There are times when all you can do is shake your head and wonder. This series of tweets is a window into their minds.
And for the record, the reason Dr. Singer wasn’t referred to as a “climate denier” was… it’s a rule in the AP stylebook, you dolts.



One thing is for certain, that can’t be said of Mann, Gleick, and Oreskes. Fred Singer made tangible contributions to science which have improved our daily lives; like GPS. Did you know Dr. Singer was instrumental in making it happen? Weather satellites, also a pioneer.
Unlike Mann, Gleick, and Oreskes, Dr. Singer made real contributions to society; instead of whining about the future, he embraced it. This essay below says it all. – Anthony
My Long Goodbye to S. Fred Singer
By Marc Sheppard in American Thinker
The first time I laid eyes on climate science pioneer Fred Singer was in a scenic elevator at the Marriot Marquis in NYC, in March of 2008. The hotel was hosting the premiere International Conference on Climate Change (ICCC), and I was there to cover the event for American Thinker. Dr. Singer was there not only to dazzle the crowd of noted skeptical climate scientists, economists and policy experts from around the world, but also to launch his new Non-IPCC report, a rebuttal to the agenda-driven propaganda of the then recent IPCC Fourth Assessment (AR4).
We had exchanged a few emails prior to this chance encounter, but most were quick fact-checks or update-requests relating to article research. So I was more than a bit surprised when this science legend gave my press-badge the once-over, then smiled and said, “So you’re Marc from American Thinker… nice to finally meet you, Marc.” My struggle for a warm-yet-clever response lasted all of two heartbeats as the elevator door whooshed open, and out stepped the man whose climate knowledge I revered most. “Have to run … See you at lunch,” his words barely made it through the closing doors.
I knew he was referring to that day’s upcoming plenary lunch session at which he would officially debut what would become the climate-skeptics’ bible. Singer was editor and lead author of Nature, Not Human Activity, Rules the Climate [PDF], subtitled Summary for Policymakers of the Report of the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change. The NIPCC had been established in 2007 by Singer’s Science and Environmental Policy Project (SEPP), whose weekly newsletters remain aggregators of “The Week That Was” in non-agenda-driven science.
Throughout their many revisions, the NIPCC reports continue to distinguish themselves from the IPCC in that they are not pre-programmed to “support the hypotheses of anthropogenic global warming (AGW) and the control of greenhouse gases.” Instead, they remain a non-political authoritative rebuttal to the multi-government-controlled IPCC’s “errors and outright falsehoods” regarding warming’s measurement, likely drivers, and overall impact.
Although I never caught up with the world-renowned atmospheric and space physicist that day, our paths would cross again many times. Over the next few years, we’d see each other at various ICCC venues and we’d exchange emails now and then when he’d happily reply to any research questions I asked. He was, after all, not only the most-prominent scientist in the world bravely speaking out against the scourge of climate alarmism, but also the most easily accessible. And what an amazing backstory.
Singer fled Nazi-occupied Austria as a boy in the early 1940s, designed mines for the U.S. Navy during WWII, earned his PhD in physics from Princeton University in 1948, designed satellites in the 1950s and became the first director of the U.S. weather-satellite program in the early 1960s. Over the course of his storied career, Singer published more than 200 peer-reviewed scientific papers. Indeed, the volume and breadth of his contributions and accomplishments are nothing short of astounding and far too numerous to consolidate in one space, although his longtime friends and NIPCC publishers over at the Heartland Institute have done a superb job of trying. This one blows me away:
Dr. Singer was the first to make the correct calculations for using atomic clocks in orbit, contributing to the verification of Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity and now essential in the GPS system of satellite navigation. He also designed satellites and instrumentation for remote sensing of the atmosphere and received a White House Presidential Commendation for this work.
Imagine that! And that such a mind was so quickly (and wrongfully) dismissed by climate alarmists as belonging to an “oil shill”. What nonsense.
Singer wrote about his amazing GTR journeys in his 2015 AT piece “Einstein, Your GPS (and Me).” It’s a captivating read, indeed.
The Undisputed Dean of Climate Skeptics
Still, it was unquestionably Singer’s relentless work as the world-renowned “skeptical” scientist which rocketed him to either fame or infamy, depending on your AGW politics.
By the time I met him via email in 2006, Singer had already achieved a lifetime of successes as a climatologist, having established SEPP in 1990 and waged intellectual battle with the IPCC since its 2nd Assessment Report (AR2) in 1995, both in writing and at the many lectures he’s given over the years.
Two recurring themes in Singer’s prose and presentations were that climate sensitivity to CO2 is much lower than IPCC estimates (read his October 2014 AT piece “The Climate Sensitivity Controversy”) and that the UN climate models don’t match observed temperatures, mostly due to their ignorance of negative feedbacks (see 2016’s “Climate Change: The Burden of Proof”).
Singer often challenged the IPCC for proof of its claim that AGW was 90-99% certain, and to respond to the many “disputed and unsolved problems.” These include the true figure for climate sensitivity, whether water vapor and clouds represent positive or negative feedback, the impacts of natural forcings (internal ocean oscillations, volcanism and solar insolation), atmospheric CO2 residence time and the rate of sea level rise (SLR), which Singer often stated (including in last year’s AT piece on the subject) has been an unalarmingly constant 7 inches per century for 3000 years.
In his 2006 (coauthored) book, Unstoppable Global Warming — Every 1500 Years, evidence is presented which supports fluctuations in solar energy causing the title. The book describes how the frequency of the cycle originally emerged from a 1983 study of ice cores in Greenland. That figure was then verified by analysis of an ice core from Antarctica’s Vostok Glacier — at the other end of the world, which showed the same 1,500-year cycle through its 400,000-year length. These 1,500-year cycles analyzed include the Little Ice Age of 1300-1850 and the modern warm period which started around 1850 and we experience to this day.
Singer’s conclusion? Once you recognize that we’re dealing with natural and not human forces, all the “to-do” about AGW is
“nonsense.” Attempts to mitigate CO2 — which is not a pollutant — are pointless, very expensive and completely ineffective. They’ll have no effect on the climate and in fact will have little effect on the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere. Besides, “a moderate warming trend” will have “beneficial effects for humanity and wildlife.”
Brilliantly simple.
He was Scientist, Speaker, Author, Co-Author and Editor
Singer’s unique, soft-spoken wit was imbued in his writing, as in this example from 2007 where, in his characteristic good-humored fashion, he took on the IPCC’s typical mistake of confusing cause and effect:
“Some cite the fact that the climate is currently warming and the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is increasing. This is true, but correlation is never proof of causation. In Europe, the birth rate is decreasing and so is the number of storks. Does this correlation prove that storks bring babies?”
In that same piece, Singer also dismissed the canard of “consensus” in climate science:
“But even if a majority of scientists had voted for human-caused global warming, that’s not how science works. Unlike in politics, the majority does not rule. Rather, every advance in science has come from a minority that found that observed facts contradicted the prevailing hypothesis. Sometimes it took only one scientist; think of Galileo or Einstein.”
This emphasis on contrarian individual thought over groupthink was a repeating peeve of Singer’s. After day 1 of ICCC2 back in 2009, the NYT’s Andrew Revkin did a trash-piece titled, “Skeptics Dispute Climate Worries and Each Other.” Revkin played the old divide et impera card — characterizing scientific points of debate as “internal rifts” within skeptics’ ranks, sprinkling words like “division” and “dissent” to imply disruptive disunity throughout. And he highlighted Singer’s derogation of the single GHG-theory dissenting “Slayer” present.
The piece evoked a bit of angst among conference-goers the next morning. Not Singer. When asked, his response was characteristically simple and delivered with his trademark smile: “There’s disagreement among skeptics — and that is good.”
This was a position I’d relish just one year later.
And Ultimately, Mentor and Teacher
In early 2010, Fred approached me about submitting articles to AT and, of course, all hands were excited about just what a score this would represent for the site. And I was presented the honor and privilege of “editing” an S. Fred Singer piece prior to submission, which seemed a dream-come-true – at first. But, as providence would have it, a “disagreement” threatened to turn the dream into a nightmare.
For the first time since undertaking his tutelage, fate had chosen this, of all times, for me to take issue with one of the master’s lessons. The details are inconsequential, but suffice to say, there was a controversial slogan arising from the Climategate affair, the meaning of which the doctor and I fervently disagreed upon. And while this putative “detail” was mentioned almost casually in Singer’s piece, its alternate represented the very heart of many of my recent AT pieces, including an article mentioned in the Climategate emails. But Singer was, understandably, implacable in his position.
What a quandary I was in! To let the point go unchallenged was to denigrate not only countless hours of work but also my credibility on the subject. But how could a software engineer/data analyst possibly overrule the position of an exalted legend in the climate field on a matter relating to climate science? This could have easily become my worst experience ever at AT. But it wasn’t. It wasn’t because rather than pull rank, Singer mercifully suggested a compromise in his wording, and, in doing so, let me off the hook.
This is not to suggest that I had changed his mind, but rather to demonstrate best the man’s gentle nature, the strength of his intellect notwithstanding.
That was Fred. Later that year, when I mentioned in an email that WaPo had referred to him as “aging” in a recent hit-piece, he quickly responded with his typical good humor, “but very gracefully, I should note.” I could easily envision his smile as I read his words, despite my anger at WaPo for obnoxiously claiming that “very few climate scientists would describe [Singer] as ‘renowned’ for his climate research,” words which the venerated climatologist simply shrugged off.
And rightly so. Fred Singer was nothing short of a giant in his field and exuded the confidence which came with knowing it. But, at the same time, he was a modest, soft-spoken man, one whose wisdom and kindness enriched all he met.
Life has taken me in other directions since meeting one of my heroes on that March morning a dozen years ago in a scenic elevator in Times Square, and years have passed since last we spoke.
But I’ll never forget that day. Nor everything Fred taught me before and since.
Siegfried Frederick Singer passed away in his sleep on April 6, 2020 at the age of 95.
And this is my long goodbye to a great man whose legend and teachings will surely live on.
Marc Sheppard is a data analyst, software engineer, and writer. He’s been a frequent contributor to American Thinker and welcomes your feedback.
Dr. Singer was mercifully spared the warmist reactions to his passing. Upon reading their execrable screeds my first impulse was to suggest we prepare in advance their obituaries without actually wishing for their demise with the intent of letting them know the legacy they leave behind in the minds of so many. Then both reason and civility returned and I now suggest we leave it a mystery so that they will never know. Not knowing being their natural state.
No, it’s a good idea Rob. Mann is likely to outlive me, so I won’t be around to deliver the eulogy myself, but when his demise occurs I would like the following to be read at his funeral.
meh.
It’s a minor point but the NYT has its own style book (or it did). I doubt that it uses the AP’s.
Wikipedia manage to bring smoking negatively into the second sentence of their entry on Fred Singer.
Of course Wiki isn’t able to see and explain what realy happens around the smoking story.
What everyone should be very clear about, is what absolutely despicable human beings that whole crowd is.
Not even at the occasion of a person’s a death can they contain their anti-social sniping, or the juvenile babbling and vapid inanity which is the hallmark of their nauseating mutual admiration society.
I sense a richly deserved comeuppance brewing.
Change is in the wind.
Perhaps the dismal days of having to suffer these fools are drawing to an end.
It’s a consummation devoutly to be desir’d.
What a reward for the sh!tty year we’re having, what a Christmas gift to the world’s capitals, to see all the lamp-posts up and down Main Street decked with inverted perverters of the course of science.
‘Tis indeed a sad day that the hearts and minds of men and women of good character should be led to entertain such notions.
And yet…here we are…
Hang ’em high!
I can’t wait for Science Nuremberg.
The suspense is killing me—which, incidentally, will be the last words going through the minds of those found guilty of crimes against science (provided they don’t lose their heads as a result of a miscalculated drop length).
Ballad Of The Gibbet
Brothers and men that shall after us be,
Let not your hearts be hard to us:
For pitying this our misery
Ye shall find God the more piteous.
Look on us six that are hanging thus,
And for the flesh that so much we cherished
How it is eaten of birds and perished,
And ashes and dust fill our bones’ place,
Mock not at us that so feeble be,
But pray God pardon us out of His grace.
Listen, we pray you, and look not in scorn,
Though justly, in sooth, we are cast to die;
Ye wot no man so wise is born
That keeps his wisdom constantly.
Be ye then merciful, and cry
To Mary’s Son that is piteous,
That His mercy take no stain from us,
Saving us out of the fiery place.
We are but dead, let no soul deny
To pray God succour us of His grace.
The rain out of heaven has washed us clean,
The sun has scorched us black and bare,
Ravens and rooks have pecked at our eyne,
And feathered their nests with our beards and hair.
Round are we tossed, and here and there,
This way and that, at the wild wind’s will,
Never a moment my body is still;
Birds they are busy about my face.
Live not as we, nor fare as we fare;
Pray God pardon us out of His grace.
François Villon
.
….. metaphorically speaking, of course.
Similarly with the final hours of the lives of Joseph Goebbels and his family, still to be found on Wikipedia. A great read when having to deal with thinking about these genocidal freaks.
Gorgeous stuff, thank you philincalifornia.
I never understood why James Delingpole had to retreat to “metaphorically speaking, of course” after publishing his beautiful reverie on pseudoscientists, judges and black caps. I would’ve written
“Note—to obviate any misunderstanding (and the sacksful of outraged letters on my long-suffering editor’s desk that go with it), please read my lips: all that stuff about hanging people was merely an example of what we writers call literally what I mean with a straight face. Commenters who insist on wilfully misreading the piece as a mere figure of speech shouldn’t be surprised if they’re truncated like Marie Antoinette.”
Piltdown Mann
Except that was the pseudo-fossil of a vertebrate.
😎
I’ve always preferred “Meltdown Mann”.
It brings to mind what was behind Piltdown Man, what Mann has projected based on similarly robust scientific studies and his reaction to anyone that calls him out on his tree ring circus.
From the article: “Two recurring themes in Singer’s prose and presentations were that climate sensitivity to CO2 is much lower than IPCC estimates”
That doesn’t sound like a denier to me. Singer acknowledges CO2 is a factor, just that it appears to be a small factor (since its effect is so small it can’t be measured). So what are the Twitter CAGW Charlatans accusing Singer of denying? The magnitude of the CO2 effect? Shouldn’t this be called a difference of opinion, rather than a denial of anything? I think so.
Do the Twitter CAGW Charlatans know the magnitude of the CO2 effect? Allow me to answer for them (since I don’t do Twitter): No, they don’t. They haven’t been able to measure it in all these decades. They claim Singer is denying something they can’t measure.
There are a few people in the climate science community who are foisting a lot of unnecessary misery on the world over the subject of human-caused climate change. They have no evidence of CAGW, yet they claim they do, and scare many people with such unsubstantiated claims.
They should produce this evidence, they claim to have. That ought to shut up the skeptics. But they won’t, because they can’t, because they don’t have any evidence. All they have to offer is science fiction posing as science. A lot of posing going on. And a lot of smearing going on because smearing is the only thing the alarmists have.
What a weak case the alarmists have. They can’t meet the challenge of providing evidence of their CAGW claims, so they resort to assasinating the character of those who point this out, like Dr. Singer.
The Alarmists are hoping people don’t notice that they never have a factual rebuttal, it’s always a personal attack on those who disagree with them. They don’t want to debate the subject, they just want to shut the skeptics up, so they insult them and ban them from their websites and feeds because they can’t handle the heat, and the reason they can’t handle the heat is because they have no evidence for CAGW.
That’s why these guys are on Twitter. That way they can ban anyone that upsets their little (dishonest/delusional?) universe.
When you’re so rabidly infected with your own self-delusion and sanctimony that you can’t even abide the counsel of Thumper’s father, “if you can’t say something nice don’t say nothing at all,” when others are eulogizing your opponent, you’ve got a problem. Mann and Gleick (and Kalmus) have a serious problem.
Let me get this straight: just because someone happens to believe in climate, climate change, climate science, science and climate change science, it’s somehow wrong for reporters to call them a climate/change/science denier?
Political correctness gone mad!
Oh, what a tangled web we weave…
Anthony,
please consider endowing something like a Golden Stoat Award for the first believalist cretinous enough to say (in either a Beavis or a Butthead voice) ‘science her her advances one funeral at a time her her.’
You won’t have to wait long. They said it when Prof. Carter passed away, and I see no reason to assume they’ve suddenly stopped hating scientists.
For these cretins, ethical standards have zero values, nor human, neither scientific
They show their own bias and we knew the emperor had no clothes so the knickers comment was not required.
“S. Fred Singer, a leading climate change contrarian, dies at 95”
“And for the record, the reason Dr. Singer wasn’t referred to as a “climate denier” was… it’s a rule in the AP stylebook, you dolts.”
—Anthony Watts
IIRC, WUWT devoted a thread to the AP’s new rules few years ago. In that thread I commented:
That “doubter” was too wishy-washy. We are disputers of the climate consensus, or deviationists from it. We are heretics, not agnostics. We are skeptics, militant skeptics.
But given that the mainstream media won’t / can’t use that positively tinged term, lest it be tarred as being in denial itself, I suggested that it use the more neutral term “climate contrarian.” I said that it was allitierative (two “c”s) and paralleled “climate consensus-ite.”
Some commenters objected that “contrarian” connoted a person who is a knee-jerk naysayer, a born “aginer.” But that’s only true when the word is used unmodified, to describe a “global” trait. (And even then, it probably just as often connotes an independent thinker.) When the noun is modified by “climate,” that global taint is removed.
It is the best descriptor we can hope for from the media at present, and its use should be promoted there by us. The media should not use “denialist,” because that is a slanted, suggestive term. It chimes with and brings to mind the very common phrase, being “in denial” of some self-evident truth, generally for some disreputable reason.
> When the noun [contrarian] is modified by “climate,” that global taint is removed.
Well, OK, obviously the taint is no longer *global*, but so what? It’s still there: it’s merely been restricted to a named scope (the climate issue).
Accusing someone of knee-jerk rejection of a particular idea is no less infantilizing, it’s just more specific.
Note that as with ‘contrarianism,’ so with ‘denialism’: prepending the word ‘climate’ doesn’t solve the problem, because they’re still tarring us with irrationality (to wit, disagreeing with Teh Science for the sake of disagreeing). A ‘denialist,’ if such a species exists, believes in denial itself, and denies X not because he has any basis for doubting it, but because he believes in doing so.
‘Denier,’ on the other hand, is simply a religiously-flavored way of saying ‘disbeliever,’ and delivers no dysphemistic payload to its target, yet makes the person who wields the term as a weapon sound unhinged. It’s an own goal, so we should encourage the enemy to keep bandying it about at every opportunity.
To that end, I often go further and identify myself as a climate kafir, infidel, etc., which all have an identical denotation, yet (if they were foolish enough to take me up on the invitation) would have the connotation that something’s rather wrong with the person who calls me such a thing.
It’s like the N-word. Thanks to the brilliant idea on the part of the black community to appropriate it for themselves, we now live in a culture where its use as hate speech invariably backfires. If I described or addressed an African American person as a N____, I would succeed in exposing myself—not them—to odium and ridicule. (And rightly so.)
Which is why we need to take up Lindzen’s suggestion of greeting each other with a hate-free ‘yo what’s happening, my D______?”
‘Skeptic’ is problematic. There are unskeptical disbelievers (and skeptical believers), if we understand the word in its philosophical sense, a sense to which every critical-thinking person aspires, no matter which side of any given issue they wind up leaning towards. Whereas if we understand it in its colloquial sense of ‘doubter,’ it’s not nearly strong enough to describe most of us—a point you’ve made well.
I like to show good faith (when debating a believer who seems to deserve it) by happily conceding that I’m not necessarily any more of a good ‘skeptic’ than they are, and that they are more than welcome to call me a ‘denier’ instead, on one condition:
that they can say what, exactly, I’m a denier of.
If they call me a ‘climate’ or ‘climate change’ or ‘science’ denier they lose.
I made some other remarks above, to Susan Crockford, that you might find relevant:
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/04/13/monday-mirthiness-gleick-and-mann-cluelessly-trash-fred-singers-nyt-obit/#comment-2965597
Quibbles aside, your comment is really well thought through. Thanks.
4/14/20 WUWT
“S. Fred Singer, a leading climate change contrarian, dies at 95”
“And for the record, the reason Dr. Singer wasn’t referred to as a “climate denier” was… it’s a rule in the AP stylebook, you dolts.”
—Anthony Watts
IIRC, WUWT devoted a thread to the AP’s new rules few years ago. In that thread I commented:
That “doubter” was too wishy-washy. We are disputers of the climate consensus, or deviationists from it. We are heretics, not agnostics. We are skeptics, militant skeptics.
But given that the mainstream media won’t / can’t use that positively tinged term, lest it be tarred as being in denial itself, I suggested that it use the more neutral term “climate contrarian.” I said that it was alliterative (two “c”s) and paralleled “climate consensus-ite.”
Some commenters objected that “contrarian” connoted a person who is a knee-jerk naysayer, a born “aginer.” But that’s only true when the word is used unmodified, to describe a “global” trait. (And even then, it probably just as often connotes an independent thinker.) When the noun is modified by “climate,” that global taint is removed.
It is the best descriptor we can hope for from the media at present, and its use should be promoted there by us. The media should not use “denialist,” because that is a slanted, suggestive term. It chimes with and brings to mind the very common phrase, being “in denial” of some self-evident truth, generally for some disreputable reason.
When I first began to study the CO2 story, I read Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth’ and then S.Fred Singer and Dennis Avery’s ‘Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1500 Years’.
The Singer and Avery book was excellent, broad reaching in the topics discussed and thought-provoking.
Gore’s book was clearly an expertly put together piece of biased propaganda reflecting the author’s skewed views; nothing more.
I’m sorry to hear of Dr. Singer’s passing – a true scientist, unlike the media-feted charlatans masquerading as such.
Gleick, Orestes and Mann, Prostitutes for the UN goals of achieving world control without representation. (Except of course they are not nearly as useful as prostitutes!)
Thanks for the Marc Sheppard essay.