by Gideon Rozner
Republished with permission from:The Spectator Australia, 9 March 2019
When the Left talks derisively about ‘climate deniers’, they probably imagine someone very different from Dr Peter Ridd. Bearded, bespectacled and softly-spoken, Ridd is a sandal-wearing one-time Green voter and former president of his local chapter of the Wildlife Protection Society. He is also a marine geophysicist who has been studying the Great Barrier Reef for over 35 years. And like many in his field, Ridd is passionate about his subject.

But Ridd is equally passionate about his profession, and has spent years questioning the orthodoxy that climate change is ‘killing the reef’. In speaking out against this climate alarmism, Ridd put himself on a collision course with his employer, James Cook University. After years of warnings, censures and absurd gag orders, Ridd was finally made to walk the plank. Now, he’s fighting back, in a case with momentous implications for free speech in Australia.
Reading Ridd’s work can be difficult for a layman. It is detached, dispassionate and everything that scientific writing should be: careful consideration of the evidence followed by a sober conclusion.
Take, for example, Ridd’s contribution to the Institute of Public Affairs’ Climate Change: The Facts 2017, in which he dispels the myths about the Great Barrier Reef repeated ad nauseam by climate evangelists. Yes, coral bleaching has occurred, but that is not a new phenomenon. In fact, the white colourisation that creates the ‘bleached’ look is a natural response that enables the coral to adjust to warmer temperatures and, over time, thrive.
So why does ‘conventional wisdom’ suggest that the reef is in mortal, man-made danger? Largely because dissenting voices ‘are typically ignored, drowned out and sidelined by the majority’, Ridd writes. ‘There is now an industry that employs thousands of people whose job it is to “save the Great Barrier Reef”. As a scientist, to question the proposition that the reef is damaged is potentially a career-ending move’.
Ridd’s biggest beef is with the questionable marine science fuelling the save-the-reef hysteria. The ‘peer review’ process feted by ‘the-science-is-settled’ types is not the guarantee of scientific authenticity that its name suggests. Peer review, according to Ridd, ‘usually consists of a cursory read of the scientific paper, often just for a couple of hours, by two scientists. They never have time to check the data property, or to try to repeat the analyses’.
But the minute Ridd blew the whistle on this shoddy science, he was a goner. Given JCU’s extensive interest in reef science, publicly questioning their methodology was arguably always going to make him an irritant.
Ridd had been on JCU’s radar for some time, but the publication of his chapter in Climate Change: The Facts transformed his struggle from the occasional skirmish to all-out war. After a subsequent interview on Sky News, a barrage of letters from the university started, accusing Ridd of ‘serious misconduct’ on several trumped-up grounds.
When Ridd publicly – and understandably – objected to his treatment by the university, JCU accused him of ‘denigrating’ the university, ‘interfering with the disciplinary process’, even of being ‘insubordinate’. And when public statements weren’t enough, the university searched his email account to dig up further breaches of the code.
Worse still, JCU has slapped Ridd with numerous ‘confidentiality’ directions in relation to the disciplinary process. As Ridd has correctly pointed out, gag orders of this nature effectively create a star chamber in which ‘victims are isolated, subjected to a closed disciplinary procedure where highly subjective concepts are applied’.
Ridd’s ordeal culminated in his termination in May last year. He has taken legal action in response, in part with the help of a campaign on crowdfunding website GoFundMe. Thousands of Australians donated, and the campaign amassed over $250,000 in just a few days. Ridd will have his day in court in Brisbane later this month.
Ridd has much in his favour. The enterprise bargaining agreement covering JCU staff – essentially Ridd’s employment contract – has extensive free speech protections. Under the agreement, staff have the express right to air unpopular or controversial views, and participate in wider public debate. Importantly, they are also entitled to express public opinions about the operation of JCU and university decisions.
The problem for Ridd is he is also subject to JCU’s staff code of conduct, which imposes all manner of vague requirements, like behaving ‘in a way that upholds the integrity and good nature of the university’. Under the pretext of this code, JCU has hit Ridd with a barrage of outlandish claims of alleged breaches, such as failure to be ‘collegial’ and ‘respect the reputations of other colleagues’.
JCU would have this dispute reduced to the narrow legal matter of which document trumps the other. Is it the enterprise bargaining agreement, with its protection of academic freedom? Or is it the code of conduct, with its rubbery obligations of ‘collegiality’?
But this case is about more than that. It will decide what academic freedom means, what intellectual inquiry means, what free and open debate means. And it is about whether a binding legal agreement promising these things can be rendered meaningless by a cadre of self-interested university administrators via an Orwellian code of conduct and a Kafkaesque disciplinary process.
And above all, this case is about the simmering free speech crisis at Australian universities, about places of higher learning that place their own reputations above the search for truth. Throughout this sorry saga, JCU has justified their railroading of Ridd on the basis of a requirement to protect the ‘integrity and reputation’ of the university. But all Ridd was doing was belling the cat on scientific standards that were at best sloppy and at worst dishonest.
No doubt exposing such academic quackery probably does compromise JCU’s integrity and reputation, but deservedly so. It would appear, then, that rules against compromising that precious reputation are really just a protection racket. They are a velvet glove with which to stamp out dissent.
We should be grateful that Peter Ridd is one target who will not go quietly.
Long may scientist like Peter Ridd live; questioning the science, seeking facts and not trying to hoodwink people to gain taxpayer funded grants,
“They never have time to check the data property…” should be “properly.”
JCU’s staff code of conduct includes “behaving ‘in a way that upholds the integrity and good nature of the university’”. I would like to suggest some better wording for the university: “The ‘social credit system,’ first announced in 2014, aims to reinforce the idea that ‘keeping trust is glorious and breaking trust is disgraceful.'”
Actually, my suggested wording comes from the Chinese government (and the translation from Business Insider), so I won’t take credit for it.
The issue is wider than that because it involves conduct not in work time or on work premises and in media discussions. Many companies have media policies employees agree to but the uni is trying to use conduct clauses to cover the area.
Here in Australia, we see freedom of speech almost gone. All you have to do is claim offense or “hate speech”, call someone a racist and that is the end of them. Out with an 18c , your job undermined, your career in tatters. The crime-telling the truth. The PC brigade/SJWs and offence industry need to have a good hard look in the mirror. This is where the fascists they are looking for reside.
If you want to find a fascist, just look in the mirror. That’s where the fascists will be. This is the song that needs to be sung to the useful idiots.
For those in Sydney, Tim Soutphommasane is speaking at the Perkins Centre at Sydney University on Thursday, 21 March at 6.30pm. It is part of the Sydney Ideas series, which usually land on APAC (Foxtel.)The topic-Hate and Race in politics. This is an oxymoron if this there ever was. Who will join me to ask him a searching question? Who will stand up in support. In a theatre that holds 500, it will be great to show them up for the little fascists they are.
As the rhetoric gets totally insane, this is the opportunity to wake people up that the Emperor is wearing no clothes. The tide has to turn eventually, then the rats will be running for cover and will rat out on each other.
You clearly know nothing of Australian law it will probably surprise you to know Australian don’t have a right of free speech. Our laws are framed in reverse to USA they say what you can’t do not what you can.
Try reading about what the actual situation is in Australia first then comment
https://www.gizmodo.com.au/2018/09/australia-does-not-have-freedom-of-speech/
It is like a percentage of the Australian population think we have 1st ammendment right because US TV shows talk about it.
What LdB ^^^^ said!
There are no rights in Australia. No bill of rights, as in the US! We are “granted” certain “privileges” is the best way I can describe it. I am not a legal beagle…there is probably some other BS term.
“LdB March 12, 2019 at 1:32 am
It is like a percentage of the Australian population think we have 1st amendment right because US TV shows talk about it.”
Most Australians “get” their “rights” information and “science” from US TV shows broadcast here. It’s almost 24hr US TV tripe (I make no apology to US commenters here at WUWT). Aussie TV is not much better, if at all! Trouble is, seems like almost ALL VOTING Australians have fallen for the tripe, both US and Aussie.
It’s almost 24hr US TV tripe (I make no apology to US commenters here at WUWT)
no need to apology, most US TV is tripe. As is most Aussie TV, UK TV, Canadian TV, etc. Non-tripe TV is the exception the world over.
Dr Peter Ridd did not harm the reputation of JCU when he exposed their malfeasance. The University itself had already done all the damage to itself. Without the exposure Dr Ridd provided, the cancer would spread unchecked.
Actually if that was all the case was about he would have a problem even if an employer does the wrong thing and employee may be barred from disclosing it. That is why whistleblower law exists
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whistleblower_protection_in_Australia
Note ==> the protections for private sector whistleblowers to be weaker than for those in the public sector
So lucky for him he isn’t using your defense.
Regarding the comment as to did my daughter require a University degree to
run a centre for victims of domestic violence. Well no, probably not. Her own
inbuilt “Common Sense” is more than sufficient, it is a managerial job with
a staff of 19 other women and up to 40 “Victims,” their kids and even pets
Its a 24/7 operation and its a Church based centre, and yes her degree did
help in that it opened the door to get her to the top of the interview listing.
They gave her a three year contract, which in today’s world is a vote of
confidence in her ability. Such “Battered Women” do need assistance. It
short term, the average stay is three weeks, so turnover is quick.
The women learn just what their rights are in law, and in most cases following
a Court hearing , they return to the house with the husband living elsewhere
with a legal order to keep away from her.
She is now in her third year of the contract, with good signs for a renewal
of it. She is 58 so is not a “Wet behind the ears” graduate. She
graduated 10 years ago.
Prior to this job she was assisting women prisoners following their release
regarding employment etc. .
MJE