Climate of Here
Is a conservative climate consensus possible?
If hard cases make bad law, soft science makes sensible politics even harder. The Climate Wars present legislators on both sides of the aisle with few certainties, among them that one side is prone to construe any human impact on climate as tantamount to Weather of Mass Destruction.
It does so with Hollywood's full arsenal of special effects at it disposal, and makes its case using lines corny enough to make Captain Planet wince, yet the results seldom face scientific criticism. This stands in stark contrast with its token opposition, chosen for political reliability rather than scientific acumen, and scripted by conservative media often as scientifically impoverished as they are well funded. The result is that Republicans find themselves poorly armed and bizarrely outnumbered in the Climate Wars.
Where does this asymmetry come from? Even recusing all those with a stake in the outcome in the Climate Wars, there are still hundreds of thousands of scientists at large in America. Yet Fox and the other self-styled conservative media can find barely a dozen willing to put their scientific reputations at risk on
demand. Those often seem a pretty underwhelming and unenthusiastic lot, for a reason as simple as their discourse tends to be infantile—deliberate appeal to authority instead of evidence is akin to a scientific death wish.
In science, as in politics, the truth that sets men free is seldom the one they want to hear. The conservative media's most favored talking heads frequently adduce views by turns obsolete, tendentious, or just plain daft. If Conservative journalism at large perseveres in relying exclusively upon them, it risks becoming a 21st century scientific eyesore. Some already regard it as such because of websites regurgitating Yack Radio sound bites as "sound science." This is a risky business, for while faith-based science op-eds may find their target in a demographic of Fox viewers who last saw a science text in junior high, they tend to repel adults who invest in today's technical economy.
Less scientific common sense is heard on the right today than in Reagan's time. Many of the talking scientific heads on both sides seem more interested in trading truth for influence than speaking truth to power. Though presentable to the point of being, well, lawyerly, those on the right by and large lack a first-rate scientific constituency and show as little stomach for debating the facts in a serious scientific forum as Al Gore—who appeared before an audience of 12,000 earth scientists in San Francisco last year only to skedaddle the minute he finished his 1001st performance of The Speech.
Those demanding Gore debate, like Steve Milloy, should be exhorted to sally forth and mix it up at meetings that afford an open forum for controversy. But peer review cuts both ways . I must I accept Milloy’s protest that it is unfair to write he refuses to debate his scientific views , what there is of them.. I’d love to see him enliven Association of Science Writers meetings and appear on NOVA in a warm Moyeresque colloquy with different climate modeler each month.
His cohorts low academic profile may be merely astute- neither their yack TV performance art or the burlesque of climatology on the Orwellian “Junk Science” website would stand an ice cube’s chance in hell of surviving scientific cross examination. Finding their polemics unpublishable in the face of peer review, some contrarians have scandalously opted to found, or co-opt, journals of their own, just as Creationists do, and for the same reason—to avoid the rigorous reality check that peer review affords.The reluctance of the fringes in the Science Wars to come out and fight tends to polarize the apolitical scientific center. Absent intellectually serious Republicans, scientific professionals on websites like RealClimate have only Democrats with whom to discuss policy. It is hard to break this cycle because the most predictable contrarians long ago self-destructed on TV. In contrast, environmentalists have stayed on message ever since Frank Capra turned from Cold War to global warming propaganda in 1958.
What little scientific street cred the "global warming skeptics" brought to the debate evaporated in the heat of a long string of (un-peer reviewed) articles like “Meltdown for Global Warming Science”:
"Bombshell papers have just hit the refereed literature that knock the stuffing out of the United Nations, and its Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). In two research papers in...Geophysical Research Letters...we have a quarter-century of concurrent balloon and satellite data, both screaming that the U.N.'s climate models have failed, as well as indicating its surface record is simply too hot."
Authors Singer & Michaels were dead wrong—the satellite data they cited was seriously in error—the climatologist responsible agreed to its retraction in Science in 2005 and told Newsweek in 2006 that "our satellite trend has been positive."
Canada has contributed to K Street climatology as conspicuously, and controversially, as neoCans have to White House speechwriting. With barely concealed deference to the tar sand industry, Dr. Robert Ball has responded to Green polemics with an unnatural alliance of astrophysicists, economists, and climate modelers, responding to the IPCC report with such works as “Polar bears of western Hudson Bay and climate change.” While normative science accepts citation in peer reviewed journals as the ultimate measure of success or failure, the Natural Resources Stewardship Project has another view:
A measure of Dr. Ball’s impact was seen recently when, after one of his pieces was featured on the Drudge Report a leading on-line news service, he received approximately 1,000 e-mails from the general public during the next 24 hours"
There is more to science than changing your mind when the facts demand—you have to persuade your colleagues as well. Searching Science Citations reveals that the cohort seconding Singer, Michaels, and Ball are most often cited by themselves.
Twenty years ago, a famously bad climate model almost lead to a foreign-policy debacle—it abused the Stefan-Boltzman equations by treating this planet as a featureless bone dry billiard ball without such vexing complications as the kaleidoscopic play of clouds in the sky or the sluggish thermal inertia of the oceans. When its science was taken to task in Nature and its politics in the Wall Street Journal it soon collapsed back into the cold war factoid cemetery—“Nuclear Winter” could not take the heat.
A decade before Limbaugh did for State of Fear what Johnny Carson had earlier done for Carl Sagan, Michael Crichton called to discuss then-current developments in geophysics , for his nest technothriller Congo. We touched on dynamics of the ‘nuclear winter crack-up, from Carl Sagan’s refusal to debate, to the hazards of simple models of complex systems , subjects that figured in his 2003 Cal Tech speech. ‘Do Aliens Cause Global Warming?” The decay of Crichton's thoughtful' layman's critique of climate modeling , designed for a sophisticated Cal Tech audience, into ten second sound bites depleted of scientific substance has an eerie parallel in Viscount Monckton’s ‘M’ Model. He too prefers simple equations to the daunting complexity of a planet with a massive and dynamic atmosphere and ocean. It takes a bush telegraph to raise scientific Cain in the global village, and just as Sagan exploited access to Parade—he was its Science Editor—Monckton is hard wired to the Daily Telegraph.
This insularity is much remarked upon in the small world of global climate modeling—its favored blog, RealClimate, having hosted this remark:
“the leftward bias in climate discussions arises not from any bias of the scientists or the science, but rather from the fact that conservatives have been absent from discussions about how to handle the issue. In general, those of a conservative bent have wasted a lot of time and energy attacking solid science that they often do not understand rather than trying to come up with solutions that won’t knock the economy off the rails. This has worked out very well for Al Gore, but it probably isn’t the best use of their talents, or the best way to guard their interests.”
Among the few skeptics on climate change who count as real players in the underlying scientific game is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a prolific and respected author of peer-reviewed papers on the atmospheric sciences, MIT's Richard Lindzen. He stands out like a gilded lightning rod atop a pyramid whose scientific facade is propped up by a rubbly Flintstone fill of politically appointed TV weathermen, and geologists and mining engineers righteously defending the turf (and production prospects) of coal and tar sand miners. Near the apex of respectability in this microcosm are astrophysicists who think variable star and cosmic ray research should get its fair share of the funding pie. Examining their collective bibliography suggests the core competence of most of those whose authority is invoked by publicists lies outside the realm of climate modeling.
Lindzen is no stranger to technical controversy, having over the years posed many novel and scientifically interesting objections to the common wisdom in the climate change debate, focusing on how rising amounts of atmospheric water vapor could curb the rate of man made temperature rise. But each of his serial objections has been coherently replied to in the peer-reviewed science literature. Good scientist that he is, Lindzen has accepted as valid many quantitative objections to his theoretical views, and altered his stance accordingly.
That's how science works. For all Senator Inhofe's words (often drafted by staffers) to the contrary, the iconoclast who lauded Crichton's State of Fear on the floor of Congress no longer defends many talking points that the yack-TV pundits still cleave to. Though scarcely part of the “consensus” that so dismays the idiotarian blogosphere, he has alienated many in it—as I hope I have—by committing the unpardonable political sin of allowing scientific facts to change his mind.
This has yet to register with the talking heads on FOX, and Limbaugh’s fans will spout his line on climate until the seas run dry, boil, or freeze over. Little wonder Marc Morano, Rush's scientific casting director, became ringmaster of Inhofe’s public policy circus. But what about Lindzen's impact on his colleagues views? The National Academy has over a thousand members, and Lindzen has had 20 years to persuade them that man-made warming remains too uncertain to be a serious issue. Like most respectable skeptics, he began by questioning warming's detectable existence, and pointing out that negative feedbacks could curb it in models and reality alike.
Ask around the Academy as to how many Lindzen has won over, and you will discover that the answer is closer to none than a dozen. The same is true on Lindzen's home turf. Another MIT professor, with an office a minute away from Lindzen's, shares the view that the Climate Wars have become egregiously politicized and that climate models are sorely constrained. Yet in a quarter-century of daily interaction, Lindzen has failed to persuade fellow MIT climate scientist Kerry Emanuel that global warming is “not a big deal."
Emanuel is a far cry from a liberal icon. MIT is not Harvard, and like Lindzen, and many others in high-tech establishments like MIT, Emanuel harshly criticized Carl Sagan's attempt to use a primitive climate model as a policy lever during the Cold War, calling “nuclear winter” studies "notorious for their lack of scientific integrity " in the pages of Nature in 1986. Bear that bipartisan commitment to the integrity of science in mind as you consider “Phaetons' Reins,” his overview of what the climate wars have come to. I recommend making the detour to read it because the atmosphere is the Earth's most complex dynamic system, and there is no way I can do justice to the debate in so few words as I have here.
Should it evoke a certain sense of déjà vu, you can confirm it by reviewing “A War Against Fire,” a report from the front I wrote for the (then-) echt conservative quarterly The National Interest long before Gore started running for Environmental President. Its conclusion stands. If any species of principle is at once worth conserving and profoundly endangered, it is that the political neutrality of scientific institutions must first exist in order to be respected.
While the Wall Street Journal and other conservative must-reads remain willing to run words critical of media hype and politicized science on the left, all are in denial about the fact that conservatives are quitting the field in the Science Wars, abandoning intellectually serious engagement in favor of posturing on TV and preaching to the choir on op-ed pages that increasingly have no in-house science editors—or fact checkers—to whom to turn.
The results can be painfully comic, but they embody what Jefferson noted three centuries ago: “If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.” The information explosion has merely expanded the scope of the rhetorical carnage. The disdain shown science by ill-informed conservatives and intransigent liberals slugging it out in the TV trenches less recalls Jefferson's fears than Thucydides' view of an earlier conflict:
"The state which separates its scholars from its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools"
Republicans and Democrats clearly have two very different views of the world, but there can be no armistice in the Climate Wars until both sides acknowledge that, from the atmosphere's point of view, there can be, at most, one kind of physics.
Russell Seitz blogs at Adamant .

Comments
Well, what do you expect? When the Conservative movement
allowed the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Ann Coulter to
be elevated as pundits, it paid the penalty in a genearl
dumbing down which we are now enjoying.
Populism is a dangerous tool. That they were so willing
to use it against Clinton shows to what extremes of
stupidity hartred can lead you. Now the conservative
movement is in thrall to rabble rousers. How long before
the rabble rousers decide to take all the power to
themselves?
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A contemptible screed, unworthy of Taki.
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This is somehow reminescent of the controversy which grew out of the discovery of the AIDS virus and its implications over a quarter-century ago. The gay bath-houses in San Francisco were shut down. An outspoken gay libertarian I worked with loudly announced that AIDS was a right-wing hoax intended to end gat liberation, and that he had switched his frequent patronage to a still-operating gay bath-house in Berkleley, which was all_American to preserve individual liberty in the face of Establishment oppression. Guess who succombed rather soon. Very possibly Mother Nature is doing a climate change, and adding greenhouse gasses is just enhancing the effect. Jimmy Carter put it very nicely when he remarked that science is our way of trying to learn how God does it. So let’s please not regard the prospect of global warming as an anti-capitalist plot by a bunch of killjoy leftist eggheads and hope that we will soon have a good idea of what’s actually going on.
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The author is convincing in putting hard science with those who believe in man-made global warming. The side which argues “no big deal” seems to have a two-pronged approach - A. That the warming may just be a cyclical phenomenon and B. even if it isn’t it won’t affect life on the planet all that adversely. Is the evidence that it will affect life adversely in the realm of hard science or conjecture?
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@JW
On the subject of whether the results of global warming will be
good or bad, my money is on the bad. Why? Because in all regions
the organisms that live there are adapted to precisely the
conditions that prevail. Change those conditions, and they are
no longer adapted. They do not get enough rain, for example and
fail to thrive, or they get too much rain and the roots drown.
In ecology, change is never for the better.
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Adriana has proclaimed the fundamental principle of modern environmentalism that is as widely eccepted as it is totally wrong:
“In ecology, change is never for the better.”
Without change, there is no ecology, for it is change that drives the evolution of life. Life, by definition, is change. All life takes something from the environment and returns something else, causing change. Unchanging, unadapting life is unsustainable. It inevitably leads to extinction and death.
The Earth today is not like it was yesterday nor like it will be tomorrow, because the Earth is full of life! The underlying theme of the modern environmental movement to cast all change as ‘damage’ and ‘harm’, is 180 degrees out of phase with the real nature of the world.
Climate is changing. It always has and always will. That is a good thing, because it forces life to evolve. Slogans to “Fight Climate Change” are calls to fight against the most fundamental aspects of nature and against life.
This in no way implies that we have no responsibility to make good decisions about the way we live. It is simply a notice that modern environmentalism, at its most fundamental level, is a twisted practice destined to achieve the exact opposite of its stated goal.
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Reductionism is the global pastime. Too bad it does not extend to reducing impact.
While there may indeed be a long term trend toward warmer temperatures, it has happened before, it would be better if the term used would have been “climate dynamism”. Volatile weather is on the increase. Rainfall events are seeing shorter duration, greater intensity and higher velocity flow. Streams in New England are becoming deeply imbedded in places, lowering surrounding groundwater elevations. In other parts of the country, droughts are entrenching and we have tornados in February. While global warming and cooling have happened before, what is distinctly different this time is the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
What is always missed in our popular media and it’s little Goebbels called Conventional Wisdom is that there are many sides to every issue and that glib partisanship is a sure recipe for suicidal dysfunction.
We have committed a huge amount of financial and intellectual capital to an unsustainable paradigm of living. Some elements of modernism are hugely beneficial while others are rampantly destructive. Our American brand of debt-financed sprawl on the back of cheap oil has created a land-use pattern that will not stand the test of time. Though climate and land use are indelibly tied, we need to separate the debate about our consumptive land use from the scientific debate about climate change. Combining them seems already to be confusing the issue to a standstill.
Though there is great economic opportunity in change, it threatens the Business-Bureaucracy Institutions developed to support our heavily industrialized and centralized way of life. In this atmosphere, the disinformation spread to protect the prevailing institutions will be ultimately harmful because we need to adapt and adapt now.....not to mention the need to cut the Bureaucracy down to a fraction of where it is today.
Otherwise, we can simply keep being Lemmings to the bitter end.Better yet, we’ll be NASCAR Lemmings, gunning it through the wreckage to the finish line.
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JIm:
Yes, it is easy to say that change is good, in the long run.
In the short run, change means disasters of differing magnitudes.
The point of evolution is based on “selective extinction”, that
those individuals, and whole species, who are not adapted to their
environment die off, leaving the planet free for those who are.
Fine if you are one of the survivors, of course. And you have no
guarantee that you will be one. Of course, you might say that your
grandchildren will benefit. If you have any children by the time
of your extinction, of course, and they do not become extinct before
reproducing, then your grandchildren will benefit.
Evolution works by surviving disasters. It is not an all-wise,
all-beneficent Mother Nature. Moter Nature is a bitch, or rather
it is an Aztec Goddess, drunk on the blood of its own children.
Change is never for the better when She is involved.
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I will become an advocate for the statists “War on Weather” when the scientists, politicians and other fear-mongers sell their cars and stop flying to ‘global-warming’ conferences. Buying new “fuel-efficient” cars and soon-to-be scandal and corruption riddled “carbon offsets” prove to me they are not really, actually THAT concerned. The serfs must be kept afraid, and using the weather! My God, it’s friggin’ brilliant.
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JM Stillman:
You certainly did not get a Catholic education, because
they would have taught it that no matter how sinful the
priest, the sacraments that he administers are valid.
Similarly, the truth or falsity of scientific theories cannot
be derived from the personal behavior of those who expound them.
They might be hypocritical, but again as with the sacraments,
that hypocresy is irrelevant.
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The fact that slightly more than one thousand years ago the earth went through a mammoth warming in less than a decade never sinks into the mind of those who trumpet man-made global warming. Of course there is no evidence of man-made global warming yet otherwise seemingly intelligent people rant on-an-on. What happened over a millennia ago be damned. No wonder the founder of the weather channel is on a mission to disprove this rot, and he knows more about the climate than any poster here.
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Yep, there was a global warming ages ago, also a Ice
Age (which caused the Flood when all that ice melted and
had to go somewhere), and other climate calamities which were
followed by mass extinctions.
Just because somehting is natural does not mean that it is
benign. The bubonic plague was natural enough. So, if the
climate is changing, we need to prepare for it, and the
ostrich technique is not the way to do it.
Somehow the climate skeptics seem to come in stages.
“The climate is not changing” (well, at least this is succeptible to proof)
“The climate is chaning for natural causes” (as I point out, not a reason
to rejoice)
“The change in climate will produce minimal changes or beneficial changes”
(if only Mother Nature was not such a bitch....)
“The climate change can be dealt with by measures that do not involve coercion
nor government action” (this is debatable, but the problem is that those who
get to that point have spent too long saying one of the above statemtnes and
their credibility is zero).
Failure to acknowldege the problem head on leads to the situation decried by
Burke, when what would be a boon graciously granted turns out to be a concession
forcefully extracted. When you reach that point, you cannot ask for conditions.
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Not “ages ago”, but just over a millennia ago. The Norsemen then settled in Greenland and other places, even naming part of it Vineland. It happened and no man-made causes were behind it. If it is happening now, and that is a a big ‘IF’, it is again a natural occurrence. Flapping ones arms in despair and crying the sky is falling solves nothing. Those watching, the sun seems rather calm these days. Cold and very snowy winter across the Northern Hemisphere at the same time. Correlation?
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Don:
Add to the new climatic events the sudden spate of tornadoes. A
cheerful prospect, no?
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When I do statistical analysis for business/economic purposes, I consider the quality of the sample data and test it for sensitivity. For example, if the sample data is a proxy for something otherwise immeasurable then I test the sensitivity based on the strength of the correlation. Similarly, if some of the data in the sample is flawed in some way, I test output with the flawed data ‘corrected’ in some way vs. removing the flawed data altogether. I don’t see this kind of sensitivity testing being done with climate data which is all proxy data, much of which is deeply flawed. How have we reached such a high level of confidence on the subject of global climate change? It’s as if we’re measuring the global economy by weighing the vault at a few hundred banks each day. Flawed proxy; flawed data.
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1) The CO2-centric model is simple and easier to play with than complicated cloud formation or solar activity models. Just assume the atmosphere is a static jar of gas, propose clever and novel corrections and model away. The fact that the predictive power of the products of the CO2-centric model is very, very weak is not that important if they can be funded and published.
2) There is no competing coherent paradigm to challenge the anthropogenic model. Saying there is more to it or that more work needs to be done is not fundable, publishable, newsworthy, persuasive or fun. The steadily growing historical proxy record of climate variability makes it pretty clear that there are powerful cycles at work that must involve something more than greenhouse concentrations. It’s just that nobody can yet explain what that something is.
3) The author is far too quick to dismiss the gale winds of the liberal zeitgeist that blow through academia. Once left-right lines have been drawn the bias against heretical thinking is overwhelming and the likelihood of non-PC speculation approaches zero.
4) The CO2–centric model is overfunded, over-hyped and incapable of delivering predictive power required for a theory that commands such near-religious loyalty. When it crashes, I wonder whether there will be retribution or just amnesia.
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I’m obliged to Tobin for illustrating the disconnect between the mature and highly detailed scientific literature on atmospheric science,which indeed takes several years application to achieve minimal fluency ,and the naive views that arise from failing to invest the time.
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