Climate Change Debate Over? It's Just Begun!

February 22, 2010
Click here to read previous articles by Ken BlackwellBut
now comes the pushback. Just before the World Summit on Climate Change
at Copenhagen last December, several hundred e-mails from the Climate
Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia were leaked. It
appeared that Dr. Phil Jones had urged colleagues, including some at
Penn State University, to "hide the decline" in world temperatures and
encouraged others to do some of their usual "tricks" to get the right
result from ambiguous data. A huge scandal erupted, instantly dubbed
"Climategate."
Jones stepped down as director of CRU and even went so far, he confessed to the Times of London,
as to contemplate suicide. God forbid. Truly, these are serious
questions, and we have serious objections to what Dr. Jones and his
colleagues were caught doing, but we want no one involved in this
affair to become so despondent as to take his own life. Dr. Jones says
his hope for his five-year-old granddaughter is what helped him to
banish thoughts of self-destruction. "I wanted to see her grow up." Dr.
Jones, I pray that you will.
If
Al Gore has not become any humbler, it's at least good to see Dr. Jones
somewhat chastened by the revelations that some of his data may not be
as reliable as we have been led to believe. And it is not only the
reading public that may have been misled. Dr. Jones' CRU is one of the
primary institutions responsible for feeding data to the U.N.'s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). It was this IPCC that
shared with Al Gore the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. (Note: They did not win
the Nobel Prize for Science.)
The
Left is wringing its hands over the "failure" of the World Climate
Summit at Copenhagen to approve a binding treaty. But perhaps they
should thank God (or Gore) for that fact. That's because the mere
threat of job-killing cap-and-trade legislation has been enough for
independent voters in the U.S. to abandon left-leaning politicians in
droves.
Along
with stiff carbon taxes and straitjacket regulations inevitably comes
population control. At Copenhagen, China's Peggy Liu, chair of the
Joint U.S.-China Collaboration on Clean Energy, bragged about Beijing's
brutal one-child policy. That policy, said this winner of Time Magazine's
"Hero of the Environment" award, "reduces energy demand and is arguably
the most effective way the country can mitigate climate change."
Soviet
Communist Party boss Joe Stalin would be proud. "You have a problem
with a man. If you get rid of the man, you get rid of the problem,"
said the top Communist of the Twentieth Century. (Come to think of it,
Uncle Joe Stalin even topped Peggy Liu. He was named Time's Man of the Year not once, but twice -- 1939 and 1942.)
Thomas Friedman of the New York Times hails
China's one-child policy as "reasonably enlightened." He likes the fact
that Beijing's rulers -- unburdened by those pesky voters voting out
their betters -- can "impose the politically difficult but critically
important policies needed to move a society forward in the 21st century." Friedman's bestselling book is titled The World is Flat. (And liberals accuse us of being the Flat Earth Society?)
Isn't
it really funny how all the "errors" made by the climate scientists
seem to fall on one side of the debate? If the glaciers of the
Himalayas are all going to melt by 2035, that's a real problem. But if
they're not expected to melt until 2350, it's another matter. Guess
which date the IPCC chose to publish? Just a typo?
What
if the globe is indeed warming, but the warming is part of a cyclical
pattern of warming and cooling? That's the thesis of Dr. S. Fred
Singer. Dr. Singer and co-author Dennis Avery write in Unstoppable Global Warming that
"evidence from North Atlantic deep-sea cores reveals that abrupt shifts
punctuated what is conventionally thought to have been a relatively
stable Holocene [interglacial] climate. During each of these episodes,
cool, ice-bearing waters from north of Iceland were advected as far
south as the latitude of Britain. At about the same times, the
atmospheric circulation above Greenland changed abruptly....Together,
they make up a series of climatic shifts with a cyclicity close to 1470
years (plus or minus 500 years). The Holocene events, therefore, appear
to be the most recent manifestation of a pervasive millennial-scale
climatic cycle operating independently of the glacial-interglacial climate state (emphasis added)."
Dr.
Singer has been abused by Left-wing bloggers, called a denier, and
denounced as a tool of industry. He earned his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins
University, worked with NASA for decades, and is thoroughly conversant
with satellite measurements of earth's climate. And he taught
environmental sciences at the University of Virginia for twenty-five
years. Dr. Singer might be wrong. He might be seriously in error. But
so far, no one has demonstrated that his arguments are wrong.
Reviling him, calling him names, trying to shut him up and close him
down -- none of this constitutes a reasoned argument. It is nothing
more than (in the words of Al Gore) an assault on reason. Stay tuned, folks. The earth may be warming -- but not as fast as the debate over climate is heating up.
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