This is a MUST READ op-ed. WUWT readers will recall that just a few days ago, we spearheaded an effort to make a legal fund go “over the top” to help Professor Ridd fight back against the bureaucracy at James Cook University that was censoring him. Today, he penned an op-ed that appeared on Fox News online, and I’m please to say, he pulls no punches.
Science or silence? My battle to question doomsayers about the Great Barrier Reef
Around the world, people have heard about the impending extinction of the Great Barrier Reef: some 133,000 square miles of magnificent coral stretching for 1,400 miles off the northeast coast of Australia.
The reef is supposedly almost dead from the combined effects of a warming climate, nutrient pollution from Australian farms, and smothering sediment from offshore dredging.
Except that, as I have said publicly as a research scientist who has studied the reef for the past 30 years, all this most likely isn’t true.
And just for saying that – and calling into question the kind of published science that has led to the gloomy predictions – I have been served with a gag order by my university. I am now having to sue for my right to have an ordinary scientific opinion.
My emails have been searched. I was not allowed even to speak to my wife about the issue. I have been harangued by lawyers. And now I’m fighting back to assert my right to academic freedom and bring attention to the crisis of scientific truth.
The problems I am facing are part of a “replication crisis” that is sweeping through science and is now a serious topic in major science journals. In major scientific trials that attempt to reproduce the results of scientific observations and measurements, it seems that around 50 percent of recently published science is wrong, because the results can’t be replicated by others.
And if observations and measurements can’t be replicated, it isn’t really science – it is still, at best, hypothesis, or even just opinion. This is not a controversial topic anymore – science, or at least the system of checking the science we are using, is failing us.
The crisis started in biomedical areas, where pharmaceutical companies in the past decade found that up to 80 percent of university and institutional science results that they tested were wrong. It is now recognized that the problem is much more widespread than the biomedical sciences. And that is where I got into big trouble.
I have published numerous scientific papers showing that much of the “science” claiming damage to the reef is either plain wrong or greatly exaggerated. As just one example, coral growth rates that have supposedly collapsed along the reef have, if anything, increased slightly.
Reefs that are supposedly smothered by dredging sediment actually contain great coral. And mass bleaching events along the reef that supposedly serve as evidence of permanent human-caused devastation are almost certainly completely natural and even cyclical.
These allegedly major catastrophic effects that recent science says were almost unknown before the 1980s are mainly the result of a simple fact: large-scale marine science did not get started on the reef until the 1970s.
By a decade later, studies of the reef had exploded, along with the number of marine biologists doing them. What all these scientists lacked, however, was historical perspective. There are almost no records of earlier eras to compare with current conditions. Thus, for many scientists studying reef problems, the results are unprecedented, and almost always seen as catastrophic and even world-threatening.
The only problem is that it isn’t so. The Great Barrier Reef is in fact in excellent condition. It certainly goes through periods of destruction where huge areas of coral are killed from hurricanes, starfish plagues and coral bleaching. However, it largely regrows within a decade to its former glory. Some parts of the southern reef, for example, have seen a tripling of coral in six years after they were devastated by a particularly severe cyclone.
Reefs have similarities to Australian forests, which require periodic bushfires. It looks terrible after the bushfire, but the forests always regrow. The ecosystem has evolved with these cycles of death and regrowth.
The conflicting realities of the Great Barrier Reef point to a deeper problem. In science, consensus is not the same thing as truth. But consensus has come to play a controlling role in many areas of modern science. And if you go against the consensus you can suffer unpleasant consequences.
The main system of science quality control is called peer review. Nowadays, it usually takes the form of a couple of anonymous reviewing scientists having a quick check over the work of a colleague in the field.
Peer review is commonly understood as painstaking re-examination by highly qualified experts in academia that acts as a real check on mistaken work. It isn’t. In the real world, peer review is often cursory and not always even knowledgeable. It might take reviewers only a morning to do.
Scientific results are rarely reanalyzed and experiments are not replicated. The types of checks that would be routine in private industry are just not done.
I have asked the question: Is this good enough quality control to make environmental decisions worth billions of dollars that are now adversely affecting every major industry in northeast Australia?
Our sugar industry has been told to make dramatic reductions in fertilizer application, potentially reducing productivity; our ports have dredging restrictions that threaten their productivity; scientists demand that coal mines be closed; and tourists are scared away because the reef is supposedly almost dead – not worth seeing anymore.
Last August I made this point on Sky News in Australia in promotion of a chapter I wrote in “Climate Change: The Facts 2017,” published by the Australian free market think tank the Institute of Public Affairs.
“The basic problem is that we can no longer trust the scientific organizations like the Australian Institute of Marine Science, even things like the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies … the science is coming out not properly checked, tested or replicated and this is a great shame because we really need to be able to trust our scientific institutions and the fact is I do not think we can any more,” I said.
The response to these comments by my employer, James Cook University, was extraordinary.
Rather than measured argument, I was hit with a charge of academic serious misconduct for not being “collegial.”
University authorities told me in August I was not allowed to mention the case or the charges to anybody – not even my wife.
Then things got worse. With assistance from the Institute of Public Affairs, I have been pushing back against the charges and the gag order – leading the university to search my official emails for examples of where I had mentioned the case to other scientists, old friends, past students and my wife.
I was then hit with 25 new allegations, mostly for just mentioning the case against me. The email search turned up nothing for which I feel ashamed. You can see for yourself.
We filed in court in November. At that point the university backed away from firing me. But university officials issued a “Final Censure” in my employment file and told me to be silent about the allegations, and not to repeat my comments about the unreliability of institutional research.
But they agreed that I could mention it to my wife, which was nice of them.
I would rather be fired than accept these conditions. We are still pursuing the matter in court.
This case may be about a single instance of alleged misconduct, but underlying it is an issue even bigger than our oceans. Ultimately, I am fighting for academic and scientific freedom, and the responsibility of universities to nurture the debate of difficult subjects without threat or intimidation.
We may indeed have a Great Barrier Reef crisis, but the science is so flawed that it is impossible to tell its actual dimensions. What we do know for certain is that we have an academic freedom crisis that threatens the true life of science and threatens to smother our failing university system.
Professor Peter Ridd leads the Marine Geophysical Laboratory, James Cook University, Australia and has authored over 100 scientific papers.
It’s everywhere! Political correctness run amok. It not just that you disagree, it’s that you are “dead wrong” and have triggered feelings that can not be allowed. Government bureaucrats have seized control of research through the billions and billions of dollars they disperse. Do you really think research that disagrees with the bureaucrats will ever be funded? How about funding for studies to replicate previous studies? No way. It is not in the bureaucrat’s best interest of maintaining and expanding their power. We are on the way to 1984, like it or not.
almost correct. We’ve been in it for decades.
If Democrats can play politics with painful racial issues and sexual harassment, they are certainly capable of play politics with science. They also love the tactic of personal destruction and censorship. CAGW is all politics and no real science.
Can You Spot the Racist?
Where were the 500 Women “Scientists” when we needed them? The above videos highlight just how dangerous it is to entrust a Nation to Progressives.
https://co2islife.wordpress.com/2018/02/08/can-you-spot-the-racist/
“a charge of academic serious misconduct for not being “collegial.”
Dang. First science by consensus, now science by collegiality. What’s wrong with this picture?
Not ‘collegial’! Cannot discuss with his wife! Who on earth do these academic thugs think they are?
People who think Franz Kafka novels are the University Policies and Procedures guide.
Dr. Ridd’s plight and his eloquent retort clearly points out how the climate wars are denigrating the scientific process. Enforced consensus rules the day. Universities have developed programs focused on catastrophic climate and those programs draw billions of extra funding. No catastrophe, no funding! So they act harshly against anyone who challenges and upsets their gravy train.
Dr. Ridd is a bright light, whose fearless truth seeking brings objectivity and respectful debate back to the scientific process.
It is terrific that WUWT highlighted this and enabled us to help out.
Yes it is. Excellent editorial too. But unfortunately it appeared on Fox News, which means no one other than conspiracy theory mongers will believe it. I hope the editorial becomes more widely published.
” I hope the editorial becomes more widely published … ” Being reproduced here will help, meanwhile record it on a wayback machine, cd/dvd/bluray/flashdrive/ssd/fire&waterproof storage/bolt it to the wall. I have stuff in a safe deposit box at the bank.
” But unfortunately it appeared on Fox News, which means no one other than conspiracy theory mongers will believe it.”
Kill the messenger.
Even beyond research, university faculty object to people/organizations (billionaire businessman Charles Koch) giving major donations to the university. Recently it was stated “Their critics at USU and elsewhere in academia argue the money given to the universities is meant to advance conservative political principles.”
https://www.usu.edu/today/index.cfm?id=57072
Good for him. Extortion is less effective when you call their bluff and let everyone know you’re being extorted.
Let’s start tracking the enrollment numbers at JCU now.
This is what campus chaos gets you…..
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/09/us/university-of-missouri-enrollment-protests-fallout.html
NYT article says enrollment off because of racial bigotry. The real reason that parents don’t send their kids there now is they are worried it had become a den of identity politics goons. I would have steered my kids away for this reason.
Yes, I agree. I linked the NYT version to show how even the explanation of the enrollment decline is biased.
The NYT analysis is Leftist nonsense, of course. They say:
“Since then fights over overt and subconscious racial slights, as well as battles over free speech, have broken out at Middlebury College in Vermont, the University of California, Berkeley, and The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash.”
The NYT should have said “…alleged overt and imaginary racial slights…” They slant the article by only quoting students who say Mizzou is perceived as a hotbed of prejudice. The truth is: parents won’t send their children to a school controlled by mob-ocracy.
+1
Berkeley still teaches courses in racist subjects, like mathematics.
If my skin color is not within the limited spectrum of skin colors currently popular with the ‘people of color’ fascists, should my skin color be considered an overt racial slight or a subconscious racial slight? Any one feel ‘privileged’ enough to respond?
By their ‘standards’, the free speech hope of Martin Luther King’s dream “…that one day my little children will be judged by the content of their character and not the color of their skin!” ….. would be overt racism indeed.
The GBR is the Ozzy “Polar Bear” icon for these promoters of the NeoMarxbrothers Manifesto. Can you imagine the kind of people who want to rule overus in global gov putsch? I’ve considered myself a problem solver over the decades but I must confess that I see little possibility of rehab of our universities, scientific institutes, technical journals, etc. that have bought into this global Philistine movement. My thoughts keep returning to the natural death of newspapers. I think we have to simply reinvent new institutions and let the others atrophy. Yeah, I know that Harvard is over 300 years old, but a replacement with a new institution and an ethical code like that for engineers, doctors, etc. backed up by statute with removal from practice and other disciplinary remedies for professional misconduct, etc. Scientists can no longer be left on their honor to be honest and objectrive. The new institutions would have high standards for admission into the sciences. Over half of the faculties are mindless indoctrination and identity politics mills created for the huge influx of mediocre students that rushed in with the Wide Open Door Policy in which enrollment numbers were used to subsidize them. It gave us Feminine Glaciology – which produced papers that they dared journals to reject. Oxford, Cambridge, Heidelberg…..I would choose some Red State university (after I cased the joint).
The pressures on the Left to control the internet are becoming extreme. Google and Facebook may continue down that path. But as long as websites are able to independently publish apart from the Social media platforms, then Google and FB efforts at censuring free speech would ultimately be their own undoing.
What is to be feared more is for the UN to gain control of internet domain name assignments, assignments that were once protected by the US constitution’s first amendment, but no more due to Obama. If that happens, then UN bureaucrats can begin enforcing speech codes (and dissent against their climate change pseudoscience, etc) by threatening to revoke domain name recognition and IP address resolution by “offending” web addresses.
My guess is that employers will start to look outside colleges for good employees. In theory colleges did the training and the employer got a trained employee. When in actual fact they get a useless moon-bat, employers may decide it is worth the expense of doing the training themselves. When students then find they can be trained as a sort of intern, (and be paid, even if the pay is meager), and that they can skip the huge burden of college loans, what do you think the students will chose to do?
I foresee a day when many universities become ghost-towns.
When calculating the cost of a degree you have to include the opportunity cost as well as the direct cost of the college itself.
That’s 4 years of foregone income, plus 4 years of seniority that you will never get back.
Agreed.
I have two sons who are burdened by huge college debts. One is an intern who needs a second job to pay debts, and the other is struggling to even find a job that uses his degree in biology. Both would do things differently, if they had it to do over again.
The University-based business model is completly obsolete and outdated.
In most larger Uni’s you don’t participate in lectures, you simply observe them. It’s a one-way dialogue.
I had a foreign-visiting Engineering Professor, who openly admitted, in my class, that he was there (at UCLA) to do research, not to teach. “Tough shit,” he said.
Because so many people have them, college degrees aren’t worth what they were 50 years ago. Because there is a high demand, they cost a lot more proportionally than they did 50 years ago. This is buying into a falling market. What don’t we have enough of? Electricians, plumbers, carpenters…
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-ST27uwAJCtk/UDDesRJPN4I/AAAAAAAAVqM/tNVg9Is7UhQ/s1600/trade+school.jpg
Wouldn’t it be nice to develop universities determined to produce a graduate with a meaningful education. Degrees would be limited to areas where the market sets the need and the graduate could find a job that would add to the benefit of society.
Only the best candidates chosen. Meritocracy rules. No more using diversity as a metric for entrance to any university. Can you imagine the quality of the graduates? Can you imagine how the wealth and health of the nation would improve?
No sports. Potential students should choose an institution that meets their academic needs, not one that develops the winning football team. All sports teams could be taken over by the cities the unversities are located in. Players would be paid as semi-pro participants and their needs would not impact the operation of the university. And the universities wouldn’t have to develop useless curriculum to funnel players through five years of shady academic courses meant, not to educate, but to keep the players eligible. The idea of a student/athelete could be dropped and the focus put on “student”.
The entire focus of the university would be to teach, but to teach with a purpose other than pushing as many graduates through a flawed system: a system, like the current system, that does not require a quality student with a quality degree.
I can dream can’t I?
It looks as though Yuri Bezmenov was right in many ways.
How much you wanna bet this never goes to trial and the university tries to settle out of court or backs down?
Based on what we’ve read the university would be insane if they didn’t either settle it or back down. The key is that Peter Ridd be vindicated and that it becomes widely publicized.
Universities are loathe to admit any wrongdoing. Saving face is paramount to those posers. My bet is that they will offer him a lot of money to disappear.
Since it isn’t there money they will be spending, they don’t likely care much either way.
Most important is maintaining their social acceptability with the in kids.
What if Peter Ridd goes ‘all in’. He has already stated “he will fight it all the way” here on WUWT.
=========
platogbr
February 2, 2018 at 3:18 pm
Thanks To everybody especially Anthony for all the support. I really am astonished and incredibly grateful. We will fight this all the way.
Peter Ridd
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Don’t back off. Science is at stake and you’ve got a winning hand.
JCU == James Cook University
JCU also == Januis Clausis University
where Januis Clausis == behind closed doors (or private ,
in secret, secretive, etc etc.)
We need more people like Peter Ridd, especially in “high places”
The business of shutting people up whose views do not tally with the Worldview imposed from above (govt., the MSM & its unquestioning herd) has become ubiquitous in many aspects of life, climate science and mass immigration come to mind. In order to go full steam ahead with their policies, in what purports to be a democratic system, they have to ‘persuade’ the People by hook or by crook, by constant repetition, by lies, ridicule, bullying and ultimately repression, that their view is the only tolerated view. As many have suggested, this practice increasingly resembles the methods of totalitarians.
If only there were more with the courage of Professor Ridd…….
Well I hope his got some really thick pants, because the attack dogs will have been set on his rear now.
With respect to mainstream climate science, the word science should always be used in quotations: “science.”
Seems like there ought to be a RICO action in this situation.
Australia doesn’t have RICO-like legislation, nor anti-SLAPP laws.
Imagine you are a young scientist hoping to make a name for yourself and knowing that the work you want to do requires support from the university and grants from government. Would you dare do what Peter Ridd has done and question the credibility of colleagues and the very institution at which you work?
The answer is obvious. Of course not. If you are paid to be collegiate and not upset colleagues by suggesting their work is wrong, then that is exactly what you will do. And it is not science. Which is why the whole model is beyond flawed; it is corrupt.
This must go to Court. The university must be publicly shamed and humiliated for its appalling actions. Others must see and take note.
Several points:
University of Chicago has taken a strong stance in support of academic freedom and against safe spaces. If interested, you can google President Zimmer’s statement.
Growing up in Pakistan, I watched pitch battles between left wing and right wing, Islamist student groups. One of the reasons I came to the U.S. for university studies. I hope we can stop the craziness that is going on in our universities before they become full indoctrination centers.
When I was studying for my Ph.D at Chicago, one of the courses required us to replicate the econometric/statistical analysis in published papers. I am pleased to report that we found very few with significant errors. Why can’t universities require this practice for papers in climate science.
Probably because they already know what the result of such a review would be.
Meanwhile the reef lives on. Only the fossil reefs are static records.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delaware_Basin
Thanks for sharing this Anthony. Great letter and helps reveal the moral bankruptcy of so many in academia and in many other places. Contrast this letter to the one highlighted a couple of days ago where Micheal Mann used his postilion as a climate expert to try and harm a private individual. He is the one that should e censored and investigated. But he is allowed to continue his biased garbage because he is on the “correct” side of an issue.
I really appreciated Professor Ridd bringing up the fact that so many scientists do not have historical perspective. So many people now believe that time starts when they remember it did or when they were born. That sets a dangerous precedence. I have been involved in several blog debates and when you bring up the past you are discounted as not being up to date. Great example: along the shore in South Carolina, an area had been eroding for years and growing in another area. It is called the shoreline of an ocean and is dynamic. I was told that man made climate change was responsible for the erosion. I relayed to the people making this claim that the erosion had been occurring at least since the 1930s and it was common for the shoreline to be eroding in some areas and building up in others. Not only that but dredging and installation of piles in the harbor had changed the ocean dynamics and had resulted in accelerating the erosion. Their response was I was an idiot.
If you think about it, a lot of the problems we are encountering in society today is due to same issues that Professor Ridd discusses above. The premise of so many is that they are right and you have to prove they are wrong. Not only that, but they are right and facts do not matter. The exact opposite of how ideas are advanced.
noble cause corruption. ultimately they will kill you to save your soul.
Funny how climate change misses out –
The 5% of coral that is protected.
The coral at Bikini Atoll- where man does not go – which is in pristine condition and growing like a forest.
The Coral around Cuba- where they do not use pesticides or fertilizers that leach into the sea- which is in pristine condition.
Funny how climate change misses out –
The 5% of coral that is protected.
The coral at Bikini Atoll- where man does not go – which is in pristine condition and growing like a forest.
The Coral around Cuba- where they do not use pesticides or fertilizers that leach into the sea- which is in pristine condition.
I suspect he made a mistake in naming whole institutions as being untrustworthy, rather than detailing their failings solely on a case by case approach. Even if it is true, the lawyers can probably get him for the generalization.
Freedom of speech is under attack by criminal thugs who belong in jail.
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/11/27/a-big-goose-step-backwards/#comment-1800850
Here is a list of those forced from their institutions by global warming thugs:
George Taylor – Oregon State Climatologist
Sallie Baliunas – Harvard University
Pat Michaels – University of Virginia
Murry Salby – Macquarie University, Australia
Caleb Rossiter – Institute for Policy Studies
Nickolas Drapela, PhD – Oregon State University
Henrik Møller – Aalborg University, Denmark
Bob Carter, James Cook University, Australia
Regards, Allan
Post Script
Hello Peter and thank you for your courage. I visited your wonderful country in 2005 and spent a week on a dive boat out of Cairns, snorkeling the Great Barrier Reef. The areas of the reef that I visited were in perfect condition and it was one of the best experiences of my life. Note to all – as a tourist, you don’t need scuba gear – the colors disappear below about 15 feet, and most people can easily free dive down to that depth.
Oregon State’s brown shirt enforcers have been particularly active. When is the book burning scheduled for?