WUWT at 10+ years – I need some help, please

UPDATE 6/14/17: Michael E. Mann just can’t stand this, see below.

Hello everyone,

I feel like many of you are family, you’ve been with me and this endeavor so long. I started in November of 2006, and I’m approaching my 11th year. In all that time, WUWT has been providing a daily service to readers with original research, commentary, and humor where appropriate.

During this time, we’ve witnessed many great things together: Climategate started here in 2009, and the implosion of the Copenhagen conference as a result. The unmasking of the IPCC, showing that many of the “voodoo science” claims against skeptics made by IPCC chairman Pachauri, were based on fake datashockingly bad science, and even grey literature. Now the tables are turned, and he’s out in disgrace. Then there was the time that I proved without a doubt that both Al Gore and Bill Nye were not just incompetent, but liars too, faking a science experiment. That finding by me was later backed up by a peer reviewed paper in the American Journal of Physics. Then there was the leaking of the IPCC AR5 documents here, showing how corrupted their thinking is, and how the final product was sanitized. Then there’s the Paris Agreement, watching it unfold, shaking our heads at the inanity of it. Even Dr. James Hansen called it a “fraud”. Then, just two weeks ago, watching President Trump remove the U.S. from it. It was truly a great day, with the bonus of watching all those heads explode.

Some people say that WUWT was a force or a catalyst in contributing to these things happening, but I don’t know. I just did what seemed like the right thing. Dig for the truth behind the headlines, and never, ever, give up.

It’s been a great ride. But, to be honest, I’m facing burnout. I need a break, so that I can continue another 10 years. I have not taken a real vacation from WUWT during the entire time. Ric Werme, who tracks WUWT, I think once said it’s been about 7 years since WUWT went a day without at least one story, and often there are five or six. It’s a lot of work. The ride has personally and professionally had it’s fallout for me. I’ve had clients cancel on me because of my views, and I’ve been through a personal hell too.

But, I continued, and I want to keep contributing, but I need a break to do it. I think I deserve one. Steve McIntyre of ClimateAudit once told me in a face to face conversation that “You and I both have done the work of ten men. I think we’ve given them a good run” (he was referring to the “Hockey Team et al”). Steve has essentially retired [from] blogging, because he has other pursuits. He feels like he’s done his fair share. I’d say his contribution was monumental.

I still have more stories to tell, I still have more research to do, I still have more to contribute.

One of the great things about WUWT is that we’ve had so many guest authors. This keeps it fresh. But I still have to administer it all. I do it from my phone, my laptop, and my home and office PC. I’ve never really been out of touch from it

Here’s the stats over the past 10+ years.

  • 16,496 stories posted
  • 2,075,345 Comments
  • 316,737,166 views
  • 49 reference pages (some of which sorely need work)

There’s no other website that focuses on Climate Science that can even come close to that track record. That’s not a boast, but a simple fact of numbers. Many people said I’d fail, that I’d be undone, and there’s been a lot of pressure and outright hatred and smearing directed at me personally to make me quit. I even had an offer once to “buy me out” as a way to get me to stop. I told them to shove it.

I had help getting here, from readers like you, guest authors, and many many scientists who have advised me from behind the scenes. I’m greatly appreciative to all of you for bearing those slings and arrows with me.

What convinced me that I really need a break was a really stupid error I made yesterday. I posted a story thinking it was Wednesday (Hump Day Hilarity) when it was actually Monday (Monday Mirthiness). Readers caught it [in] comments, and I was too tired to notice until hours later. It’s a simple error that has since been corrected, but it’s a wake-up call for me. It’s a clear sign of fatigue.

Here is what I want to do: Take a month off. Disconnect.  Then come back fresh.

 

To do that though, and keep WUWT running, requires help. It’s not without precedence. Back in 2007, Steve McIntyre took a vacation to the desert southwest USA, with a mission in mind, to gather some tree ring core samples of his own to dispute Mann’s findings (though he didn’t say that at the time). Long time readers may recall he asked me to take over ClimateAudit during that break, which I did gladly, and it continued, ready for him when he returned.

I think I can do that here, I’m sure many of our guest authors will step up and our moderators can keep the comments flowing, albeit perhaps not as speedily since we have fewer moderators than we used to have.

I’m asking for two things: help with content/moderating, and some donations, so that I can choose a place to go disconnect, and not worry. I don’t want a staycation, and if that darned Koch Brothers check that many Mann-like people seem to think I’m getting would just show up in the mailbox, I’d not have to ask. There’s another reason too. I have an idea for a temperature data study, along the lines of some of the UHI studies I’ve done in the past, but I’ll need to purchase some equipment to run the experiment. And, when I return (assuming I can get help to keep WUWT running) I want to migrate WUWT to a new web platform. The last overhaul was in September of 2014, and since then things that I keep asking for from wordpress.com keep getting ignored (such as comment editing by end users to fix simple mistakes). I’ve been asking for almost as  long as WUWT has been on wordpress, and it’s become clear to me that wordpress.com just doesn’t care because they keep adding social media enhancements rather than real meat and potatoes features. Time to move on to something that works better and requires less time to administer.

In other news, I just finished a new book chapter, it’s at the proof stage at the printers, and it will be available soon. I’ll let you know when it is available.

So, dear readers and contributors, here is what I need:

  • Volunteers: for moderating, for guest author content, and for scheduling publishing of the kind of stories and press releases we normally carry. Use the About》Contact form from the drop down menu under the header.
  • Donations: for recharge, and for new ventures to be designed and published
  • Patience: while I figure out how to do all this.

Thanks for your consideration. Those that want to help with moderation, guest content, and scheduling can either leave a comment or use the contact form to direct message me.

For those that wish to donate towards a break and a new setup and experiment, here’s the link and button. Anything is welcome, no matter how small.

Donations accepted

I’m going to leave this post up for a couple of days as the top head post, to make sure casual readers and regulars alike see it.

Thanks, sincerely, to all of you. -Anthony Watts


UPDATE: Mann and the usual suspects have had a twitterstorm over this.

It’s driving them all batshit crazy that:

1. I’ve survived 10 years, even though I’m apparently too stupid to have accomplished anything in that time.

2. People actually like me and want to help.

3. More people read WUWT than all of their blogs combined.

I’m very blessed. Thanks to everyone! – Anthony
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Ej
June 14, 2017 4:58 am

Thanks Anthony for all you have done thus far. You are very much appreciated to many of us. Don’t hurry back, but please come back.
As soon as I found WUWT, I became a constant reader every morning. You have done a huge service, especially to us lay/people that certainly are not rocket scientist but we are intelligent enough to know a s/cam when we see it.
( and I do need my daily dose of Janice too, : ) , or whenever she’s around posting )
$100 bucks your way. I hope you spend it on fishing !! ( I just caught 6 – 9 to 10 inch sunfish last weekend and it was so thrilling, yet such a relaxing joy)
Have fun, relax, and free your mind.

Janice Moore
Reply to  Ej
June 14, 2017 6:48 am

Ej — thank you, so much. I’ve missed seeing your “smiling face” around here these past several weeks. Still praying about the goal, etc..

Ej
Reply to  Janice Moore
June 14, 2017 7:13 am

: )
Sometimes I just have to sit back and just read, Janice. I try not to post much because I can be a fool sometimes. I’m just not that savvy at computer talking, I’m the ‘in your face’ in person, kind of person.
I can’t type as fast as my mind thinks, which gets me frustrated.
( I think it’s good to realize that, after-all, I don’t understand some of the real technical stuff, even though I want to respond, I’m better off letting the real experts do that ).
Thank You, Janice, you still inspire me and hopefully one day I could email you and really let you see what I do,
Thanking our Lord in Jesus name for giving me this poor old girl many Blessings.

Keitho
Editor
Reply to  Janice Moore
June 14, 2017 9:00 am

Done

Greg
June 14, 2017 5:11 am

Another ‘ship of fools’ :
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jun/14/canada-hudson-bay-climate-change-study-warm-temperatures
An expedition to document how “climate change” is affecting Arctic ice had to be called off because Hudson Bay was getting blocked with thick multi-year ice.
Of course the Guardian manages to spin this as proof of climate change “reality” despite it being the opposite of what they were expecting to document.

Michael Brown
June 14, 2017 5:16 am

50 bucks I wish I could send more. Be Safe Get Some Rest and Relaxation!!

mairon62
June 14, 2017 5:22 am

Anthony, if you come to Thailand on your vacation I can show you an official Stevenson Screen collecting data less than 30 feet from a busy six-lane highway…oh wait, better to leave that hammer at home, may I suggest a jungle trek or rafting on the Mekong? lol. Donation on the way. Thanks for providing us with a tremendous community resource.

Wakeupmaggy
June 14, 2017 5:26 am

Take a break, as you have been my constant sanity break for years now. Donation made.

kivy10
June 14, 2017 5:40 am

Recently discovered this site (2016) and have been reading every day since. Enjoy your sabbatical. Donation sent.

Herbert
June 14, 2017 5:52 am

Donation sent from Australia. Enjoy your sabbatical!

Kathy Brooks
June 14, 2017 5:54 am

Left money in the trip jar. Don’t forget to come back, eventually:)

David Brown
June 14, 2017 5:59 am

Sorry for being dumb, now sent $100, have a good long holiday, you deserve it.

Bernd Niessen
June 14, 2017 6:02 am

Dear Anthony
You really deserve some time off
Thank you for all your hard work and drive to inform without prejudice
I hope that lots of donations will be made and help you to recharge for the next episode

Graham
June 14, 2017 6:09 am

£25 donated-don’t spend it all in one shop!

Greg
June 14, 2017 6:10 am

catastrophic fire a London tower block looks like the inferno was due to external thermal cladding.
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/jun/14/fire-safety-concerns-raised-by-grenfell-tower-residents-in-2012
More deaths caused by AGW hysteria.

Roger Knights
Reply to  Greg
June 14, 2017 11:03 am

Here’s another story from the Guardian; it contains a quote blaming the fire’s spread on flammable cladding being “being introduced on the back of the sustainability agenda,”:
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/jun/14/disaster-waiting-to-happen-fire-expert-slams-uk-tower-blocks

Arnold Tarling, a chartered surveyor at Hindwoods and a fire safety expert, says the elephant in the room is the flammability of insulation panels that are being used to clad postwar buildings to bring them up to date with today’s thermal standards. A recent £8.7m refurbishment of Grenfell Tower saw the building clad with “ACM cassette rainscreen” panels, an aluminium composite material covering insulation panels, which could have caused the fire to spread more quickly up the facade of the tower.
“The issue is that, under building regulations, only the surface of the cladding has to be fire-proofed to class 0, which is about surface spread,” says Tarling. “The stuff behind it doesn’t, and it’s this which has burned.” He says he recently inspected a new-build eight storey block in south-east London where there was no fire protection in the external cavity walls. “The insulation behind the external cladding is flammable polyurethane. I know because I took a chunk out and burned it.”
Scott Sanderson, director at PRP Architects, has worked on the refurbishment of several postwar high-rise housing estates, including recently Bow Cross in Tower Hamlets, east London, where three 25-storey 1960s tower blocks were over-clad with insulated render.
“The issue is about compartmentalisation,” he says. “Whatever cladding system you use, you have to incorporate fire stops at the line of each floorplate and every party wall around a dwelling to prevent fire from spreading up the facade. The current regulations are robust enough, but they have to be properly followed, and the architects drawings properly executed on site.”
Dr Jim Glocking, technical director of the Fire Protection Association (FPA), thinks our standards need a fundamental overhaul. He says he has been campaigning for years to see fire safety standards improved, to no avail.
“We have been very concerned about the introduction of highly combustible products into buildings,” he says. “They are often being introduced on the back of the sustainability agenda, but it’s sometimes being done recklessly without due consideration to the consequences. It’s not uncommon for buildings to have blocks of polystyrene up to 30cm deep on the outside, which is an extraordinary quantity of combustible material to be sticking on to a building. There are often ventilation voids between the rainscreen cladding and the insulation to prevent damp, but this also increases the spread of flames.”
He says UK fire regulations are unique in focusing on simply evacuating people before the building falls down, but not on properly tackling the ingress of fire from outside. “Our regulations are generally very good at keeping people safe,” he says, “but they work on a presumption that fires start inside buildings and that the method for protecting people is to ensure that it stays in the room of origin, doesn’t get to any neighbouring rooms, and certainly doesn’t get to any floors above. But they do not cater for fires ingressing into the building from outside or spreading to the external cladding, which appears to be what happened at Grenfell Tower.”

Roger Knights
Reply to  Roger Knights
June 14, 2017 12:25 pm

I wonder if asbestos cladding will now be allowed. (I’ve read that the absence or paucity of asbestos insulation in one of the Twin Towers contributed to its collapse.)

Frodo
June 14, 2017 6:16 am

You got 3 Castars from Middle Earth, the rough equivalent of 50 Murican dollars. God bless you for all you do. I don’t post here much anymore, but do read some of the topics (less than I should!). Appreciate you and all the other contributors as well.

zubbyz
June 14, 2017 6:24 am

Long time listener, first time caller…blah blah blah………..
So, upon reading this post, my mind asked “how much should I send?” The response was “Well, what kind of value have you gotten from reading WUWT?”
Crap, I don’t have that kind of money. Sending what I can.
Suggestion: Don’t wait another 10 years to grant yourself a break after you return from Wattsapaloouza 2017.

Clay Sanborn
June 14, 2017 6:54 am

Thank you, and God bless you, Anthony. You, the moderators, and guest writers, (this website) have been a blessing to us.

Eric H
June 14, 2017 6:55 am

Enjoy your time off Anthony! I have been reading your blog since it began and I appreciate what it has inspired me to learn.

Pamela Gray
June 14, 2017 7:09 am

Come to Halfway, Oregon. Enjoy peace and quiet fishing at multiple venues. And the solar eclipse is coming in August with Halfway being the best location on the West Coast for viewing. There are several places to vacation-rent here and many folks who would be willing to set up fishing for you. Climate change is considered normal here so no one would quiry you about the topic. And we have wifi…most of the time, if you still want to be connected.

toorightmate
Reply to  Pamela Gray
June 14, 2017 9:53 pm

Why would you only go Halfway?

MJB
June 14, 2017 7:21 am

Glad to see you doing the smart thing and disconnecting. Funds on their way.

Steve (Paris)
June 14, 2017 7:28 am

Funds flung. Anthony, if you are heading my side of the Atlantic be a great pleasure to welcome you.

June 14, 2017 7:49 am

Anthony, you’re a hero. Godspeed to your time off and a happy, refreshed return.

JohnWho
June 14, 2017 7:55 am

Regarding the Michael Mann update:
So, did Mann send you a ton of money in hopes you wouldn’t come back?
/grin

June 14, 2017 7:59 am

Anthony for having saved mankind from the falling sky you deserve much more than what we can give you but a months vacation has been authorized, more if we gave you enough. Many thanks.

WBrowning
June 14, 2017 8:00 am

Sent you a small thank you. Bon voyage!

Rick C PE
June 14, 2017 8:01 am

Mr. Watts: Enjoy your well deserved time off. Been reading WUWT for about 5 years and have learned so much. WUWT has been the home page on my browser since I retired. I’m sure it will be well taken care of while you’re away. Sent a few bucks.

WBWilson
June 14, 2017 8:04 am

Cheers Anthony, you are a true American hero. You have proven your courage and honor every day of the last ten years right here for everyone to see. And this thread proves that you are rich in friends who will do anything to help you. We can certainly muddle along while you rest and recuperate.

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