Cooling Off the Global Warming Talk
Your data is only as good as your points of entry.
Frantic over the flood of evidence that shows climate change is a natural phenomenon and is not made significantly worse by fossil fuel use — which runs contrary to the narrative that fossil fuel use is slowly killing the planet — officials in two states have begun using government power to punish those who dare to speak against the climate change demagoguery.
The Heritage Foundation’s Hans von Spakovsky writes, “California Attorney General Kamala Harris has joined New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman in trying to prosecute ExxonMobil for supposedly lying to its shareholders and the public about climate change, according to the Los Angeles Times. The Times reported that Harris is investigating what ExxonMobil ‘knew about global warming and what the company told investors.’”
Von Spakovsky’s article continues: “Neither Harris nor Schneiderman recognizes the outrageousness of what they are doing — which amounts to censoring or restricting speech and debate on what is a contentious scientific theory. In fact, they want not just to stop anyone who questions the global warming theory from being able to speak; they want to punish them with possible civil sanctions or even criminal penalties.” He goes on to suggest the two AGs badly need a refresher course on the First Amendment.
While trying to punish contrary opinions through government oppression is fairly new to the climate change debate, proponents of human-caused climate change have long been guilty of hiding inconvenient data, distorting and manipulating other data, and ignoring a more recent and more accurate method of measuring the Earth’s temperature that does not produce “favorable” data.
For example, 37 years of satellite-based instrument measurements have provided the world’s most accurate and unbiased temperature data. These measurements are free from coverage gaps and siting problems — such as artificial surfaces like concrete, asphalt and heat sources like air conditioner exhausts — that pollute measurements of land-based instruments. Satellite measurements show no warming of the climate for 18 years. Despite their own satellite data, NASA advances theories based upon land-based measurements, which support the human-caused warming theory.
Mike van Biezen addressed the satellite measurement result in a recent article discussing 10 of the “many scientific problems posed by the assumption that human activity” is causing climate change. In his commentary, the adjunct professor of physics, mathematics, astronomy and Earth science at Loyola Marymount University and Compton College acknowledges things he says we know to be correct. These include such nuggets as that the global average temperature has increased since the 1980s; since the 1980s, glaciers around the world are receding and the ice cap of the Arctic Ocean has lost ice, especially during the summer months; and the average global temperature for the last 10 years is approximately 0.35 degrees centigrade higher than it was during the 1980s.
But while acknowledging that those points from 25 or 30 years ago are true, and charging that the global warming community exploits those facts to prove that human activity has caused increased temperatures, he then asserts that “no direct scientific proof or data has been shown that link the current observations to human activity. The link is assumed to be simply a fact, with no need to investigate or discuss any scientific data.”
Among the many things he says are falsely assumed to be linked to human activity:
- Temperature records from around the world do not support the assumption that today’s temperatures are unusual
- Current temperatures are always compared to the temperatures of the 1980s, but for many parts of the world the 1980s was the coldest decade of the last 100+ years
- The world experienced a significant cooling trend between 1940 and 1980
- Urban heat island effect skews the temperature data of a significant number of weather stations
- CO2 cannot, from a scientific perspective, be the ultimate cause of significant global temperature changes, and might even be helping to green the planet
- There have been many periods during our history that a warmer climate was prevalent — long before the industrial revolution
- Glaciers have been melting for more than 150 years
- “Data adjustment” is used to continue the perception of global warming
Biezen provides scientific arguments to refute those commonly advanced ideas, and he explains why they fail to demonstrate a connection to climate change from human activity, threatening the comfort and success of human-caused climate-change alarmists.
The American Left, whose ideas routinely fall to logical counter-arguments, frequently resort to force of one sort or another to combat their opponents. Desperation clearly has set in, as evidenced by the radical and tyrannical use of government force by the California and New York AGs to silence dissent. But they and others who think they can quiet the voices of dissent should remember that the United States thrives because it protects its citizens’ right to think for themselves and make their own decisions.
Whatever you believe about human activities contributing to changes to Earth’s climate, honest people of all ideological persuasions must agree that if you have to deceive the public in order to gain support for your ideas, perhaps there is something fundamentally wrong with those ideas.
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- climate change