New York- Czech President Vaclav Klaus told journalists in New York today it would most help the debate on climate change if the current monopoly and one-sidedness were eliminated.
As a politician, Klaus no doubt finds a disinterested field of study, such as science, incomprehensible.
In his speech at the special U.N. summit on climate change in New York today Klaus said that despite the artificially created idea about a large extent of ongoing climate changes, the recent rise in global temperatures has been very small in historical comparison and its impact on man and his activities are basically negligible.
He's very ignorant, isn't he? And not a nice person - you should check out his wider political stance.
Klaus told journalists that the only chance was his proposal that the United Nations organise two parallel inter-governmental panels to discuss climate changes and publish two competing reports, because it was a political question.
See above. Klaus clearly can't distinguish between science (a search for truth) and politics (choosing a belief).
It would actually be interesting to watch him, and like-minded politicians, appoint their alternative IPCC. Would Crichton be in, I wonder? Would explicit rejection of the existing IPCC reports be a necessary qualification? Presumably members of the IPCC would be excluded. The cat-fight over precedence amongst those that
do get in would be deeply amusing too.
Ain't gonna happen, though. Or it would have done already.
"Let us look for a real solution," he said.
From his statement he already
knows there isn't an AGW problem, so the problem this solution applies to is presumably the progress - glacially slow though it is - towards action being taken. An anti-IPCC would stop that.
He said he would not take part in today's lunch at which former U.S. vice-president Albert Gore who holds the views on the global warming different from Klaus's would be present.
Gives you a flavour of the guy, doesn't it? Unless he just wasn't invited or has a prior engagement.
He said he agreed that it was correct to compare different views.
Well he would, wouldn't he?
"However, this would require the side that behaves as if it has a monopoly on the truth showed the willingness for a dialogue and a public discussion. I am prepared for such a debate any minute," Klaus said.
He's not prepared for a
scientific debate, he's up for a rhetorical debate full of lawyers' tricks, like any standard politician. Or like Singer, as another example.
This is the
Science Forum, not
Politics. So I'll say no more about Klaus.