Claim: Climate Doom is Inevitable – but Love of Music will Help

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

h/t ivankinsman – according to doomsday futurist Mayer Hillman, wealthy survivors of the inevitable collapse of civilisation might have a chance if they embrace love of music and prevent climate refugees from entering their northern enclaves.

‘We’re doomed’: Mayer Hillman on the climate reality no one else will dare mention

By Patrick Barkham

The 86-year-old social scientist says accepting the impending end of most life on Earth might be the very thing needed to help us prolong it

“We’re doomed,” says Mayer Hillman with such a beaming smile that it takes a moment for the words to sink in. “The outcome is death, and it’s the end of most life on the planet because we’re so dependent on the burning of fossil fuels. There are no means of reversing the process which is melting the polar ice caps. And very few appear to be prepared to say so.”

Hillman, an 86-year-old social scientist and senior fellow emeritus of the Policy Studies Institute, does say so. His bleak forecast of the consequence of runaway climate change, he says without fanfare, is his “last will and testament”. His last intervention in public life. “I’m not going to write anymore because there’s nothing more that can be said,” he says when I first hear him speak to a stunned audience at the University of East Anglia late last year.

“With doom ahead, making a case for cycling as the primary mode of transport is almost irrelevant,” he says. “We’ve got to stop burning fossil fuels. So many aspects of life depend on fossil fuels, except for music and love and education and happiness. These things, which hardly use fossil fuels, are what we must focus on.”

Although Hillman has not flown for more than 20 years as part of a personal commitment to reducing carbon emissions, he is now scornful of individual action which he describes as “as good as futile”. By the same logic, says Hillman, national action is also irrelevant “because Britain’s contribution is minute. Even if the government were to go to zero carbon it would make almost no difference.”

Instead, says Hillman, the world’s population must globally move to zero emissions across agriculture, air travel, shipping, heating homes – every aspect of our economy – and reduce our human population too. Can it be done without a collapse of civilisation? “I don’t think so,” says Hillman. “Can you see everyone in a democracy volunteering to give up flying? Can you see the majority of the population becoming vegan? Can you see the majority agreeing to restrict the size of their families?”

Hillman doubts that human ingenuity can find a fix and says there is no evidence that greenhouse gases can be safely buried. But if we adapt to a future with less – focusing on Hillman’s love and music – it might be good for us. “And who is ‘we’?” asks Hillman with a typically impish smile. “Wealthy people will be better able to adapt but the world’s population will head to regions of the planet such as northern Europe which will be temporarily spared the extreme effects of climate change. How are these regions going to respond? We see it now. Migrants will be prevented from arriving. We will let them drown.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/apr/26/were-doomed-mayer-hillman-on-the-climate-reality-no-one-else-will-dare-mention

Sadly Hillman’s prediction doesn’t seem to be very specific on timescale, which effectively makes his claims untestable.

But I’m sure you will join me in expressing appreciation of the Guardian’s tireless efforts, to entertain us with the colorful predictions of their parade of increasingly eccentric climate doomsday prophets.

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David S
April 27, 2018 7:28 am

Social scientist = deadbeat?

PaulH
Reply to  David S
April 27, 2018 7:34 am

Downbeat, clearly. ;->

WXcycles
Reply to  PaulH
April 27, 2018 10:41 am
Lonny Eachus
Reply to  PaulH
April 27, 2018 10:12 pm

Offbeat.

mariec
Reply to  David S
April 27, 2018 8:35 am

Indeed this is the, so called, scientific discipline from which the failure to replicate issue first emerged.
There really is nothing more to be said.

Komrade Kuma
Reply to  David S
April 27, 2018 9:14 am

Q:- Social scientist?
A:- Oxymoron
As for stunning an audience at UEA, home of the Nature tricksters and decline hiders, being stunned like a mullet or a lamb just before slaughter is a prerequisite for entry isn’t it?

D. J. Hawkins
Reply to  Komrade Kuma
April 27, 2018 9:36 am

PhD candidates in ANY discipline should be required to demonstrate minimal competence in math, chemistry, physics, and biology. With proof of continued competence every 2-3 years. This just might keep them from saying incredibly stupid things.

Robert Austin
Reply to  Komrade Kuma
April 27, 2018 2:12 pm

Especially the (oxy)moron part.

s-t
Reply to  Komrade Kuma
April 29, 2018 6:12 am

Most often, I ask myself if people (those giving their opinion on the media) can still multiply and divide. Not just compute a result, but use the correct parameters, correct unit, correct operation, express the result with the correct unit, and have the inspiration that such operation could be useful in real life.
For example (real life example), an article might indicate the price tag of a nuclear plant, but the author of the “news” article wouldn’t have the idea of indicating the power rating of such, so the reader couldn’t make a division and compute a price per megawatt. (The reader can lookup such data, but then he might be even less inclined to disable his adblocker on the “news” website.) Only people inclined to do divisions would find such information essential. I guess many readers just want to be hit with big numbers that they cannot interpret or compare.

Reply to  David S
April 27, 2018 9:20 am

Social scientist has to be a contradiction of terms!

Pop Piasa
Reply to  andrewmharding
April 27, 2018 7:36 pm

Try socialist scientologist instead, That should fix it fer ya.

WXcycles
Reply to  David S
April 27, 2018 9:49 am
Reply to  WXcycles
April 27, 2018 3:23 pm

Look for the version by Gregorian. It is great as all of their music is.

mike
Reply to  David S
April 27, 2018 11:59 am

Let’s see now, everybody’s favorite “futurist”, Mayer Hillman, has found the ultimate secret of the “good life”–the fossil-fuel-free pursuit of love, music, education, and veganism. O. K., so why, then, isn’t our “thought-leader” lover-boy traipsing about some virgin wilderness, even as we speak, with his “significant other”, both in their birthday-suits, foraging for vegan sustenance, and bearing up heroically under the life-time-supply load of all those text-books, that he and his beloved would surely be humpin’, and groovin’ on the life-enchancing strains of many a merry, oaten-reed-genic, tune-wanking, contrapuntal riff? I mean, like, Hillman could be livin’ this quality-time, life-style option, like, right now, even, if he wanted to!
But no!–instead, we get Hillman runnin’ his “Cassandra-wannabe” pie-hole, at the cyclic rate, in front of some “stunned” audience. An audience that we can well imagine is largely, if not exclusively, made up of “stunned”, tenured, ivory-tower, trough-centric parasites, in on the deal, and their “stunned”, impressionable-adolescent, “woke”, spoiled-brat, captive-audience, brain-washed charges–safe-space-normative dumb-kids, in other words, oblivious to the consequences of the crushing, student-loan debt, that they are accumulating, to the benefit of their youth-master exploiters. So what else is new, right? Honestly, how can anyone take this crap seriously?

John harmsworth
Reply to  mike
April 27, 2018 2:00 pm

He’s not my favorite futurist. I never heard of him. Now that I know of him, he has rocketed to the bottom of my favorites list. He’s behind Yogi Berra as a futurist. ” It’s hard to make predictions. Especially about the future”.

Reply to  mike
April 29, 2018 8:10 am

Great stuff Mike, but maybe a teensy bit more periods.
I had to re-read it, like, three times to follow that groovalicious riffin’ you was laying down, just to be sure I was pickin’ it up, you know, correctamundo-style.

Reply to  mike
April 29, 2018 8:16 am

I have decided, John, that predictions are easy.
It is accurate predictions that are hard.
Predictions that are worth the wasted breath it takes to utter them, that are difficult.
Impossible, really…when the central premise of said worthless utterances is a steaming pile of rancid horseshit.

mike
Reply to  mike
April 29, 2018 1:24 pm

@ menicholas
Supremely good advice menicholas, unfortunately, totally wasted on the likes of moi. Sadly, I suffer from incurable PWS (Proust Wannabe Syndrome), and that, together with my bumptious, self-indulgent, attention-seeking, self-absorbed immaturity, compels me to take up WUWT’s precious blog-space with my rant-normative, feeble imitations of the master.
But on a more positive note, I also like to think, that the “period”-phobic, street-theater product of my digitally-enabled, keyboard stage-craft, just might be so off-beat as to really “screw” with the AU (Artificial Un-intelligence) algorithms of certain, imitation-dumb-kid, passive-agressive-goody-goody, “crusher crew” wrecker-bots (note: I am not referring to Kristi, here!–even though I did once ask her, in a complete, non-sequitur, after-thought, closing aside to an otherwise, indignant welter of exclamation-point-friendly, run-on sentences, wherein I, most assuredly, did not “bully” Kristi (and no!–I am not suggesting any “dog-whistle”, invidious comparisons with Willis, here), if she was a “bot” (please see my Apr 23, 2018 at 3:36 am comment, appended to WUWT’s “Climate Fanatic Demands…” of April 21, 2018)).

Dave Fair
Reply to  mike
April 29, 2018 2:09 pm

Evidenced by your writing, Mike, your PWS hasn’t any foundation for moving ahead.

mike
Reply to  mike
April 29, 2018 4:11 pm

@ Dave Fair
Hey Dave! What’s the deal with your comment, anyway? A good-natured, regular-guy “needle”, maybe? Or a not so friendly, drive-by, zinger put-down, maybe?
I’m kinda leaning to the view, Dave, that my “PWS” writing-style has “triggered” you in some way. And, in response, you’ve chosen to address me with a quip that is weighed-down with faintly nerdy and stuffy flourishes of “educated” speech like “Evidenced by” and “your writings” and “lack a foundation for moving on” (whatever that might mean). You know, Dave, the sort of pretentious locutions someone suffering from a parvenu’s status-anxiety self-doubts might employ.
And your above comment is especially curious in that the language you employ, in your other comments on this thread, feature rather crude, inelegant language of the “my ass” and “mental masturbation” persuasion (that last, an apparent favorite of yours, Dave, since one finds it in two of your comments).
So again, Dave, help me out here–was your last just some good-buddy joshin’-around, or were you tryin’ to take me down a notch? Be honest.

John harmsworth
Reply to  David S
April 27, 2018 1:56 pm

Many deadbeats can at least think clearly. This guy is too stupid to scrounge for a living.

Pop Piasa
Reply to  John harmsworth
April 27, 2018 7:49 pm

Indeed, to survive while scrounging requires invention, attention, boldness, tact and fortitude. This bloke is at the bottom of the social food chain, engrossed in fantasy.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Pop Piasa
April 27, 2018 10:01 pm

But he can make a lot of money using mental masturbation to pontificate about a future none of us will be around to experience. Great gig, if you can get it. Academic rigor, my ass.

Urederra
Reply to  David S
April 28, 2018 6:55 am

Pretty much like social justice.

Editor
April 27, 2018 7:31 am

h/t ivankinsman for giving me another opportunity to post this…
https://youtu.be/LQCU36pkH7c

HotScot
Reply to  David Middleton
April 27, 2018 11:26 am

David
If Hillman believes music is CO2 free, he’s obviously never been to an Iron Maiden concert!

Pop Piasa
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 8:04 pm

Only “unplugged” songs should be considered green, recorded with a cell phone that was charged by renewables.

Mayor of Venus
Reply to  HotScot
April 28, 2018 2:17 am

Music! Sing about happiness from burning fossil fuels! From “My Fair Lady”, we have the song “Wouldn’t it be loverly”…In one’s own HEATED room, “Lots of chocolates for me to eat; Lots of COAL making lots of heat; With one enormous chair, now wouldn’t that be loverly.”
In England in the winter, I expect being in an unheated room would cause unhappiness.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Mayor of Venus
April 28, 2018 10:37 am

Love those central heating and cooling systems provided by our industrial society.
If you think a bunch of UN SJW-ers are going to provide for your reliable energy systems, you are a fool.

HotScot
Reply to  Mayor of Venus
April 28, 2018 10:42 am

Mayor of Venus
“In England in the winter, I expect being in an unheated room would cause unhappiness.”
Never mind Scotland……… 🙂

Reply to  HotScot
April 29, 2018 10:26 am

I own over 2,000 compact discs
because I’m an audiophile who loves
listening to music, but don’t have
the skills to create my own music,
like most people.
CDs made of plastic, in plastic cases.
So how are plastics carbon free?
Prof. Hillman is evidence that leftists
don’t get wiser with age.

Tom in Denver
April 27, 2018 7:33 am

Hillman is exactly right, just is timing is off a bit. In the next billion years the sun’s output will increase by a full 10%. This should be enough to evaporate the world’s oceans, and the surface of the earth will be all but inhabitable.

MarkW
Reply to  Tom in Denver
April 27, 2018 8:46 am

On the other hand, a billion years gives us plenty of time to find a way to increase the earth’s orbit by a few percent which should add a billion years, give or take, before the oceans boil away.

Joel O'Bryan
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 9:56 am

That Earth orbit alteration has already been studied and there is a relatively straightforward way to do it.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn14983-moving-the-earth-a-planetary-survival-guide/

Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 10:03 am

How to move Earth has already been figured out. Change the orbit of Ceres, so that it traverses around between Jupiter and Earth.
Angular momentum of Jupiter is transferred to Earth, which obligingly increases its orbital velocity and moves gradually further from the sun. Problem of solar heating while the sun slowly leaves the main sequence: solved.

Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 9:15 pm

My science fiction forecast is in a million years, our descendants will be living in virtual reality like The Matrix but without those clumsy bodies attached to the computer. No human bodies, it’s all microchips. The monolith in the 2001 Space Odyssey is a big microchip, the world of virtual intelligent beings. They will put these on Mars or the moons of Jupiter and Saturn away from the red giant sun. Arthur Clarke had figured it all out in 1968.

Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 12:18 am

The major uncertainty though is how Mars and Venus orbits might evolve into chaos after the mutibillion year gravitational resonances of the inner planets are disrupted. The result could be further chaos from the asteroid belt… unleashing a planet-killing hailstorm on the inner planets.

MarkW
Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 8:48 am

Solve one problem at a time.
Compared to moving whole planets, a couple of asteroids is not a big deal.

markopanama
Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 4:32 pm

@Strangelove, saying that in a million years the world will be run my microchips is as misguided as people sitting around a million years ago saying that a million years from now the world will be run by pointed sticks and really sharp bone knives. /humor

Louis
Reply to  Tom in Denver
April 27, 2018 10:52 am

“Migrants will be prevented from arriving. We will let them drown.” — Mayer Hillman
If Hillman is “exactly” right, Tom, how will migrants manage to drown after the world’s oceans have evaporated?

HotScot
Reply to  Louis
April 27, 2018 11:28 am

Louis
He actually said that?!!!!!!!!

Curious George
April 27, 2018 7:35 am

The Policy Studies Institute “combines the rigour of academic research with expert knowledge.”

Komrade Kuma
Reply to  Curious George
April 27, 2018 9:16 am

“combines the rigour of academic research with expert knowledge.”That just has to be true cos like its too inane to actually be just marketing spin, isn’t it….?

Clyde Spencer
April 27, 2018 7:40 am

Here I thought that most of the warming was taking place in the Arctic and at night and in the Winter. Daytime warming at lower latitudes seems to be minimal, so why would people be migrating? Reporting average global temperatures doesn’t give the public the real picture. Hillman probably doesn’t understand the ‘problem.’ That being the case, how can we put any stock in his solution to the ‘problem?’

Reply to  Clyde Spencer
April 27, 2018 7:57 am

Excellent comment, I can’t improve upon it (-:

HotScot
Reply to  Clyde Spencer
April 27, 2018 11:22 am

Clyde
Well, as a non scientist, I reckon that if the planet warmed up just a little more, people would start migrating, to the then unfrozen, now wastelands of Siberia and northern Canada where a vast acreage of agricultural land will be released from the grip of permafrost.
Imagine all the food production from these two areas alone with modern agricultural methods.
As for sea level rise, frankly, I don’t give a monkeys. If people are stupid enough to buy £5M dwelling on the River Thames, or beach front properties in Florida, then hell slap it into them, they took the risk. Mind you, insurance companies don’t seem to take this AGW nonsense seriously as they are still insuring both!

John harmsworth
Reply to  Clyde Spencer
April 27, 2018 2:04 pm

And don’t forget, he’s so old he likes it to be above 90F all the time now. Lol!

John harmsworth
Reply to  Clyde Spencer
April 27, 2018 2:05 pm

He wears his pants so high he has to pull the zipper down to breathe. That’s why he thinks it’s so warm. Lol!

Latitude
April 27, 2018 7:40 am

” must globally move to zero emissions”….so we’re supposed to consume huge quantities of CO2….and not replace it
These types of “predictions” seem to have one thing in common…..there’s a very sad pathetic person behind them

Trevor
Reply to  Latitude
April 27, 2018 8:44 am

“L’attitude ” Vous ne comprenez pas !
Sorry…….that was my feeble attempt at humour !
Hillman is a FAILURE ! Obviously he hates people as he thinks they have given
him a hard life…………….and he STILL can’t afford a MOTOR CAR !
This is HIS ” LAST GASP SOLUTION ” !!
WHAT HE ACTUALLY WANTS IS FOR YOU TO STOP BREATHING !
This will prevent you producing any more CO2 ….and ALSO lower the World’s population !!
It is a truly beautiful , but totally malevolent , solution .
Think of it this way : He’s 86 , on his push-bike these HILLs are killing him MAN ( Hence: Hillman )
He is far more likely than you to “snuff it” soon…………………probably !
That gives us ALL something to look forward to in future ! Keep me posted !

WXcycles
Reply to  Trevor
April 27, 2018 9:45 am
Bill
Reply to  Latitude
April 27, 2018 9:11 am

We could stop breathing. Then of course we’d all die. Perhaps that is what he means. What a t????r

WXcycles
Reply to  Bill
April 27, 2018 9:33 am
markopanama
Reply to  Bill
April 28, 2018 4:53 pm

@WXcycles – Thanks for posting this – all that is old is new again. So appropriate for today. Not to mention its brilliant use as the intro and conclusion music for Apocalypse Now.
This is the end
My only friend the end
It hurts to set you free
But you never follow me
The end of laughter and soft lies
The end of nights we tried to die
This is the end

AllyKat
Reply to  Latitude
April 27, 2018 2:58 pm

I do not understand why he thinks we should bother doing all of those things, if we are really “doomed” and the process causing the ice caps is “irreversible”. What good is it to take “action” if those actions will not make a difference, other than decreasing quality of life?

Red94ViperRT10
Reply to  AllyKat
April 28, 2018 12:16 am

At last, a reply appropriate to his actual statements! And I’ll even give him credit, about one thing he is correct, WE’RE ALL GONNA DIE!!! Research has shown 100% of all people ever born will eventually die! Some have kicked the bucket already! A quick Duck-Duck-Go search, and selecting the first answer, suggests 94% of all people ever born are already dead! Given those odds, how can he go wrong in his startling prediction? And while I employ all facts in a sarcastic manner, I believe everything I say is 100% factual! So, no need for

Red94ViperRT10
Reply to  AllyKat
April 28, 2018 12:18 am

…not sure if I should blame WordPress or html, but it disposed of my at the very end.

Red94ViperRT10
Reply to  AllyKat
April 28, 2018 12:20 am

Hunh… I can’t use the less-than and greater-than signs without them turning into html symbols and disappearing? I was trying to indicate htmlmarkup /sarc htmlclose.

Reply to  AllyKat
April 28, 2018 11:43 am

And the answer to the problem of “people gonna die”, is never let them be born in the first place?
None of the rantings of these Chicken Little’s make the lightest bit of logical sense, starting with how melting some ice is gonna doom the planet, considering that the icecaps forming was a recent event, and by itself was a life and habitat destroying catastrophe with few parallels in Earth history.
We are in an ice age, the planet is far too cold for most living things to survive over a vast percentage of the surface, and warmer conditions are a remedy, not a problem.
All that really ought to matter to the sane people who know how to think logically is how to prevent these jackasses from doing any more damage.

drednicolson
Reply to  AllyKat
April 28, 2018 1:50 pm

The only questions are when, where, and whether those still living will respond to your demise with sympathy or schadenfreude.

April 27, 2018 7:40 am

I guess this will help sell newspapers and get folks to watch the Telly!

HotScot
Reply to  tomwys
April 27, 2018 11:43 am

tomwys
I have bought, nor watched either, since Al Gore kindly invented the internet for me.
Mind you, he invented it specifically for me, so careful what you say.
🙂

Reply to  HotScot
April 28, 2018 11:48 am

” nor watched either”
OK, I was going to go pedantic grammar Nazi here…but why bother.

HotScot
Reply to  Menicholas
April 28, 2018 11:58 am

Menicholas
I hope I’m allowed the occasional transgression considering I frequently use a tablet with a dire touchscreen keyboard and predictive text that refuses to stay switched off.
I’ll duly write out “Must try harder” x 100.
🙂

HotScot
Reply to  Menicholas
April 28, 2018 12:00 pm

Menicholas
PS your quotation marks are not correct. Ahem.
🙂

Reply to  HotScot
April 28, 2018 1:09 pm

LOL, just messin’ wit cha meng!

April 27, 2018 7:42 am

Social science – example of an oxymoron.

Thomas Homer
Reply to  vuurklip
April 27, 2018 7:48 am

‘Carbon Pollution’ is another example of an oxymoron.
It translates to: Carbon is harmful to Carbon Based Life Forms.

R Shearer
Reply to  Thomas Homer
April 27, 2018 9:43 am

And carbon dioxide = carbon

HotScot
Reply to  Thomas Homer
April 27, 2018 11:47 am

Thomas Homer
Launch a big enough diamond at my head hard enough, and yes, it’s likely to be harmful to me.
Miss, and you’re gonna have to catch me with your diamond.
🙂

Reply to  Thomas Homer
April 28, 2018 11:50 am

Diamonds…waste of good carbon.
Cannot burn it or make a pencil.
It does make some great saw blades, so there is that.

Reply to  Thomas Homer
April 28, 2018 12:05 pm
Reply to  Thomas Homer
April 28, 2018 1:07 pm

True, and so will iron and most metals and lots of stuff considered not to be flammable.
But saying “They will not burn except under special conditions and with considerable effort that will likely take more energy than is released by the burning diamonds” would not have sounded as catchy.

drednicolson
Reply to  Thomas Homer
April 28, 2018 1:58 pm

The difference between “possible to do it” and “having a good reason to do it”.

Edwin
April 27, 2018 7:44 am

Even if we assume that the “worse case model output” is going to happen if AGW mythology is correct, it is not going to lead in the next several hundred years to the death of most life on earth. Though it is probably true that the rich leftist billionaires are going to have to wall themselves inside their enclaves to keep us peons from breaching their castle walls, especially if they get their way today. I can make a good case that if the AGW crowd get their way that the third world nations, prevented from having basic modern technology, will rise up in revolt.

HotScot
Reply to  Edwin
April 27, 2018 11:53 am

Edwin
According to some, it’s already happened in Egypt, and is happening in Syria. Then there’s Brexit, and of course Trump. Now it looks like N. Korea is getting in on the game (a bit tenuous, I know).

JCR
Reply to  Edwin
April 27, 2018 6:56 pm

And it’s not like AGW crowd are going to turn China, Russia and India from their current paths.

Dave Fair
Reply to  JCR
April 27, 2018 9:57 pm

But Ivan says they have special circumstances, JCR. Whatever that has to do with the rest of us, I don’t know.

ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 7:49 am

Thanks for posting Eric. I am glad you are slowly coming round to my way of thinking that AGW is here and mankind is facing one of the biggest threats in human history. We should all praise The Guardian and The New York Times for their unrelenting efforts in highlighting the climate change crisis.

Greg61
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 7:53 am

You forgot the sarc tag

ivankinsman
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 8:04 am

C’mon Greg … The probably of AGW not happening is equal to the probability of it happening and I prefer to err on the cautious side. No sarc tag needed here my friend. I am cautious by nature.

Latitude
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 8:20 am

“But I’m sure you will join me in expressing appreciation of the Guardian’s tireless efforts, to entertain us with the colorful predictions of their parade of increasingly eccentric climate doomsday prophets.”

MarkW
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 8:49 am

Climate change is definitely happening, and it’s 100% a good thing.

D. J. Hawkins
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 9:38 am

;
Clearly you have no grasp of probability. Very few things in this world are a binary solution set. Not everything is a coin toss.

Sara
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 9:57 am

Ivankinsman, you’re mistaking someone’s action for your intention. I suggest a nice, cold beer, a ham sandwich with lettuce and mustard, and some chips, and a good book that doesn’t take more than three years to read.

Alan Tomalty
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 10:11 am

Ivanskman You mean it is 50%? If you really think that then no amount of evidence would ever persuade you that global warming is one BIG hoax.

MarkW
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 10:11 am

Even a coin toss has a small (very, very small) chance of landing on the edge.

NorwegianSceptic
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 10:22 am

Sarcasm is waisted on religious people. QED….

WXcycles
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 11:35 am
John harmsworth
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 2:14 pm

In the spirit of Ivankinsman’s warning I have just signed on for way more insurance than I can really afford. I will have to forego eating decent food and having a roof over my head but , my long term future is secure! Hooray!! Thank God for The Precautionary Principle!

John harmsworth
Reply to  Greg61
April 27, 2018 2:15 pm

The trees will all die! The Guardian should buy up all the paper in existence. Right Now! You know, to secure its future!

schitzree
Reply to  Greg61
April 28, 2018 7:58 am

Even if we accept Ivankinsman’s 50/50 split for Climate Armageddon, how is a 50% chance of DOOOOOM worse then the 100% chance that the ‘final solution’ of the Climate Faithful would require the elimination of 95% of the Global Population, and for the vast majority of those remaining to live like Amish at best or (more likely) like medieval Serfs?
~¿~

Reply to  Greg61
April 28, 2018 11:57 am

When I go out to the store, there is a chance my house could burn down, or it might not.
So it is 50-50.
To be on the safe side, I am going to call the fire department everytime I leave and have them soak my house and everything in it.
I am gonna have my electric service disconnected and rip all the wiring out.
And I am gonna start insisting on paying triple or quadruple for anything that has anything to do with fire or burning or heating, just to be on the safe side.
Then I can go to the store without worrying.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Menicholas
April 28, 2018 12:30 pm

Every probability is 50/50; it either happens or it doesn’t.

MarkW
Reply to  Greg61
April 28, 2018 8:20 pm

NorwegianSceptic, obviously you have never met many religious people.

Bill Toland
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 8:15 am

Ivankinsman, you keep conflating AGW with CAGW. The vast majority of climate skeptics believe in AGW but not CAGW. I notice that you very carefully only mention AGW because you are unable to defend CAGW.

MarkW
Reply to  Bill Toland
April 27, 2018 8:50 am

There are a lot of environmentalists who are convinced that the planets ecology is a fragile thing.
Any change, no matter how tiny will inevitably bring about it’s utter collapse.

Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 8:22 am

I am glad you are slowly coming round to my way of thinking that AGW is here fake and mankind is facing one of the biggest threats frauds in human history.
There, fixed it for ya.

Latitude
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 8:24 am

“mankind is facing one of the biggest threats in human history.”…
It’s been warmer…..it’s been colder
You do realize if the “average” temp was normally 10 degrees warmer…….everyone would look really stupid complaining about a 2 degree increase in today’s temp

Andrew Cooke
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 8:31 am

I like this Hillman guy. He’s hilarious. I mean, I know he isn’t intending to be but he is just plain funny. I felt like I was reading an Onion article.
Of course, his reaction is predictable, as was the man who immolated himself in Central Park. And the direction of his talk is also quite predictable. Notice how the strongest premise of his discussion is overpopulation and the belief that self determination will always stop the necessary actions to prevent climate change from happening.
It is obvious to anyone with intelligence and the capability to follow logic what the unspoken end game is for all CAGW true believers. Tyranny and depopulation.
So tell me Ivankinsman, which solution do you think will end up being pursued? Tyranny or depopulation?
Technology may allow for absolute tyranny…..call it Technotyranny, but my personal suspicion is that some evil nutbag will go for depopulation. It would be for the greater good after all, wouldn’t it?

ivankinsman
Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 27, 2018 8:52 am

250 babies are being born eac mi ute. Forecast is for population of 11 billion by 2100. Yes I think measures need to be taken via contraceception iniatives, restricting the number of children per family via financial incentives etc. https://mankindsdegradationofplanetearth.com/2018/04/24/with-250-babies-born-each-minute-how-many-people-can-the-earth-sustain-lucy-lamble-global-development-the-guardian/

Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 27, 2018 9:13 am

here, ivan. there are loads of other sites discussing facts. you know, those things your types consider perspective. Newflash. truth is absolute. you are not the arbiter of truth.
https://overpopulationisamyth.com/

MarkW
Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 27, 2018 9:21 am

The number is dropping, as is the rate of increase in the population.
Regardless, the earth can easily support 11 billion humans, and a lot more.

Andrew Cooke
Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 27, 2018 9:55 am

Nice avoidance, Ivankinsman. You have read what the gentleman in question said, correct? Notice, he did not say, “Population Control”. He said, at least according to the person who was there, “Reduce Our Population.”
Not ‘reduce our increase’, but ‘reduce our population’. You AGW lot have been talking about reduce our increase for a while now. It is a main stream thought although utterly unnecessary, as the only major growth now occurring is happening in Africa. As you are well aware, the majority of the world is falling below replacement.
But this ‘reduce our population’. Now that means something different.
So which is it Ivankinsman? Tyranny or Depopulation? The CAGW crew is already trying to establish a moral necessity for Tyranny, but I think that in just a few more years we will begin to hear the “moral” case for Depopulation. You know……legal murder.
Come now…don’t try to avoid what this old fellow is saying. Hint, hint…nudge, nudge.

John Endicott
Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 27, 2018 11:48 am

if ivan truly wanted to curb the population growth of the planet, he’d support the use of more fossil fuels, not less. Cheap energy is the gateway to prosperity. It’s in the third world, where Ivan’s preferred restrictions on fossil fuels leaves the populace in energy poverty, that the population is increasing the greatest. In the first world, where we have prosperity due to our use of cheap energy, population is actually decreasing.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 27, 2018 1:31 pm

We will have a population problem as long as sex is more popular than dying.
Electrification and TV tends to reduce the birthrate. I wonder why?

John harmsworth
Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 27, 2018 2:20 pm

Do You choose sex or death?
Who’s the sex with?
Hillary Clinton!
Just shoot me!
Lol!

schitzree
Reply to  Andrew Cooke
April 28, 2018 8:07 am

So tell me Ivankinsman, which solution do you think will end up being pursued? Tyranny or depopulation?

comment image?itemid=3787079
~¿~

Tom Halla
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 8:38 am

Ivan==>Just how much will it have to warm to reach the Holocene Climatic Optimum? And why, pray tell, was it named that?

MarkW
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 8:48 am

As clueless as always ivanski. The article was posted so that the rest of us can laugh at it, and you.

ivankinsman
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 8:55 am

Laugh away Markski. I always have a good chuckle whenever I see any reference to a greening planet as a result of man-made CO2 emissions.

MarkW
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 9:21 am

So reality amuses you.
How quaint.
I’m guessing that ivanski doesn’t know the first thing about biology.

D. J. Hawkins
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 9:42 am


invankinsman considers Pink Floyd’s “The Wall” to be a “how to” manual. Or “how not to”.

John Endicott
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 11:57 am

MarkW, you can add that to the long lists of things he is clueless about that he’s posted just in the past few days.

Chimp
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 2:21 pm

Ivan,
Those laughable CACA skeptics at NASA are laughing at you:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2016/carbon-dioxide-fertilization-greening-earth

MarkW
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 3:50 pm

The Guardian disagrees with NASA, therefore NASA is wrong.

drednicolson
Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 2:12 pm

Laughing derisively at those who say the sky is blue will not cause the sky to turn pink with purple polka-dots.

Dave Fair
Reply to  drednicolson
April 28, 2018 2:29 pm

We laugh at people who assert that a 1% difference in total earth energy flows will lead to climate Armageddon.

MarkW
Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 8:21 pm

dred, actually we are laughing hysterically at people who are claiming that the sky is pink with purple polka-dots.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 10:09 am

I am glad you are slowly coming around to the idea that mankind is facing one of the biggest threats in human history: the Big Lie that CO2, which is completely beneficial to mankind and to all life is somehow “destroying the planet”. Kudos.

HotScot
Reply to  ivankinsman
April 27, 2018 12:15 pm

ivankinsman
I’m now of the opinion that you are a double agent sceptic.
Anthony has given you the task of testing the resolve of everyone on this site ~cunning Anthony, very cunning~.
We know there is enough scientific evidence presented on WUWT to have even the most hardened alarmist scientist question AGW if they visit this site as often as you do.
Anthony has instructed you to use the Guardian as a means of testing the science on here with, the most illogical, left wing propaganda currently available. So far, WUWT has passed with flying colours.
Keep it up mate, science loves being tested, even by the Guardian.
What happened to Griff anyway…………Ahhhhhh………….Anthony, I get it now. He served his purpose as the WUWT clown and you replaced him with ivankinsman. Like I said, very cunning.
Not that I think your a clown ivankinsman, ~ nudge, nudge, a nod’s as good as a wink, as they say.~
I’m the soul of discretion, I won’t tell anyone.

ivankinsman
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 1:12 pm

HotScot you are coming out with the same old cliches e.g. correlating climate change with left wing propaganda when there us no connection between the two. How can scientific fact be either ‘right wing’ or ‘left wing’. What has the large amounts of man-made CO2 in the atmosphere and it’s detrimental impact got to do with politics. You surely either accept or refute the science-based evidence. I accept it and it seems you reject it. For Christ’s sake keep politics out of it. Politics is not science (only Pruitt sees to think the two are one and the same thing and look what a complete disaster he has turned out to be).

Chimp
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 1:19 pm

Ivan,
Consensus climate science isn’t science but politics.
The facts, ie scientific observations, have repeatedly falsified the baseless conjecture of CACA.

HotScot
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 2:20 pm

ivankinsman
I like this game, you’re testing our resolve again. Good one Anthony, the force is strong with this one.
It would be Maurice Strong and that awful woman Christiana Figueres who presented the political case of the climate change scam objective, to destroy industrialisation, not climate sceptics.
Or has that little nugget entirely passed you by?
You will also, of course note, that the ONLY observed manifestation of increased atmospheric CO2 is that the planet has greened by 14% over the past 30 years of satellite observations, directly attributed to increased atmospheric CO2, according to NASA.
The Maldives aren’t under water now as predicted 20 years ago, nor New York or London.
Whilst the planet wallows in 400 ppm atmospheric CO2, it is only 250 ppm away from the destruction of all meaningful life at 150 ppm CO2, and we flirted with 180 ppm in the not too distant past.
So sea level rises as the poles melt, but the north pole is largely sea ice anyway so it won’t make a jot of difference, and the Antarctic is doing pretty well considering it’s pock marked with newly discovered volcanoes beneath it.
And who does sea level threaten? The wealthy individuals with properties in London, a city built on the banks of a river. Or wealthy western communities like Florida, a city built on a swamp. So who would sea rise affect the most, yep, the wealthy.
What does the developing world do when threatened with sea level rise? When it actually happens, which it hasn’t, they pick up their meagre belongings and move to higher ground.
Perhaps we are doing the developing world a favour, if sea levels rise, the wealthy western world will be worst affected, whilst the developing world will just shrug it off and move on.
However, that’s no excuse for actively depriving them of the right to move from developing world, to developed world by denying them access to funding for the very fossil fuels the west has profited massively from.
But thankfully, there’s China. I believe It’s building/financing around 1,200 fossil fuelled (coal) fired power stations around the world as we speak. Their solar arrays and wind turbines complexes pale by comparison, no matter how big. Put pen to paper mate and figure out how much energy is produced by 1,200 coal fired power stations Vs acres of solar and turbines.
Meanwhile, the paltry 2 ppm humanity contributes to atmospheric CO2 is statistically inconsequential. Under any other circumstances, 2 cents in a million cents will not make a difference. Would you invest in a company that offered you a return of 2 cents in 1,000,000? “Invest 1,000,000 cents in us and get 2 cents interest”.
Seriously?
Have I passed Anthony?

MarkW
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 3:52 pm

Like most trolls, ivanski is completely imprevious to fact and reason.
He continues to believe that CO2 is 100% evil because that’s what his handlers have paid him to believe.

Fraizer
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 7:31 pm

I like this game, you’re testing our resolve again. Good one Anthony, the force is strong with this one.

I like this game, you’re testing our resolve again. Good one Anthony, the farce is strong with this one.
Fixed that typo for you HotScot

Reply to  HotScot
April 28, 2018 12:05 pm

I think Griff gradually realized he was playing for the wrong team and slunk off in shame.
Would not be surprised if he is here in a skeptical role under another handle.
You could see in his writing Griff was agreeing more and more with the WUWT regulars.

Reply to  HotScot
April 28, 2018 12:08 pm

“hat the ONLY observed manifestation of increased atmospheric CO2 is that the planet has greened by 14% ”
No, there are others, such as steadily increasing crop yields even under identical conditions and with identical seeds and methods.

HotScot
Reply to  Menicholas
April 29, 2018 4:16 am

Menicholas
My point is that they are observable and measurable. No one to date to my belief, has demonstrated that increased atmospheric CO2 is melting the polar ice caps, other than by some convoluted, dubious science.

Reply to  HotScot
April 29, 2018 9:05 am

Regarding the ice at the poles, that is for sure.
The one at the South Pole is not even thought to be losing ice, but gaining.
The sea ice around it waxes and wanes but shows no sign or shrinking away to nothing.
The sea ice in the Arctic is well known to have waxed and waned on a cycle with a period of somewhere around 60 years.
It is pure warmista lie-mongering that suggest otherwise, from the assertion that no satellites existed prior to 1980, to the notion that prior to this time insufficient information exists to draw any conclusions regarding ice extent.
Many news outlets, notably the NYT, have baldly asserted such nonsensical and patently false claims as that the north pole has been continuously covered in deep ice for hundreds of thousands and even millions of years, until this past decade.
In fact, their own reportage on the subject goes back well over 150 years and the things they assert these days is amply contradicted by their own prior stories and article.
In short, it is a web of lies and garbage non-science from pole to pole and as far as the eye can see.

HotScot
Reply to  Menicholas
April 29, 2018 4:30 pm

Menicholas
My belief is that the planet has operated rather well for 80% of its existence without frozen poles.

Latitude
Reply to  Eric Worrall
April 27, 2018 5:21 pm

+1

Reply to  Eric Worrall
April 28, 2018 12:18 pm

Likewise, here in the US, a huge percentage of the population has relocated much further south over the past 50 years, to the southern tier of states that are tens of degrees warmer than where they came from.
The migration continues, as does the increase in shoreline and riverfront housing.
Actions speak louder than words, and whether it is the profligate consumption and consequent emmissions of CO2 of the likes of Algore and that Leonardo di Jackasso, or the fact that none of the green elite are living in tents and eating foraged food and wearing animal skins, the actions of those doing the complaining and virtue signalling tell us all loudly and clearly that none of them actually believes a word of the nonsense they spew.
People do not engage in behavior they truly believe is wrong.
Liberals like to pretend that words are more important than actions, which is simply how they hypocritically except and forgive themselves for doing the same things as those they condemn.

commieBob
April 27, 2018 7:51 am

Can it be done without a collapse of civilisation? “I don’t think so, …

He’s right for the wrong reason. The question could be read as: Could we quickly reduce anthropogenic CO2 emissions to zero without collapsing civilization? No. Quickly reducing our CO2 emissions to zero would cause the collapse of civilization.
The reason we haven’t run out of vital materials is that we keep improving our technology. In that regard, we have a tiger by the tail. We have to keep improving our technology. link Wrecking our economy by insisting on nonviable renewable energy would certainly stall technological progress and lead to global cataclysm.

HotScot
Reply to  commieBob
April 27, 2018 12:19 pm

commieBob
I think you’re aware of my opinion of CO2 at 400 ppm as it stands now. Far too close to the destruction of mankind of 150 ppm for comfort. I’ll be happy when CO2 reaches 1,500 ppm so we have a little wriggle room.

HotScot
Reply to  Eric Worrall
April 27, 2018 2:50 pm

Eric
I like to think that just once in a while I contribute something. Your response is much appreciated.

HotScot
Reply to  Eric Worrall
April 27, 2018 3:00 pm

Eric
Were it not so tragic, it would be funny……….or will be.

Reply to  HotScot
April 28, 2018 12:24 pm

Personally, I do not think it will be very long into the future that this occurs.
People hate being lied to, and you cannot fool people for long.
The USSR was able to prevent people from acting on what they believed by intimidation and coercion, but they were not able to make people believe the party line was true.
The proof of this is how quickly and completely that country changed once the totalitarians were removed.
I do not think communists are much tolerated over there.

April 27, 2018 8:03 am

Humans are extremely adaptable and will rise to the occasion of “peak oil” by adapting to other sources of energy. We will find a way. We always have.

MarkW
Reply to  wallensworth
April 27, 2018 8:51 am

We have several hundred years (at the very least) in order to find or invent the next best thing.

Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 12:25 pm

I would bet on thousands of years of buried carbon based fuel.

April 27, 2018 8:04 am

This should cheer him up …
LOVE
by Strapping Young Lad

Reply to  Max Photon
April 27, 2018 2:46 pm

Nice.

April 27, 2018 8:09 am

commieBob at 7:51 am
…Wrecking our economy by insisting on nonviable renewable energy would certainly stall technological progress and lead to global cataclysm.

Isn’t that the plan?

“Isn’t the only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilizations collapse? Isn’t it our responsibility to bring that about?” . . . Maurice Strong 1992

HotScot
Reply to  Steve Case
April 27, 2018 12:26 pm

Steve Case
“Isn’t the only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilizations collapse? Isn’t it our responsibility to bring that about?”
Funny that, a quote by an old, white, westernised, wealthy male, endorsed by the greens who hate old, white, westernised, wealthy males.
Double standards?
Or is it just me, as an old, white, westernised, wealthy male?

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  HotScot
April 29, 2018 8:11 am

“Or is it just me, as an old, white, westernised, wealthy male?”
In the spirit of income equality, and to ease your suffering, I’m willing to make the ultimate sacrifice and take a fair portion of wealth off your hands. I’ve got the old, white, and westernized part down pat, still working on the wealthy. 🙂

HotScot
Reply to  Jeff Alberts
April 29, 2018 4:27 pm

Jeff
I consider my ‘wealth’ well invested in my family. Financially, I’m no better off than you, and probably much worse.

DonT
April 27, 2018 8:13 am

“Can you see everyone in a democracy volunteering to give up flying? Can you see the majority of the population becoming vegan? Can you see the majority agreeing to restrict the size of their families?”
The implication is that the “enlightened” elites need to impose a solution… sounds like a typical advocate for totalitarian socialism, aka. communism. Means he’s just another watermelon.

Andrew Cooke
Reply to  DonT
April 27, 2018 8:35 am

Nah, he rejects his own conclusion. Besides, communism wont fix the problem, it would actually make it worse. The only real solutions are tyranny through technology (think like the Chinese Social Score) or through depopulation.

April 27, 2018 8:43 am

Upon further reflection, I believe that Mayer Hillman is lamenting the death of “globalism.”
He’s seeing that that Agenda 21 folk (of which he is one) couldn’t pull it off, and he will not participate in the glorious control of the commoners.

Paul Penrose
Reply to  wallensworth
April 27, 2018 10:06 am

Exactly.

JimG1
April 27, 2018 8:43 am

There is no social scientist, just socialists. But music does make me feel better, if you can find any real music since about the 1970s, and damn little after the 60s, if you don’t count movie scores.

Reply to  JimG1
April 28, 2018 12:29 pm

Great music in large quantity did not die until the early 1990s, around the time of the advent of napster.
When it became nearly impossible to make a living from music, it was hard to get huge numbers of people to devote their lives to it.

schitzree
Reply to  Menicholas
April 28, 2018 1:44 pm

I would argue the exact opposite, Menicholas. There is all kinds of great music our there, and the advent of Napster, Youtube, and many other internet based means of distribution have only increased how much is produced.
The real difference is that the record companies no longer have sole control of what gets produced and played. So some of the best stuff isn’t going to show up in the top 40 countdown, or get endlessly repeated on the radio.
That does mean you need to dig a little more for the good stuff, as there’s plenty of crap being produced as well. But that only makes the diamonds shine more when you find them.
~¿~

drednicolson
Reply to  Menicholas
April 28, 2018 5:30 pm

Every decade has its gold/platinum artists, its one-hit wonders, and its big steaming pile of forgettable tripe that nobody bothered to document for posterity.
The big difference nowadays is that the tripe pile grows faster than ever, but we also sort through and discard it faster than ever. And that record companies can’t get away with charging you an album price for what amounts to one hit single and 8-9 tracks of tripe.

Greg Cavanagh
Reply to  Menicholas
April 29, 2018 8:11 pm

schitzree; you can shortcut the search a little by looking through SXSW. There are bittorrent files available under the SXSW moniker. (I can advertise the torrent files because these are demo songs provided to SXSW by the artists for advertising [demo] purposes). PS: not much classical among them.
https://www.sxsw.com/

MarkW
April 27, 2018 8:44 am

If a 2C increase in temperatures is going to end life on earth, how the heck did the world survive when temperatures were 5C warmer about 20K years ago?

HotScot
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 12:34 pm

MarkW
Awwwww…..Mark, come on!
The Guardian didn’t exist 20K years ago so how could people possibly understand a 5C cooling was going to mean the end of humanity.
I mean. seriously, get with the program!
🙂

Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 12:32 pm

I think you have the timeline wrong
HCO was 8k years ago.
20k years ago, the ice age was in full advance mode and going strong.
But, it is undeniable that for hundreds of millions of years CO2 and temperatures were not a little but very much higher, and life did not merely prosper but exploded in a riotous profusion from pole to pole.

Reply to  MarkW
April 28, 2018 12:34 pm

“Warmth is a lethal threat to life” is as patently absurd as anything it is possible to believe could be.

drednicolson
Reply to  Menicholas
April 28, 2018 5:41 pm

(Lack of) Warmth is a lethal threat to life.

Bob Hoye
April 27, 2018 8:54 am

Public intellectuals–sheesh what nonsense!
But his “collapse of civilization” is worth exploring. There is a long history of governments becoming ambitious and eventually going full authoritarian. Then the public sees the excesses of the governing classes, their living well and compared to not living well, the imbalance prompts a popular uprising. In the 1970s, Barbara Bell published that such uprisings in Ancient Egypt forced changes in dynasties. As in changing the pharoahs, then the priesthoods.
In recent times, the last such successful uprising ordinary folk took down the Berlin Wall and Communism. No mean feat. Especially in the face of governing classes that had used machine guns and tanks to murderously quell the uprisings in Hungary in 1956 and in Prague in 1968.
All today’s governing classes have is propaganda. That and even with a remarkably strong will to continue to impose their power won’t be enough to prevail.
Their main boasts have been the ability to “manage” the economy and (audacities of audacities) to “manage” the temperature of a planet.
The next recession will end the tout about the economy and as this cooling trend continues it will end the tout about controlling the climate.
I guess I’m an optimist.
The last great reformation began to be successful in the early 1600’s when practical merchants in London described government policies as “Tyrannical Duncery”.
Enough of the latter going around these days to prompt another Great Reformation.
That could be considered as a “collapse” of the worst parts of grand government edifices and superstitions.
((Tony–I have essays that expand this theme. Let me know if you would be interested in reading them))
bobhoye@ahaw.ca

HotScot
Reply to  Bob Hoye
April 27, 2018 1:07 pm

subtle2
We have our western uprising right now.
Brexit and Trump. Make no mistake, as bloodless and peaceful as they are, they represent a paradigm shift from open revolt, to demonstrating the power of the ballot box.
Both will only be recognised as such if the opportunities both present are seized, but wont manifest themselves for generations.
Both events should be celebrated for their exhibition of the rights of the common man. Instead, the wealthy, westernised liberal left condemn them. They threaten their comfortable equilibrium, yet mankind has historically thrived on change.
To keep mankind on it’s toes, there must be change. And it’s such a pity that, to prove to alarmist’s global warming isn’t bad, we sceptics must wish for far worse, global cooling.
Any opportunity to capitalise on even minute warming, and the greening of the planet thanks to increased atmospheric CO2, is being squandered in the ridiculous bun fight that is CAGW.
I almost don’t get the human capacity for pessimism, other than courageous people profit from their optimism; the Wright brothers (utterly staggering the progress humankind has made since them), Alexander Graham Bell, Newton, Columbus……….name your pioneer.
Even if not financially, many have left an indelible mark on humanity, thanks to optimism.

Dave Fair
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 1:38 pm

Yeah, that stupid Trump. It was Obama that brought Korea together.

HotScot
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 2:41 pm

Dave
It remains to be seen whether N. Korea is serious.
Me? I suspect N. Korea want’s to move on, they just don’t know how with China as their paymaster.
But what a coup for Trump if it works out. And I’m fairly certain the the ‘momentous’ meeting between north and south will pale by comparison to the ultimate Capitalism meets communism, when Trump welcomes Kim Jong whattsit to the USA (insert successive future POTUS who will eventually do so) and finally ends this particularly pathetic stand off Trump has exposed for what it is, penknife Vs sabre rattling.
“N. Korea threatens global destruction”. Oh!……please, give me peace, what a preposterous proposition. A single cat 5 hurricane generates as much energy per minute as mankind has nuclear weapons.
Nuclear war, another media fantasy!
Sorry, long response to a short comment.

John harmsworth
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 2:58 pm

Without pessimism there is no cogent argument why we should need the All-Wise to rescue us. Their power is dependent on the existence of a crisis.The greater the crisis the greater the scope for their power to be exercised.
That’s what it is all about. They just want power and status., and they don’t want to work for it or have to make actual contributions or learn to allocate Capital intelligently. They just know they need it and for some reason they deserve to have it! Us peasants are just in the way. T’was ever thuis.
First thing we do let’s hang all the lawyers-French Revolution.
Who will be blamed when the next collapse comes?

HotScot
Reply to  John harmsworth
April 27, 2018 3:30 pm

John
I understand what your saying, I’m not sure it’s entirely true though.
Personally, I largely blame we ‘underlings’ for our own fate.
Whilst we watch our ‘superiors’ roll over us with manifest impunity, the only reason is we can’t be bothered to inform ourselves of our lawful rights.
And whilst I never thought I would say it as a big picture kind of bloke, the detail matters.
If we don’t stand up for day to day rights, the big picture can’t come into focus.
For example, when Anthony started this blog, it was largely founded on the concept of the ridiculous proposition of AGW. Then he started examining the practicalities, urban heat island effects on temperature measurement etc. Now the site is focussed on the scientific detail of climate change.
We drill deeper into the detail.
Now, had all scientists who had an objection to the detail of the concept of AGW actually vocalised their objection in the early days, we wouldn’t be where we are now.
But they didn’t, they just followed the herd, knowing it was wrong, but fearing for their job.
And whilst it’s difficult as a young man/woman to voice objection, that’s what employment, especially scientific employment is about. We should all be testing the chinks in the armour of authority. All too frequently examination of an entrenched process is found wanting, after the fact.
I’m incredibly humbled to be on WUWT, watching clever people question the scientific establishment holding their feet to the fire on climate change.
Our sceptical intervention is more important than the AGW proposition itself.
And that goes for every level of employment or intervention.
If we don’t challenge established authority, we are all lost.

MarkW
Reply to  HotScot
April 27, 2018 3:54 pm

From everything I have read, it seems that China is getting pretty fed up with having to foot most of N. Korea’s bills.

Reply to  Bob Hoye
April 28, 2018 12:51 pm

On the subject of authoritarian government, and the jarring juxtaposition of the privileged class, we have these strikingly awful and horrifying images to witness on the very same day in the very same place:comment image
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/newpix/2018/04/27/17/4B9E8B1D00000578-0-image-a-5_1524844836714.jpg
“Alfie dies”, say the headlines.
Yes, he is dead, but he died the same way people died in the gas chambers…they were murdered.
They did not “die”.
Being killed is not dying, it is being killed.
Does anyone think the same fate would have been in store for a child of the privileged class, or by a royal?
Ridiculous to even ask.
It was so important this baby die they would not even let him be taken to another country for treatment, even though a plane was waiting and doctors in Italy standing ready.
But that would have exposed the evil penny-pinchers for the monsters they are, and so it could not be allowed, especially, rather than in spite of, worldwide attention and condemnation.

MarkW
Reply to  Menicholas
April 28, 2018 8:27 pm

The inevitable result of turning health care decisions over to the state.

John V. Wright
April 27, 2018 8:55 am

The Guardian is almost unreadable at the moment. It is full of articles such as this, unbalanced moronic drivel based on an interview with someone in whom senility has replaced intellectual curiosity. The glorious days of Harry Whewell, Jack Trevor Storey and, of course, James Cameron are long gone – intelligent writing, forensic journalism and northern wit have been replaced by endless diatribes about the vagina and leftie scribblers with no knowledge of life beyond their antiseptically-wiped keyboards. The only wit remaining in the Guardian is to be found in its engaging, clever and deceptive clues in the daily cryptic crossword.

HotScot
Reply to  John V. Wright
April 27, 2018 1:35 pm

John V. Wright
On my first day in a new job in central London in 1988, I bought a newspaper at Waterloo station, The Daily Telegraph, so I might appear ‘on the ball’ when I first presented myself. I was fresh off the boat from deepest, darkest Glasgow, so knew little.
It was a relaxed environment, I was in sales and marketing so no one cared what we did. My colleague and ‘mentor’ (ahem) showed me the comfortable kitchen where he poured his coffee and sat down with his newspaper, the Guardian.
I opened my Telegraph and he accused me of being a fascist. I had never read The Telegraph, nor the Guardian, so I hadn’t a clue what he was talking about. In fact, to be honest, then in my 30’s, I had barely read a newspaper as I found them utterly boring and prescriptive. I only bought the damn Telegraph because my father in law (former UN forester) read it, and I recognised it.
What struck me some years later when I was a bit wiser, is that the Guardian reader was a socialist, with a millionaire father. He and I left the company a year later (actually, we were both fired) and I persuaded him to start a business in competition with our former employers, which was a roaring success for a few years until the early 90’s recession when we went under.
Looking back, what struck me was that this ‘socialist’ was entirely focussed on profit during our business relationship. Our first company car was his Ford Fiesta, our next, a rather nice Mercedes. He never refused his turn at driving the Mercedes.
I rather resent him these days for his distorted politics.

Tom in Florida
April 27, 2018 9:05 am

April 27, 2018 9:13 am

The 86-year-old social scientist, Mayer Hillman, says a lot of things and is quoted a bunch for this blog post.
It doesn’t matter what he says … it is all a type of rationalization. Basically the guy now knows he has wasted his life and this last bunch of BS is his attempt to to further bury his subconscious realization that he was just a societal parasite.

WXcycles
Reply to  DonM
April 27, 2018 9:59 am
andrew davison
Reply to  WXcycles
April 27, 2018 2:25 pm

There’s a special area if Hell reserved for people who post nothing more than YouTube clips as comments. You know who you are.

Reply to  WXcycles
April 28, 2018 12:58 pm

Would that be right next to the place there for the people who only ever criticize and offer nothing constructive, helpful, illuminating, entertaining, or funny?
Your version of Hell must be brimful at this point…they best be working on a large expansion wing.

schitzree
Reply to  WXcycles
April 28, 2018 2:52 pm

I know that corner of Hell! It’s right next to the Pop Machine that’s always out of everything but Sierra Mist.
~¿~

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  WXcycles
April 29, 2018 9:12 am

I’m with Andrew on this one. Once is ok, twice is meh, but this is ridiculous.

Andrew Cooke
Reply to  DonM
April 27, 2018 9:59 am

Oh, it is a rationalization alright. A rationalization for the introduction of the concept that Depopulation is a “moral” answer to the problem.

Reply to  DonM
April 28, 2018 12:55 pm

Don M,
Nail on head.

drednicolson
Reply to  DonM
April 28, 2018 5:58 pm

“It’s never too late to be what you could have been.” – George Eliot
Sadly, Mr. Hillman seems content to be what he always has been.

David Hoopman
April 27, 2018 9:21 am

“I’m not going to write anymore because there’s nothing more that can be said,”
Translation: “I’m out of ideas so obviously the world is ending.”

WXcycles
April 27, 2018 9:24 am

Music for an immolation leaning greenie.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=deB_u-to-IE

Bitter&twisted
April 27, 2018 9:27 am

A Senile social “scientist”.

MarkW
Reply to  Bitter&twisted
April 27, 2018 10:14 am

How do you tell the difference?

David J Wendt
April 27, 2018 9:40 am

When he greets the prospect of massive depopulation with a “beaming smile” Mr. Hillman differentiates himself from his fellow doomsayers by his honesty, since for all of them massive depopulation is their ultimate preferred goal. Of course, as George Carlin has so aptly illustrated in his comedy routine, which has played here often, if we all disappeared tomorrow the planet would not skip a beat. Why they all blather on about an outcome which they ardently long for being a looming catastrophe is,as always, unclear. Let’s face it, if they had any bit of logical consistency, they would all be lobbying for massive increases in CO2 to accelerate the arrival of our day of demise

April 27, 2018 9:51 am

Thanks to the efforts of climate alarmist John Kerry, James Taylor is all tuned up and ready to play “You Have a Friend” during the Themopaclypse. Oh wait … singing produces CO2. Can’t have that in a zero carbon world. Also, the same for love, or rather, love making. Too much heavy exhaling of dreaded CO2. Education is only carbon free if you read books by sunlight. As for happiness, if it is indeed “a warm puppy” then that damn puppy is breathing out all amounts of CO2.
Let’s face it this guy is just yammering on to stay in the spotlight now that he has stopped writing.

drednicolson
Reply to  Mumbles McGuirck
April 28, 2018 6:05 pm

The wise man speaks when he has something to say, then stops. The foolish man speaks when he has to say something, and never stops.

Bruce Cobb
April 27, 2018 9:52 am

Clearly Hillman is off his meds. Or needs stronger ones. Because he sounds battier than a bat-cave.

WXcycles
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
April 27, 2018 10:16 am
Dave Fair
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
April 27, 2018 1:44 pm

Mental masturbation, at any age, is ugly. Sadly, that is the basis of Nobel Peace Prize awards.

drednicolson
Reply to  Dave Fair
April 28, 2018 6:08 pm

Like with the non-mental variety, most are decent enough to keep it behind closed doors.

Dave Fair
Reply to  drednicolson
April 28, 2018 6:36 pm

Sadly, Dred, music videos don’t follow that rule.

Joel O'Bryan
April 27, 2018 10:03 am

“Can you see the majority of the population becoming vegan”
Ancient man, pre-civilization were hunter-gatherers. A purely vegan lifestyle by humanity would require significant agriculture to provide enough daily calories for everyone. So of course, it’s clear he expects most people to simply chose to die off along with their family. He should set the example.

WXcycles
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
April 27, 2018 10:50 am
Sara
April 27, 2018 10:05 am

Hi. My name is Edith Ann, and I’m five and a half years old. My schoolteacher told us that global warming was going to kill off everyone, so i asked her how plants would survive without us?
She didn’t understand my question, said it was silly.
So I said plants came first in the primordial ooze and then they were running out of carbon and other chemicals to grown on, so they invented animals, and here we are. So how will plants do without us?
She made me go home with a note to my mother.
And that’s the truth. PFFFFTTT!

Sara
Reply to  Sara
April 27, 2018 10:09 am

In addition, when I run across something as bodaciously stupid and self-centered as Hillmann, I want to ask him if he would be the first to volunteer for the death cycle.
As long as these doomsayers insist that getting rid of humans is the answer to everything, I think they should be asked if they’ll volunteer to go first. Then the rest of us can get on with our lives.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Sara
April 27, 2018 1:46 pm

They, in their enlightened state, are much more valuable than you are.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Sara
April 27, 2018 11:14 am

She better watch out. I believe they have a big red button hidden under the desk for the likes of her.

Sara
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
April 27, 2018 11:29 am

Oh, Edith Ann has one in her bookpack, too.

drednicolson
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
April 28, 2018 6:10 pm

Labelled “Shark Tank”?

Coeur de Lion
April 27, 2018 10:11 am

Time the Guardian went bust.

MarkW
Reply to  Coeur de Lion
April 27, 2018 10:16 am

It’s already on that trajectory.

Gavin
Reply to  MarkW
April 27, 2018 11:24 am

I think they’ve bee burning through their ~ £800 million trust fund at about £100 million per year recently.

Peta of Newark
April 27, 2018 10:28 am

Meanwhile, I iz in Lincolnshire – Gainsborough and possibly at THE very spot where Knut did his tide-turning stunt. Its raining.
About 15 years ago, a particularly industrious friend of mine (lets call him Norman, coz that’s his name) saw an opening ‘in the agricultural market’ because of Global Warming. He foresaw that Cumbria would become toasty & warm and the local peasants would take up arable farming instead of chasing manky old yowz (sheep) across the bleak and rainy fells. In the mud.
He thought he’d buy a combine harvester and so he did. From a farming chap in Lincolnshire as it ‘appens. (They call em ‘Barley Barons’)
Lincolnshire is a truly epic place for growing stuff, don’t stick a walking stick into the dirt or it’ll grow roots and you’ll have to get another from somewhere.
Parts of it are really really flat. The ‘Fens’ as opposed to the ‘Wolds’ which are hilly.
As one might use a VW Dirty Diesel to navigate these features (the fens), one will notice that one’s Sat-Nav tells one that one is maybe 3,4,5 or even more metres below sea-level. So what.
But the observant ‘one’ will notice that the land or fields are easily 5, 6 and 7 or more metres below the road one is travelling along.
OK, they built an embankment for the road, one might think.
Back to Norman’ retail therapy.
Norman had noticed the rather different (from Cumbria) landscape and mentioned it to the Barley Baron.
“Aye” said the Barley Baron.

“I’ve been on this farm for 40 years now and I’ve seen the land on my farm sink by over 4 feet”

Go figure…
Is carbonoxide a problem or symptomatic of something else??
Countenance the possibility that the ‘missing’ 4 feet of the Barley Baron’s field is now actually wafting around a volcano in the Mid Pacific.
(Hawaii just set a new daily record for rain, did you see that. The WunderGrundKids are having kittens about it)

Joel O'Bryan
Reply to  Peta of Newark
April 27, 2018 11:01 am

Continually working the fields for years leads to steady deep water removal (mostly evaporation as water is pulled upward due to wicking (capillary action), even without active groundwater pumping) from silty and clay soils. Clays can especially compact as they lose water, but silty soils will compact too.

gwan
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
April 28, 2018 1:27 am

I saw your comment Joel O’Bryan and cannot resist .
The fens are mainly peat and peat soils sink as they are mostly organic matter and as they dry out the organic matter compresses and breaks down and you guessed releases CO2.
We have large areas of peat swamps in the Waikato NZ and they are continually sinking as they are drained . The secret of farming these soils is to not over drain them .Keep the water table at about 50 centimeters
Working heavy clay soils in wet conditions leads to compaction and declining yields.
Farmers try to keep off these soils when they are wet .
We get this end of the world stuff in our news papers and TV.
The New Zealand Herald used to be a very good paper but unfortunately it is now become a marxist rag,and the other regional papers are scrambling to keep up.

Reply to  Peta of Newark
April 29, 2018 12:55 pm

Wait a second…what about the combine harvester?
Did he make a go of it?
Or has his money been wasted?

Stephana
April 27, 2018 10:38 am

I guess I better stock up on a ton of diesel for the generator to power the tower of Marshall amps. Got to Rock On!

WXcycles
Reply to  Stephana
April 27, 2018 10:57 am
ResourceGuy
April 27, 2018 10:51 am

I hear there are vacant properties at Jonestown.

WXcycles
Reply to  ResourceGuy
April 27, 2018 11:03 am
Jeff Alberts
Reply to  WXcycles
April 29, 2018 9:14 am

Apparently some saw the word “music” in the post title and thought it meant “post only music clips”.

Stonyground
April 27, 2018 11:10 am

Every time that I read the name Hillman I can’t help thinking of the Hillman Imp, a rather eccentric sixties rear engined car. The Imp was a bit naff but my parents had a Hillman Hunter which was a really nice car. It was roughly the same size and shape as the Ford MK4 Cortina but had a much nicer interior and much better handling and performance.

saveenergy
Reply to  Stonyground
April 27, 2018 11:19 pm

Hillman Imp car was crap… but the 875cc engine was superb; I put one in a motor bike in 1970 (got 139mph over 12miles on the M4, fast at the time)

knr
April 27, 2018 11:20 am

It it worth reflecting that should climate doom fail to arrive some will be really, really upset .
The fact that is would be nothing but good news for most people would mean nothing to them.

drednicolson
Reply to  knr
April 28, 2018 6:16 pm

And will it prompt a sober reexamination of their priorities? Likely not.

Louis
April 27, 2018 11:22 am

“We’re doomed,” says Mayer Hillman with such a beaming smile that it takes a moment for the words to sink in.
When someone speaks about pending doom with a big smile on his face, he’s either trying to pull a fast one, or he’s actually looking forward to humanity being wiped out. Based on what Hillman says, he is looking forward to the “collapse of civilisation.” It seems to be a fantasy of his. He assumes that he would be among the wealthy elites who escape to a northern utopia to spend his day listening to music. But where would he get the batteries or instruments to play his music, from amazon.com? What happens to stocks, bonds, or bank accounts when civilization collapses? Who would buy your real estate investments so you can move north? And who is going to give you food or clothing for your currency or your gold? You can’t survive by eating gold. I don’t think Hillman has given this any real thought. If he had, he wouldn’t be smiling.

Schrecken
Reply to  Louis
April 27, 2018 12:06 pm

That’s also what I was thinking….the only music there would be would be that coming from instruments being played by someone and/or singing. Kinda the way things were before electricity and the phonograph. You couldn’t even play a pipe organ unless someone was pumping air into it with a bellows, but they would probably lack the energy anyway due to that vegan diet…. I guess in Hillman’s mind chamber music and piano recitals will be back in fashion, because that will be the only music that will be available with no power.

Chimp
April 27, 2018 11:25 am

The English did much the same as the Dutch to dry out the naturally soggy bits of their realm.

Chimp
Reply to  Chimp
April 27, 2018 11:26 am

Out of place. Apropos of Fens comments above.

Alasdair
April 27, 2018 11:45 am

History repeats, albeit with different knobs on. Back in the lead up to the first millennium ( ad 900 on). It was well known that the coming of the apocalypse was due circa ad1000, along with the second coming of Christ.
A healthy market ensued in the peddling of indulgences and perpetual prayer for the departed etc. Many books written but none I can cite from memory.
In the human affairs climate, little appears to have changed, except perhaps in the advent of readily available energy, now deemed satanic by some of us unless liberally indulged by those who must be obeyed.
PS: Not sure whether to put a sark character (:/sark) here: So leave it to others to consider any validity.

John Endicott
April 27, 2018 11:52 am

they don’t need or care about those with sense taking them seriously, just as long as there are plenty of gullible fools that do. preferably gullible fools who will foot their bills.

J Mac
April 27, 2018 11:55 am

To all of the ‘alarmed climate change snowflakes’ out there, I suggest a hot cuppa coffee with a splash of ‘irish’ and chill out with the following:
“Garden In The Rain” – Diana Krall
https://youtu.be/EZOyrxp1i3w

Joel Snider
April 27, 2018 12:13 pm

The doomsday criers needed new purpose once the millennium came and went.

otsar
April 27, 2018 12:26 pm

I have noticed over the years that people near the end of their lives, or with undiagnosed terminal illnesses, begin to talk more about doom and gloom and end of the world scenarios.

Gary Pearse
April 27, 2018 12:52 pm

Futurists are generally unsuited to the task of attempting to predict the future, which, outside of very broad strokes is, indeed, unpredictable. I say this because all those who have engaged in it won’t get the broad strokes right. They are invariably social scientists, preachers, biologists and philosophers, who all have one thing in common. They proceed from the petri-dish-zero-sum-model because they have no sense of the magnitude and dynamics of human ingenuity.
It is this elephant-in-the-room factor that remains a blank in doom futurists’ analyses inspite of the fact that it has been the confounder of every doom forecast without exception from Malthus at the turn of the 18th-19th Century, Jevons (economist in the 1860s: industrial revolution will end because we will run out of coal) and Erlich’s “Population Bomb” and the Club of Rome’s report in the 1970s that foresaw billions starving and the depletion of metals and other resources before 2000.
Human ingenuity completely decimated these scenarios. There is less poverty and hunger today in actual numbers despite a more than doubling of 1972s population of 3B. So here is what empirical data from the history of doom forecasts foretells about today’s end-of-world Global Warming – there will be no doom to confront. I feel Mayer Hillman at 86 senses a more personal near term doom.

Reply to  Gary Pearse
April 28, 2018 1:14 pm

I think it also became harder to scare people with warnings of an earth crowded out of habitability once most people had taken an airplane ride with a window seat.

gwan
Reply to  Gary Pearse
April 28, 2018 1:48 pm

100%

April 27, 2018 1:29 pm

Here’s Larry Norman’s take on the climate armaggedon:
https://youtu.be/rD7YODSdmDo

ResourceGuy
April 27, 2018 1:34 pm

Okay no gun permits or truck rentals for climate doomsters.

Reply to  ResourceGuy
April 27, 2018 3:15 pm

Maybe rental companies can start requiring that a vetted driver has to drive the rental truck for questionable customers.

robinedwards36
April 27, 2018 1:46 pm

The trouble with Hillman is that he clearly lacks the wisdom that eventually comes with age. When he gets to my age perhaps the reality of things will come home to him, and he will find it necessary to withdraw the tripe he’s already written, and which he appears to continue writing. Perhaps the simplest thing would be for him go to the literature and data. There’s a lot of pertinent information there.

ferdberple
April 27, 2018 1:57 pm

I love the logic. We must reduce the population else global warming will — wait for it — else global warming will reduce the population.

eyesonu
April 27, 2018 2:40 pm

“…. music and love and education and happiness. These things, which hardly use fossil fuels, are what we must focus on.” ….. well this thread is that old geezer’s dream come true. Someone send him a link!
There are a lot of contributions of music here on this one!

April 27, 2018 3:05 pm

Clearly “social science” was invented so that the feeble minded could play at being scientists.

April 27, 2018 3:09 pm

“..Heading to Northern Europe…” what can anyone say about that idea? One only has to look at what has taken place over this last winter and spring to see what a ridiculous thought that is. Yesterday at 11:30 am Moscow temps were at a toasty 54 degrees F. Here is their 14 day past temps, …http://www.intellicast.com/Local/ObservationsSummary.aspx?location=RSXX0063

james feltus
April 27, 2018 3:31 pm

“Wealthy people will be better able to adapt but the world’s population will head to regions of the planet such as northern Europe…”
Northern Europe? Good luck with that, Bub…anyone with an ounce of brains will be headed South. This fool will be hard put to even find servants to hire.

Walter Sobchak
April 27, 2018 3:49 pm

And you think that nothing good came out of this:
““I’m not going to write anymore.”

drednicolson
Reply to  Walter Sobchak
April 28, 2018 6:25 pm

Cue the choral cries of “Hallelujah!”

April 27, 2018 4:06 pm

Hillman, pseudo scientist, specialist in dooms, skipped mathematics, logic and reasoning.
At 86, he is a candidate for cryogenic freezing.
With his wakeup date: “When glaciers reach Toronto, New York or London.”

Hocus Locus
April 27, 2018 7:53 pm

michael hart
April 27, 2018 7:54 pm

I think he needs some stronger pharmaceuticals to go with the music, but why is anyone, including The Guardian, listening to this Hillman person in the first place? Has he actually ever done anything of great merit that I should be aware of?

Dave Fair
Reply to  michael hart
April 27, 2018 11:03 pm

His academic credentials are rigorous, Michael?

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  Dave Fair
April 28, 2018 4:18 am

Yes, I believe he has a docorate in ImFullofCrap (IFC).

Reply to  Dave Fair
April 28, 2018 1:17 pm

Plus he is a certified BMF

eyesonu
April 28, 2018 4:06 am

When the music’s over ……. well the music is your special friend

tadchem
April 28, 2018 4:50 am

The theme reminds me of a classic Kingston Trio recording: “We Will All Go Together When We Go”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YN0qvNhtGhM

Sara
April 28, 2018 6:33 am

Hillman’s “we’re doomed!” pronouncement and that thing about ‘melting ice caps’ indicates that he hasn’t stirred his stumps in some time. This bit: “Even if the government were to go to zero carbon it would make almost no difference.” is ridiculous.
The forest laws inflicted on England by the Normans made it illegal to cut down trees, or even gather woodfalls for fires. So this old gasbag wants us to return to those days of no heat by law (and no way to cook anything, either), but it’s okay for him to enjoy the benefits of modern life.
Is this supposed to impress anyone? Okay, sure – turn his gas off first, and make him show a real need for fuel for heating his home. He can find out what it’s like ahead of the rest of us.
Great news here: we are NOT doomed!!! The sun came up this morning, and we had rain overnight. I haven’t had breakfast yet, but I will have two eggs sunnyside up on toasted (large) shredded wheat biscuits, plus nice, crispy bacon, OJ, and hot tea. Good day ahead of me, too.

drednicolson
April 28, 2018 6:27 pm

You first, Mr. Hillman.

April 29, 2018 12:47 pm

As most of us here are doubtlessly aware, there is nothing unusual going on with the weather, noting unprecedented occurring, no catastrophes beyond what history indicates have been regular occurrences all through time.
We here all know these things to be true, plain as day.
And yet these alarmistas are inhabiting an alternate reality, where planetary meltdown is proceeding full speed ahead and everyone can see it in everyday events and news stories.
How strange it is that so many can be so completely deluded!
How incredibly weird and illogical such beliefs are!
Just exactly what the heck is wrong with these people?
Are they merely halfwitted jackasses?
Truly insane to the point of delusion?
Anyone can walk outside and see the sun shining, see and feel the rain falling, the snow settling, see the green grass, blossoming flowers, blue skies, and ever-growing trees.
Anyone can go shopping and see the full bounteous range of foodstuffs, all manner of fruits and vegetables and produce of every shade and description, in copious quantity and dirt cheap prices (by historical standards and percent of disposable income), available for the taking in every shop and market in the world (outside of a few mismanaged hellholes like Cuba or Venezuela), with harvests and yields at record levels and increasing ever more all the time.
Anyone can go to the beach and see the ocean just exactly where it has always been, within the ability to discern without sensitive instrumentation, despite what anyone says to the contrary.
Anyone can realize that the world is incredibly clement and livable, outside of the frozen wastelands, and some dry spots…with these dry spots actually shrinking and greening up on any close examination.
So…who are these people who have no ability to discern the world for what it is?
No way to realize that nothing is wrong, nothing has changed?
Seriously…what the hell is wrong with them?

Dave Fair
Reply to  Menicholas
April 29, 2018 1:32 pm

“Seriously…what the hell is wrong with them?” In a word, Menicholas: Ideology.
Anybody looking at the recent temperature spikes related to the Super El Nino that rose into the probability range of IPCC climate models and says that is proof that the models are correct is spouting propaganda.

drednicolson
Reply to  Menicholas
April 30, 2018 2:15 am

In a better word: Mania.
We don’t like it when the things we emotionally invest in are criticized or held up for scrutiny. Most of the time we get over it. For those who won’t, the object of their attraction becomes their mania. Don Quixote’s mania was knight-errantry. For the rabid sports fan, the sport in question. For true believer Greens, the whole Gaia complex.
Otherwise normal, intelligent, sober, thoughtful people can quickly descend into raving indignance if you’re so unfortunate as to touch upon their mania. It’s like a Jekyll-and-Hyde switch. And people who lean Left politically can be some of the most extreme. Deal lightly with any aspect of the so-called progressive agenda and you may go from polite company to the Antichrist so fast you’ll get whiplash.

April 29, 2018 9:38 pm

My advice to Mayer Hillman: Get a brain or drop that good name. (also, learn how to spell it correctly 🙂