OK, let me criticize all skeptics who ignore politically motivated public attacks on the credibility of science. What are we about here if it isn't attacks on the integrity of legitimate science? How are we supposed to effectively encourage critical thinking if we don't address this kind of underlying attack on critical thinking? Are people only interested if the attack on science suits their needs?
Curious...you picked perhaps the least relevant part of my post (in regards to your original question), while ignoring the more relevant part.
You stated quite unequivocally that Penn demonstrated bias in not mentioning the Exxon stuff; yet I don't believe you can in any manner, shape, or form demonstrate that he was even
aware of the issue! I myself (and apparently several other people here who are also global warming "believers") was unaware of that. Is that not the
ultimate strawman? You've condemned the man, and made rather damning comments about his credibility, based on a claim that has, so far as I can see, no merit to it whatsoever.
As to the rest -- "Are people only interested if the attack on science suits their needs?" I would feel fairly comfortable that if I were to make a list of
all the relevant and important issues in science today, there would be a number of topics on that list that you personally would find uninteresting, or on which you would not know enough to be able to offer a strong opinion one way or the other.
Heck...Penn & Teller are far, far,
far more competent and knowledgeable at exposing psychic frauds and superstitious woo than you are. There would, absolutely, be situations in which they would be able to offer a professional and knowledgeable opinion on issues about which you know little or nothing.
Should I therefore criticize you because you haven't spent huge amounts of your time researching everything to do with psychic fraud, and debunking supernatural claims? Should I condemn you because, despite the fact that such things are very important, and harm millions of people every year, you have not put much time at all into taking action on these things?
There's
far far far too much information out there for any one person to be able to take it all in. Inevitably, there will be certain issues that will attract us, and certain issues that will not. The fact that I as an individual am not interested in certain topics or issues doesn't mean that I'm somehow less of a skeptic than you; the fact that you may know lots about issues on which I am clueless (or vice versa) does not render you in any way a better 'skeptic' than me.
Quite the opposite. I know far, far,
far too many self-proclaimed skeptics who, based on little real understanding or research of a particular issue, will nevertheless make absolute declarations of fact, and dismiss any suggestion that they could be wrong.
So I say kudos to those who, when asked about an issue they personally don't understand, or don't know enough to reach any conclusion, simply state that as an honest fact.
"I don't know"
It is a valid statement for any skeptic. In fact, it is a statement that I'd suggest far
more skeptics should be using.
For example, skeptigirl
should be saying, "
I don't know whether Penn was aware of the Exxon issue, and therefore cannot criticize him for not mentioning it when he responded to the question", rather than, "Penn showed his bias by refusing to mention the Exxon issue." The first is honest; the second is an entirely unfounded attack that is entirely unworthy of anyone claiming to be a skeptic.
Tell ya' what, skeptigirl. The day that you can honestly state that you have studied every scientific subject that is relevant to humanity, and understand every one of those subjects well enough to comment with authority on them, that is the day that you will at least have some foundation for criticizing others for not being knowledgeable on particular subjects. I'll bet there are numerous subjects on which Penn could make you look completely ignorant -- but I doubt that he'd have the arrogance to suggest that, because you were not interested in or knowledgeable on those subjects, that you therefore were not deserving of being called a skeptic.