CLIMATE CRITICS POUNCE! How the Media Turned “Questioning a UN Bureaucrat” Into a Hate Crime Against Science

Stop the presses. Summon the fact-checkers. Alert Greta’s yacht. Because, dear reader, the climate heretics have pounced again.

Yes, that’s the headline this week from the stenographers over at E&E News, a Politico-adjacent publication that reads like the employee newsletter for the Church of Saint Carbon Credit. The story begins in the key of outrage: Climate critics try to discredit IPCC author for linking disasters to global warming.

Translation from Journo-speak: “Someone noticed the emperor’s new lab coat is made of recycled grant money.”

Apparently, Roger Pielke Jr. — a political scientist with the unfortunate habit of reading data instead of chanting slogans — wrote an op-ed questioning whether Dr. Friederike Otto, an activist who co-founded World Weather Attribution, might not be the most neutral person to help lead the next United Nations climate report. Otto’s research, you see, keeps showing up in lawsuits against the oil and gas industry. Big ones. The kind of lawsuits where the legal fees could buy an entire Tesla fleet and still leave room for a virtue-signaling dinner at Davos.

Now, any normal reporter might think, Hmm, that sounds like a potential conflict of interest worth exploring. But we’re not dealing with normal reporters here. We’re dealing with the High Clergy of the Narrative. So instead of “UN installs activist whose work is fueling climate lawsuits,” we get, “Fossil fuel industry allies attack a scientist.”

Because in modern media theology, questioning the priest is a greater sin than whatever the priest did.

This is the “Republicans pounce” phenomenon, that magical incantation journalists deploy whenever someone on the left does something indefensible. A Democrat governor gets caught vacationing mask-less during lockdowns? Republicans pounce. The FBI loses another laptop? Republicans pounce. And now, when a UN scientist with open activist ties takes a key seat in the IPCC, what happens? Climate critics pounce.

The Holy Narrative Must Be Protected

The E&E News piece begins in high moral tones, as if announcing an indictment at The Hague:

“Critics of mainstream climate science and allies of the fossil fuel industry are taking aim at a prominent expert…”

Did you catch that? The critics aren’t people with questions. They’re “allies of the fossil fuel industry.” Because in the catechism of climate journalism, every skeptic has a secret Exxon logo tattooed behind the ear.

Then we learn that Pielke’s concerns — namely, that putting an activist whose studies are used in billion-dollar lawsuits at the helm of a supposedly neutral IPCC chapter might hurt credibility — are just part of an “attack.”

Imagine the scene in any other field. Suppose a tobacco company lawyer suddenly became the lead author on a World Health Organization report about lung cancer. Think anyone at Politico would write, “Tobacco critics try to discredit WHO expert”? Of course not. They’d be live-tweeting the bonfire.

But when it’s climate science, rules don’t apply. The journalist’s job is not to ask questions but to shield the narrative from contamination.

The Church of Settled Science

Dr. Otto, the subject of this crusade of sympathy, runs a group that specializes in what’s called “attribution science” — studies claiming to show how much a given weather event was worsened by human-caused climate change. The key word there is claiming, because the math behind those models makes astrology look like accounting. But the media treat it as gospel.

Her work has been “used in lawsuits against polluters,” E&E News notes approvingly, without a hint that this might raise eyebrows. It’s like announcing that your forensic expert moonlights as the plaintiff’s attorney — and expecting applause.

When Pielke pointed out that turning every heat wave into a press release for class-action lawyers might erode scientific neutrality, the authors reacted as if he’d denied gravity. The piece solemnly informs us that Otto will, quote, “be assessing peer-reviewed science,” which apparently is supposed to calm the masses. Because as everyone knows, the phrase “peer-reviewed” is the modern equivalent of a papal seal.

The article then adds Otto’s own reassurance: “There are many, many peer-reviewed studies that show how climate change has affected extreme weather events.” Sure. And there are many, many medieval scrolls proving witches cause crop failures. Quantity is not the same as quality, but that nuance never makes it through the newsroom filters.

“The Critics Are Coordinated!” (Because They All Read)

Once the piece establishes Otto’s sainthood, it pivots to the villain: the Trump administration. Because you can’t write about climate without invoking the Orange Man.

We’re told that Trump officials have “worked to discredit established climate science.” The evidence? They released their own report that concluded the IPCC’s worst-case scenarios were exaggerated. The horror. Apparently, doing your own research is now an act of war.

Then, right on cue, the article quotes Rachel Cleetus of the Union of Concerned Scientists — a name that sounds like a 1970s garage band but functions as the Vatican of climate activism — who assures us that the criticism of Otto is a “deliberate mischaracterization.”

Cleetus adds that “no individual scientist hijacks the IPCC process.” That line alone deserves an award for unintentional comedy. Bureaucratic hijacking is practically the IPCC’s house sport. The organization has been producing consensus-by-committee reports for decades, with “consensus” defined as “whatever the politicians agree to in the summary.”

But E&E News dutifully prints her words as gospel, unchallenged, because climate journalism isn’t about reporting — it’s about catechism reinforcement.

How Dare You Ask About Bias!

Halfway through the story, E&E News finally concedes the real issue: Otto’s “extreme event attribution” work has been cited in multiple lawsuits, including a $51 billion claim by Multnomah County, Oregon. The plaintiffs’ lawyers literally use her studies as ammunition.

That’s the kind of revelation that, in sane times, would lead to tough follow-ups: Does this create a conflict of interest? Should the IPCC separate itself from litigation-linked research? What safeguards exist?

But instead of questions, the journalists sprint to mop up the spill. We’re reassured that the IPCC’s author-selection process is “balanced” and “protected from the influence of special interests.” Because if there’s one thing the UN is known for, it’s the absence of special interests.

It’s all boilerplate — the bureaucratic equivalent of “trust us, we’ve got this.”

Otto, for her part, insists that her work has “absolutely nothing to do with litigation.” Right. And my gym membership has absolutely nothing to do with my expanding waistline.

She also complains that her critics “took her comments out of context.” That’s the universal defense of anyone caught saying something inconvenient. The context, presumably, is that she meant to say something else entirely while articulating exactly what she said.

The Media’s Favorite Sport: Pretend Objectivity

The last quarter of the article plays clean-up like a press secretary. We’re told that Otto’s co-author in Germany has “absolutely no concerns,” that other scientists call her methods “fundamental science,” and that the World Weather Attribution project is “super transparent.”

Of course it’s transparent — you can see right through it.

But the best part is the tone: a mixture of solemn authority and parental disappointment. The reporters write as though they’re explaining to a confused child that Santa Claus is real and the mean old skeptics are just trying to ruin Christmas.

The message: The science is settled, the lawsuits are righteous, and if you disagree you probably own a pickup truck.

The Pattern of “Pounce” Politics

The structure of this story could be used to teach Journalism 101 — assuming the class was called Narrative Protection for Fun and Profit.

Step 1: Identify a left-wing actor engaged in dubious behavior.
Step 2: Shift focus from the act to the reaction.
Step 3: Smear the critics as extremists or industry shills.
Step 4: Quote a couple of “neutral experts” who all work for activist NGOs.
Step 5: Conclude with a reassurance that everything is fine, nothing to see here, move along.

That’s the “Republicans pounce” formula, now re-branded as “Climate critics attack.” The only variable is the noun. The structure never changes.

It’s the same muscle memory that led CNN to write “Republicans seize on Biden gaffe” instead of “Biden forgets where he is again.” The sin is never the action — it’s the noticing.

The Cult of Credentialism

One reason this works so well is that climate reporting runs on credentialism. The journalist’s worldview is built around deference to “experts.” If someone has a Ph.D. in Atmospheric Feelings from the University of Virtue, the press treats their statements as immutable law.

So when Otto says her research is “fundamental science,” no one asks, “Fundamental to what?” The answer, of course, is “fundamental to keeping the grant money flowing.”

Meanwhile, Pielke Jr. — who has actual experience analyzing disaster data — gets dismissed as a “critic allied with the fossil fuel industry.” His sin is not ignorance; it’s independence.

In this world, there are only two categories: believers and deniers. And if you’re in the second group, no amount of evidence will redeem you.

Why This Matters (and Why It’s Funny)

Underneath the farce is something serious. The IPCC isn’t just a scientific body; it’s the policy backbone for trillions of dollars in spending and regulation. When its authors have visible activist ties, that’s not a minor footnote — it’s a legitimacy crisis.

If the people writing the “objective” climate chapters are also producing studies weaponized in court, the line between science and advocacy disappears. And once that happens, the entire enterprise becomes politics with equations.

The media should be the first to demand transparency. Instead, they circle the wagons, shielding the activists with headlines that imply criticism equals conspiracy.

It’s the same pattern we’ve seen in every other issue where the left’s ideology collides with reality. Question the lockdowns? You hate grandmothers. Question DEI? You’re racist. Question the IPCC? You’re a fossil-fuel shill.

That reflex — the automatic demonization of dissent — is what turns journalism into propaganda.

Satire Writes Itself

To appreciate the absurdity, imagine E&E News covering any other controversy this way:

“Critics of mainstream dietary science try to discredit USDA official for linking obesity to sugar subsidies.”

Or:

“Legal ethicists pounce on judge for presiding over cases involving her own family.”

But because it’s climate, we’re supposed to nod solemnly and thank the journalists for defending truth against the barbarians.

The funniest part is that they think this framing works. They don’t realize how transparent it’s become. Every time they write “critics attack” instead of “questions arise,” normal readers see the bias glowing like a solar panel in a desert.

Even people who accept the climate narrative instinctively sense the propaganda. It’s too heavy-handed. Too self-righteous. You can almost hear the subtext whispering: Don’t ask questions. We already did the thinking for you.

The Bureaucracy of Belief

The IPCC itself is the perfect symbol of our technocratic age — a sprawling committee of bureaucrats claiming to speak for Science Itself while issuing reports so dense that politicians can twist them into anything.

Its real product isn’t knowledge; it’s authority. Every report becomes a cudgel to justify whatever policies the climate clergy already wanted — carbon taxes, ESG mandates, bans on gas stoves, you name it.

So when someone like Otto, whose research directly supports climate litigation, is elevated to lead author, it’s not a coincidence. It’s the system working as designed.

The journalists’ job, therefore, is to bless the process, to reassure the faithful that the priests are pure and the heretics are evil. That’s why the E&E News story feels like liturgy — repetitive, solemn, and immune to evidence.

Meanwhile, in the Real World…

Outside the echo chamber, people are dealing with actual problems — skyrocketing energy costs, unreliable grids, and food inflation caused by policies dreamed up by the same bureaucrats who lecture us about “sustainability.”

They don’t care whether Friederike Otto or Roger Pielke wins the latest academic spat. They care that their utility bills look like mortgage payments. But for the press, those concerns are irrelevant. The only crisis that matters is the one that justifies more control.

So the beat goes on: every new storm, flood, or drought becomes another sermon in the endless homily of climate catastrophe. And every skeptic becomes a villain to be anathematized.

The Punchline

In the end, E&E News accidentally produced a masterpiece of unintentional self-parody — a story not about science but about the media’s own reflexive obedience.

They could have written, “Debate Erupts Over IPCC Author’s Activist Ties.” Neutral. Informative. Balanced.

Instead, they wrote, “Climate Critics Try to Discredit IPCC Author.” Because to them, the story isn’t that an activist infiltrated the IPCC. The story is that anyone noticed.

And that’s the real scandal: in modern journalism, skepticism itself has become the crime.

So congratulations to E&E News for pioneering a new genre. Forget “Republicans pounce.” The future is “Climate critics pounce.” Coming soon to a headline near you:

  • “Skeptics attack scientist after another record warm Tuesday.”
  • “Drivers pounce as gas prices rise to save planet.”
  • “Homeowners criticize blackouts caused by grid savior policies.”

Because in the religion of climate, there’s only one commandment: Thou shalt not question the narrative.

And as always, the media will be there to enforce it — clipboard in hand, halo slightly crooked, wondering why the rest of us keep laughing.

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Tom Halla
October 9, 2025 2:19 pm

An impossible dream would be a RICO prosecution of the liability lawyer/expert witness/litigation funder complex. Which will never happen, as lawyers are very reluctant to sanction each other meaningfully.

gyan1
Reply to  Tom Halla
October 9, 2025 3:44 pm

The current DOJ isn’t reluctant in taking on corruption. The journal industrial complex is being investigated for fraud.

Scarecrow Repair
Reply to  gyan1
October 9, 2025 7:06 pm

Except for the Epstein files. That dog continues doing nothing, daytime or nighttime.

KevinM
Reply to  Tom Halla
October 10, 2025 8:34 am

I don’t like the idea of RICO, where corruption hunting becomes self-funding by recycling criminal gains into law enforcement resources.

Law says “the racketeer must forfeit all ill-gotten gains and interest in any business gained through a pattern of racketeering activity.”

To understand the danger of the policy to politically motivated fraud, the sentence needs to be completed “to (cite specific organization).”

I have philosophical troubles with government agencies taking material property from criminals, especially in situations so obviously political as climate science. Its a slippery slope argument, but IF the government can confiscate personal wealth of its citizens for telling lies AND a federal judge determines what is truth THEN… I don’t think the founding fathers would have liked where that goes.

KevinM
Reply to  KevinM
October 10, 2025 8:40 am

And has not every successful US politician since the 1970’s (limits of my memory) campaigned on what could be called lies? Voters know the promises usually aren’t real, one politician can’t fix 250 years of law-making errors by proposing new bills in the incumbent congress – but what the listener wants to hear is not the point – the campaign is an orderly system of promising X to get Y, then never delivering X.

Derg
Reply to  KevinM
October 11, 2025 1:08 am

Trump has done a fairly good job of promises made and promises delivered. Illegals and trans to name a few. Getting legislation through Congress is the toughest part because those critters want their cut.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  KevinM
October 11, 2025 8:24 am

You mean campaigns the simplified accurately to “We need change. Trust me!”

I have followed this for 50 years. In most cases, a politician cannot take a position on a single issue.

Consider the venn diagram of abortion and gun control. The divide is ~50-50 on both. Choose a position on 1 and you have alienated 50% of the voters. Choose a position on 2 and you have alienated 75% of the votors.

The last time (1992) I saw a candidate who was worth voting for was Stockdale (Perot’s VP). When asked about abortion, his answer took less than 1 minutes. “It’s the woman’s body. It’s wht woman’s choice.” (or words to that effect).

Whether I agreed with his position or not, that he stated it simply and clear allowed me to know what I was deciding. Nothing the other candidates said or did grated me that level od clarity.

Trump comes in second place.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  KevinM
October 11, 2025 8:17 am

Upvoted.

Not agreeing with everything, but there are some points that need serious thought applied.

Tony Tea
October 9, 2025 3:11 pm

Excellent post, Charles. One change, tho: call it “The Church of The Settled Science” because it sounds both more churchy and more sciencey, and even more dubiousy.

gyan1
October 9, 2025 3:40 pm

The World Weather Attribution project is a cesspool of cherry picked data and circular reasoning. Grifting on steroids is their business model.

October 9, 2025 3:47 pm

I’m waiting for this future headline about me. “Former Exxon employee pounces on IPCC attribution claims, alleging that modelers know the “climate” influence of CO2 emissions is negligible.”

https://www.regulations.gov/comment/EPA-HQ-OAR-2025-0194-0305

Disclosure: Yes, I worked for Exxon from ’78 to ’80.

mleskovarsocalrrcom
October 9, 2025 3:50 pm

The MSM has been making up the narrative for many things, not just AGW, and repeating it throughout their vast network. But that echo chamber is getting smaller and smaller and their credibility is in the loo. Too many “conspiracy theories” have come true and too many future claims have proved to be false. They are eating themselves.

MarkW
Reply to  mleskovarsocalrrcom
October 9, 2025 5:22 pm

Here in the US, the Democrat candidate for Virginia’s Attorney General was caught texting friends about how he fantasized about shooting the Republican Leader of the Virginia House of Representatives. He stated that if he was confronted with a situation where the Republican, Pol Pot and Hitler were in front of him, he would put both bullets into the Republican’s head. He also fantasized about forcing the Republican to watch his young children die.

Not a single Democrat anywhere in the country has condemned these remarks. When given the chance, the Democrat candidate for governor could only comment “He has apologized”.

Bob
October 9, 2025 3:50 pm

When was the last time you read an article from the other side explaining how more CO2 causes catastrophic global warming. I don’t mean claiming it I mean showing how it happens. They have never done that. That is why we must endure crap like this from E&E. They are pitiful, they have no proper science to support their claims.

David Wojick
Reply to  Bob
October 9, 2025 4:47 pm

Great point. I have long wondered how an increase in bad weather could be an existential threat. Never seen it explained just endlessly claimed.

GeorgeInSanDiego
October 9, 2025 4:51 pm

Attribution science isn’t science, it’s advocacy masquerading as science.

Reply to  GeorgeInSanDiego
October 9, 2025 6:09 pm

These attribution “scientists” are just pretending that their speculation and assumptions about the weather are established facts.

This is not science.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
October 9, 2025 7:55 pm

Nope, not even close. it’s politics.

October 9, 2025 5:43 pm

From their website:

World Weather Attribution uses weather observations and climate models to understand how climate change influences the intensity and likelihood of extreme weather events.

I thought World Weather could be attributed to high and low pressure systems that encircle the globe. They must have a great theory about how CO2 affects the pressure systems. I could not find anything about that on their website. Just pictures of fires burning.

Of course the whole idea is silly anyway by definition. Climate can not affect the weather because climate is defined as 30 years of weather. The weather must change first. Cause and effect.

Reply to  doonman
October 9, 2025 8:07 pm

climate is defined as 30 years of weather

Isn’t it about time good statisticians start to challenge this preposterous notion?
Climate is the local weather according to the influence of physical features of the area and surrounding areas and it’s position in relation to the sun and is always changing as much as the above bounds will allow. It is definitely not 30 years of weather averaged out.

Reply to  Mike
October 10, 2025 5:58 pm

Be that as it may, when you have an accepted definition (per WMO) you should use that definition for your argument and not invent one of your own. It prevents all those messy logical conundrums that these people find themselves in.

Presently, its the weather that affects climate, not the other way around.

rogercaiazza
October 9, 2025 5:47 pm

Brilliant – Great essay.

Leon de Boer
October 9, 2025 6:02 pm

Attribution statics are like a ouija board they produce what the charlatan frames the input to produce and they are most certainly NOT SCIENCE.

World Weather Attribution may try and pretend it’s a scientific process and try to use scientific terms but they define the argument to run thru the attribution process just like a good snake oil salesman does.One can argue if they are Charlatans, stupid or just very science naive.

Mac
October 9, 2025 6:33 pm

Charles. I really like how you dismantle this with humor and excellent writing outlining each point!
Really enjoy your posts!

Reply to  Mac
October 10, 2025 9:07 am

No doubt about it, Charles’ posts are hilarious skewers. 

I chuckled painfully at this part:

“Otto’s “extreme event attribution” work has been cited in multiple lawsuits, including a $51 billion claim by Multnomah County, Oregon.”

For those in trapped the ozone, Multnomah County is entirely the city of Portland, that bastion of communist anarchy, a dysfunctional human zoo where junkies on smack and crank crowd the sidewalks and discarded youth throw bricks at cops. Of course the “leaders” there sue to end civilization. It’s what happens when insanity reaches critical mass.

cgh
October 9, 2025 6:34 pm

The joys of attribution by credentialism and of confirmation bias. This statement is truly great.

And there are many, many medieval scrolls proving witches cause crop failures.

Indeed. At the time, Maleus Maleficarum or Protocols of Zion were the equivalent of “peer reviewed”. That didn’t mean they weren’t full of utter nonsense and outright evil. They were both about justification to murder innocent people.

October 9, 2025 7:51 pm

Meanwhile, Pielke Jr. — who has actual experience analyzing disaster data — gets dismissed as a “critic allied with the fossil fuel industry.”

Just yesterday in an interview Pielke said, …”Climate change is real and a concern” or words to that effect. We don’t need him or want him. Get stuffed, Pielke, you are a useful idiot.
Climate ”change” separated from natural variation has not even been defined, let alone actually measured.

A. O. Gilmore
Reply to  Mike
October 10, 2025 9:10 am

I wouldn’t characterize Pielke in that way. Saying it’s a concern isn’t the same as saying we have a climate crisis – which is now doctrine in the Church of Climate Change. As WUWT’s own gadfly commenter Richard Greene has written: “The settled climate science for the past 128 years is merely that CO2 emissions should increase the greenhouse effect by some unknown amount. That’s it.” Now you can argue that point – and be called a science denier by Mr. Greene – but what you can’t do is say that it leads to specific policy like banning gas stoves, electrify everything, carbon credits, EV mandates, windmills, solar farms or anything else. Those are the accoutrements of the Church of Climate Change – not science.

Reply to  Mike
October 11, 2025 11:29 am

Mike:
You are mistaken.
Roger Pielke, Jr was the most highly cited researcher in the DOE’s recent Climate Working Group report. On weather attribution {Charles’ article!], misuse of scenarios [looking at you RCP 8.5 and SSP3-7.0], politicization of science [AR6, & forced retractions of skeptical climate articles] or costs of weather disasters among others, he has done crucial work showing the climate Emperors are nearly naked.

Mike, I suggest you go over to Pielke’s substack “The Honest Broker” and sign up for a free account and peruse his many articles. I don’t agree with everything his says but he is not a “useful idiot”. He also has given multiple Congressional testimonies.
As to ”Climate change is real and a concern”: the first is true [climate always changes] and much of his “concern” has to do with the idiotic climate policies being promoted.

Also, I suggest everyone read the CWG report!

[Full Disclosure: I am a paying member of THB. IMO Just the links to other sources & discussion in the comments at THB is worth the cost.]

observa
October 9, 2025 8:05 pm

ICE carmakers allied to fossil fuel industry pounce on promising solid state batteries-
Promising battery tech ‘years away’

October 9, 2025 8:50 pm

This article frightened me. I ran to the bathroom and looked in the mirror and d*mned if I don’t have a tattoo behind my ear.

It didn’t say Exxon though it said WUWT.

Ed Zuiderwijk
Reply to  davidmhoffer
October 10, 2025 2:26 am

You are joking. If you saw it in the mirror it should have said TWUW.

sherro01
Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
October 10, 2025 2:49 am

Ed Z,
Nice to see humour with physics to support the sarcasm of Charles the Mod. Geoff S

Reply to  Ed Zuiderwijk
October 10, 2025 2:26 pm

Don’t be silly. I had to use two mirrors to see what was behind my ear 🙂

Wish I’d thought of that, I would have put it in the original comment.

Ed Zuiderwijk
October 10, 2025 2:24 am

Brilliant piece.

Keitho
Editor
October 10, 2025 2:59 am

Jeez, talk about jumping the shark. The IPCC has cemented itself as the most obvious self parodying pseudoscientific clump of bureaucrats in human history.

KevinM
October 10, 2025 8:24 am

Headline
“try to discredit”
“link to”

Implication is that the effort to discredit failed.
Implication is that the effort to link succeeded.

Good job leftist headline writer. My people, engineer types, just do not seem to understand how to use words that way. We read the words, dissect them and complain they are wrong.

Laws of Nature
October 10, 2025 2:39 pm

One way to evaluate the work of F. Otto is starting with

S. Rahmstorf’s post on the difference between CMIP5 and CMIP6 models showing a cold water anomalie:
https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/01/the-amoc-is-slowing-its-stable-its-slowing-no-yes/
“””In the North Atlantic, the historic runs of CMIP6 models on average do not reproduce the ‘cold blob’ despite this being such a striking feature of the observational data”””

And he concludes
“””Thus I consider CMIP6 models as less suited to test how well the ‘cold blob’ works as AMOC indicator than the CMIP5 models.”””

Besides his huh outlandish call to disregard newer models with higher resolution and corrected physics, it seems evidented here that local features changed and even disapeared when the models where upgraded.
Most of Otto’s published research is about local feaures calculated with CMIP5 and older models and should just be discarded until reproduced with the corrected models.

If they cannot be reproduced – like Rhamstorf’s “science” – that raises the strong question how something that is not there could be published in the first place!
IMHO both of these uh experts significantly downplay the uncertainty of their findings, like we could observe in another post at realclimate but yet another expert, G. Schmidt:

https://www.realclimate.org/index.php/archives/2025/05/predicted-arctic-sea-ice-trends-over-time/
comment image
to which he writes:
“””Actually, this isn’t bad. The CMIP6 ensemble mean for September area trends is now -11 %/decade (observed 13 %/decade) and the March trends are spot on. “””
well, he should discuss the uncertainty of his simulation essemble results, as they should be the key metric to evaluate these results,

and they look really horrific! with more than 90% almost anything can happen to the artic sea ice.. great finding!Now we have three climate scientists apparently presenting nonsense data while ignoring uncertainty, but we need none of those in any leading position.

Sparta Nova 4
October 11, 2025 8:14 am

Charles,

Don’t sugar coat it. Tell us how you really feel.

/sarc

TBeholder
October 13, 2025 1:11 am

Now, any normal reporter might think,

And now you know the difference between the old-fashioned “reporter” and “journalist”. Colloquially speaking.
Of course, the underlying difference is simply that guard dogs do not need to be as well-trained as attack dogs. Just teach them who not to bark at, and put on a chain somewhere.

The structure of this story could be used to teach Journalism 101

You may be still overestimating willingness of an average juju-nalist to make actual mental effort.
All they need is to find some blogs of someone who can be conceivably stretched to the status of “experts” (at least if one is sufficiently intoxicated and squints a bit), subscribe to a few and when several of those get agitated at once over something, slap together a “story” from comments.
I mean, we can guess what sort of a pipeline is at work from its performance. If they consistently pump out of teh series of tubes content on the level of infamous “General Pavel” from Daily Star and its «senior intelligence source», year after year? And their best attempt at defense is to point, shriek and project their deficiencies like this? The simplest hypothesis is that they are both lazy and stupid.
Which is also why they are, um, being replaced with software parrots. Compared to that, a half-decently set up LLM + web scraper (updated to remove any newly discovered heretics, of course) is likely to be a vast improvement.