past.

“Some 15,000 delegates gather at the Mexican resort of Cancun on Monday for an annual UN conference on climate change.”
france24.com – 29 November 2010
==========
George Monbiot
Canada Book Tour – November 12th – 15th 2006 – Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver
Monbiot.com – 2006
==========
“Maldives to Construct Two New Airports and Resorts”
maldives.net.mv – 10 July 2011
==========
“Nasa scientist Dr James Hansen was speaking to BBC Scotland ahead of being awarded the prestigious Edinburgh Medal at the city’s Science Festival.”
BBC – 11 April 2012
==========
“Al Gore kicks off book tour for ‘The Future'”
mnn.com – January 2013
==========
“In a special three part series on the imminent crisis, the Guardian has visited Newtok and spoken to the villagers, politicians and climate scientists about their plight…”
Guardian – 13 May 2013
==========
“Now the tour is going global — first to Australia, then to New Zealand, Fiji, and beyond!”
http://maths.350.org
May 29, 2013?
Australia and New Zealand: The New Frontiers of Divestment and Maths
Bill is about to start a two week tour of Australia, New Zealand and Fiji, bringing his Do the Maths message Downunder. Before he even lands in Australia, the Australian Coal Association has come out biting at his ankles……
http://350.org/australia-and-new-zealand-new-frontiers-divestment-and-maths/

Jimbo
Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 2:09 am

We must act now because small island states will go underwater. Now back to reality.

27 February 2015
Chinese investment to help triple Maldives airport capacity
Chinese investment is expected to help triple passenger handling capacity of the Maldives international airport with the addition of a new runway, an official said on Thursday.
Minister of Economic Development Mohamed Saeed said efforts were underway under the direct supervision of President Abdulla Yameen to secure financing for the projects. …..
http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2015-02/27/content_19667997.htm
=====
Dec 13, 2012
…..During the past year, they have been busy building four new airports……Kooddoo….Maamagili…Dharavandhoo…Fuvahmulah ……….
Of course, all the tourists flying in will want to stay somewhere, so the government there has has identified 14 virgin islands to be leased for resort development…..
https://notalotofpeopleknowthat.wordpress.com/2012/12/13/maldives-opening-four-new-underwater-airports/

This is what I call planning for future sea level rise. Get tourists to FLY IN and hope your investments get flooded. A brilliant plan! Then people get all upset when I am sceptical and cynical. BS!

johnmarshall
Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 2:46 am

That would be great, we would never hear from them again. Sounds like a plan.

Barbara Skolaut
Reply to  Bryan A
October 4, 2015 4:44 pm

Bingo, Bryan!

Reply to  Bryan A
October 5, 2015 8:08 am

@Menicholas, that still doesn’t prove there is life on Mars. 😉

mike
Reply to  kenwd0elq
October 4, 2015 12:54 am

An Apr 8, 2015 blog-post, entitled “No More Flying”, at the “…and then theres physics (ATTP)” blog, links to a “peer reviewed” study that–sitting down?–scientifically proves that “on-line” eco-conferencing is a fully practical, low-carbon alternative to CO2-spew, frequent-flyer “physical attendance” eco-conferencing. And not only that, but the study’s lead author, Corrine Le Quere, also scientifically proves that “on-line” eco-conferencing would allow THIRD-WORLD WOMEN CLIMATE SCIENTISTS OF COLOR TO BETTER PARTICIPATE IN THEIR FIELD!!! (“Towards a culture of low-carbon research for the 21st Century” by Corrine Le Quere, lead author).
And so in light of all that in-your-face, irrefutable common-sense, presented in Corrine La Quere’s research paper, the naive public, with its idealized view of climate scientists, might expect the enlightened, leading climate scientists, at the ATTP blog, to embrace “on-line” eco-confabbing with enthusiasm, as yet another opportunity for them to PRACTICE WHAT THEY PREACH!!!TO LEAD FROM THE FRONT AND BY INSPIRING PERSONAL EXAMPLE IN MATTERS OF CARBON-FOOTPRINT REDUCTION!!! Right?
Likewise, that same naive public might be surprised–shocked, really–if, instead, leading climate scientists at ATTP responded to Corrine La Quere’s work by launching a panic-attack WAR ON THIRD WORLD WOMEN CLIMATE SCIENTISTS OF COLOR!!!, in which the main argument of their infantile, spoiled-brat, privileged-white-dork frenzied-defense of their “physical attendance” eco-confabbing was that that little perk is the choicest gobbet in their good-deal swill-ration–SO BACK OFF LADIES!!!. Again, right?
I’ll leave it to the interested reader to pull up the relevant ATTP blog-post and see whether the hive-worthies who hang-out at that blog took the “high” road or the “low” road. I will only provide, as a teaser, this comment from Rachel M, the sole and frustrated advocate of the “high” road, “This thread reminds me of the interactions I sometimes have with my children.”
Incidentally, here’s the money-shot from Corrine le Quere’s report: “A large proportion of people agreed that flying helped to maintain working relationships and networks and if they flew less (or not at all), it would limit their career prgression”. In other words, those careerist climate scientists devoted to “physical attendance”, at Gaia gab-fests, pay no never mind to all their copious, BABY-KILLING!!! AND POLAR BEAR KILLING!!!, CO2 emissions, in their travel to/fro their little “greenwashed” hive-swarms because such attendance keeps them members in good-standing of climate science’s “good ol’ Boss-Hog” networks (some brazen-hypocrite carbon-piggies are more equal than others), which, in turn, assures them continued “front-of-the-line” privileges in their “career progression” of ever more snout-appealing, trough-and-swill up-grades.
Final thought of my own: “on-line” conferences also make it more difficult for the hive’s alpha-porker shot-callers, runnin’ the good comrades’ eco-cons to plot their agit-prop strategies and to play the Gruber-card and say things behind the public’s back they would never say to the public’s face. That is, “on-line” conferences tend to leave “a record”.

dennisambler
Reply to  mike
October 4, 2015 2:19 am

Le Quere is Professor of Climate Change Science and Policy at the University of East Anglia and Director of the UK Tyndall Centre for Climate Change, founded by Mike Hulme, a climategate luminary.
On her webpage (https://www.uea.ac.uk/environmental-sciences/people/profile/c-lequere), she says,
“I was also invited to deliver the annual Bolin lecture in Stockholm University in 2014, and was listed among 20 ‘women making waves in the climate change debate’ on the Road to Paris web site.”

aussiepete
Reply to  mike
October 4, 2015 4:51 am

Say Mike,
Any chance of you being asked to deliver the keynote address in Paris next Month? Loved what i’m guessing is your abridged thoughts on Corinne and Co.

Reply to  kenwd0elq
October 4, 2015 1:47 pm

At work, we quit traveling to conferences and meeting almost a decade ago. We use tools like SKYPE, WebEx, or other similar ones to conduct our meetings. No jet fuel consumed, and the comfort of my own office near where I live. No hotel or rental car bills either.
But that is not what these globe-trotting science wannabees are in the AGW business for, now is it?

GregS
Reply to  Newt Love
October 4, 2015 3:12 pm

I do even less travel, I work remotely from my home using a standard telephone ADSL connection. In fact most of the company does this too, we use the various teleconferencing tools plus telephones to do our work and collaborate. The commute is the best part, though casual Friday is a bit of a drag.

George E. Smith
Reply to  kenwd0elq
October 4, 2015 4:08 pm

” Going ” to conferences lacks integrity.
It can all be done on line.

Admin
October 3, 2015 8:52 pm

Don’t forget Teamviewer for the budget conscious.

Hugs
Reply to  Charles Rotter
October 3, 2015 9:03 pm

With modern remote conferencing tools, it is no problem what so ever to arrange a conference from a dozen geographically distributed locations. But no. These people like to fly. There is no way to keep presidents of different organizations from taking a flight to Tahiti to have a little drink with umbrella in it.
And call it a climate conference.

RoHa
Reply to  Hugs
October 3, 2015 9:48 pm

I totally disagree. I propose the following rules for climate conferences.
(1) All attendees (but especially heads of state) should be physically present at the conference venue.
(2) All conferences should be held in late January.
(3) Only two venues can be used, on alternate years. They are Yakutsk and Marble Bar.
(4) The conferences shall be held outdoors.

AndyG55
Reply to  Hugs
October 3, 2015 10:24 pm

Me, well, I hope that Paris is FREEZING COLD in December and that they have electricity supply problems and muslim riots on the streets.

Patrick
Reply to  Hugs
October 3, 2015 11:16 pm

Paris city authorities already power off street lights because they cannot afford the costs. The city is broke.

KLohrn
Reply to  Hugs
October 3, 2015 11:48 pm

That Paris and most of the west is broke could in large part be the main reason a cause for AGW.
Or so the masses must be lead to believe.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Hugs
October 4, 2015 12:23 am

“AndyG55
October 3, 2015 at 10:24 pm
Me, well, I hope that Paris is FREEZING COLD in December and that they have electricity supply problems and muslim riots on the streets.”
Andy, that’s why they changed it to “CLIMATE CHANGE”, so what ever happens (snowstorm or sunstroke) they’ll see it as justification for them burning lots of fuel to have a climate conference.
hypocritical ba$tards

Mr Green Genes
Reply to  Hugs
October 4, 2015 2:17 am

Patrick
October 3, 2015 at 11:16 pm
Paris city authorities already power off street lights because they cannot afford the costs. The city is broke.
=============================================================================
I call bs on this statement (not the bit about Paris being broke but about the street lighting). Give me a citation which doesn’t include an article from the Daily Mail (sigh) in 2012. The last time I was in Paris a little earlier this year, the place was certainly NOT in darkness.
However, they do appear to be looking to implement an energy efficiency program, which is a good thing n’est-ce pas?
http://www.engerati.com/article/paris-streetlights-start-smart-city-network

Patrick
Reply to  Hugs
October 4, 2015 2:47 am
Sandy In Limousin
Reply to  Hugs
October 4, 2015 4:40 am

AndyG55
It’s unlikely Paris will have no electricity in December, barring the EDF staff striking which could easily happen, normally 80% of French electricity is nuclear generated. In fact France manages to export power to the the UK (1-2GW normally), Italy, Belgium, Switzerland, Spain and Germany. Quite often a bit of unpredictable wind comes in from Germany or Spain.

Keith Willshaw
Reply to  Hugs
October 4, 2015 5:11 am

The irony is that I frequently attend Oil and Gas Industry conferences with attendees from Europe, America and Asia. All those meetings are virtual. Only climate scientists can afford these massive junkets. Its not just the cost of the travel and hotels its the lost time spent travelling that costs, if you are doing a real job that is.

Reply to  Charles Rotter
October 4, 2015 6:26 am

A bit off topic, but critical to those here who believe in a fair Justice system in the U.S., if you care to read. Concerning the Obama Justice Dept. and how it is now infiltrated with Obama appointed, leftist idealists, who will carry on there after Obama leaves office:
https://imprimis.hillsdale.edu/justice-and-the-obama-justice-department/?utm_source=housefile&utm_medium=email&utm_content=september2015&utm_campaign=imprimis&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_vH8NlJICotZIu1YwwB5fdcCmiKcc9HMd13ozSIJiX7Y8PtSlodDcTAjgMEaRax911oPiftufiuSGAc2RkPPOgh_sKpg&_hsmi=22552564

John F. Hultquist
October 3, 2015 9:01 pm

sabbatical year in 2021
Suggests the group is locked into hotel and convention sites through 2020. That’s a big carbon footprint. They could get serious and cancel all future meetings. Then there would be believable and integrity. The current leaders and shakers will be replaced by 2021 so the current crop has nothing to forego.
What a hoot.

David Chappell
Reply to  John F. Hultquist
October 4, 2015 1:16 am

Yes, a case of “Lord, make me good, but not just yet”.

meltemian
Reply to  David Chappell
October 4, 2015 6:54 am

Like St. Augustine.

David, UK
Reply to  John F. Hultquist
October 4, 2015 2:20 am

Delaying one’s integrity for another six years is pathetic enough; but notice also that she says “in” 2021, not “with effect from” 2021. But it illustrates beautifully the vacuousness of the whole Green philosophy; their actions are mere gesturing, purely symbolic. They’ll preach to us that we should limit our productivity, to reduce our carbon footprint, to somehow reach the arbitrary temperature reduction of 2°C, but will never talk real numbers. The symbolism alone is enough for them, and hang reality. Soviet Russia, anyone?

Billy Liar
Reply to  David, UK
October 4, 2015 9:16 am

their actions are mere gesturing, purely symbolic
Virtue signalling:

I have come across a new phrase: virtue signalling. Apparently coined by Libby Purves, it involves saying something that has moral appeal but without being founded on any kind of clear thinking. Up till now, when I have read Giles Fraser’s public pronouncements, the phrase ‘vacuous moral reasoning’ has come to mind, but now I have a new phrase to deploy.

from:
http://www.psephizo.com/life-ministry/virtue-signalling-and-moral-decisions/comment-page-1/

Lewis P Buckingham
October 3, 2015 9:02 pm

‘nonessential travel and eating foods such as meat with a high-carbon footprint.’
The idea that the Catholic Church should make abstinence from meat on Fridays part of its penitential practices has had a small airing on Catholic sites.
This above argument gives a further justification based on poor quality climate science.
The historical argument is that cows produce methane which causes AGW so endangers mankind.
There is no empirical evidence that cows or methane cause global warming.comment image
Meat contains essential fatty acids and essential amino acids required for conception, foetal growth, child and adolescent growth as well as normal physiological functioning of the human body of any age.
Places such as the Sudanese grasslands are capable of feeding Africa by extensive grazing, preventing protein malnourishment and the pathologies it inevitably causes.
There is no argument that we in the West do not need the high fat and protein diet we consume.
However adherents of the Catholic faith, such as myself, need be aware that proscriptions limiting beef production and any such false narrative may only harm, those most in need of food, in the third world.

David Chappell
Reply to  Lewis P Buckingham
October 4, 2015 1:28 am

I always understood that abstaining from meat on Fridays had been a practice, not only in the Roman church but the English one also, for centuries. Although probably observed more in the breach than the practice, during my childhood in England in the 1940s it was still an active tradition. The irony is that it was introduced as an economic measure to assist a fishing industry in trouble.

Man Bearpig
Reply to  David Chappell
October 5, 2015 1:23 am

I may be wrong here, but I believe it was only the Catholic church that only allowed fish meat to be eaten on Fridays, and the practice has been recently re-introduced. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-14929199
In the 40’s in England there may have been rationing that impacted on meat eating on any day of the week, so perhaps Fridays was chosen to coincide with the catholics – but this is complete guesswork on my part.
I dont know if any other religion bans meat eating on Friday (or any other day) ..

Reply to  David Chappell
October 12, 2015 12:15 pm

Man Bearpig – there is. The Eastern Orthodox Church fasting rules call for abstinence from meat and dairy on Wednesdays and Fridays, as well as during the four major fasting seasons (Great Lent, Apostles’ Fast, Dormition Fast, Nativity Fast). A majority of those days call for abstinence from fish as well. Someone following the fasting rules strictly (not all can) would avoid meat and dairy on about half the days in the year.

Srga
Reply to  Lewis P Buckingham
October 4, 2015 2:04 am

The ‘saturated fats’ scandal of Ancel Keys is a good lesson in the dangers of politicians and bad science.

Jimbo
Reply to  Srga
October 4, 2015 2:37 am

Exactly! I often bring that example up as a warning to people about over confidence in consensus. It can have ‘catastrophic’ consequences.

Annals of Internal Medicine – 18 March, 2014
Dr. Rajiv Chowdhury et al
Association of Dietary, Circulating, and Supplement Fatty Acids With Coronary Risk: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Conclusion: Current evidence does not clearly support cardiovascular guidelines that encourage high consumption of polyunsaturated fatty acids and low consumption of total saturated fats.
Primary Funding Source: British Heart Foundation, Medical Research Council, Cambridge National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, and Gates Cambridge.
http://tinyurl.com/q3hqfvc

Wall Street Journal – 2 May, 2014
The Questionable Link Between Saturated Fat and Heart Disease
Are butter, cheese and steak really bad for you? The dubious science behind the anti-fat crusade
“Saturated fat does not cause heart disease”—or so concluded a big study published in March in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine. How could this be? The very cornerstone of dietary advice for generations has been that the saturated fats in butter, cheese and red meat should be avoided because they clog our arteries……..
Our distrust of saturated fat can be traced back to the 1950s, to a man named Ancel Benjamin Keys, a scientist at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Keys was formidably persuasive and, through sheer force of will, rose to the top of the nutrition world—even gracing the cover of Time magazine—for relentlessly championing the idea that saturated fats raise cholesterol and, as a result, cause heart attacks.
This idea fell on receptive ears because, at the time, Americans faced a fast-growing epidemic. Heart disease, a rarity only three decades earlier, had quickly become the nation’s No. 1 killer. Even President Dwight D. Eisenhower suffered a heart attack in 1955. Researchers were desperate for answers……
Critics have pointed out that Dr. Keys violated several basic scientific norms in his study…..
http://tinyurl.com/m8sczes

A bloody scandal if you ask me. At least CAGW was caught early, but the powers that be don’t care.

Goldrider
Reply to  Srga
October 4, 2015 6:17 am

Pays to track down the primary sources on LOTS of things. Too often they turn out, as Bill Clinton once said, to have no “there” there.

Ian W
Reply to  Srga
October 4, 2015 9:36 am

@ Jimbo October 4, 2015 at 2:37 am
Yes Ancel Keys was the Michael Mann of nutrition. Well known and famous for his saturated fats study that had carefully picked research included the diets of Cretan men studied but during a religious fast and left out populations studied that didn’t ‘fit’ the hypothesis. There is a good commentary on the dietary research and the way it was picked up by the politicians and advice to the population to change diets to increase carbohydrates and reduce meat, in “Good Calories Bad Calories”.
The parallels with AGW research show that there is a fundamental fault in the practice of modern science which is not egoless and has become combative, perhaps due to the continual fight for research funding by increasingly commercial universities.

David, UK
Reply to  Lewis P Buckingham
October 4, 2015 2:28 am

@Lewis: you lost me with the word “faith.” Best to stick to the science, and to reality.

MarkW
Reply to  David, UK
October 4, 2015 7:04 am

I always find it fascinating how people who claim to have no “faith” can display so much faith in the religion of their choice. In your case this would be science and atheism.

Reply to  Lewis P Buckingham
October 4, 2015 5:12 am

Meat also contains vitamin B12, an essential vitamin for the brain and nerves. B12 is only obtained from certain meats. Vitamin supplements don’t work. Your body rejects most of those vitamins and removes it through urine. Laurie Zoloth likely believes in evolution, so I would like to ask her why did the human body evolve canine teeth if we weren’t meant to eat meat? And for those that believe in a creator, why did he give up canine teeth if we weren’t meant to eat meat?

MarkW
Reply to  alexwade
October 4, 2015 7:05 am

Look in a cows mouth, all the teeth are flat, for grinding. In a human’s mouth, only the back teeth are flat. The other teeth are designed for cutting and tearing. Not something that is needed for a vegetarian diet.

BFL
Reply to  Lewis P Buckingham
October 4, 2015 8:58 am

Isn’t it just warm blooded animals that are Catholic restricted on Fridays (making fish, snakes, reptiles, alligators and the like okay/see google)?

D.J. Hawkins
Reply to  BFL
October 5, 2015 4:27 pm

Yes. Only warm-blooded animals are included in the restriction.

Lorne Russell
October 3, 2015 9:05 pm

Rumour has it Dr. Suzuki plans to retire and retreat from public life to his four houses allowing him to contemplate the affects of opulent western lifestyles on the climate. No more private jets for him. A humble retirement.

Simon
Reply to  Lorne Russell
October 3, 2015 11:12 pm

Lorne
Never listen to rumours.

David, UK
Reply to  Simon
October 4, 2015 2:30 am

Simon.
It was a joke.

Paul Coppin
Reply to  Simon
October 4, 2015 7:51 am

Or David Suzuki.

Admad
Reply to  Lorne Russell
October 3, 2015 11:32 pm

What do you expect from hypocrites?

Jimbo
Reply to  Admad
October 4, 2015 3:07 am

DO AS I SAY,:

David Suzuki Foundation
Reduce your carbon footprint
http://www.davidsuzuki.org/what-you-can-do/reduce-your-carbon-footprint/
========
1972
……..people are “maggots” that “defecate all over the environment”. …….
https://hauntingthelibrary.wordpress.com/2012/05/12/flashback-1972-david-suzuki-humans-are-maggots-that-defecate-all-over-the-environment/

AND NOT AS I DO.

Ottawa Sun – October 10, 2013
David Suzuki a man of property
…..owns four homes, including one property he co-owns with a fossil fuels company.
His primary abode is a sprawling mansion in the Kitsilano neighbourhood of Vancouver, worth approximately $8.2 million……
========
David Suzuki’s Five Kids
[FIVE Children: Severn Cullis-Suzuki, Laura Suzuki, Troy Suzuki, Sarika Cullis-Suzuki, Tamiko Suzuki]
http://nofrakkingconsensus.com/2010/10/13/david-suzukis-five-kids/

ECO-HYPOCRITE?

Billy Liar
Reply to  Admad
October 4, 2015 9:22 am

Eco-hippycrite?

J. Philip Peterson
October 3, 2015 9:10 pm

I eat meat every day for protein and just eating pleasure…(I like fillet minion, ribs, pork chops, lamb chops, etc) – even the Catholic church resented the edict of not eating meat on Fridays. But here in the southern Baja, I eat more fish than red meat – I like rare tuna and rare swordfish (but I think it’s sailfish)…

James the Elder
Reply to  J. Philip Peterson
October 4, 2015 9:31 am

YES! Greens are what real food eats. We did not evolve with multiple stomachs. However, a nice side salad and a vine ripened tomato or two are always welcome. When the first herbivore reaches self-awareness and can make fire, I may change my opinion.

October 3, 2015 9:11 pm

I guess she is booked fully through 2020, or figures by that time no one will remember she ever said that and will just continue on flying all over the place or heck maybe they are looking for a better deal in Fiji.

Knute
October 3, 2015 9:14 pm

Ah good. An article about how a warmista feels. This is a good moment to dig deep. The mindset of the Ms Zoloth is that she feels uncomfortable living a lifestyle that denies some unknown other somebody something.
If you really want to understand this mindset see the movie “The East”. It’s a movie about an anarchist group that attacks pharma and big energy production to name a couple. During one point in the movie, the daughter of the CEO, (daughter is a member of the group) lashes out at her kidnapped father for condoning a lifestyle of living in posh gated communities while poisoning those that cannot afford to move away from the filth. It’s a powerful little drama as the Dad unexpectedly jumps into the waste pond and confesses. Thought provoking film and an opportunity to understand what Ms Zoloth represents with more depth.
Warmistas aren’t stupid. They know there is doubt to the CAGW concept. They won’t give up on the change it can bring because they sense an opportunity to advance social justice causes.
We need to talk about what that means more than failed CO2 models. What kind of society do we want ? Is it okay that Joe drives a SUV while Mel drives a little ecobunny ? Should Jenny be allowed to live in a 1200 sq ft house while millions suffer ? Should little Joey be tutored with expensive piano lessons while a little child in Pakistan starves ?
The above is the type of dialogue that needs addressing.

Leonard Lane
Reply to  Knute
October 3, 2015 10:48 pm

I doubt that your examples to force people really make sense and can never work. The best way to solve problems of poverty and all the horrible human suffering it brings is to have a healthy and robust capitalist system and continue spreading use of fossil fuels for all the wonderful things they do to combat poverty, starvation, and most of a society’s ills.
We have enough phony science and totalitarian governments in the world.
We need freedom and honesty and faith in the gospel to solve the problems you discuss.

MarkW
Reply to  Leonard Lane
October 4, 2015 7:11 am

There will always be differences in result, because people do not have equal abilities and equal drive.
In any system some will do well, and others not so well.
In the US, even the poorest live better than most people in the rest of the world, and they live better than almost everyone a couple hundred years ago.
The solution is to grow the economy, and let everyone compete for what they want.

Knute
Reply to  MarkW
October 4, 2015 9:10 am

Mark writes
“There will always be differences in result, because people do not have equal abilities and equal drive.
In any system some will do well, and others not so well.
In the US, even the poorest live better than most people in the rest of the world, and they live better than almost everyone a couple hundred years ago.
The solution is to grow the economy, and let everyone compete for what they want.”
Knute replies ..
Bravo. Cut to the quick.
I would also add that ANY system developed by man is flawed because man is NOT perfect.
Up till now, the system you describe above has arguably achieved the best success.
Notice, nothing, absolutely nothing you’ve described has anything to do with CO2. There are truly bad things occurring that should be corrected. CO2 is not one of them. The greatest travesty of this moment is the unintended consequence of more deserving problems going unaddressed.
Science got tooled.
It’s still getting tooled.
It’s still arguing about how many camels can you fit on the head of a pin while its abusers are moving on.
Get mad bro.

MarkW
Reply to  Leonard Lane
October 4, 2015 10:00 am

Knute writes: stuff
the post I was responding to had nothing to do with CO2. It made no sense to add in a reference to CO2 since it had nothing to do with the subject being discussed.

Knute
Reply to  MarkW
October 4, 2015 10:24 am

Mark writes
“Knute writes: stuff
the post I was responding to had nothing to do with CO2. It made no sense to add in a reference to CO2 since it had nothing to do with the subject being discussed.”
Knute replies …
Hahahahaha “stuff”. At least get me to laugh harder by adding an adjective.
Nor should you add CO2 to your discussion. Addressing CAGW from a CO2 pov is futile. The data shows it’s a false conclusion yet the skeptics movement fails to gain much traction. The warmistas have moved on.
Skeptics are losing ground.
Do you like losing even when you know you are right ?
Skeptics are pounding the table that the data is a fraud. It is. Meanwhile you get no traction and they get the support of the pope and his 1B followers.
Advantage warmistas.
Skeptics continue to pound the table that the data is a fraud. Warmistas handcuff the IMF for building future coal plants and hand the business over to the BRICs.
Advantage warmistas.
Skeptics will continue to pound the table with new data that shows this is a fraud. Warmistas will likely secure 100s of billions of dollar in handout money thru the UN yearly !
Advantage warmistas.
Your attempt at cutting to the quick concerning the root support of CAGW is a seldom used approach. It’s seldom used for the same reason people don’t call out obvious race baiters. Your opponent knows that and will continue to abuse you because of your fears.
Advantage social justice warriors.
Get mad bro.

Chris Hanley
Reply to  Knute
October 4, 2015 12:33 am

“… What kind of society do we want ? Is it okay that Joe drives a SUV while Mel drives a little ecobunny ? Should Jenny be allowed to live in a 1200 sq ft house while millions suffer ? Should little Joey be tutored with expensive piano lessons while a little child in Pakistan starves ? …”.
=================================
Knute apparently has a zero-sum economic model in mind.
Joe, Mel and Jenny should be ‘allowed” to do with their legally acquired wealth whatever they like, assuming a Liberal Democracy.
The answer to poverty is economic development and growth which requires the use of abundant cheap reliable energy.
BTW, who are “we”?

Zeke
Reply to  Chris Hanley
October 4, 2015 12:45 am

inre: Knute’s Pete Singer argument
Chris Hanley is correct. Ari Schulman recently wrote an article on this subject, and he said, “Singer’s morality, then, must be one of total leveling. Hence he has made a career not only out of condemning Western consumer culture as frivolous and selfish, but of depicting even most of our charitable giving as little different.” (emph added)
But there is more to Pete Singer’s philosophy than total leveling:
“Consider, for example, one of the most prominent champions in our day of the project to make us objective judges of universal moral obligations: Princeton University philosophy professor Peter Singer. Singer is less interesting for — and often seems less interested in — doing good philosophy than in using philosophy as an instrument of provocation. Singer and his followers make a point of defending practices like infanticide for no reason other than preference, euthanizing the elderly (including his own mother), bestiality, cannibalism, and other such bourgeois peccadilloes. That these arguments are sure to be met with shudders and gasps is of course not incidental to what motivates them, so perhaps they are better met with a roll of the eyes — except for how seriously many intellectuals take these arguments, and how tellingly they distill certain universalist and countercultural strains in the legacy of Enlightenment thought.”
ref: http://www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/in-defense-of-prejudice-sort-of

Reply to  Chris Hanley
October 4, 2015 6:45 am

If it wasn’t for advancements in civilization and people living “the good life” what reason would anyone who doesn’t have those advantages strive for to attain them? Advancements in civilization carry the worlds people forward along with them. So, I do not feel bad that some people are not as advantaged as I am, just as I do not feel guilty or bad for people who lived 100 or 2000 years ago without our modern conveniences.

Knute
Reply to  Dahlquist
October 4, 2015 8:16 am

Original blog clip
“… What kind of society do we want ? Is it okay that Joe drives a SUV while Mel drives a little ecobunny ? Should Jenny be allowed to live in a 1200 sq ft house while millions suffer ? Should little Joey be tutored with expensive piano lessons while a little child in Pakistan […]
Dahlquist writes …
“If it wasn’t for advancements in civilization and people living “the good life” what reason would anyone who doesn’t have those advantages strive for to attain them? Advancements in civilization carry the worlds people forward along with them. So, I do not feel bad that some people are not as advantaged as I am, just as I do not feel guilty or bad for people who lived 100 or 2000 years ago without our modern conveniences.”
Knute says …
:::: Provokes actually … it’s called murder boarding … getting the debator ready for the barrage :::
So in your trickle down view of world advancement, you got yours, the disenfranchised got less and that’s okay ?
:::: the social justice warrior sees the above as his entry point for attack ::::
If you think this is not a real and widely spread thought process there is this dude called the pope. He just got about 1B people at least tacitly supporting him.

Knute
Reply to  Chris Hanley
October 4, 2015 9:20 am

Chris
Please reread my blog in total context.
I do not ascribe to social justice principles as they are currently wielded.
I’m trying to provoke well meaning and generally smart people to recognize what this fight is about. You cannot defeat an enemy if you fight them using only the things you see thru your own field of vision. Learn to live in the mind of your opponent and you’ll gain advantage more quickly because you’ll see the weaknesses more easily.

MarkW
Reply to  Chris Hanley
October 4, 2015 10:02 am

Interesting how Knute refers to people wanting to keep what they have earned as being bad.
On the other hand his wanting to take what people have earned and give it to others is somehow noble and caring.
Give your own stuff dude, spending your time worrying that people have too much stuff is what has driven most of the mass murders of the last few centuries.

Knute
Reply to  MarkW
October 4, 2015 10:37 am

“Interesting how Knute refers to people wanting to keep what they have earned as being bad.
On the other hand his wanting to take what people have earned and give it to others is somehow noble and caring.
Give your own stuff dude, spending your time worrying that people have too much stuff is what has driven most of the mass murders of the last few centuries.”
Actually Knute doesn’t support that line of thinking but presented it as an opportunity for readers to be provoked. It’s ironic that you latch on to Knute being the originator of such beliefs. See beyond your joy identifying “someone” to pile on and become more aware of how you are being baited. It’s called murder boarding.
Do you know that your opponent practices such skills before they unleash their message ? They already know your answers and are far more prepared than so called smarter people.
They laugh at the bait you take and have been taking for years.

Reply to  Chris Hanley
October 4, 2015 10:09 am

Knute
When people start getting things for free ( mostly in the U.S. ), those things become less valuable to them than if they earned it themselves. As for poor and disadvantaged people in the world in general, the only real way to help them is to give them the tools to accomplish their own advancement… Not to weep over their condition and shower them with money, houses and SUVs to bring them up to the standards we enjoy. Health, if we can, yes. But peoples must make themselves proud of their own accomplishments for it to have value and sustainability.
Your “social justice warrior” cannot accept the cold, hard truth that the human condition is a fact of life and that for civilizations to advance and maintain there must be hard work and struggle for those advancements to have value. No one can give value to a person or a peoples…It must be earned by themselves. And your “social justice warrior” , he or she cannot give value either.
For one example, take many of the American Indian tribes. Over the last century, many tribes were given everything they owned, cars, houses, etc. by the Government and they had no pride in what they were given (in most cases, if you ever visited any reservations in the past). Wreck your Govt. car, they get you a new one to wreck…let the house sit and rot… “We’ll get a new one when this one falls down”. But when some of the tribes were given the opportunity to make business for themselves, Casinos and accompanying businesses, the reservations looked like pride had lifted them up and people began to take care of what they had because there was value in it for them. I’m only using a few examples I have witnessed personally here. But without earned value, things are almost worthless. Social justice warriors are selfish, narcissistic, self hating pawns of the leftist guilt trippers who want everyone else who has anything to feel guilty about it.
And the worst thing about social justice warriors is that if they ever did succeed in helping a group of people to advance, they would immediately begin taxing and regulating everything they earned and had value to the group.

Knute
Reply to  Dahlquist
October 4, 2015 10:43 am

The social justice answer to all that well written answer is …
“Sure you got yours and I’m suffering. You are a selfish person. Even the pope can see that you got wealthy while I got poor”.
::::: Additional notification … Glad you are beginning to NOT take the CO2 bait :::::

Knute
Reply to  Chris Hanley
October 4, 2015 10:28 am

Knute would like you to reread the post and see that he is attempting to encourage you to put yourself in the mind of your opponent. It is a tried and true way to learn to anticipate his tactics vs reacting with the same old drivel.
Get mad bro.

MarkW
Reply to  Knute
October 4, 2015 7:09 am

What business is it of yours how much others have?
What is your proposal, to have govt take from those you deem to have too much?
Who gets to decide who has too much? You?
Down that path lies totalitarianism. Even if you try to paint it with the pretty face of “social justice”, the only way to implement it is via fascistic means.
As every country that has tried to implement your dream has discovered, all it results in is death, destruction and misery for all, with the exception of those who run the asylum, who continue to live lives of luxury.

Knute
Reply to  MarkW
October 4, 2015 8:41 am

n response to Knute:
Ah good. An article about how a warmista feels. This is a good moment to dig deep. The mindset of the Ms Zoloth is that she feels uncomfortable living a lifestyle that denies some unknown other somebody something. If you really want to understand this mindset see the movie “The East”. It’s a movie about […]
Mark replies
“What business is it of yours how much others have?
What is your proposal, to have govt take from those you deem to have too much?
Who gets to decide who has too much? You?
Down that path lies totalitarianism. Even if you try to paint it with the pretty face of “social justice”, the only way to implement it is via fascistic means.
As every country that has tried to implement your dream has discovered, all it results in is death, destruction and misery for all, with the exception of those who run the asylum, who continue to live lives of luxury.”
Knute provides …
Ah, well done Mark. Finally a bit of testicular umbrance. My intent in posting my little diddy is to move the discussions here beyond fudged temp readings and scientific fraud.
Science and any attempt at using facts/evidence is NOT what this is about. If you attempt to frame the debate in that manner you will and are being sidelined. That train has left. The social justice warrior cemented just enough momentum to create support for his real agenda. Science was abused and needs to learn from it.
Get mad bro.

noaaprogrammer
October 3, 2015 9:14 pm

I’m not so sure about the Greenies shedding their hypocrisy. As pointed out earlier, their resulting “increased integrity” may eventually lead them to climate skepticism, however for the others, it will just give them more time to promote and gloat about their greenness.

benofhouston
Reply to  noaaprogrammer
October 3, 2015 11:31 pm

Then they will at least be honest fools. I can respect an honest fool, We can even learn from them from time to time. However, we cannot learn anything from one who is dishonest, especially with themselves.

Bob Lyman
October 3, 2015 9:19 pm

Flying? If one examined what OECD countries would have to do to reduce GHG emissions by 70 to 80% below 2010 levels by 2050 as recommended by the IPCC, one would have to almost eliminate fossil fuel use within 35 years. Given the politically correct opposition to additional nuclear energy generation, this would mean severely restricting all transportation uses – cars, trucks, aircraft, and marine vessels and completely electrifying the railways at enormous cost. It would mean shutting down all energy intensive industries like oil refining, vehicle and vehicle parts manufacturing, chemicals production, cement plants and others. It would mean significantly cutting agricultural production. Bicycles and horses would make a major comeback. There would have to be severe limits on the size of residential units and on residential construction outside the urban zones. The truly astounding part of all this is that, according to IEA projections of energy demand growth in the less developed countries, the complete transformation of energy economies in the OECD would still not compensate for the growth in emissions elsewhere. Global emissions would actually grow by 2050.

Bryan A
Reply to  Bob Lyman
October 3, 2015 11:59 pm

Now, we would simply have to build underground and let the surface do as it pleases

Another Ian
Reply to  Bob Lyman
October 4, 2015 12:42 am

Bob
“completely electrifying the railways at enormous cost”
IIRC isn’t this what South Africa did in another era? But when I was there they still used steam for shunting – apparently electricity doesn’t do that so well.
So do they get “Greenie Points”?

Patrick
October 3, 2015 9:33 pm

From the article…”…Religious scholar…”. I didn’t bother reading any further about this person and her opinion about climate change.

Mike the Morlock
Reply to  Patrick
October 3, 2015 9:52 pm

Patrick, Many people are of the same mind. Just one word from, or of the wrong topic and the walls come down Same with me at times. But there is still this, Eric Worrall thought it worth posting. I tend to look at what he offers up.
michael 🙂

Patrick
Reply to  Mike the Morlock
October 3, 2015 10:14 pm

I agree, and I usually read all his posted articles. But I said I didn’t bother reading any further about this person (Ms. Zoloth) and her opinion on climate change (Because of her *belief* that humans are causing climate change, something that isn’t there/happening. Also, to have anything to do with religion, you too have to believe in something that isn’t there).

Dawtgtomis
Reply to  Mike the Morlock
October 4, 2015 8:21 am

Patrick, I find it quite ironic that a religious scholar would not ultimately trust God and would buy into the notion that humanity has accidentally gained a deic control of the climate by using the element of fire and becoming “too numerous for the planet”.
I always wonder how these folks justify conflicting beliefs?

noaaprogrammer
Reply to  Mike the Morlock
October 4, 2015 7:57 pm

It would be quite a capricious God to state that after the Noachian flood he would never again destroy the entire Earth with water again – but then decide to do it with fire.

markl
Reply to  Patrick
October 4, 2015 9:58 am

“Laurie Zoloth….as president of the American Academy of Religion”

RoHa
October 3, 2015 9:41 pm

I agree. Refreshing integrity.

AndyG55
Reply to  RoHa
October 3, 2015 9:48 pm

NO, a façade of integrity.
Why 2021….?

AndyG55
Reply to  RoHa
October 3, 2015 10:30 pm

ps.. Can I ask what age she might be, and when she is due to retire ??
I bet its 2020 !!

1saveenergy
Reply to  AndyG55
October 4, 2015 12:38 am
Billy Liar
Reply to  AndyG55
October 4, 2015 9:33 am

Look at the slideshow on her page: her students appear to travel all over the world ‘studying religion’.

October 3, 2015 10:03 pm

I agree

pat
October 3, 2015 10:03 pm

MSM in Australia today!
3 Oct: News.com.au: Perth Now: Miranda Devine: Perth electrical engineer’s discovery will change climate change debate
A MATHEMATICAL discovery by Perth-based electrical engineer Dr David Evans may change everything about the climate debate, on the eve of the UN climate change conference in Paris next month.
A former climate modeller for the Government’s Australian Greenhouse Office, with six degrees in applied mathematics, Dr Evans has unpacked the architecture of the basic climate model which underpins all climate science.
He has found that, while the underlying physics of the model is correct, it had been applied incorrectly.
He has fixed two errors and the new corrected model finds the climate’s sensitivity to carbon dioxide (CO2) is much lower than was thought…
Dr Evans says his discovery “ought to change the world”.
“But the political obstacles are massive,” he said…
PHOTO CAPTION: Dr David Evans, who says climate model architecture is wrong, with wife Jo Nova…
You heard it here first!
Originally published as Climate change debate cracks
http://www.news.com.au/national/western-australia/miranda-devine-perth-electrical-engineers-discovery-will-change-climate-change-debate/story-fnj4anv2-1227555674611

Annie
Reply to  pat
October 3, 2015 11:26 pm

Marvellous! Let’s hope this spreads widely.

Patrick
Reply to  Annie
October 4, 2015 1:53 am

Not in Australia it won’t!

urederra
Reply to  pat
October 4, 2015 3:32 am

He has fixed two errors and the new corrected model finds the climate’s sensitivity to carbon dioxide (CO2) is much lower than was thought…

Many of us have been saying that for the last 10 years.
Anyway, there is not A model, there are over a hundred, and most of them use their own parametrized climate sensitivity ‘constant’, Parametrized because nobody has actually empirically measured it, and therefore nobody has proved that the climate sensitivity to carbon dioxide is actually a CONSTANT. The values, by the way, range from 1.5 degrees to 4.5 degrees, depending on the model. And some people want us to believe that an assemble ot those models can give magically the correct climate prediction, with a parameter which varies 300% from model to model.

MarkW
Reply to  urederra
October 4, 2015 10:05 am

The fact that every model has to be tuned using different constants for the various unknowns is just more proof that none of the models are accurate.

charles nelson
October 3, 2015 10:11 pm

As long as she turns off the electricity and central heating too, I’ll be happy.

Rob Ricket
October 3, 2015 10:17 pm

Take a sabbatical in 2021…six years from now…way to take one for the team Laurie!

Steve P
October 3, 2015 10:22 pm

Carbon footprints are a crock. To date, nobody has been able to show that CO₂ is harmful. Griping about carbon footprints is playing into the alarmists’ hands.
By contrast, the green airplane in the illustration has jet engines that are defintely dangerous, and would probably burn through the wings before the jet ever got off the ground. But no worries; it’s just a model.
Many real-world passenger jet aircraft hang their engines on plylons some distance below the wing, but in no case does the wing pass through the engine. Always avoid boarding aircraft with that kind of configuration.
Of course, the green airplane is just clip art, generated from a 3D model where the artist/modeler didn’t have good attention to detail, and you want to have good attention to details in your models, if for no other reason than verisimilitude, which is what models are all about.
But if you don’t have the original 3D model, it may be difficult to fix the clip art. With the original 3D geometry, it should be possible to move down the engines and their pylons by sliding them down on the y-axis, and then render a new image with the correct configuration.
With airplane models, it’s relatively easy to spot mistakes where parts are out of place, the wrong size, upside down, and what have you.
The pause befuddles the climate models. Just like the green airplane model with the wing-burning engines, the thermageddon climate models don’t, won’t and can’t fly.

Richard of NZ
Reply to  Steve P
October 4, 2015 10:01 am

Have you never seen a picture, or in reality, an English Electric Canberra, also known in the U.S. as a B57? The engine mountings are symmetrical to the centre line of the aerofoil. The same is also true of the Gloster Meteor the second production jet aircraft.

Steve P
Reply to  Richard of NZ
October 4, 2015 3:43 pm

Yes, the key term is “engine mountings.” The engine is separate from the wing, and may be removed from it for service, replacement, and upgrades.
As I said, in no case does the wing pass through the engine, either with piston, or jet engines. Piston engines were commonly mounted in the wings of multi-engine aircraft, and that practice continued in the early days of jet aircraft for some concerns, but these days, almost all passenger jet aircraft mount the engines externally, either hanging on the rear fuselage, or mounted on pylons hanging from the wings.
The engines were mounted in the wings, but the wings were not mounted in the engines.
But, my point was about bad data in a model. If you want to talk about airplanes, that’s ok too, because the green airplane illustration has a flaw, where the leading-edge of the wing is passing through the engine nacelle, and the pylons are proturuding through the upper surface of the wing. That’s a configuration that would never occur in the real world.
The green airplane clip-art illustration is rendered from a 3D model. In that model, a few of its component parts are out of place – bad data – because there was an error in importing the model, or because the modeler made a mistake, possibly moving the model slightly while failing to select all of its components. I can see that, but perhaps you cannot. C’est la vie.
Bad data = bad model. Works the same way with airplane models, and climate models.

jaffa68
Reply to  Richard of NZ
October 5, 2015 3:00 am

de Havilland Comet – first jet airliner

jaffa68
Reply to  Richard of NZ
October 5, 2015 3:01 am

tri-jets had their centre engine in the rudder

Steve P
Reply to  Richard of NZ
October 5, 2015 8:34 am

“tri-jets had their centre engine in the rudder.”
No, tri-jets had one engine in the vertical stabilizer, and not the rudder, which is the moving part of the vertical stabilizer.
The situation is analagous to wing-mounted engines, where the engine is affixed to the aircraft at attachment points in the engine mounting.
Yes, the Comet, like the Tu-104 and some other early passenger jets, had its engines mounted in the wing roots. As I’ve said, almost all modern jet passenger aircraft now mount their engines externally, either on the rear fuselage, or on plylons hanging from the wings, which is where the green airplane illustration has an error.
In the drawing/model of the jet aircraft accompanying this post by Eric Worral, the bad data is obvious – at least to me – because the engines & their pylons are out of place.
If you can’t see that, then I can’t help you.

Steve P
Reply to  Richard of NZ
October 5, 2015 8:41 am

analagous analogous

MarkW
Reply to  Steve P
October 4, 2015 10:07 am

Many older planes had the engines in the wings.
Most military planes have the engines inside the fuselage.
The engines are put on pylons to make maintenance easier. That’s it.

Boris
October 3, 2015 10:52 pm

It is said that Rajendra Pachauri had over 500,000 air miles from jetting around the world to all of the climate conferences before his past caught up to him. Al Gore is still using his “G” to jet around for the latest photo opportunity while his many houses burn up enough energy to light a small village. Obama went to Seattle this spring from Washington DC for a $1500 a plate dinner speech. Air Force 1 and 2 plus two C17’s carrying his secret service detail and the motorcade burned over 520,000 gallons of jet fuel for a Democratic fund raiser. Leonardo Dicaprio is developing a small island in the Caribbean after he removed the indigenous locals from it. The diesel power plant for the island is said to be state of the art and very low emissions. You could go look at this wonder land that he is building but the “security” force on the island does not like sight seers and will ask you to leave. He is selling villas to an exclusive clientele for when the world gets really messed up by the “Green” crowd. I suppose that we should just look the other way and give these champions for the Climate change cause a pass. George Orwell “Some Pigs are more equal than others” Animal Farm 1945.

October 3, 2015 10:53 pm

This is a problem for a philosopher. A similar argument could be made in everyday life. If you see a boy drowning in a shallow pond do you ruin your 200 dollar shoes and wade in immediately, there is no time to spare, and save the boy. Well, if you don’t did you have a moral obligation to save the boy? But if you did then don’t you have a moral obligation to give up your expensive lifestyle and assume a life of penury to save starving and needy people for considering your behavior in saving the drowning boy you have no less an obligation to others in need. I find the climate scientist/activist in the same conundrum but it is one each of us confronts everyday balancing what is possible but realizing that we will always be morally compromised in some way.
But are we and is the climate scientist morally compromised in our necessary life choices saving the boy but choosing not to save every child even though you don’t want them to die and in the case of the climate scientist enjoying herself in the company of other like minded souls and dining largely on the public purse while presumably contributing to the problem she is seeking to solve while the meeting is meant to put in place policies to solve the problem. Is she really morally compromised? Are we? I don’t really think so. And I’ll tell you why because each of us (I hope) makes ethical choices at every point in our lives balancing what is possible with what is good.
We can endlessly debate whether the IPCC is good or bad but that is a separate question to what was presented.
(with apologies to Pete Singer for stealing his example but quite a common moral dilemma)

mike
Reply to  Steven Hales
October 4, 2015 2:50 am

[snip – an over the top rant -mod]

mike
Reply to  Steven Hales
October 4, 2015 8:06 am

@Steven Shales
Let me try again.
Allow me to flesh out the point you’re making, Steve, as I understand it. CO2 “pollution” KILLS BABIES!!!. But you don’t think someone, Steve, who fully buys into the idea that anthropogenic CO2 is a baby-cide, is “morally compromised” if they choose forms of transportation that inject, directly or indirectly, tons and tons of CO2 into the atmosphere–even when there are readily available, if less “fun”, alternatives? And remember, we’re talkin’ about putatively lethal CO2 that is the by-product of non-essential travel, by our elite carbon-phobes, to eco-confabs and for their personal recreation, which is travel that could easily be replaced by zero-carbon (i. e., zero dead-baby), on-line conferencing or resort to local amusements within cycling or hiking range.
So Steve, I don’t get it. So just why aren’t our brazen-hypocrite, carbon-piggie CO2-spewing betters “morally compromised”?–and I’m referring to those who talk a good anti-CO2 game, who insist that “climate change” represents a “great moral challenge for our times”, who would kill jobs with their green regulations by the millions, and who would bring the coercive powers of the state to bear on us “little guys” to curb our peon-nobody, de minimus carbon-appetites.
And while you’re at it, Steve, could you spell out just what you think the moral duty of a leader is to set the example and to lead from the front and by inspiring, personal example, in matters of carbon-foot print reduction. None?
Having said all that, let me note, that in her world, Professor Zoloth’s call for exemplary leadership, in any form, is probably a brave proposal, and deserves respect and admiration, on that score. And the Professor also demonstrates her self-awareness when she says, “in reducing one’s fossil-fuel use, then we’re believable, then we have integrity”. The corollary being, of course, that those of our betters who do not reduce their fossil-fuel use lack credibility and integrity–and one might even say that they are “morally compromised.” Agree, Steve?
P. S. Thank you for the jerk on my chain, mods.

Reply to  mike
October 4, 2015 10:18 am

If you answer yes that you are morally obligated to do x and in doing x you harm yourself where does the moral obligation arise in the first place? Also, what if doing x wins you applause and accolades and a guest spot on some news program have you used doing x to your advantage? Let’s say you got a book contract and a movie deal would those ends justify the means of doing x, saving a life or maintaining personal integrity? You didn’t start out with those ends in mind but they happened what do you do now?
I started this with the assumption that all actors were morally good. Any presumption that the actions of any of the actors were or are less than morally good rests entirely with the reader.

mike
Reply to  mike
October 4, 2015 11:57 am

,
Let’s take this in bite-size increments:
Yr: “If you answer yes that you are morally obligated to do x and in doing x you harm yourself, where does the moral obligation arise from in the first place?”
Response: Steve, I hate to break this to you, but if there’s a “moral obligation” to do something, one is obligated to do it whether it does harm to you or not. Is this really hard for you to understand? Let me try and explain. So if I’ve sworn before God to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, in a court of law, I’m morally obligated to do the same, regardless of whether my truthful testimony helps my case or not. And the “moral obligation”, in the above example, arises and ends with my oath-bound duty to be truthful and my ethical conviction that perjury, for personal gain, is morally wrong (though perjury would be morally permitted in a Nazi court to save a German Jew’s life, for example–but you know what I mean, Steve).
The balance of your first paragraph, Steve, is otherwise kinda silly and, therefore, not worth my effort to quote it and then break it down for detailed rebuttal. Rather, I’ll say, generally, that if an act of mine inadvertently gains me some sort of an unlooked for “good-deal”, then that stroke of good luck is neither here nor there in terms of the moral character, or lack thereof, of my original action. So, for example, if I decide to car-jack someone, and that someone turns out to be a notorious terrorist, driving a car-bomb, and I just happen to frustrate his attack, just a few blocks short of the site of his intended, mass-casualty atrocity, then I’m still a car-jacker and deserve to be judged accordingly. “Normal” people understand these things Steve–really!
Yr: “I started this with the assumption that all actors are morally good”
Response: Hitler? Stalin? Pol Pot? Dr. Evil? Are you a freakin’ lunatic, Steve?
Look, Steve, I’m goin’ to give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that you’re some sort of Professor-type and that all your half-baked, look-mom-I’m-Socrates!, beyond-good-and-evil!, like-really-heavy-man! cat-nip for dumb-kid undergrads makes sense in the hive-bubble. But let me hedge my bets, Steve. While I’m leanin’ toward you being some sort of ivory-tower hive-worthy, I want to leave open the possibility, too, that you’re just another hive-bot.

dp
October 3, 2015 11:18 pm

OMFG! I’m a climate doubting morally compromised and heavily conflicted wimp unable to make sane decisions on the spot!
Ok – I’m over it. The climate will need to be actually changing in an unnatural way to justify all these moronic climate change-driven policies that destroy our economies and take away our freedoms.

John Butler
October 3, 2015 11:39 pm

To satisfy some activists we all should be wearing a hair shirt and living in a cave – without a fire.

James Bull
October 3, 2015 11:53 pm

They should all travel by horse drawn vehicle and sail boats to get there this would keep them all out of our way for a good long time before each of these bun fights and help them appreciate all the things that fossil fuel brings to their lives as they bump along looking at the back end of a horse.
James Bull

Zeke
October 3, 2015 11:59 pm

“Religious scholar and climate activist Laurie Zoloth is concerned. She is worried about people who “deny” climate change. But she is also worried about the lack of integrity displayed by people who claim to believe, but who don’t reflect those alleged beliefs in their personal lifestyle choices.”

I have talked with several people who are garden variety environmental activists. The reason they do not act on their beliefs, or make any changes to their lifestyles, is simply because it won’t make any difference “until every one does it.”
This also conveniently prevents them from having any real, direct experience of what they are demanding from others and from society.
What I want to know is, who convinced these people that they are so brilliant that they can rip out society, infrastructure, agriculture, what have you, and replace it at will. I am afraid it is the Universities, and the use of psychoactives at a time when their brains were still developing. This makes them believe in things that aren’t there.

MarkW
Reply to  Zeke
October 4, 2015 10:13 am

Leftists have been told that the are the best and the brightest for so long, that many of them have come to believe, even when the evidence from their own lives refutes that belief.

Knute
Reply to  MarkW
October 4, 2015 10:47 am

“Leftists have been told that the are the best and the brightest for so long, that many of them have come to believe, even when the evidence from their own lives refutes that belief.”
Hahahahaha leftists. ZzzzzzzZzzzzzzzZzzzz baited and hooked soon to be fileted. Stop being such an easy target.
If you are a scientist, you likely became one partly because you thought your intelligence allowed you to not take part in the politics of living. Your opponent preyed on you because you thought YOU were above that.
Now, really, who was smarter at that moment ?

KLohrn
October 4, 2015 12:02 am

There’s a video out there on youtube of Obama just before he arrives in Alaska. The camera pans down to his itinerary pamphlet for just that visit to Alaska.
No lie, was one huge stainless staple and as thick a Gideon’s bible with paper.

Washington Rumours only you understand
October 4, 2015 12:05 am

Gossip is Obama and Michelle have separated but living separate lives in the White House.
So his and hers separate bedrooms and his and hers private jets to and back from Paris

Don A
October 4, 2015 12:13 am

FGS!!!! Read Jonova.com.au re David Evans. – comment on it – understand it – disseminate it – don’t procrastinate. He has done the work now GET IT OUT THERE

john cook
October 4, 2015 12:15 am

sure , but….when you live in wealthy soceity you enjoy à lot of things that need fossil fuel to work..
you have to let this down too.

Scottish Sceptic
October 4, 2015 12:35 am

As I keep saying: Climate extremists are amongst the most gullible people on the planet. They have no idea whatsoever how much they need fossil fuels, yet they are the fist to criticise anyone else who uses fossil fuels or worse … defends society against those who are stupid enough to envisage a modern society without fossil fuels.

Another Ian
October 4, 2015 1:12 am
Dudley Horscroft
October 4, 2015 2:12 am

You might think it is a good idea to ban all crematoria and close them down immediately. There must be a heck of a lot of carbon dioxide produced every time a human being is reduced to bone fragments. Can’t recall alarmists producing this idea, however.
What to do with the bodies? Bury them in the near-deserts where the added protein and fat will be good fertilizer, and help to grow cattle for good food. If cows are too flatulate, then sheep, goats or rabbits will do nicely.
Or even imitate Discworld and sell rat pies – a la “Cut-me-own-throat Dibber”.

MarkW
Reply to  Dudley Horscroft
October 4, 2015 10:15 am

Burial at sea. Feed the fishies.

David Cage
October 4, 2015 2:51 am

I believe that it should be a legal requirement for any activist to prove they have a below average fossil fuel consumption with no allowances or offsets whatever. Until then I will continue to regard them all as despicable charlatans and fraudsters.

Knute
Reply to  David Cage
October 4, 2015 8:26 am

David says
“I believe that it should be a legal requirement for any activist to prove they have a below average fossil fuel consumption with no allowances or offsets whatever. Until then I will continue to regard them all as despicable charlatans and fraudsters.”
Knute replies
I suppose you are talking about the wealthier CAGWites. It’s a simple demand that you make in a complicated battle. So they say, yes, you are right I’ll do that … I’m working on it.
You just validated their demands by agreeing to the NEED to have to reduce a carbon footprint. You’ve been baited and hooked.
The disenfranchised are already below the average of the first tier nations and so they’ll be waiting for your check as you strive to be lead by example.
My gawd. Be smarter.

Dawtgtomis
Reply to  Knute
October 4, 2015 5:24 pm

Clever, a mental game of ‘twister’.

Legend
Reply to  Knute
October 4, 2015 5:27 pm

Knute, you’re like the modern day Sun Tzu. Amazing. You need to put out an updated version of the Art of War.

Knute
Reply to  Legend
October 4, 2015 9:19 pm

Thank you.
Anyone can do it.
1. Become aware of your own pattern bias and make sure you have an objective observer to call you out on it.
2. Learn to identify the other 3 classic patterns which you can’t do well if you aren’t doing number 1. Once you identify the primary pattern, there are fallecious lines of argument associated with that pattern. Under duress humans default to a pattern that is engrained in them when they are young. It’s a defense mechanism to being hurt as a child in an adults world.
3. Figure out if the group or person you are dealing with is friend or foe. Is compromise a possibility ? Can resolution based on a balanced approach occur ? Are you in this together ?
4. If a friend, attempt to offer balance to the pattern bias and fallecies. Plant seeds. Make sure to manage your own bias. Resist any temptation to change them. Manage your own bias. I said it twice for a reason.
5. If a foe, do not engage in 4. Identify the pattern of their attack and learn to anticipate it. Use the sparring as a way to learn their pattern. Work on taking away your own weaknesses that they painfully expose while you probe for theirs. A foe wins by abusing you until you learn to defend yourself.
The trump card for the cagwists is that you have been manuveured to prove that CAGW is not real. The burden should have been on the CAGW core to prove that it is real. They know that, so they corrupted just enough of the already corruptible peer review process to create the 97%. This was a stunning blow for the integrity of the scientific process concerning this issue. I don’t want to be too hard on science because this was just more of the slow erosion of independence that science relied upon. CAGW was not the first, but they were the best so far.
Science is flailing like a lost child on this issue. They know facts do not support the CAGW core, but they can’t get a corrupt peer review process to consider it. Within the midst of the skirmish lies a path to the victory. You are getting your ass handed to you despite being factually correct. You are being abused because you are failing to fix your own dysfunction.
First thing science should do is resurrect the brand of independence that can’t be bought. The market for it already exists as courts are struggling to find expertise that measures up to the Daubert Factors. Find a way to create a new peer process. Make it the gold standard. Subject its rigors to all comers. Seize back the thing that made your profession the hope of mankind. It will be slow at first, but it will gain steam. You’ve been adrift for a long time.
Second, well actually along with the first stop allowing yourself to baited. Why do you accept that carbon dioxide even matters ? Why do you elevate CAGW leaders integrity to be equal to their carbon footprint ? Why do you even say you admire them if they prove they can live off the grid ? They are sucking you into their strengths while you should be focused on regaining yours.
I’m routing for science.
Thanks for listening.

Dawtgtomis
Reply to  Knute
October 4, 2015 5:44 pm

I agree with Knute that calling for legalities against them is not an answer. Proper strategies are vital.

October 4, 2015 3:03 am

The effect of CO2 on the earth’s climate is tiny at most, and CO2 is very beneficial to all life forms. We could use at least 3 times what we have now and then be close to what plant growers use in their greenhouses.
When will the people demonizing CO2 explain why there has been no increase in temperatures for nearly 20 years in spite of the fact that CO2 levels have goon way up?

Reply to  markstoval
October 4, 2015 3:04 am

” goon way up” … I may have meant “gone way up” 🙂

ulriclyons
October 4, 2015 4:10 am

“Integrity is a solid foundation, which will eventually lead her to climate skepticism.”
Not while her only integrity is obedience to decarbonisation. Her token gesture is in support of AGW paranoia and away from scepticism.

Alan Robertson
Reply to  ulriclyons
October 4, 2015 6:20 am

“Integrity is a solid foundation, which will eventually lead her to climate skepticism.”
—————————-
Probably not. She is giving advice, trying to direct and control others via the conversation, just like her peers in the climate fearosphere. Her advocacy is camouflage; “…then we’re believable”. She is useful to the cause, a true believer.
The planet’s thick deposits of fertile, Carbon rich topsoil were all built by grazing herds of ruminants, turning CO2-fed, Sun- powered plants into food and fertilizer, while disturbing the topmost soil layers, mixing seeds/organic matter with their hooves. The plow which turns the topsoil to grow the grains to fuel her vision, is also the plow which sends the topsoil to the bottom of the sea.
Mental horsepower is built with fat and powered by meat. Without a proper diet, the peasants won’t have the energy to pick up that pitchfork, or even realize when the time has come to wield it. Without enough food of any kind, those peasants won’t continue to exist. Listen to those with deepest pockets, those who stand atop the Green food chain long enough and you’ll see just how useful Ms. Zoloth and her do- good intentions really are, to the ultimate Green agenda, which is this: too many human beings exist and their populations must be reduced- there will be more for us, with fewer of them.

Knute
Reply to  Alan Robertson
October 4, 2015 8:04 am

Alan says
“Listen to those with deepest pockets, those who stand atop the Green food chain long enough and you’ll see just how useful Ms. Zoloth and her do- good intentions really are, to the ultimate Green agenda, which is this: too many human beings exist and their populations must be reduced- there will be more for us, with fewer of them.”
Knute replies
Half right. The haves of the green agenda want what you describe. The have nots want unfettered ability to reproduce, consume and for the haves to support that right.
Science ? Who cares. It’s not about science.
The social justice movement needed a catalyst because it was languishing during the economic boom of the past 30 years. It stumbled into CAGW and voila, it grew legs.
Scientists were easy marks. Public funding for research had dwindled and they had shown themselves capable of being bought off for cheap.
Scientists are pissed, but mostly quiet hoping this will blow over.
The rich are laughing all the way to the bank.
The disenfranchised have a new hammer to latch on to (CAGW) and making organizational progress.
I’ll buy dinner for the smarty pants who accurately predicts what will happen next.

Barbara
Reply to  Alan Robertson
October 4, 2015 1:47 pm

It may not be long before the full economic fall-out of the climate change agenda is felt in North America and the result will be plenty of have-nothings here.
It’s here but not much affecting the inhabitants yet except for a few locations.

James Loux
October 4, 2015 4:32 am

The article’s description of Laurie Zoloth as a “Religious scholar and climate activist” supports the perception that “Climate Change” is a faith based belief system, not a science based concept. Although supporters of this belief system continue to refer to it as “science,” even claiming that the “science is settled,” I am not aware of any science based hypothesis ever put forward by anyone which could scientifically connect wide varieties of change in the climate (inclusive of all possibilities such as warmer, cooler, wetter, drier, more storms and fewer storms) to increased CO2 in the atmosphere.
For Global Warming alone, there is at least a scientific argument that CO2 can warm the earth’s surface through increased downwelling long wave infrared radiation. In fact, the expected nasty effects of added CO2 continue to be measured in increased temperature. We are all aware of the improved marketability of the broader term “Climate Change.” But to explain how the added CO2 will cause this all inclusive “Climate Change,” there is only hand waving. Might, could, may, and potentially are not scientific terms. So I ask of all, Skeptics and Believers, does anyone know what the proposed scientific relation is between added CO2 and the dreaded “Climate Change?”

Gamecock
October 4, 2015 4:42 am

2021 WILL BE TOO LATE !!!

R. Shearer
Reply to  Gamecock
October 4, 2015 8:37 am

Brilliant!

Gerry, England
October 4, 2015 5:18 am

Since environmentalism is a left wing creed and being a hypocrite is a prime tenet of the left her stance is very unusual if not almost unique.

Bruce Cobb
October 4, 2015 5:26 am

Meh. This is just guilt-relieving, more-greenie-than-thou pontification on her part. It is a meaningless gesture.

Goldrider
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
October 4, 2015 6:22 am

And no one who doesn’t read WUWT gives a rat’s ass. I promise! 😉

Dodgy Geezer
October 4, 2015 5:43 am

@Knute
…Should Jenny be allowed to live in a 1200 sq ft house while millions suffer ? Should little Joey be tutored with expensive piano lessons while a little child in Pakistan starves ? The above is the type of dialogue that needs addressing….
Well before you have that dialogue, I think you should consider an important prior.
Do there exist absolute moral and ethical rules which are so precise that detailed comparisons can be made between house sizes? Should some people be allowed to define these for all the other people in the world? Should these people be allowed to enforce these rules on everyone else using oppression and violence?
Because you need to address this issue first….

Knute
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
October 4, 2015 7:48 am

Geezer
@Knute suggests …
…Should Jenny be allowed to live in a 1200 sq ft house while millions suffer ? Should little Joey be tutored with expensive piano lessons while a little child in Pakistan starves ? The above is the type of dialogue that needs addressing….
Geezer adds …
“Well before you have that dialogue, I think you should consider an important prior.
Do there exist absolute moral and ethical rules which are so precise that detailed comparisons can be made between house sizes? Should some people be allowed to define these for all the other people in the world? Should these people be allowed to enforce these rules on everyone else using oppression and violence?
Because you need to address this issue first….”
Knute replies
Ah good. Not one word about CAGW. It was never about CAGW because CAGW was a backdoor way to get people to be sympathetic to the social justice movement. It was also a way for the rich to latch on to a new thing and make more money from the lie. It’s akin to making up reasons to go to war. Same coin, different sides.
Science allowed themselves to be abused. I’m sure most scientists are not stupid. They know when they are being taken advantage of.
So you realized (for awhile now) they you are being abused. Now what ? You pound the table about twisted data and outright fraud. Well some do. Most stay quiet hoping it will blow over.
The rich got wealthy on the ruse.
The disenfranchised are gaining ground concerning social justice movements.
Science is turning into a punching bag.
Perhaps scientists should get a tire track tattoo across their forehead too let folks know who they are.
Get mad bro.

Walt D.
October 4, 2015 5:43 am

Not sure how you can get lobster and champagne using Webex, and get someone else to pay for it.

Greg Woods
October 4, 2015 6:06 am

It would be just a step, but in reducing one’s fossil fuel use, “then we’re believable, then we have integrity.”
It takes a lot more than that to have ‘integrity’, babe…

Craig
October 4, 2015 6:13 am

Living a life of fraud?
That’s because it’s not about what they proclaim it’s about. Like MOST things the statists and elitests do, it’s about CONTROL.
The purpose of EVERY lie is CONTROL.

Robert of Ottawa
October 4, 2015 6:23 am

Holier than thou. Is she aiming for sainthood?

MarkW
Reply to  Robert of Ottawa
October 4, 2015 10:18 am

Most leftists that I know, believe they have already achieved sainthood.

Knute
Reply to  MarkW
October 4, 2015 11:03 am

And most scient(ists) hide behind the scientific method thinking that it will guard them from being abused. Above the fray so to speak. It makes their profession an easy mark.
Go beyond the easy ad homs attacks. Your opponent is much better than you at the game of jacking up emotions.
Get mad bro.
Learn better tools.

October 4, 2015 6:39 am

As I understand it the basic premise of the CAGW crowd is that increasing concentrations of atmospheric CO2 disrupt the “natural” atmospheric heat balance and the only way to restore that “natural” balance is by radiating that unbalanced heat back to space per the S-B relationship, i.e. increasing the surface temperature. BTW, the atmosphere is not, as some postulate, a closed system. That assumption simplifies calculations, but ignores reality.
One, there is no such thing as the “natural” heat balance. As abundantly evident from both paleo and contemporary records the atmospheric heat balance has always been and continues to be in constant turmoil w/o regard to the pitiful 2 W/m^2 of industrial CO2 added between 1750 and 2011. Fluctuations in incoming and outgoing radiation, changing albedo from clouds and ice, cosmic rays, 10 +/- W/m^2 range of solar insolation from perigee to apogee, etc. refute that notion of a closed system.
Two, radiation is far from the only source of rebalancing the “natural” heat balance. Water cools the surroundings when it evaporates and warms the surroundings when it condenses. The water vapor cycle, clouds, precipitation, etc., a subject which IPCC AR5 admits to having a poor understanding, modulates and moderates the atmospheric heat balance and has done so for millions of years all without the help or hindrance of industrialized man. The atmospheric water cycle is just on huge global atmospheric swamp cooler for the earth. Other planets don’t have that. The popular GHE considers radiation only and excludes water vapor. Large commercial greenhouses typically have a wall full of evaporative cooler pads, water & fans.
CAGW has zip to do with science and everything to do with a hazy, starry eyed, utopian, anti-fossil fuel (90% anti-coal) agenda bereft of facts & reality.

Richard
October 4, 2015 6:48 am

Flying to the conference may seem to lack integrity, but it’s business as usual. “Carbon” restriction laws don’t apply to the elite, the important. Neither will the wealth redistribution this movement is actually about.

Just Steve
Reply to  Richard
October 4, 2015 9:37 am

Socialism is never for the socialist.

Richard of NZ
Reply to  Just Steve
October 4, 2015 10:12 am

The party is the vanguard of the proletariat because the proletariat do not know what they want. Now where did I read that, oh yes, Joe Stalin a lovely fellow in every way.

RockyRoad
October 4, 2015 7:33 am

It only matters if the airplane traffic to the destination cities of these CAGW conferences is increased to handle the attendees. Otherwise, the planes fly anyway and the amount of CO2 generated hasn’t increased.

Logoswrench
October 4, 2015 7:46 am

The whole leftist enterprise is a do what I say not as I do deal. That’s the way they roll. Always have always will.

Just Steve
Reply to  Logoswrench
October 4, 2015 9:38 am

A conservative vegetarian doesn’t eat meat. A leftist vegetarian doesn’t want you to eat meat.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Just Steve
October 4, 2015 10:03 am

Ha-ha. True dat.

MarkW
Reply to  Just Steve
October 4, 2015 10:22 am

I had an acquaintance a few years ago who was a very strong advocate of the vegetarian lifestyle. When I pointed out that he ate almost as much meat as I did, he said that it was OK, because he felt bad about it.

John Boles
October 4, 2015 7:48 am

From the McKibbens down to the warmist bloggers, I would love to follow any of them around for a day and remind them not to use any carbon-based energy, lest they be elitist and hypocritical. Don’t you dare heat your house in the winter, or use an air conditioner or drive a car, or cook on the stove or use your computer, because that would make you look like a “denier” as they call my kind. If I were a warmist I would not be caught dead in a car or an airplane. I would set a golden example and walk or ride a bicycle or use a paddle boat. No phone, no lights, no motorcar, not a single luxury!

Billy Liar
Reply to  John Boles
October 4, 2015 10:26 am

You sound like a shoe in for an Amish community. 🙂

climatebeagle
October 4, 2015 8:03 am

Katherine Hayhoe says: “when I get speaking or meeting invites, I ask if we can do it via video first”
https://twitter.com/KHayhoe/status/575637633243574272
I got blocked from her twitter for pointing out that all of her upcoming trips must have said video wasn’t available. I mean flying to NY to see a film, that shows you care about your carbon emissions.
I’ve yet to see a conference where she is presenting by video conference, though i could have missed it.

October 4, 2015 8:19 am

I think what’s sad is basic scientific ignorance , gullibility and need for guilt which cause apparently nice people like Laurie to fear the very molecule out of which , in equal measure with water , they , like all life , are constructed .

Michael Jankowski
October 4, 2015 8:40 am

“…It would be just a step, but in reducing one’s fossil fuel use, “then we’re believable, then we have integrity…”
It is truly “just a step” towards being “believable” and having “integrity.”

Just Steve
October 4, 2015 9:35 am

Meat is high carbon footprint? This woman apparently has no idea how food is grown in mass quantity.

benofhouston
Reply to  Just Steve
October 4, 2015 9:02 pm

Steve, let’s be honest here. Grass-fed meat is just efficient use of land, especially land unsuitable for farming. Grain-fed meat is actually more energy intensive than just eating grain. As a whole, eating meat is in general more intensive than vegetarianism. This is historically why regions without strong hunting backgrounds were mostly vegetarian pre-industrialization,
Whether it’s worthwhile to cut back is obviously a matter of contention, but given her beliefs, it’s at least internally consistent to complain about.

Ian W
October 4, 2015 9:47 am

If you have to travel more than 300 miles then air transport is the lowest emission transport you can choose. Modern aircraft have a fuel consumption of 120 miles per gallon per revenue passenger mile or better some significantly better than that such as the Airbus 320neo. These figures are obtained without any infrastructure requirements between departure and destination airport. Older 4 jet aircraft can burn more fuel at around 60 mpg per revenue passenger mile but even so these are not the kind of figures that should earn opprobrium from even a Prius driver. Air travel is also far safer and allows time efficient journeys that would be impossible by any other form of transport.
Nevertheless, there is often little reason for large number of people to travel to conferences apart perhaps from the post conference networking. It seems that many of these large conferences are held in attractive locations and try to squeeze 8 hours of work into 5 days.

Patrick
Reply to  Ian W
October 5, 2015 1:58 am

Top post that man! +1

October 4, 2015 1:32 pm

While there is satisfying to see warmists being called out on their hypocrisy, i’m not too gleeful. All popular movements, and even some not popular ones, eventually become full of people who are only along for the benefit it can bring to themselves. The same thing will happen to the skeptical ‘movement’, if there is such a thing. The day will come when some of these same people will be attending conferences titled ‘CO2 how it benefits the biosphere’ and they will claim they were skeptics all along.

benofhouston
Reply to  Joel Sprenger
October 4, 2015 9:04 pm

I don’t doubt it will happen. When we reach that point, we will have already won the war, and hopefully can disband the entire thing.

Steve in SC
October 4, 2015 1:59 pm

I wonder how large a surge in business the Parisian prostitutes are expecting?

October 4, 2015 2:04 pm

Religious scholar and climate activist Laurie Zoloth has the wrong idea about the Cimate and CO2 but has the right idea about integrity and responsible action. All popular movements like CAGW are populated with people who are only in it for the benefits they get.

DGH
October 4, 2015 2:57 pm

Ms. Zoloth would be very disappointed in James Kinter of IGES/COLA at GMU who is currently tied into the Shakula affair.
Dr. Kinter’s presence at the 2014 AGU Fall meeting was so important that he flew roundtrip from Washington, D.C. to San Francisco in just one day. An expense report available on the IGES website shows that he only spent 6 hours in San Francisco before returning home.
According to carbonfootprint.com that’s 1257 lbs of CO2 for just one workshop.

Gerald Machnee
October 4, 2015 3:55 pm

Does anyone want to do a carbon footprint for the Paris conference before it happens so it can be made public. Also how many limos will be used. Remember the 1000 or so that had to be imported to Denmark?
The we can wait for the excuses.

clipe
October 4, 2015 6:03 pm

Someone upthread mentioned “virtue signalling”?
Here is the first time I came across the term.
http://new.spectator.co.uk/2015/04/hating-the-daily-mail-is-a-substitute-for-doing-good/

clipe
October 4, 2015 6:29 pm

Also upthread, Suzuki has been mentioned.
http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/2015/10/sanctimonia.html

Walter Sobchak
October 4, 2015 7:47 pm

“she proposed that her group take a sabbatical year in 2021 by skipping the annual conference that fills the jet streams with thousands of scholars converging on one city.”
Nothing is new. St. Augustine, in his “Confessions” wrote:
“As a youth I prayed, Da mihi castitatem et continentiam, sed noli modo. “Give me chastity and continence, but not right now.”
Which reminds of the scripture:
EC 1:10
“Is there any thing whereof it may be said, See, this is new? it hath been already of old time, which was before us.”
That chapter begins: “Vanity of vanities, saith the Preacher, vanity of vanities; all is vanity.”

Steve from Rockwood
October 5, 2015 5:51 am

Only a hypocrite or a procrastinator would wait until 2021 to do something.

October 5, 2015 7:46 am

what’s with 2021? That’s so manana! Let’s go with 2016, now wouldn’t that make your bones all the more believable? It’s like I’m giving us smoking in 2021; yeah, right.

George Lawson
October 5, 2015 7:52 am

Ms. Zoloth probably had Al Gore in mind.

Caligula Jones
October 5, 2015 7:55 am

Here in Canada, a large group of celebrities used the Toronto International Film Festival to launch (yet another) “countdown to the apocalypse” group.
Someone suggested that anyone who signed on should be immediately placed on a “no fly” list.
You know, to protect their integrity and save them from hypocrisy…

Resourceguy
October 5, 2015 9:40 am

It’s worse with taxpayer funded flights to Paris as reward for message management and beating back fact checking or even the suggestion of it.

Maria Sanchez
October 5, 2015 10:12 am

Have been saying for years that snake oil salesman never buy their own product. So when someone runs around screaming that we’re all doomed unless we reduce our carbon footprints immediately, and I find out later that they haveca carbon footprint 100 times my own, it’s a little hard to believe them. In fact, one might conclude that they are even more skeptical about AGW than I am.

October 5, 2015 8:16 pm

They should walk…like the religion of peace does to Mecca…that is if they really believe in that AGW junk.

October 7, 2015 11:03 am

And on the side, I’m chuckling at the illustration of a turbofan airliner.
– wing leading edge slices into engine intake
– nose shape is from an old airplane that has had a radome for weather radar added, as done with Convair twin turboprops (this shape looks familiar but I can’t place it).

Steve P
Reply to  Keith Sketchley
October 9, 2015 4:11 am

I was banging on about this earlier upstream. Rather than a hodge-podge of parts from different planes, I think what you’re seeing in the nose is an artifact of the modeling tool, probably NURBS or something like it, and see my earlier comments about the engines. But 3D modeling is not easy, and it can be difficult to get everything right.
http://oi61.tinypic.com/2lbjrsz.jpg