By Alan Caruba
It is a sure sign that the advocates
of the “global warming” and “climate change” hoaxes know that the public no
longer believes that the former is occurring or that the latter represents an
immediate, global threat.
Even though the “climate skeptics”,
scientists who have produced research proving false methodology and
the conclusions based on it are quite few in number, an effort to silence them
by smearing their reputations and denying funding for their work has been
launched and it is based entirely on a lie.
Scientists are supposed to be
skeptical, not only of other scientist’s findings, but their own. Good science
must be able to reproduce the results of published research. In the case of the
many computer models cited as proof that global warming was occurring or would,
the passing years have demonstrated that none were accurate.
As Joseph L. Bast, president of The
Heartland Institute and Joseph A. Morris, an attorney who has fought in several
countries to defend free speech, wrote in a February 24 commentary, “The
Crucifixion of Dr. Wei-Hock Soon”, of an article co-authored with
Christopher Monckton, Matt Briggs, and David Legates, and published in the Science Bulletin, a publication of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences “The article reveals what appears to be an error in
the computer models used to predict global warming that leads models to
over-estimate future warming by a factor of three.” (Emphasis
added) Their commentary has been downloaded more than 10,000
times!
“If the work of Soon et al is confirmed by other scientists,
the ‘global warming crisis’ may need to be cancelled and we can all enjoy lower
taxes, fewer regulations, and more personal freedom.” However, “having failed to
refute the article, environmentalists turned to smearing the
authors.”
Little wonder the “Warmists” are
worried; the Earth has been in a cooling cycle since 1996. People are noticing
just how cold this record-breaking and record-setting winter
is.
The attack on Dr. Soon began with a
Greenpeace news release that was republished on the front page of The New York
Times on February 22nd.
Despite its august reputation, The Times' coverage of climate issues has been an
utter disgrace for decades. As public interest waned, it eliminated its staff of
reporters exclusively devoted to writing about the “environment.”
Myron Ebell, a climate change skeptic
and director of Global Warming and International Environmental Policy at the
Competitive Enterprise Institute, noted on February 27th that the Greenpeace attack on Dr.
Soon of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics claimed they had secured
$1.2 million in funding for his research over the past decade and that it came
from energy corporations, electric utilities, and charitable foundations related
to those companies. The truth, however,
is “that the grants were made not to Dr. Soon but to the Smithsonian, which
never complained while taking its sizable cut off the top.”
Columnist Larry
Bell who is also an endowed professor at the University of Houston, disputed
the Greenpeace claim, saying, “First, let’s recognize that the supporting FOIA
documents referred to an agreement between the Smithsonian (not Dr. Soon) and
Southern Company Services, Inc., whereby 40 percent of that more than $1.2
million went directly to the Smithsonian” leaving “an average funding of $71,000
a year for the past eleven years to support the actual research activities.”
Focusing on Greenpeace and its Climate
Investigations Center which describes itself as “a group funded by foundations
seeking to limit the risks of climate change”, Bell asked “Do these activist
organizations make their estimated $360,000,000 annual funding publicly
available?” Bell said “Ad hominem assaults disparaging the integrity of this
leading authority on relationships between solar phenomena and global climate
are unconscionable.”
In his article,
“Vilifying realist science—and scientists”, Paul Driessen, a policy advisor
to the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), noted that in 2012
Greenpeace USA was the recipient of $32,791,149 and that this is true of other
environmental pressure groups that in 2012 secured $111,915.138 for the
Environmental Defense Fund, $98,701,707 for the Natural Resources Defense
Council, $97,757,678 for the Sierra Club, and, for Al Gore’s Alliance for
Climate Protection, $19,150,215.
“All told,” noted Driessen, “more than
16,000 American environmental groups collect(ed) total annual revenues of over
$13.4 billion (2009 figures). Only a small part of that comes from membership
dues and individual contributions.” With
that kind of money you can do a lot of damage to scientist’s
reputation.
They fear that the public may actually
learn the truth about “global warming” and the fear-mongering claims about
“climate change” does not stop with just the environmental organizations. At the
same time The New York Times was printing the Greenpeace lies, U.S. Senators Ed
Market (D-Mass), Barbara Boxer (D-CA), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) joined
together on February 25th to
send letters to 107 companies, trade associations, and non-profit groups
demanding comprehensive information about all funding of research on climate or
related issues.
Among the groups receiving the letter
were two for whom I am a policy advisor, The
Heartland Institute and CFACT, but
others include the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the George C. Marshall
Institute, the American Legislative Exchange Council, and the American Energy
Alliance.
Following The New York Times article,
Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-AZ), the ranking Democrat on the House Natural Resources
Committee, sent letters to the presidents of seven universities asking them to
provide details about seven professors who are either prominent global warming
skeptics.
As Rich Lowrey, editor of the National Review, pointed out on February 27th, that "Science as an enterprise usually doesn't need political enforcers. But proponents of a climate alarmism that demands immediate action to avert worldwide catastrophe won't and can't simply let the science speak for itself."
As Rich Lowrey, editor of the National Review, pointed out on February 27th, that "Science as an enterprise usually doesn't need political enforcers. But proponents of a climate alarmism that demands immediate action to avert worldwide catastrophe won't and can't simply let the science speak for itself."
This is not fact-finding. It is an act
of intimidation.
And it looks like a carefully
organized effort to quash any research that might dispute “global warming” or
“climate change” as defined by the Greens and by both the President and the
Secretary of State as the greatest threat we and the rest of the world
faces.
The greatest threat is the scores of
environmental organizations that have been exaggerating and distorting their
alleged “science” in order to thwart development here and around the world that
would enhance everyone’s life. Now they are attacking real scientists, those who
are skeptical of their claims, to silence them.
This is what fascists do.
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