The “Science” Is Unsettled
Or, when you've lost The Atlantic . . .
Clive Crook deserves kudos for an honest assessment of what the Warmaquiddick revelations mean:
While I'm listing surprises, let me note how disappointed I was by The Economist's coverage of all this. "Leaked emails do not show climate scientists at their best," it observes. No indeed. I should say I worked at the magazine for years, admire it as much as ever, and rely on the science coverage especially. But I was baffled by its reaction to the scandal. "Little wonder that the scientists are looking tribal and jumpy, and that sceptics have leapt so eagerly on such tiny scraps as proof of a conspiracy," its report concludes. Tiny scraps? I detest anti-scientific thinking as much as The Economist does. I admire expertise, and scientific expertise especially; like any intelligent citizen I am willing to defer to it. But that puts a great obligation on science. The people whose instinct is to respect and admire science should be the ones most disturbed by these revelations. The scientists have let them down, and made the anti-science crowd look wise. That is outrageous.
Megan McArdle adopts a world-weary tone similar to The Economist's: this is how science is done in the real world. If I were a scientist, I would resent that. She has criticised the emails and the IPCC response to them, then says she still believes the consensus view on climate change. Well, that was my position at the end of last week, and I suppose it still is. But how do I defend it? There is far more of a problem here for the consensus view than Megan and ordinarily reliable commentators like The Economist acknowledge. I am not a climate scientist. In the end I have to trust the experts. That is what we are asked to do. "Trust us, we're scientists".
Remember that this is not an academic exercise. We contemplate outlays of trillions of dollars to fix this supposed problem. Can I read these emails and feel that the scientists involved deserve to be trusted? No, I cannot.
It's a cogent reaction to the mere evidence of the emails, without even going to the tortured Fortran that generated the numbers. A lot of honest people have been taken in by this extraordinary scam, and in the shakeout, we'll be able to identify who they are.
They were co-opted! Ummmmmmmmmm . . . Matrixy:





November 30th, 2009 - 12:50
Scientists don’t “condition” the source data, and then conveniently lose said data. Scientists that are actually interested in researching anything don’t rig the results to fit an a priori assumption; they generally try to do the opposite-especially if they have any assumptions. And scientists don’t hide the data, their models, or their methodology; and definitely don’t strongarm journals to reject out of hand any opposing arguments or studies…
Scientists welcome debate, and the concomitant opportunity to re-affirm their findings…
What’s clear, at least for CRU-and I believe for Hansen at NASA too, is that these alleged scientists were actually highly credentialed political hacks with an axe to grind and public money serving as their sharpening stone…
Hopefully, this connivance has been burst wide open, and that ordinary folks will realize the depth of this conspiracy to aid the far-left-enviro-nazis in an attempted power grab…
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December 1st, 2009 - 06:25
But Charles Johnson says we are haters and all wrong, because he has a pony tail.
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December 1st, 2009 - 06:29
Yeah, I saw that. Yawn.
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December 1st, 2009 - 06:56
Dan, just make sure when you ride CJ’s ass you pull his pony tail too, because he likes it.
Oh yeah, most of us are going to die.
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December 1st, 2009 - 08:55
Charles Krauhammer schools Andrew Sullivan.
Ouch. Double Ouch. Ouch.
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