The Church of Climate Semiotics: When Graphs Become Heresy

This paper — The Aesthetics of Climate Misinformation by Anton and Petter Törnberg — is an extreme example institutional navel-gazing. It’s an academic attempt to psychoanalyze anyone skeptical of climate orthodoxy, dressed up in AI jargon and sprinkled with the self-assured tone of a priest lecturing on heresy. The irony is almost poetic: a study accusing others of aesthetic manipulation while itself performing the very act it condemns — turning dissent into pathology through rhetorical theater.

The authors set the tone early, assuming from the first paragraph that “climate misinformation” is an established category of sin, not a question to be examined. They claim to study how skeptics “appropriate scientific aesthetics – graphs, statistics, and technical imagery – to contest the scientific consensus”. Translation: people who use data and charts are suspicious because they look too scientific. Apparently, the mere act of presenting evidence in graphical form now constitutes “aesthetic mimicry” — unless you work for the IPCC, in which case it’s “peer-reviewed visualization.”

ABSTRACT

Climate misinformation today is increasingly conveyed through multimodal content, where images and text interact to shape meaning, emotional resonance, and enhance credibility. Yet, research on climate misinformation has rarely explored how these modes work in tandem. This paper introduces a multimodal analytical framework to examine climate-related visual misinformation. Analyzing 17,848 image-text posts, we combine BERTopic, CLIP, and qualitative framing analysis to investigate how climate denialist narratives are constructed. Our findings reveal a paradoxical communication strategy: the movement appropriates scientific aesthetics – graphs, statistics, and technical imagery – to contest the scientific consensus, projecting rationality, authority, and masculine self-control. In contrast, climate advocates are depicted through emotionally charged, feminized, and irrational imagery. These contrasting multimodal framings supports a strategy of strategic depoliticization, presenting ideological claims as neutral, objective truths. We argue that understanding climate misinformation requires moving beyond factual accuracy to examine the multimodal forms through which it gains legitimacy and emotional power.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09644016.2025.2557684#abstract

The paper’s central thesis is that climate skeptics are clever illusionists using a “masculine, rational aesthetic” to appear credible, while “climate advocates are depicted through emotionally charged, feminized, and irrational imagery”. In other words, men with spreadsheets are bad, and activists screaming in the streets are misunderstood victims of patriarchal semiotics. One can almost hear the subtext: “Logic is violence; emotion is virtue.”

It’s hard not to smile at the earnestness with which the authors “discover” that critics of climate policy use graphs and numbers. They treat this revelation as if they’ve unearthed a global conspiracy: “A significant portion of the material is dominated by technical imagery such as graphs, heat maps, and statistics”. To a normal person, that might suggest the skeptics are engaging in scientific debate. To the Törnbergs, it’s evidence of psychological manipulation — the “appropriation of objectivity.” In their worldview, you can’t be rational unless you have an institutional badge to prove it.

The methodology is equally entertaining. The authors feed 17,848 image-text posts into machine-learning models (BERTopic and CLIP), then announce that AI has confirmed what they already believed: anyone unconvinced by climate dogma is engaged in a “strategic depoliticization” campaign. In plain English, they’ve trained a robot to sniff out heresy. The “computational multimodal framing analysis” sounds impressive until you realize it’s just a neural net sorting memes by vibe and labeling any graph that contradicts the IPCC as “denialist.” This is not science; it’s digital theology.

Their discussion of “gendered framing” takes the satire to new heights. They interpret memes of Greta Thunberg as proof of patriarchal oppression: skeptics are “masculine, objective,” while Greta represents “emotional femininity”. Never mind that Thunberg built her entire brand on emotional appeals; the authors view any mockery of that performative hysteria as sexist. They even note disapprovingly that some memes depict her with a halo, “mocking the way she is idolized” — which, of course, is the point. The irony of worshiping a teenage prophet while accusing others of cult behavior seems lost on them.

By page 17, the tone shifts from sociology to caricature. Climate skeptics, we are told, use images of Mao, Goebbels, and the Great Leap Forward to frame climate activism as authoritarian. The authors call this “ideological framing,” but it’s really just a mirror held up to the movement’s own authoritarian tendencies. If one must submit to carbon rationing, energy lockdowns, and eco-censorship under threat of planetary doom, perhaps the comparisons aren’t as outlandish as they seem. Yet the Törnbergs never entertain the possibility that critics might be responding to real overreach — they simply diagnose it as semiotic deviance.

The paper’s closing sections turn philosophical, lamenting that “addressing climate misinformation requires more than correcting factual errors” — it demands “grappling with the aesthetic and affective strategies through which denialist narratives gain legitimacy”. Translation: it’s not enough to censor dissent; we must now police its tone. Facts aren’t the issue — feelings are. The battle, they insist, is over “how it is shown and felt,” a confession that climate politics has abandoned reason altogether.

Throughout, the authors treat “denialism” as a supernatural force that must be contained, not understood. They show no curiosity about why intelligent people might reject climate orthodoxy — the endless failed predictions, the model discrepancies, the politicization of funding, or the economic toll of Net Zero policies. Instead, they pathologize dissent as aesthetic subversion. It’s the academic equivalent of calling someone a witch because their charts look too convincing.

One can’t help noticing that every example of “misinformation” cited — graphs of vegetation growth, discussions of CO2’s agricultural benefits, skepticism of wind power reliability — are all legitimate debates. None of these topics are factually false; they’re simply inconvenient to the climate narrative. The authors never refute them — they just dismiss them as “frames,” as though the evidence vanishes when wrapped in the wrong color palette.

Perhaps the most unintentionally comic line comes when they describe skeptics’ use of data as a “paradoxical communication strategy” — appropriating science to question science. Yes, imagine that: people using evidence to test a hypothesis. What shocking behavior. In their worldview, “science” isn’t a process of inquiry — it’s a sacred trust that must not be questioned by laymen, bloggers, or anyone outside the priesthood of approved institutions. The word “denialist” thus functions not as a descriptor, but as an excommunication.

In the end, this paper reads less like research and more like bureaucratic self-defense. It’s an elaborate justification for why institutional authority must be preserved, even as public trust collapses. The “aesthetic of misinformation” is simply the aesthetic of skepticism — charts, logic, and humor — which threatens those whose careers depend on selling catastrophe. The authors’ conclusion, that “environmental politics will be shaped not only by what is said but by how it is shown and felt”, is unintentionally correct. The problem is that the climate movement has built its empire entirely on feelings, while pretending to speak for science.

So yes, let’s have more graphs, more numbers, more critical memes — not fewer. If the establishment finds that threatening, it tells us something profound: the crisis isn’t in the climate; it’s in the confidence of those who claim to own the truth.

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Tom Halla
November 6, 2025 6:13 am

What the Tornbergs are engaged in is religion, not science. Science is process, not content or conclusions. And they actively reject any attempt to communicate real science.

Mr.
Reply to  Tom Halla
November 6, 2025 6:47 am

Yep.
That’s because ideology (religion) and rationality cannot occupy the same mind space at the same time.

The former demonstrates settled, unquestioning belief, whereas the latter applies agnostic curiosity, always open to more / differing observations & relevant facts.
Truly an “unsettled” position.

SxyxS
Reply to  Tom Halla
November 6, 2025 8:33 am

Religion has been an important factor for mankind throughout history – everywhere.
This means it is natural part of our human nature..

This didn’t change just because some psycho came along 150 years ago and told us that we no longer need it when he replaced the opiate of the masses with the crack-cocaine of the intellectuals.

The majority can not deal without religion and will therefore subconsciously search for a replacement and will treat it as religion as they may be intelligent but generally view the world from a spiritual perspective and not an intellectual one.
Therefore they will stick to their religious substitute no matter what as they need something to fill the spiritual gap inside them.
And as with everything else communism
the communist replacement will turn out worse than the original , no matter how bad the original was /is.

That’s why we have to deal with so much ignorance,hysteria and mental derangement from the progressive side and why their integrity is 0 but their loyalty is at 11.

Remember when the Covid – Religion broke out
and how even anarcho atheists like Howard Stern and Noahm Chomsky wanted everyone to be baptised with MRNA and keep the impure away from the believers and how they followed every decree the priests came up with, no matter how crazy it was?

Reply to  SxyxS
November 6, 2025 12:21 pm

The interesting irony here is that Chomsky wrote the book:’manufacturing consent’. But, like w woke which he fully supported, if HE is in favour of something others have to be put in a Gulag. That is the hallmark of left leaning people. They dont see or ignore their shadow. They only see it in ‘far right’ people. Once in power everything shifts.

SxyxS
Reply to  ballynally
November 6, 2025 1:31 pm

And that’s why this ideology will always end in catastrophy.
Once things get tough they’ll all go with the lie and support any tyranny,
even those who must have known better as they were the ones who exposed the forced consent and should be aware of and immune to it will start to buy it by the dozen.

Reply to  Tom Halla
November 6, 2025 12:15 pm

We have come to the point where the established ‘experts’ say what Science is. No more, no less. It is no longer considered valid to state the classic definition of the scientic method tied to observations. Because that is SO 20th century.!
No, instead we have new and much improved methods which do much better..em..science. If those do not agree with observations it is clearly the observations and their methods that are wrong.
See how this works?
It is actually rather smart because w one stroke you can totally dismiss ‘old’ science and dissidents. This is what IS happening. And where the funding goes..

November 6, 2025 6:19 am

Great essay! Your writing style is captivating.

The study appears to be more about the theological basis of climate science as compared to an assessment of scientific FACTS.

Chasmsteed
Reply to  Jim Gorman
November 6, 2025 6:52 am

You beat me to it – a brilliant retort piece.

Reply to  Chasmsteed
November 6, 2025 6:59 am

Exactly!

Louis Hunt
Reply to  Jim Gorman
November 6, 2025 8:32 am

If we’re not allowed to question a hypothesis, whether generally accepted or not, then it isn’t science, it’s dogma.

November 6, 2025 6:36 am

the article is written for a certain section of readers.
Because anybody who has seriously looked at the science behind anything in relation to ‘the climate’ knows about the fragility of the underlying assumptions and assertions.
This is not an issue per se. Only for those who claim the science is settled and want to move to policy implementation.
For that you need money. You get that by creating alarm and an emergency which indeed ‘settles the science’.
Thing is: IF you would have a proper debate amongst scientists the people would see the holes in various arguments.
If forced, many of the ones who are working in the field would have to admit the uncertainties involved. And then lose their jobs.

Ron Long
November 6, 2025 6:37 am

Great catch and posting of this nonsense, CTM. Every oil exploration effort in the world utilizes Sequence Stratigraphy, and, as long as there is a continental mass in a generally polar location, world-wide sea level clearly shows the climate cycles, to wit: sea level has been higher and lower than today, there is no climate doomsday signal. I wonder, though, how much do the Net Zero/Doomsday crowd make in actual money? Just Curious. Honest.

Bryan A
Reply to  Ron Long
November 6, 2025 7:19 am

The only potential issue with natural climate cycles is Mann viewing things climate related as permanent and stable when the.opposite is true AND thereby electing to construct his society at the waters edge without any true climate buffer zone…and believing he won’t be flooded out, eventually.

ilma630
November 6, 2025 6:45 am

Anyone seen Prof Peter Carter’s latest diatribe of meaningless climate model projections? He regards them as ‘facts’, the very last thing they are.

John Hultquist
Reply to  ilma630
November 6, 2025 8:31 am

Anyone seen Prof Peter Carter ?
Nope. I did see a Banana Slug while hiking in the Cascade Mountains of Washington State. They appear to be as numerous and healthy as when first documented in the mid-1800s. They seem unconcerned by an increase in CO2.

JonasM
Reply to  John Hultquist
November 6, 2025 9:21 am

Ah, but I think you missed the fact that the slug population moved an average of 12.374 feet further up the mountains to escape the blistering heat of Climate Change.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  JonasM
November 6, 2025 9:29 am

I did not know that slugs could move that fast. 🙂

JonasM
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
November 6, 2025 1:45 pm

That’s another effect of Climate Change.

Wow, see how easy this is? Everything is caused by Climate Change!

Reply to  John Hultquist
November 6, 2025 10:11 am

What gives you reason to believe Prof Carter is distinguishable from a Banana Slug?

Reply to  ilma630
November 6, 2025 1:35 pm

The only ‘fact’ regarding climate models is that all outputs apply only to simulated fictional earth worlds – not reality.

Bryan A
November 6, 2025 6:49 am

The irony is almost poetic: a study accusing others of aesthetic manipulation while itself performing the very act it condemns

They do all, and I do mean ALL, seem to suffer from Endemic Psychological Projection. Everything they come up with to blame on skeptics is something they themselves are guilty of

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Bryan A
November 6, 2025 8:06 am

Hide the decline. Mike’s Nature Trick.

Bryan A
November 6, 2025 6:55 am

In their worldview, you can’t be rational unless you have an institutional badge to prove it

Now THAT splains a lot. Apparently you can’t be considered “Rational” by them unless you’ve been institutionalized.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Bryan A
November 6, 2025 8:39 am

And the only “valid” science is that which is published after “peer” review.

November 6, 2025 6:55 am

We argue that understanding climate misinformation requires moving beyond factual accuracy

And there you have it. Their argument in a nutshell. Factual accuracy is no longer required. We need to move beyond it.

Bryan A
Reply to  Zig Zag Wanderer
November 6, 2025 7:25 am

It’s not about graphic depiction of facts, it’s about what Can’t be Faxed.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Zig Zag Wanderer
November 6, 2025 8:40 am

These are not the droids you are looking for. Move along. Move along.

November 6, 2025 6:58 am

“In contrast, climate advocates are depicted through emotionally charged, feminized, and irrational imagery.”

Ain’t that the truth.

SxyxS
November 6, 2025 7:03 am

How can climate deniers be so crazy to come up with the claim that ” climate activism is authoritarian”
when climate activism is bypassing all national laws,
that no matter who you vote for you always end up with climate activism ,
when green energy is being forced onto people as if it were an MRNA-vaccine,
when single persons like AOC with 0 competencee and 0 mandate can come up with the Green New Deals and it instantly becomes mandatory for the rest of the “western” world,
when we already have Carbon Scores on food telling us how much of our daily carbon allowance is being used by eating a sandwich. (8.1%)

Yeah – telling the truth is framing, but shaming people and scaring them with permanent fear-propaganda ,
attributing properties to molecules that don’t exist ,
the control knob nonsense ,
and made up predictions that always fail is not framing?
Because it is not – it is reframing.
Reeducating and brainwashing people into docile cowards..

And how do we call systematic framing of politicians,celebrities and journalists and make them pass along the framing to us ?
Epstein Island, Diddy-Parties, Atlantic Council

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  SxyxS
November 6, 2025 8:44 am

Figure out how to add in there is no single global climate.
The Sahara, Antarctica, and Brazilian rain forest are not identical climates.

Figure out how to add in the Climate Models, etc., have never been able to define the optimum global climate (see above), let alone with quantifiable, measurable metrics.

Mr.
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
November 6, 2025 9:09 am

The Sahara, Antarctica, and Brazilian rain forest are not identical climates.

They’re only some of the most obvious ones.

All around the world, there are thousands of different “climates” (just 30 years of weather observations?) in the thousands of different localities all around the world, many with changes in behaviors attributable to human activities, such as broadscale vegetation clearing, asphalt, concrete, steel, glass resulting in the UHI effects.

Averaging the metrics of the weathers of all these localities to arrive at a “Global Climate” condition is arrant nonsense.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Mr.
November 6, 2025 9:30 am

True. I did not want to overdo it with a more comprehensive list.

Add to your list, increasing acreage of farming also affects the local micro climate.

Reply to  Mr.
November 6, 2025 5:43 pm

How rational of you. Based on facts, which the authors say can be ignored.

SxyxS
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
November 6, 2025 9:26 am

There is no optimum global climate imo.
and if there is than it should be the mean of the last hundreds of millions of years complex life started to thrive and developed and adjusted and optimized alongside.
And this mean is several degrees above the current average, which mean that warming will be mostly beneficial – except for arrctic king penguins and antarctic polar bears.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  SxyxS
November 6, 2025 12:12 pm

I believe your point boils down to, whatever does not kill you makes you stronger in the evolutionary sense.

I kind of like the Medieval Optimum, myself. If it came to a vote, I would cast in favor of the M.O. being optimum.

“except for arrctic king penguins and antarctic polar bears.”

Humor – a difficult concept
— Lt. Saavik

SxyxS
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
November 6, 2025 1:56 pm

I wouldn’t go so far to go full Nietzsche as something that does not kill you can cripple you for the rest of your life.
But yes,in the long run – if life went on for so long with way higher temperatures than it is very well adjusted and can cope with any,especially warmer, climate.
Proof – humans occupy climates from + 50 to – 50 degrees Celsius peak temperatures.
100 degrees range – why should 2 degrees = 2% have any real impact if you don’t live in the very extreme regions and have all the modern tech?

I second the Medieval stuff.
I was absolutely a fan of global warming before my apostasy – and still am.
And if you look at the massive population increase in Europe and China since the start of the MWP my instincts were spot on..
I ‘d take 2 degrees of warming any second and say: a nice start, but I hope there is more.

And yes – it’s a shame that those bears went extinct during their last great battle for Atlantis.The Penguins killed them with bear hands.

Laws of Nature
Reply to  SxyxS
November 6, 2025 9:16 am

just a point maybe worth noticing..

Denier argue without a factual basis
Skeptics use facts to make their point.

(and of course the term “climate denier” is historically rooted in the claim that climate skeptics would be “holocaust denier” )

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Laws of Nature
November 6, 2025 9:33 am

Skeptic means asking questions, not accepting without evidence/validation/verification.
Socially that translated as doubting. Being skeptical meant doubting.
It was an easy sophistry slide from doubting to denying.

SxyxS
Reply to  Laws of Nature
November 6, 2025 9:45 am

Which in itself is a scaretactic to silence people and destroy their reputation by stigmatizing them , therefore political and absolutely not scientific.
And if such a completely overblown reaction is being used for something trivial like climate, especially by progressive scientists who think math is racist and men are women (but don’t ever dare to question climate – you holocaust denier),
than you can be 100% sure that something is wrong with the official narrative.

Same with Ukraine – only one opinion allowed though the situation is absolutely not undisputed.

Another point noteworthy:
There are no climate deniers.
There is noone who denies the existence of climate – except for me as I’m a nice person and think that at least one denier should exist on this planet after they invested so much money and time to weaponize the term.
(a practice the CiA started at the end of the 60ies with the term conspiracy theorist to shut Vietnam war sceptics up – who turned out to be spot on after the Pentagon Paper release ).
Climate denier is therefore a term no actual scientist would ever use for all different reasons.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  SxyxS
November 6, 2025 12:15 pm

What I deny is that (a) humanity has caused such an environmental crisis on this planet and (b) we have to destroy the planet and humanity to correct it.

Reply to  SxyxS
November 6, 2025 5:41 pm

But AOC has a mandate from somewhat more than half the voters in her constituency on a part of NYC. Based on yesterday’s election results, rationality is in thin supply in NYC.

SxyxS
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
November 7, 2025 9:39 am

Well, the left got a new Obama.
Not black, but that kind of Muslim that does not exist in real life , but only in US politics.
The progressive ones.

Of course they’ll totally lose their shit when the globalist throw a new Messiah at them.

And though they are millions don’t even wonder for a single second: ” How is the world the center of capitalism is always the commie high ground ?”

Story tip :
Trotsky lived in NY( luxury hotel+chauffeur &limousine)prior to the “Russian”
Revolution.
Lenin lived in London (and met there with Trotsky prior to the Russian Revolution).
Marx lived in Frankfurt, so did Moses Hess.
He left the german Banking capital and moved to the English Banking capital London.

November 6, 2025 7:18 am

I would like to invite readers to my Youtube channel “where images and text interact to shape meaning” – for example, to show how energy conversion within the general circulation overwhelms the vanishingly weak “warming” tendency of 2XCO2. Stop the video to read the text explanation in the description.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hDurP-4gVrY

And, for another example, to show how we can watch from space on the GOES East Band 16 channel. This dispels the notion of a static radiative “blanket” in the range of IR frequencies for which it is claimed (incorrectly) that incremental CO2 must be expected to de-rate the longwave emitter. Again, stop the video to read the text description.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yarzo13_TSE

Images and text can go together to get the point across effectively. Got it. Science.

Thank you for your attention to this matter.

November 6, 2025 7:26 am

Amusing though it is – the Törnbergs’ hyperbolic semantic inventions – these people are inventing a vocabulary of accusation for the climate show-trials that Greenpeaceniks, Extinctionrebels, and members of all the other nutcase AGW collectives desire so terribly.

The laughter at such things should be grim, because the movement to impose an econutter revenge of policing, trial, and prison, if not execution, is real.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Pat Frank
November 6, 2025 8:45 am

Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.
— Climate Borg

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Pat Frank
November 6, 2025 9:34 am

I believe we have a new candidate for the Sophistry Class 1 award – the authors of that absurdity.

claysanborn
November 6, 2025 7:41 am

I “feel like” this is a Pink-O Commie, BS paper.

Reply to  claysanborn
November 6, 2025 11:13 am

Its a “sociology” paper.. you would expect nothing more. 😉

cotpacker
November 6, 2025 7:43 am

The “consensus” will reverse when the lights go out and the cash flows toward solutions rather than “fairy dust and unicorn urine,” as senator Kenny terms the grift.

The article on the NY court ruling is an early tremor of the earthquake to come. This quasi-academic gaslighting of “denialism” will come to be understood as just like condemnation of the heliocentric universe. The conventional “experts” will be exposed as the real denialists.

KevinM
Reply to  cotpacker
November 6, 2025 8:42 am

The conventional “experts” will … move on to the next thing and do it well enough to inspire angry counter arguments.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  cotpacker
November 6, 2025 12:16 pm

Aka the Greta effect?

Buy stock in Kermit the Frog hats. You will get rich beyond the dreams of Avarice.

hdhoese
November 6, 2025 7:53 am

“In contrast, climate advocates are depicted through emotionally charged, feminized, and irrational imagery. These contrasting multimodal framings supports a strategy of strategic depoliticization, presenting ideological claims as neutral, objective truths. We argue that understanding climate misinformation requires moving beyond factual accuracy to examine the multimodal forms through which it gains legitimacy and emotional power. (Emphasis mine)

This type of logic lack is apparently neither new or limited. Scavia, D., D. Justić, and V. J. Bierman, Jr. 2004. Reducing hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico: Advice from three models. Estuaries. 27(3): 419–425. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02803534  
Like carbon dioxide, nitrogen is also a demon. At least in that case some effect can be easily demonstrated whether or not nitrogen is the single enemy.

I guess that it is music to their ears. Ein, zwei, drei— https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6x0Lzvsk2LM

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  hdhoese
November 6, 2025 8:11 am

Ein, zwei, drei”

Minor correction, “Eins”. 🙂

KevinM
Reply to  hdhoese
November 6, 2025 8:44 am

I sound Bose-Einstein condensate when I misuse a thesaurus.

Denis
November 6, 2025 7:59 am

“Climate skeptics, we are told, use images of Mao, Goebbels, and the Great Leap Forward to frame climate activism as authoritarian.”

Strange, but I have read a lot of climate skeptic articles and cannot recall ever reading one with an image of Mao, Goebbels or ”the Great Leap Forward” (which I suppose is the same as an image of MAO) to suggest authoritarian governance, usually called dictatorships. One wonders why the author left out “the final solution” on their list but then that would be the same as an image of Goebbels would it not? The paper starts with a gibberish title “…multimodal framing analysis…” and seems never to get any more sensical. Anton and Petter Törnberg must have very long arms to be able to reach so deep in the barrel of muck.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Denis
November 6, 2025 12:17 pm

On the flip side, we have Kermit the Frog hats.

John Hultquist
November 6, 2025 8:07 am

This reads like one of those papers concocted to fool an editor to publish “nonsense” gobbledygook. I say this only because April 1st is still five months in the future.

Sparta Nova 4
November 6, 2025 8:36 am

That the paper performs no analysis of alternatives speak loudly.

November 6, 2025 8:46 am

The irony of worshiping a teenage prophet while accusing

others of cult behavior seems lost on them.

_________________________________________________

Sort of like the South African episode of cattle killing at the behest of a teenage prophet

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nongqawuse

November 6, 2025 8:48 am

I’d like to projectile vomit green puke (ala Linda Blair in “The Exorcist”) into the faces of the self-important assholes who wrote and published this bullshit.

Just to show them how I really feel about their pompous nonsense.

Laws of Nature
November 6, 2025 9:12 am

Climate misinformation and denialism.. I think I have found a very easy example!

Over on realclimate.com G. Schmidt posted this graph and wrote about it

comment image
“””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. Note that the observed loss in ‘area’ is slightly larger than the trend in ‘extent’ (13 %/decade vs. 11 %/decade)”””
which does not seem to describe what is shown on the graph omitting very significant uncertanties for the CMIP6 ensemble mean rendering the models seemingly useless.

There are two easy questions about that:

Are there larges areas of uncertainty marked on the graph?
Does G. Schmid mention those uncertainties when he describes trends visible in those graphs?

My answer would be yes and no, which creates a huge problem on the science misinformation front, So far no one over there was willing to post any answer, I start to imagine a huge crowd of expert COP30 scientists in front of a 5 star resort in Brazil with their heads in the sand..

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Laws of Nature
November 6, 2025 12:20 pm

Our you sure, being their rooms are in the red light district, that their heads would be in the sand?

Reply to  Laws of Nature
November 7, 2025 2:36 am

There are two easy questions about that:

Are there larges areas of uncertainty marked on the graph?

Yes. They are the shaded areas.

Does G. Schmid mention those uncertainties when he describes trends visible in those graphs?

Yes, they are labelled on the graph as “95% CI”, 95% ‘confidence interval’ (2-sigma). This is the range of plausible computer-generated values within which actual sea ice area is expected to lie.

Schmidt mentions sea ice extent to differentiate it from sea ice area as they are different metrics. It was to avoid confusion among the readers, but it didn’t work for everyone, apparently.

Sparta Nova 4
November 6, 2025 9:38 am

“In contrast, climate advocates are depicted through emotionally charged, feminized, and irrational imagery.”

Deservedly. Not willing to stand up in a public forum and face questions deserves something.

Rick C
November 6, 2025 9:39 am

Charles: Just want to say thank you for reading this paper so we don’t have too. A genuinely selfless act in my view.

Reply to  Rick C
November 6, 2025 10:01 am

My copy of microsoft word says over 6,300 words not including the 70 references.

Giving_Cat
November 6, 2025 9:52 am

Remember this Al Gore special?:

comment image

Bryan A
Reply to  Giving_Cat
November 6, 2025 12:32 pm

Ayup…so where’s the corresponding temperature rise matching CO2 at the presented scale?

November 6, 2025 10:05 am

From the quote in the above article attributed to https://www.tandfonline.com :
“This paper introduces . . . and qualitative framing analysis to investigate how climate denialist narratives are constructed.”

Anyone . . . anyone at all . . . have any idea what “qualitative framing analysis” really is? IOW, how does any neural net “sort memes by vibe“? Does it consult social media posts for popularity, or perhaps just look at songs as ranked in a playlist, or maybe just rely on vetting by one or more psychics? /sarc

I’m assuming it has nothing to do with framing a house . . . but I could be wrong.

Love that adjective “qualitative” used in conjunction with “analysis”.

BTW, very few AGW/CAGW skeptics deny that climate and climate change exist.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  ToldYouSo
November 6, 2025 12:29 pm

Framework analysis is a systematic, flexible qualitative research method that organizes and interprets textual data using a predefined analytical framework. It is particularly useful for applied research like policy and healthcare, as it helps manage large datasets to identify key patterns and create a transparent summary. The process involves familiarization, identifying themes, indexing, summarization using a matrix, and final interpretation. 

On the other hand, a better answer might be:

Frame analysis is a research method that analyzes how people, media, or engineers construct meaning and structure reality. In sociology and communication, it examines how individuals and media frame situations through selection, emphasis, and presentation to promote a particular interpretation.

Found it.

Framing analysis is a method for examining how a communicator selects and highlights certain aspects of a topic to influence how an audience understands it. It is used in various social sciences to study how messages, images, and metaphors shape perceptions by selecting some information while omitting others.

Love that adjective “qualitative” used in conjunction with “analysis”.

Me too.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
November 6, 2025 6:00 pm

By selecting some information while omitting others. Sure sounds like cherry picking

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
November 7, 2025 8:48 am

Hmmm . . . your first block of bold text says framework analysis “organizes and interprets textual data” . . . your second block of bold text says it “analyzes how people, media, or engineers construct meaning and structure reality” . . . and your third block of bold text says it examines “how a communicator selects and highlights certain aspects of a topic to influence how an audience understands it”.

This is proof-positive that even AI bots don’t know (agree on) what “framework analysis” is really. In simple terms, it is gobbledygook meant to impress the simple-minded.

Reply to  ToldYouSo
November 6, 2025 5:58 pm

This use of AI shows why we must be very concerned about who choses the data used to train the AI.

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