Schneibster
Unregistered
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
- Messages
- 3,966
You've made a number of logical and factual errors in this piece.Great points, Schneibster. The hysteria about nuclear power is a good example of how the policy wonks have totally screwed up, and plan to keep up the practice.
First, Harry Reid's policies are based on global warming- but whether they are good or bad has nothing to do with whether AGW is true or false. And railing against a politician's policies is not a subject for a thread in SMM&T. It really does belong in politics. Scientific theories are not policies. Scientific theories are scientific theories, and policies are policies. If you don't like the policies, don't take it out on the scientific theory. And don't try to change it with fake data, either.
Second, you said Mann pointed out one error, but failed to mention the other he had also pointed out. That second error is the conflation of the current conditions with regard to CO2 with high levels of CO2 in the past. Not only has life on Earth evolved to deal with lower levels of CO2 over the last several million years, but we don't know of a period in Earth's past when the levels of CO2 rose as fast- or even within an order of magnitude of as fast- as they are now. And the only other times when it is even theorized to have happened were times of mass extinctions- The Great Dying, for example. Do you think it's a good idea to be creating conditions in our atmosphere that might be similar to those that obtained during a period called The Great Dying? And if you think that's unfair, I'll point out that it was you who chose to conflate current conditions with those of the past- I merely chose past conditions that illustrate my point. And they are equally similar to current conditions with those you chose. Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.
Third, you failed (as far as I saw) to mention that the judge in that British case found that the standard education policies already in place dealing with the presentation of such films were sufficient, and did not order additional policies be enacted. So basically, the judge found that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that the film was so inflammatory that it needed to be banned, or even have special policies be enacted by the educational system regarding discussion of it. As far as I was concerned, that was the message from the judge. The bit about the nine points is spin. He probably put it in there so the plaintiff wouldn't go around whining. Give them something to do to keep them busy so they'll shut up.
Finally, it's worth noting that the CO2 we are emitting today will have impact for a long time; centuries, IIRC, though it may be only one. Certainly more than a human lifetime. Marry in haste, repent at leisure, they say. Some people, you go to bed with for one hour, you get a hundred year kid and he got brothers and sisters and they got uncles, they say. And one of the points about this is, the heat doesn't stop building up until equilibrium is reached, and that takes a long time. We may not have caught up to the CO2 released during the Civil War yet. We don't know. We suspect we have, but we DON'T KNOW. What we do know is that even if we stop adding CO2 to the atmosphere right now, it won't stop heating up for at least a decade, and possibly a century. We also know we've almost certainly passed a tipping point; the Arctic is plain flat gone. If it could be ice free in summer by 2040, it's just about for sure it's gonna be ice free, no matter what we do now. What other tipping points exist? We don't know. We DON'T KNOW. We better stop soon, or we're liable to find out, and major climatic changes are going to upset apple carts all over the world.
Am I sure we're gonna go extinct because of AGW? Hell no. Matter of fact, I expect we won't. But it's sure starting to look like we, as a species, might be doing some major Malthusian die-off real soon. And that ain't gonna be pretty, and it ain't gonna be neat and clean. Wars and rumors of wars. Scary, scary stuff people are liable to do, particularly if we in the US are still part of the problem and not part of the solution when the time comes to start laying blame. That could get real sticky. And I get to pay right along with you guys for y'all running your mouths; they'll tar me with the same damn brush. You guys wanna shut up? Sorry, but that's how I see it. I figure I better have something to point to proves I was on the right side when they start stringing people up, you know? You might want to think about whether you might want something like that later on.
So I see cherry-picking, and I see distortion of scientific fact, and finally I see conflation of policy that may or may not be right with scientific theory in an effort to discredit that theory. Overall, sorry Harpoon, I'm not impressed. I smell agenda. The only saving grace is that you had the stones to publish what Reid and Mann had to say; and I give you a fair bit of cred for that. My only question is, did those appear in the same format as the two editorials you showed us? In other words, if your two editorials appeared in a print version of your paper, did the two letters as well? If so, you get full marks for integrity.
Now, thanks for the compliment. I think I returned one; certainly, I consider integrity an important gauge of a journalist, and I hope you do too. Obviously I don't agree with Reid on nuclear energy (as can be clearly seen on the nuclear thread). But I need to point out that I also don't agree with your AGW agenda. Whether I agree with you on Reid is footless, particularly on a forum other than politics. I won't chide you on the quality of your paper; that's your lookout, and I will say that you're considerably less of a problem than quite a few people out there who claim to be journalists with considerably less justification than you have in my humble and non-journalist opinion. Still, I'd like to see you separate the scientific argument from the policy argument; the two really have nothing to do with one another. Criticize Reid all you like for bad policies; but be sure you do it on good grounds. Don't politicize science. And try to make sure you understand what it says. That's all a reasonable person can ask, I think. And I don't think it's excessive.