OK, before everything gets binned because the usual suspects are unable to contain their constant bickering, let's just emphasise the two main points here.
Firstly:
BTW, MOST denialists seem to dispute that. In fact, why care about HADCRUT3 at all if you don't dispute that? Because 100% of that is about temperature. If you stipulate that the world is warming, its off the table.
This is an extremely important point, especially as far as the hacked emails are concerned. All the data that is called into question addresses the question of whether the Earth is warming or not. If you accept that the Earth is warming but merely dispute the cause or effect, this data is irrelevant. Since many deniers claim to hold this position, it seems rather odd that they are so pleased about these emails since they don't actually add anything at all to their position. On the other hand, if you don't accept that the Earth is warming, this data is irrelevant. After all, you didn't accept the data before the questions about fraud arose, so what difference does it make now?
Either way, the focus on the emails is really rather weird, since no matter what flavour denial you prefer, they don't support the case. Either you ignored this data anyway or you accept its conclusions and dispute other, completely unrelated, data.
Secondly:
Three independent data sets, not one of them controlled by anybody at East Anglia, and all in agreement.
That is Science.
Indeed, that is science. In fact, that is probably the most important part of science. It doesn't matter how controlled your tests, how accurate your observations or how elegant your theory is, if no-one else can repeat your results, those results may as well not exist. What we have in this case is that many independent groups, some looking at the same or similar data, some looking at entirely separate things, all come to the same conclusion. If one of those lines of enquiry, or groups of enquirers, turns out to have a problem, the conclusion still remains.
So arguing about these emails is really rather pointless. Yes, it may well turn out that a few scientists were dishonest. Disappointing, certainly, but hardly the first time it's happened, and rather unlikely to be the last. But regardless of the outcome of an investigation, it won't change all the other things that have also led to the same conclusions.
Science. It works, bitches.