From the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation:
Dear Attorneys General,
You’re not stupid. Stupid people don’t graduate from law school.
Neither are you generally ignorant. You know lots of law.

So, U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch and members of Attorneys General United for Clean Power, take no offense when I tell you that your intent to investigate and potentially prosecute, civilly or criminally, corporations, think tanks, and individuals for fraud, under RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act) or otherwise, because they question the causes, magnitude, risks, and benefits of global warming, and best responses to it, is a dead giveaway that you’re ignorant about climate science and related climate and energy policy.But the day of the “Renaissance man,” vastly learned across all fields of knowledge, is long gone. All intelligent and learned people are ignorant about some things.
I’ve thought this ever since you first went public, but an email from Ed Maibach, Professor in the Department of Communications and Director of the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University (GMU), to Jagadish Shukla, Professor of Climate Dynamics and president of the Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies and the Institute of Global Environment and Society at GMU, dated July 22, 2015, ironically makes the point:
I had breakfast with David Michaels today. He is currently the Director of the Occupational Health and Safety Administration (in the US Department of Labor), and a former environmental health colleague of mine at George Washington University. He is an expert in the case against the tobacco industry.
His [sic] feels the odds of the DOJ [Department of Justice] pursuing this case against [the fossil fuel] industry are slim to none, because there are no easily quantifiable [health care] costs that the government can seek reimbursement for.
That said, I have no objection to our sending a letter to the President, our Maryland Senators and members of Congress …, with a cc to Senator [Sheldon] Whitehouse [D-RI], asking them to support Senator Whitehouse’s call for a RICO investigation.
That’s ironic because it comes from one of the 20 signers of Shukla’s infamous letter to AG Lynch and the head of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy urging a RICO investigation similar to that against tobacco companies in the 1990s.
The ironies of Maibach’s email are obvious enough. He cites an expert who thinks the odds of DOJ’s acting “are slim to none,” yet signs a letter asking DOJ to do it. He knows why the odds are slim: “because there are no easily quantifiable … costs that the government can seek reimbursement for.” Yet he signs a letter saying, “We are now at high risk of seriously destabilizing the Earth’s climate and irreparably harming people around the world.”
But the chief irony I have in mind is that you, attorneys general—none of whom, presumably, is an expert in climate science or ecological biology or the economics and engineering of energy or any of the many other fields relevant to the controversy—have launched precisely the action Maibach reported Michaels said DOJ wouldn’t launch for lack of easily quantifiable costs.
Now, why would Michaels have said there were no easily quantifiable costs?
Because, unlike in the case of tobacco’s health risks, there are innumerable and enormous holes in the case (not for human contribution to global warming but) for manmade global warming dangerous enough to justify spending trillions of dollars reinventing the world’s energy system to mitigate it, particularly when competing use of those trillions might bring far greater benefit.
And you, intelligent and learned all, are ignorant of those enormous holes.
It’s not entirely your fault. Journalists have been delinquent in reporting them. Climate alarmists have worked hard to deprive dissenters of research funds, jobs, and publication while hiding their own scientific misconduct. And it is ever so much easier to tell a scary story to motivate the public than to unpack the gory details with all their uncertainties.
So here are a few recommendations for you to remedy your ignorance:
- Start by getting a grasp of the basic science of climate change by reading former Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Chairman Sir John Houghton’sGlobal Warming: The Complete Briefing.
- Then, to learn some of the reasons for doubting Houghton’s somewhat alarmist views, read The Great Global Warming Blunder: How Mother Nature Fooled the World’s Top Climate Scientists, by equally well-qualified climate scientist Roy W. Spencer.
- If you’re brave, get into the weeds of why the IPCC said in its Third Assessment Report, “The climate system is a coupled non-linear chaotic system, and therefore the long-term prediction of future climate states is not possible” (emphasis added), by reading Taken By Storm: The Troubled Science, Policy and Politics of Global Warming, by applied mathematician Christopher Essex and environmental economist and statistician Ross McKitrick. You’ve probably never heard of the Navier-Stokes equation, but it is unsolved (and a million-dollar prize awaits anyone who solves it), yet accurate long-term prediction of climate requires its solution.
- Go beyond journalists’ breathless reports based on the biased and unrepresentative Summary for Policymakers and actually read the (mostly very good) thousands of pages of the main texts of the Fifth Assessment Report of the IPCC (including Working Group 3, whose predictions indicate countries poorest today are better off under warmer than cooler scenarios because in their models economic growth fueled by fossil fuels drives the warming). In them you’ll discover far more uncertainty than the SPM reveals.
- Read the thousands of pages of the competing reports from the Nongovernmental [hence less politicized] International Panel on Climate Change.
- Get acquainted with the meaning of “climate sensitivity” and why estimates of it—and consequently of all effects of global warming driven by human emissions of CO2 and other deceptively named “greenhouse gases”—have been declining over the years.
- Learn a little about “energy density” and “power density” and how they relate to questions about the engineering and costs of various energy sources from Robert Bryce’s Power Hungry: The Myths of “Green” Energy and the Real Fuels of the Futureand then about the costs of replacing fossil fuels as the source of roughly 85% of all the world’s energy with wind, solar, and other “renewable” options.
If you do these things, I don’t guarantee you’ll become skeptical of dangerous manmade global warming, but I do expect you’ll understand—because you’re smart—that the issues are far more complex than you thought, and certainly far too complex to be adjudicated in a court of law that needs to find “easily quantifiable costs” to justify a ruling.
You’ll also learn that honest people intelligent as yourselves—and maybe better informed—can disagree about the causes, magnitude, risks, and benefits of global warming, and best responses to it, without being mafia bosses. You’ll discover that what motivates us is far more our concern not to trap billions of people in poverty by denying them access to the abundant, reliable, affordable energy indispensable to lifting and keeping any society out of poverty.
And then maybe, too—before Congress takes you to the woodshed—you’ll decide to back off your potentially felonious conspiracy to “injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person … in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or because of his having so exercised the same,” for which you could be fined or imprisoned up to ten years, or both (18 U.S.C. 241).
Signed (italics denotes climate scientists; boldface denotes legal experts):
Timothy Ball, Ph.D. (Historical Climatology), University of London, England
Calvin Beisner, Ph.D., Founder and National Spokesman, Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation
Charles Clough, M.S. (Atmospheric Science), Founder and Retired Chief of the US Army Atmospheric Effects Team, Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD
Colonel John A. Eidsmoe, JD, Senior Counsel, Foundation for Moral Law, Professor of Constitutional Law & Criminal Procedure, Oak Brook College of Law & Government Policy
Christopher Essex, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Applied Mathematics, University of Western Ontario
Neil L. Frank, Ph.D. (Meteorology), Director, National Hurricane Center (1974–1987), Chief Meteorologist of KHOU-TV, Houston (1987–2008)
Rev. Peter Jones, Ph.D, Director, truthXchange
Madhav Khandekar, Ph.D. (Meteorology), former research scientist, Environment Canada, Expert Reviewer, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Fourth Assessment Report, 2007
Jamieson C. Keister, Ph.D. (Physics), retired research chemist, 3M Company
Kevin Lewis, J.D., Associate Professor of Theology & Law, Biola University
Anthony R. Lupo, Ph.D., Department Chair and Professor of Atmospheric Science, University of Missouri
Prof. Dr. Vishal Mangalwadi, LLD, Director, Centre For Human Resource Development, Sam Higginbottom Institute for Agriculture, Technology, and Sciences, Allahabad (UP), India
Tracy Miller, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Economics, Grove City College
Ben Phillips, Ph.D., Associate Dean, Harvard School of Theological Studies, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
Shawn Ritenour, Ph.D., Professor of Economics, Grove City College
Chris Skates, B.S., Environmental Chemist
Roy W. Spencer, Ph.D. (Meteorology), Principal Research Scientist in Climatology, University of Alabama; former Senior Scientist for Climate Studies at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center; U.S. Science Team leader, Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer on NASA’s Aqua satellite
Timothy Terrell, Ph.D. (Economics), Associate Professor of Economics, Wofford College
Anthony Watts, Publisher, WUWT, the world’s most viewed website on climate
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Also, I realize that it was Shukla that was the Actual From addressee of the RICO letter to John Holdren, but I really regard it as the Maibach letter. He’s the one that wrote it, coordinated getting all the co-signers, incorporated all the edits and suggestions, and prepared the final letter.
I hope you have forwarded a copy of this awesome, rational letter to Trump and his advisors…Like it or not, he is the Republican nominee, and he may be a able to spread this to a HUGE, hungry audience !
+ 50 stars….
Actually not a bad idea. Maybe some aide will notice and convince Trump to highlight? Now that would be interesting to see if the press will ignore…..
Not only Trump. I applaud the letter and the signatories but the MSM will ignore it without some household names. Ted Cruz or other major Republicans? I suggest that all house and senate reps as well as governors and state reps should be asked to sign in support of constitutional liberties. Then make a fuss about it with press releases in the districts of those who refuse. ACLO?
And be sure to ask Hillary!
Fight fire with fire.
Very nice.
…Semi Off Topic Scientific News….
“Carbon planets around special stars could have hosted life”
http://www.foxnews.com/science/2016/06/09/carbon-planets-around-special-stars-could-have-hosted-life.html?intcmp=hphz03
So “pollution” causes life ?…/sarc off…
and not just way out there –
http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2016/carbon-dioxide-fertilization-greening-earth
How much does a one page add in either the New York Times or Wall Street Journal cost? Not that I’m volunteering to pay it, I do however think this letter appearing in a high profile paper would open some eyes.
$110K to $140Kmare numbers I have seen for full-page, B&W ad.
because there are no easily quantifiable [health care] costs that the government can seek reimbursement for.
================
well there is the extra cost caring for of all the homeless people that didn’t freeze to death, because the climate got warmer.
That’s a mighty big IRS audit list there…
Yes, time to state the facts.
“You’ll discover that what motivates us is far more our concern not to trap billions of people in poverty by denying them access to the abundant, reliable, affordable energy indispensable to lifting and keeping any society out of poverty.”
I don’t really appreciate being told that the people who sold me abundant, reliable and affordable energy over the last 20 years were criminals conspiring against the environment.
Out of poverty
http://cdltraining.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/Job-Outlook-for-Truck-Drivers.jpg
We came a long way baby.
http://image1.masterfile.com/getImage/619-00903983em-Young-woman-smiling-for-the-camera-with-truck-in-background.jpg
Terrific letter, both this one and the letter from Sen Cruz et al.
Great letter, Cal. People who say your fine words are wasted on the AGs miss the point. The chief audience here is not the AGs but (1) the people and organizations they have targeted and (2) the larger court of public opinion.
The letter is especially valuable because it reminds readers how easily–and deservedly–the AGs’ accusations of “misrepresentation” and “fraud” can be flipped back on them. These guys not only advocate policies like cap-and-trade, carbon taxes, “Keep It in the Ground,” and forced investment in renewables, they also demand fossil-fuel CEOs confess their business model is “unsustainable.” Intended result: Investors flee, stock prices crash, fossil energy companies go bankrupt. Yet the AGs’ claim they seek to “protect shareholder value.” Misrepresentation with a vengeance.
They define fraud as hiding risks from the public for personal gain. Well, well, when are they going to acknowledge that putting an energy-starved planet on an energy diet could do enormous harm to millions of innocents? Never, of course, as that would spoil the partisan narrative on which the ‘progressive’ movement’s power, income, and status increasingly depends.
Its a big shake down. This came about after Hillary met with Exxon mgmt for financial support and was turned down!
A tactic invented by Hillary’s mentor, Saul Alinsky.
And speaking of Attorneys General conspiring together and working with NGOs and assorted environmental activists to prosecute Americans for buying and selling diesel and gas,, keep in mind that NGOs are often funded by foreign governments.
Russia had the right idea when it required NGOs to regsiter as “foreign agents.”
Report of a football coaches meet that took place in La Jolla:
https://nigguraths.wordpress.com/2016/06/10/la-jolla-junta-true-story/
When he writes “no easily quantifiable costs” he really means no identifiable costs at all. What lawyer would baulk at suing just because the damages aren’t “easily quantifiable”?
I wonder why residents of the states these people are from do not file a complaint with the State Supreme Court about attorneys using the law to push a political agenda. It certainly seems to be improper.
The AG’s are from Leftwing States.
Nonetheless, skeptics and lovers of freedom in those States ought to hold their State’s AG to account for trying to take away the First Amendment rights of U.S. citizens.
If the AG’s can take away the skeptics free speech rights, then they can take them away from anyone, including Leftists.
So here are a few recommendations for you to remedy your ignorance:
0. Prof. J. Ray Bates used to think the extra CO2 that mankind was putting into the atmosphere was a problem. He is big enough to admit when he is wrong. In fact he has actually proven that he was wrong.
The feedback that was supposed to give us 2-5 C warming doesn’t exist. At most we will get a 1 C to 1.5 C increase from doubling CO2 (300->600 PPM). The IPCC has said that anything under 2 C will not be harmful and will be beneficial.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2015EA000154/pdf
The question now is will you be honest enough to admit that you are wrong?
http://www.raybates.net/
B.Sc. (Physics, 1st class honours), University College Dublin, 1962.
PhD (Meteorology), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1969
Great letter, especially the points 1 thru 7. Somehow how do we get this to the MSM.(main stream media)?
Send to Dellingpole at Breitbart, would be fun..
Perhaps, Bain, of Comic Book and Movie lore would while knitting observe, “A Tale of Two Cites!”
The letter sums it up: after 40 years the science community can’t tell if
1. Is there such thing as ‘greenhouse gas’ in the open system of earth’s atmosphere
2. Does CO2, and in what amount, contribute to warming / cooling of said open system.
Astounding.
Look I applaud your efforts on organizing against this harassment. Irregardless of my stance on CAGW (its not pro, btw), I prefer transparency. Some skeptical thinktanks/organisations, dont smell so good and I would love to see transparency, but they operate behind ( “donations”, which are undisclosed). There’s so many skeptics who fight a good fight, to stop governments from tanking the economy on something that isnt catastrophic.
I think you will find that MOST organizations one way or the other have ‘undisclosed’ donators- because they don’t need their backers badgered for ‘crimes,’ especially thought crimes such as being skeptics.
Only a year or so ago, a CEO was fired because it was found out that he had contributed to an organization that supported a certain ballot initiative in CA.
The Cornwall Alliance are a group who try to drag christianity into the debate.
We need to beat the CAGW nutters using science and not fairy stories about a big man in the sky.
And you had ZERO reason to even bring religion into this. But while I am here I note a great many Great scientists in the past WERE religious and thanked God for their ability to reason. Including the PRIEST who designed the Big Bang theory.
btw, can you point to Anything in that letter which smacks of bringing God into the equation?
“Creation” is the flag-word. Also, check out CA’s website:
http://cornwallalliance.org
Just because some scientists were religious doesn’t make their religion correct. Sceptics quite rightly call out alarmists for their lack of empirical evidence of CAGW, so equally we should not be hanging our hats on faith-based beliefs that have no empirical proof.
You’re welcome to believe in a god in the sky, but leave it out of a scientific debate please.
BTW typing in CAPITALS makes you appear shouty and over-defensive.
AWWW, TSK!
I note the word ‘creation’ is often used by people who do not believe it was created. I see it all the time… so where does that leave you?
The irony of DS making this petty point in a discussion on a post about the vital freedom to hold opinions must qualify for some sort of award.
‘Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.’
” … so where does that leave you?”
Something has always been there both pre and post big bang.
Get your head round the concept of infinity and you’ll understand that not evrtything has to be “created”.
” The irony of DS making this petty point in a discussion on a post about the vital freedom to hold opinions must qualify for some sort of award.”
When did I say you shouldn’t be allowed to believe in something? You can believe in what you like, no matter how wrong you might be.
Anything that can’t be proven, must be dis-believed?
There goes about 90% of modern physics.
BTW, I don’t know of any Christian who claims that God can be proven empirically.
Pretty much by definition, supernatural can’t be proven using the laws of nature.
My take on the Cornwall Alliance is that they’re an eclectic group of creationists (who don’t all believe the biblical story of creation) who are also climate skeptics. Just think of them as an example of the broad reach climate skeptics have, and evaluate the letter in terms of our understanding of climate, not religion.
BTW, I seem to have missed the section about a big man in the sky, can you quote that part of the letter for me?
I’ll go you one better.
Nobody needs to beat anybody.
Did somebody beat the soviet union?
and yet it collapsed, did it not?
what worked, hmmmmmm?
pay some attention to what works or you will keep on failing.
Fighting and Winning are distinctly different propositions.
The end will come about as a direct result of the means you choose.
Failure is an option, that’s abundantly clear.
What is also tautological is that If you keep achieving the same outcome after numerous repetitions, then no matter what you say- that is the outcome you really want!
Is being able to complain such a big freakin thrill, after all?
That’s all you get with the choices you keep making.
It really is sad how intolerant and ignorant your average atheist is.
Not using a capital C for Christianity make you look petty. Would you adopt the same format with other religions?
Yep.
If they’re not at the start of a sentence: christianity, islam, sikhism, etc
Why should one belief in the existence of gods hold sway over another? They’re all evidence free.
So you’re saying “republican” or “democrat” should not be capitalized? Are they not also names of belief systems?
I’ll captalise Dem and Rep as they’re political parties and the names are proper nouns.
Religions? Nah. I’m an atheist and I don’t capitalise atheism. I’m not that precious.
I am a Christian, you are not religious. The answer as to who is correct in both religion and global warming will both be answered in time. However your views on religion have no more of a place in this discussion than mine.
David:
I also think you are being petty. I am an atheist, but I do not let that get in the way of writing using the correct English rules and styles. I am very Jeffersonian on the issue – “What does it matter to me if a man believes in one God or twenty [or none], it neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.”
I don’t like mondays (sic).
I want to write (sic)
The whole day down.
You give prosecutors too much credit. Most (almost all) are severely lacking in science education; and some will believe the most ludicrous things in order to pursue an agenda. Vide, the prosecutors who believed children’s tales of orgies and cannibalism in prosecuting the owners of a child-care operation in Oregon (? Don’t remember the state) a few years ago.
JimB, JD
I guess you are trying to remember the McMartin Preschool case, which was in California.
There was another case in Oregon. As well as one in MA.
There were also the daycare “abuse” scandals in the 80s. People went to prison for years, and a provider in Massachusetts was stuck there well after the allegations in his case were proven to be false. As the state AG, Martha Coakley fought all efforts to reconsider his conviction (years after the evidence was exposed as bogus), and as of a few years ago, never apologized for her inexplicable actions.
We all want to believe that no one would make up awful tales, but there are too many cases that prove that not only will people believe anything, they will also claim anything. If we are lucky, false claims are benign. If we are unlucky, we wind up with things like AGW being taken seriously and used to harm individuals and/or society as a whole.
I think this letter will have a positive effect. As pushback, it will let its recipients know that their targets will not take their abuse lying down. More importantly, it will let its recipients know that we are upfront about our opinions and not afraid to face our accusers in the daylight.
Very good. However, when rational meets the irrational, the irrational does not move.
The reason David Michaels said the odds of DOJ’s acting “are slim to none,” is that he was actually trying to practice law, and not simple practice “judicial advocacy”.
RICO charges require specific elements. One basis for a RICO charge is that a group of individuals (or entities) perpetrate a fraud that results in quantifiable costs to the US government.
In the tobacco RICO litigation, the tobacco defendants, through a series of concerted acts, suppressed knowledge of public harm for their product, promoted the use of their product although there was an alternative of not using it, engaged in selling a medical device (a nicotine content tailored cigarette) that delivers an addictive drug (nicotine) without going through the FDA regulations , and through the sales of that device burdened the US government with healthcare costs directly and conclusively attributable to the use of the device.
Please note that in the RICO tobacco litigation, the DOJ pursued equitable, injunctive remedies. (See https://www.justice.gov/civil/case-4). It sought to prevent the tobacco concerns from continuing to promote the conspiracy. (See https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/civil/legacy/2014/09/11/amended%20opinion_0.pdf). Is big energy promoting anything other than the sale of energy products?
To try to analogize the acts of the tobacco concerns with big energy is an enormous stretch.
Probably the biggest problem facing DOJ bringing a RICO charge is the simple question, so what was the public to do?
Not buy petroleum products? How would they live?
Not buy electricity? How would they live?
Not buy food made with energy products sold by the alleged conspirators? How would they live?
You can live without ever consuming a tobacco product. The same cannot be said in modern America about the energy products sold by the alleged conspirators.
+10
Add to that list:
Not use products made of plastic?
Not gonna happen