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The Attack on Climate-Change Science
Why It’s the O.J. Moment of the Twenty-First Century
Twenty-one years ago, in 1989, I wrote what many have called the first book for a general audience on global warming. One of the more interesting reviews came from the Wall Street Journal. It was a mixed and judicious appraisal. “The subject,” the reviewer said, “is important, the notion is arresting, and Mr. McKibben argues convincingly.” And that was not an outlier: around the same time, the first president Bush announced that he planned to “fight the greenhouse effect with the White House effect.”
I doubt that’s what the Journal will say about my next book when it comes out in a few weeks, and I know that no GOP presidential contender would now dream of acknowledging that human beings are warming the planet. Sarah Palin is currently calling climate science “snake oil” and last week, the Utah legislature, in a move straight out of the King Canute playbook, passed a resolution condemning "a well organized and ongoing effort to manipulate global temperature data in order to produce a global warming outcome" on a nearly party-line vote.
And here’s what’s odd. In 1989, I could fit just about every scientific study on climate change on top of my desk. The science was still thin. If my reporting made me think it was nonetheless convincing, many scientists were not yet prepared to agree.
Now, you could fill the Superdome with climate-change research data. (You might not want to, though, since Hurricane Katrina demonstrated just how easy it was to rip holes in its roof.) Every major scientific body in the world has produced reports confirming the peril. All 15 of the warmest years on record have come in the two decades that have passed since 1989. In the meantime, the Earth’s major natural systems have all shown undeniable signs of rapid flux: melting Arctic and glacial ice, rapidly acidifying seawater, and so on.
Somehow, though, the onslaught against the science of climate change has never been stronger, and its effects, at least in the U.S., never more obvious: fewer Americans believe humans are warming the planet. At least partly as a result, Congress feels little need to consider global-warming legislation, no less pass it; and as a result of that failure, progress towards any kind of international agreement on climate change has essentially ground to a halt.
Climate-Change Denial as an O.J. Moment
The campaign against climate science has been enormously clever, and enormously effective. It’s worth trying to understand how they’ve done it. The best analogy, I think, is to the O.J. Simpson trial, an event that’s begun to recede into our collective memory. For those who were conscious in 1995, however, I imagine that just a few names will make it come back to life. Kato Kaelin, anyone? Lance Ito?
The Dream Team of lawyers assembled for Simpson’s defense had a problem: it was pretty clear their guy was guilty. Nicole Brown’s blood was all over his socks, and that was just the beginning. So Johnnie Cochran, Robert Shapiro, Alan Dershowitz, F. Lee Bailey, Robert Kardashian et al. decided to attack the process, arguing that it put Simpson’s guilt in doubt, and doubt, of course, was all they needed. Hence, those days of cross-examination about exactly how Dennis Fung had transported blood samples, or the fact that Los Angeles detective Mark Fuhrman had used racial slurs when talking to a screenwriter in 1986.
If anything, they were actually helped by the mountain of evidence. If a haystack gets big enough, the odds only increase that there will be a few needles hidden inside. Whatever they managed to find, they made the most of: in closing arguments, for instance, Cochran compared Fuhrman to Adolf Hitler and called him “a genocidal racist, a perjurer, America’s worst nightmare, and the personification of evil.” His only real audience was the jury, many of whom had good reason to dislike the Los Angeles Police Department, but the team managed to instill considerable doubt in lots of Americans tuning in on TV as well. That’s what happens when you spend week after week dwelling on the cracks in a case, no matter how small they may be.
Similarly, the immense pile of evidence now proving the science of global warming beyond any reasonable doubt is in some ways a great boon for those who would like, for a variety of reasons, to deny that the biggest problem we’ve ever faced is actually a problem at all. If you have a three-page report, it won’t be overwhelming and it’s unlikely to have many mistakes. Three thousand pages (the length of the latest report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change)? That pretty much guarantees you’ll get something wrong.
Indeed, the IPCC managed to include, among other glitches, a spurious date for the day when Himalayan glaciers would disappear. It won’t happen by 2035, as the report indicated -- a fact that has now been spread so widely across the Internet that it’s more or less obliterated another, undeniable piece of evidence: virtually every glacier on the planet is, in fact, busily melting.
Similarly, if you managed to hack 3,000 emails from some scientist’s account, you might well find a few that showed them behaving badly, or at least talking about doing so. This is the so-called “Climate-gate” scandal from an English research center last fall. The English scientist Phil Jones has been placed on leave while his university decides if he should be punished for, among other things, not complying with Freedom of Information Act requests.
Call him the Mark Fuhrman of climate science; attack him often enough and maybe people will ignore the inconvenient mountain of evidence about climate change that the world’s scientific researchers have, in fact, compiled. Indeed, you can make almost exactly the same kind of fuss Johnnie Cochran made -- that’s what Congressman James Sensenbrenner (R-Wisc.) did, insisting the emails proved “scientific fascism,” and the climate skeptic Christopher Monckton called his opponents “Hitler youth.” Such language filters down. I’m now used to a daily diet of angry email, often with subject lines like the one that arrived yesterday: “Nazi Moron Scumbag.”
If you’re smart, you can also take advantage of lucky breaks that cross your path. Say a record set of snowstorms hit Washington D.C. It won’t even matter that such a record is just the kind of thing scientists have been predicting, given the extra water vapor global warming is adding to the atmosphere. It’s enough that it’s super-snowy in what everyone swore was a warming world.
For a gifted political operative like, say, Marc Morano, who runs the Climate Depot website, the massive snowfalls this winter became the grist for a hundred posts poking fun at the very idea that anyone could still possibly believe in, you know, physics. Morano, who really is good, posted a link to a live webcam so readers could watch snow coming down; his former boss, Senator James Inhofe (R-Okla.), had his grandchildren build an igloo on the Capitol grounds, with a sign that read: "Al Gore’s New Home." These are the things that stick in people’s heads. If the winter glove won’t fit, you must acquit.
Why We Don’t Want to Believe in Climate Change
The climate deniers come with a few built-in advantages. Thanks to Exxon Mobil and others with a vested interest in debunking climate-change research, their “think tanks” have plenty of money, none of which gets wasted doing actual research to disprove climate change. It’s also useful for a movement to have its own TV network, Fox, though even more crucial to the denial movement are a few rightwing British tabloids which validate each new “scandal” and put it into media play.
That these guys are geniuses at working the media was proved this February when even the New York Times ran a front page story, “Skeptics Find Fault With U.N. Climate Panel,” which recycled most of the accusations of the past few months. What made it such a glorious testament to their success was the chief source cited by the Times: one Christopher Monckton, or Lord Monckton as he prefers to be called since he is some kind of British viscount. He is also identified as a “former advisor to Margaret Thatcher,” and he did write a piece for the American Spectator during her term as prime minister offering his prescriptions for “the only way to stop AIDS”:
"...screen the entire population regularly and… quarantine all carriers of the disease for life. Every member of the population should be blood-tested every month... all those found to be infected with the virus, even if only as carriers, should be isolated compulsorily, immediately, and permanently.”
He speaks with equal gusto and good sense on matters climatic -- and now from above the fold in the paper of record.
Access to money and the media is not the only, or even the main reason, for the success of the climate deniers, though. They’re not actually spending all that much cash and they’ve got legions of eager volunteers doing much of the internet lobbying entirely for free. Their success can be credited significantly to the way they tap into the main currents of our politics of the moment with far more savvy and power than most environmentalists can muster. They’ve understood the popular rage at elites. They’ve grasped the widespread feelings of powerlessness in the U.S., and the widespread suspicion that we’re being ripped off by mysterious forces beyond our control.
Some of that is, of course, purely partisan. The columnist David Brooks, for instance, recently said: “On the one hand, I totally accept the scientific authorities who say that global warming is real and it is manmade. On the other hand, I feel a frisson of pleasure when I come across evidence that contradicts the models… [in part] because I relish any fact that might make Al Gore look silly.” But the passion with which people attack Gore more often seems focused on the charge that he’s making large sums of money from green investments, and that the whole idea is little more than a scam designed to enrich everyone involved. This may be wrong -- Gore has testified under oath that he donates his green profits to the cause -- and scientists are not getting rich researching climate change (constant blog comments to the contrary), but it resonates with lots of people. I get many emails a day on the same theme: “The game is up. We’re on to you.”
When I say it resonates with lots of people, I mean lots of people. O.J.’s lawyers had to convince a jury made up mostly of black women from central city L.A., five of whom reported that they or their families had had “negative experiences” with the police. For them, it was a reasonably easy sell. When it comes to global warming, we’re pretty much all easy sells because we live the life that produces the carbon dioxide that’s at the heart of the crisis, and because we like that life.
Very few people really want to change in any meaningful way, and given half a chance to think they don’t need to, they’ll take it. Especially when it sounds expensive, and especially when the economy stinks. Here’s David Harsanyi, a columnist for the Denver Post: “If they’re going to ask a nation -- a world -- to fundamentally alter its economy and ask citizens to alter their lifestyles, the believers’ credibility and evidence had better be unassailable.”
“Unassailable” sets the bar impossibly high when there is a dedicated corps of assailants out there hard at work. It is true that those of us who want to see some national and international effort to fight global warming need to keep making the case that the science is strong. That’s starting to happen. There are new websites and iPhone apps to provide clear and powerful answers to the skeptic trash-talking, and strangely enough, the denier effort may, in some ways, be making the case itself: if you go over the multi-volume IPCC report with a fine tooth comb and come up with three or four lousy citations, that’s pretty strong testimony to its essential accuracy.
Clearly, however, the antiseptic attempt to hide behind the magisterium of Science in an effort to avoid the rough-and-tumble of Politics is a mistake. It’s a mistake because science can be -- and, in fact, should be -- infinitely argued about. Science is, in fact, nothing but an ongoing argument, which is one reason why it sounds so disingenuous to most people when someone insists that the science is “settled.” That’s especially true of people who have been told at various times in their lives that some food is good for you, only to be told later that it might increase your likelihood of dying.
Why Data Isn’t Enough
I work at Middlebury College, a topflight liberal arts school, so I’m surrounded by people who argue constantly. It’s fun. One of the better skeptical takes on global warming that I know about is a weekly radio broadcast on our campus radio station run by a pair of undergraduates. They’re skeptics, but not cynics. Anyone who works seriously on the science soon realizes that we know more than enough to start taking action, but less than we someday will. There will always be controversy over exactly what we can now say with any certainty. That’s life on the cutting edge. I certainly don’t turn my back on the research—we’ve spent the last two years at 350.org building what Foreign Policy called “the largest ever coordinated global rally” around a previously obscure data point, the amount of atmospheric carbon that scientists say is safe, measured in parts per million.
But it’s a mistake to concentrate solely on the science for another reason. Science may be what we know about the world, but politics is how we feel about the world. And feelings count at least as much as knowledge. Especially when those feelings are valid. People are getting ripped off. They are powerless against large forces that are, at the moment, beyond their control. Anger is justified.
So let’s figure out how to talk about it. Let’s look at Exxon Mobil, which each of the last three years has made more money than any company in the history of money. Its business model involves using the atmosphere as an open sewer for the carbon dioxide that is the inevitable byproduct of the fossil fuel it sells. And yet we let it do this for free. It doesn't pay a red cent for potentially wrecking our world.
Right now, there’s a bill in the Congress -- cap-and-dividend, it’s called -- that would charge Exxon for that right, and send a check to everyone in the country every month. Yes, the company would pass on the charge at the pump, but 80% of Americans (all except the top-income energy hogs) would still make money off the deal. That represents good science, because it starts to send a signal that we should park that SUV, but it’s also good politics.
By the way, if you think there’s a scam underway, you’re right -- and to figure it out just track the money going in campaign contributions to the politicians doing the bidding of the energy companies. Inhofe, the igloo guy? Over a million dollars from energy and utility companies and executives in the last two election cycles. You think Al Gore is going to make money from green energy? Check out what you get for running an oil company.
Worried that someone is going to wreck your future? You’re right about that, too. Right now, China is gearing up to dominate the green energy market. They’re making the investments that mean future windmills and solar panels, even ones installed in this country, will be likely to arrive from factories in Chenzhou, not Chicago.
Coal companies have already eliminated most good mining jobs, simply by automating them in the search for ever higher profits. Now, they’re using their political power to make sure that miner’s kids won’t get to build wind turbines instead. Everyone should be mighty pissed -- just not at climate-change scientists.
But keep in mind as well that fear and rage aren’t the only feelings around. They’re powerful feelings, to be sure, but they’re not all we feel. And they are not us at our best.
There’s also love, a force that has often helped motivate large-scale change, and one that cynics in particular have little power to rouse. Love for poor people around the world, for instance. If you think it’s not real, you haven’t been to church recently, especially evangelical churches across the country. People who take the Gospel seriously also take seriously indeed the injunction to feed the hungry and shelter the homeless.
It’s becoming patently obvious that nothing challenges that goal quite like the rising seas and spreading deserts of climate change. That’s why religious environmentalism is one of the most effective emerging parts of the global warming movement; that’s why we were able to get thousands of churches ringing their bells 350 times last October to signify what scientists say is the safe level of CO2 in the atmosphere; that’s why Bartholomew, patriarch of the Orthodox church and leader of 400 million eastern Christians, said, “Global warming is a sin and 350 is an act of redemption.”
There’s also the deep love for creation, for the natural world. We were born to be in contact with the world around us and, though much of modernity is designed to insulate us from nature, it doesn’t really work. Any time the natural world breaks through -- a sunset, an hour in the garden -- we’re suddenly vulnerable to the realization that we care about things beyond ourselves. That’s why, for instance, the Boy Scouts and the Girl Scouts are so important: get someone out in the woods at an impressionable age and you’ve accomplished something powerful. That’s why art and music need to be part of the story, right alongside bar graphs and pie charts. When we campaign about climate change at 350.org, we make sure to do it in the most beautiful places we know, the iconic spots that conjure up people’s connection to their history, their identity, their hope.
The great irony is that the climate skeptics have prospered by insisting that their opponents are radicals. In fact, those who work to prevent global warming are deeply conservative, insistent that we should leave the world in something like the shape we found it. We want our kids to know the world we knew. Here’s the definition of radical: doubling the carbon content of the atmosphere because you’re not completely convinced it will be a disaster. We want to remove every possible doubt before we convict in the courtroom, because an innocent man in a jail cell is a scandal, but outside of it we should act more conservatively.
In the long run, the climate deniers will lose; they’ll be a footnote to history. (Hey, even O.J. is finally in jail.) But they’ll lose because we’ll all lose, because by delaying action, they will have helped prevent us from taking the steps we need to take while there’s still time. If we’re going to make real change while it matters, it’s important to remember that their skepticism isn’t the root of the problem. It simply plays on our deep-seated resistance to change. That’s what gives the climate cynics ground to operate. That’s what we need to overcome, and at bottom that’s a battle as much about courage and hope as about data.
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100 Comments so far
Show AllClimate change denial is a big and growing business. Think-tanks and foundations are scooping up the green stuff (alas money) with both grubby little hands. We get major conservative figures like Pat Buchanan spouting this patent nonsense at every turn.
Anti-intellectualism is a major factor in the deniers' success, feeding off the public insecurity complex when it comes to higher learning and intellectuals. Gore probably lost not just because the election was stolen by SCOTUS, but because he is seen as (and is) a wonk. He'd have carried more states otherwise.
All we can do is state the case in clear and if positive emotional terms. Use the damned polar bears. Glaciers. The rising water swamping south sea islands. Increased number of hurricanes. Anything to illustrate the situation is real and growing.
It's your duty to Mother Earth.
Gary
"Modern technology
Owes ecology
An apology."
-~ Alan M. Eddison
"All we can do is state the case in clear and if positive emotional terms. Use the damned polar bears. Glaciers. The rising water swamping south sea islands. Increased number of hurricanes. Anything to illustrate the situation is real and growing."
And then you'll be accused of "scaremongering". It's a no-win game. Most of the deniers don't care about polar bears, they just know that they don't like Al Gore, and therefore the Earth can't be warming if Al Gore says it is. This is the level of scientific education we're dealing with here.
Bill McKibben said it right. Climate change is not doubted on the basis of argument, but on the basis of feeling. Feeling trumps argument every time. If it didn't, then even a ten percent chance that warming was happening would result in policy changes, given the significance of a failure to act in the one-chance-out-of-ten that catastrophe is in waiting. But that is a rational argument, one that does not gain respect.
A friend I know is a skeptic because he imagines he is preternaturally intelligent in seeing things scientists miss. Spends a lot of time on the web seeking out info that will vindicate his position. Of course, he is not a scientist, does not understand the physics, climate modeling, climatology or any other relevant discipline. A lot of ego depends on climate science being wrong, so he is unlikely to change his mind. How strange we humans are!
A contributing factor is the zeitgeist of post-modernism, which has seeped out of it's birthplaces in literature-criticism in universities, to the public in general. Nearly everyone now seems to feel the need to deconstruct all objective scientific knowlege into simply someone's political agenda. Truth itself is entirely a personal preference now.
yes...
truth, and intelligence, maintained within carefully defined boxes, that the larger truths and intelligences, outside the box, not be noticed...
what a fragile, vulnerable arrangement...
I think you at once both missed my point and proved my point!
and all before lunch...I've got my afternoon free!
Climate change is another battle lost because it was fought in the wrong fields: scientific journals, left-wing blogs and the world of academia.
We NEVER learn.
The fight for climate change acceptance must be fought in the mass media.
Only there can we potentially reach tens of millions of Americans every hour, repeatedly.
Our opponents understand this. They fight all their battles by saturating the mass media and cleverly putting the left on the defensive.
You never win a fight backpeddling.
Iraq, Afghanistan, Health Care, Energy, Presidential Powers, Bailouts etc. all were won by the corporate-right using their massive mainstream media advantage.
Until we get serious and intelligent about competing for the public mind through the largest mass media outlets we'll continue to lose every battle.
----------------
Whoever controls the media controls the county. Period.
"Climate change is another battle lost because it was fought in the wrong fields: scientific journals, left-wing blogs and the world of academia."
For a long time I have been advocating that CDers spend more time on the denier sites for the benefit of the people who might be too easily pursuaded by the denier talking points. And, by the way, they are places where you can never lose:>)
For a long time I hated the idea, but with all of the trolls I have been battling lately (and I think they are doing exactly what you say, to us), I may be ready to foray into the war for the American Mind (what there is left of it). Thanks for the encouragement and I think you are exactly right: we must preach to the heathens! I wonder if they will yell at me like I yell at them? *Slips on his troll costume*
There is massive system justification going on in the USA in relation to climate change. System justification involves a desperate need to see the prevailing social, political, and economic systems as just and responsive to objective reality (science) even when they quite clearly aren't. Many people are afraid that their jobs and lifestyles, which are dependent on those systems, are under threat. That's why the Glenn Becks and Sarah Palins of the world are getting more traction as they tell the masses not to worry, than are James Hansen and Bill McKibben.
I have to say, James Lovelock is probably right. It's too late already. Gaia is turning into a big self-cleaning oven and we are the baked on crud. Cheers...
And giving even more thought to Dr. Lovelock, here is an article he wrote in 2006 that is guaranteed to give one a bad case of depression.
http://www.futuresfoundation.org.au/documents/wellbeingproject/supporting articles/The Revenge of Gaia - reviews.pdf
Yes, I've read that article, and Revenge of Gaia. Oddly, Lovelock, as of late, is neither depressed or depressing: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/video/2009/apr/22/james-lovelock-gaia-space-biochar
He sees human beings as having something very unique to contribute to Gaia... intelligence, if you can believe it after listening to Fox News at all.
Lovelock's slide into full pessimism neatly coincided with his approach towards personal body-death.
His bio-char fueled "upswing" recently makes me suspect he will be dead before long.
You mean like a dead cat bounce? Hmm... I wish I could be as connected with actual objective reality at the age of ninety as is Dr. James Lovelock.
Unfortunately, media-based "scientific knowledge" is often as faulty as faith-based "scientific knowledge" in providing the basis for public understanding and acceptance. In fact, few members of the general public are equipped to appreciate the validation processes involved or even to distinguish between peer reviewed science ("just" theories) and pure speculation.
Anyhow, FWIW, there's a fairly good treatment of some of the "facts and spin" at http://www.realclimate.org/
I think the debate has shifted. It used to be about whether GW was a fact. It's now accepted that GW is a fact, but questioned whether AGW is a fact, and secondarily, the relative merit of attempting to reverse AGW vs. adapting to climate change is questioned.
The biggest problem facing warmists is the Chicken Little attitude that we have to immediately go back to a primitive lifestyle to avert imminent catastrophe. This turns off more people than it motivates. It turns ME off.
Luckily, science marches on. In the next five or ten years, the remaining questions will be answered much more definitively and general public opinion will coalesce around a stable point. Meanwhile, I advise warmists to stay away from "the sky is falling" scenarios.
But what if it is?
drosera February 25th, 2010 12:08 pm -- There's a difference between urgently and emotionally claiming that the sky is falling and rationally describing the sky falling. Climate change isn't like a tsunami or hurricane, or even a drought.
Academic.
It isn't.
The main problem with the AGW "proponents" is that they fall into a habit of equating Climate Change with the Apocolypse.
This is a doomed strategy for at least four reasons.
1. Millions of people are actually LOOKING FORWARD to the Apocolypse! That's when Jesus is gonna come down and kick the Devil's ass and make everything hunky-dory. Can't scare the kids by promising them ice cream after supper -they LIKE ice cream.
2. It is hard to imagine a AGW scenario that would put the planet through worse circumstances than the changes at the end of the last ice age. Humanity came through THAT with flying colors, so why should we be so damned terrified NOW?
3. Telling people whose main climate-related problem is being too cold for 3/4ths of the year that its is going to get WARMER doesn't scare them for 3/4ths of the year. Summer heat waves are the time for "OMG its going to get so HOT" scare-tactics.
4. Scare-tactics period aren't such a good idea if your focus is as narrow as most AGW "proponents". How can we be so concerned about people's great-grandchildren in the future, when we aren't concerned about they, themselves, NOW? We brush off terrorist scares, we say they shouldn't have guns to defend themselves, we allow the non college degree holding workforce to go on a 40 year slide into overworked poverty and usurous exploitation, we constantly whine about what "white people" are doing to "minorities" or how "priviledged" they are BECAUSE WE HAVE ELIMINATED THESE POOR, OVERWORKED AND UNDERRESPECTED "WHITE" PEOPLE FROM OUR WORLDVIEW. Other than as "ignorant sheeple" they don't exist. Not really surpising that the folks who we are constantly and consistantly showing that we don't really give a fig about, feel like we don't give a fig about them.
Many people I know who doubt AGW from a non-scientific-skeptic position have the thought: "What these 'rich-folks' REALLY are saying is that they are scared me and my poor kids will be able to hurt them by hurting the environment, and money won't save'em". always at the back of their minds.
It is past time to admit that it is WE that have failed in this situation.
McKibben's last section is a good start to this process.
-matti.
matti;
As to your point 2; see my reply to Only Anarchy above. I think the destruction of 94% of all sea life beats an Ice Age.
A few points:
1) The expression 'AGW' is more than useless; it communicates very badly. It refers to Anthropogenic (man-made) global warming, and it only adds to the communication problem that's part of the larger problem of climate change. (People who understand climate change and want to spread the word are seen--and portrayed by deniers--as over-educated, snooty, elitist, condescending dweebs. Unfortunately, the charge is not always that far fetched!)
As you point out, global warming is now accepted but the deniers claim that it isn't man-made. It doesn't take up that much of our daily ration of 24 hours to pronounce: 'man-made climate change', or 'man-made global warming'. Acronym-laden speech communicates poorly and reeks of intellectual holier-than-thouism.
2) The sky will be falling, and while I agree that crying wolf inappropriatly leads to predictable results, when the wolf is on your ass, indeed you should bellow. Gore's film was judged basically solid by the judge who then went on to point out 9 (I believe) exaggerations or distortions: like saying 'soon' for sea-level elevation of a few meters, where the science says a few centuries. So that kind of exaggeration deeply reduces the appropriate effect of something basically solid. So, I'm agreeing with you...to a point.
"That these guys are geniuses at working the media ..."
The media is compliant and Operation Mockingbird applies to anything that would help the people.
The function of most journalists in the corporate media is to legitimize and spread the veiws, attitudes, and prejudices of the ruling political and business elite: Journalism functions like a priesthood supporting the social structure of a feudal society ruled by an aristocracy.
In journalism-land, there is no past and no future, only an eternal present, which means that learning and memory have no real place and aren’t important.
Journalism isn’t meant to inform, but to mis-inform; not to reveal, but to conceal, especially when dealing with anything that’s perceived as a threat to established power relationships in society.
Brian...You nailed it. Succint and spot on. I think it was Mark Twain who wrote once "I don't read the newspapers. I'd rather be uninformed than misinformed".
I think your view, while largely true in the US's current context, is overly-simplistic with regard to journalism itself. For every journalist that is a shill for corporate and elite interests, there is one who cries against that, maybe evcen more. It is more that they are just not given access to the wider and more expensive media streams and outlets, so you don't hear their voices. In a way, we are all journalists, albeit some of us have more experience, done more research, or, lets face it, are just plain more intelligent than others. We just have an audience limited to CD commenters.
But to say that all journalism is meant to mis-inform is incorrect; that implies that there is no true information, merely attempts at persuasion. That is a deep argument (I think you would find its root in the "is-ought" controversy) and I am not ready to admit that nothing is true. Given that, there are journalists who wish only to inform, mostly I would think that they restrict themselves to scientific fact and documented historical records. Of course, those can always be twisted... Anyways, I think the truth is out there and that there are journalists who subscribe to an imperitive to inform only of the truth, they just don't get much play in the ol' US of A.
Sioux Rose
ERIC: As usual I think you raised fine points. However, I believe Brian was speaking about the species of journalism that the corporate media and its gatekeepers will allow (or finance with paychecks).
This article is a good reminder. I wish Bill McKibben had touched on the relevance of the Kyoto Protocol here, and why it was critical to achieve a meaningful successor treaty at Copenhagen and how that was sabotaged. Even more worrisome, the intransigence of the U.S. is clearly making other countries to tone down their own commitment - including countries that have already cut emissions below their 1990 levels, as per the Kyoto treaty.
The U.S.A. is NOT the world, but unfortunately its people - even ordinary people - have the power to cause misery to people halfway across the globe, simply through their everyday actions at present. The U.S., Canada, Australia and U.A.E. are right at the top when it comes to per capita carbon emissions - facts that are NOT talked about in the media.
Great article and I agree with everything Bill McKibbin is saying. However, I increasingly feel myself falling into despair that there isn't enough time for humanity to evolve to a higher level of understanding about global warming. The only thing that might get people to see through the right-wing propaganda would be several cataclysmic events on the level of Katrina or worse that was undeniably caused by global warming. The symptoms of climate change happens too slowly in most areas for people to really take note and political climate changes at a glacial pace.
Maybe it is for the best. Perhaps this is nature's way of reclaiming the earth. Eventually, intelligent life will again get another chance - maybe they will figure out what happened and try to avoid the same mistakes.
Good point Mr Natural,
I'm afraid it's too late already. Not ever talked about is the known contribution (in some studies a full third of the world's total carbon footprint) of slash and burn farming and cooking going on around the world. There's just too many people.
No effort that ignores the impact of billions of peasants who can no longer afford LP gas to cook with and have resorted to felling every tree on their island to produce very dirty charcoal from old growth trees are going to be successful imho.
The lungs of the planet: the amazon and borneo are under major assault right now. Cat tractors are fanning out in all directions producing roads that peasants soon traverse, so it's only a matter of time if the sea plankton drops off too from over acidification.
I think the Greenland Ice cap breaking up will be the wake up call. Florida could mostly be under water with any storm surge (Greenland melting is estimated at a 20 foot world-wide sea level rise.) So in the boating world, it's possible to get a storm surge twice or three times that. 60 feet of water will wipe out the Bush palace in Palm Beach so it's not all bad.
Maybe it's a good thing, as you say, for the Earth to cause an extinction event and reclaim herself. I can't even begin to imagine the horrible destruction that could be caused if Republicans were able to reproduce indefinitely and spread throughout the galaxy.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
I know the subject matter is secondary in this article, but what were the first words spoken by every white male law enforcement officer in Southern California upon learning of the jury's decision in the second Rodney King trial?
And throughout the United States?
Racists kill. Payback time.
In my opinion, his wife is the one they wanted dead. Otherwise, they would have murdered Mr. Simpson.
Note: In San Francisco, during this trial, there was an advertisement about saving the gorilla. A full-front image of a gorilla would appear on the screen, then dissolve, revealing a picture of Mr. Simpson, as if he had been inside of the gorilla or, perhaps even, was the gorilla.
Subsequently, there were at least two additional advertisements featuring primates.
And nothing has changed in the twenty years since that book was published Bill.
climate change forces one to analyze how unable to survive one is without money and modern conveniences...this is deeply disturbing territory...
education directed toward how to live without would go far...
land to live upon without charge will go farther...
having food available as many places as possible will go farthest...
let's get those gardens growing!
as to how people 'feel' about returning to more primitive times, few things are as irrelevant to the realities of our physical future as feelings...
But, but, but ..... O.J. is *still* searching for the one-armed man.
Ther are also some global warming denialists on the left.
The otherwise sensible socialist Alexaneder Cockburn of "counterpunch" is a full-blown denialist. The strangest thing about his denialism is that, from Kennedy to Sept 11, he takes pleasure in shooting down conspiracy theories, but when it comes to AGW and his denial of it, he is as loony a conspiracy theorist as I've ever met.
In spite of being a leftist, Mr. Cockburn is known to be a fan of large trucks and RV's - spending much of his time driving about the US west in a big Power-Stroke Ford powered camper. Maybe this has something to do with it?
One thing for sure, I'm done supporting or subscribing to Counterpunch, until they get rid of him.
I'm not sure if you are reading Cockburn correctly. He's not necessarily denying the fact of global warming, just AGW. He rightfully questions the motivation of people like Gore and others who may have dubious agendas, like pro-nuke for example. Cockburn's co-editor, Jeffery St. Clair is an environmentalist and writes on the topic regularly. Cocburn himself wrote, along with Susanna Hecht, "The Fate of the Amazon", bringing attention to corrupt corporate policy and deforestation.
Counterpunch regularly runs articles by St. Clair, Harvey Wasserman, and others. Just today there is an article by Jason Rhibal, "The Cry of Nature; An appeal for Mercy on Behalf of Persecuted Animals."
So what if drives an old Ford? Do you know how much pollution and energy goes into making a new vehicle?
You are being pendantic. Be it AGW or GW, - he opposes any action against it, and he opinion is based on his selfish love of cars and driving 50,000 miles a year.
The Ford power stroke diesel is the pickup-equivalent of the Hummer H2 it isn't old and it uses entirely too much fuel. If they were truly leftist, they would move the counterpunch offices from Petrolia to San Francisco, where they wouldn't need cars at all.
St. Clair is not an environmentalist, he is a single-issue western-wilderness preservationist. No douby he will oppose wind development if it ever interfered with his pristine views, while he likewise no doubt drives a big pickup truck 50,000 miles per year.
Wasserman did some good work on the Ohio election scandal. But, his shrill anti-nuclear pieces are about as fact-free and technologically ignorant as anything I've ever read.
Sioux Rose
PDJ: You're either a psychopath or a walking contradiction or both. You try to slay Wasserman for calling nuclear power plants what they are. Since the makers of these monsters had 40-50 years in which to use their taxpayer-funded profits to clean up the mess or come up with a way to handle the radioactive detritus (and don't tell me they have done so! Burying the stuff in some state's back yard doesn't cut it, and no one wants it!); they are in no position to keep creating more of same!
You took the side of Monsanto in the genetic engineering debate. You think you understand Buddhism while calling the Eastern understanding, a long-held spiritual belief in reincarnation, "new age," and here you are attacking Wasserman.
For someone on the left, you're a one man divisiveness act. And as for kids not doing the one-on-one any more, maybe that's YOUR experience as they attempt to get as far away from your scathing criticisms as they can. Strange doesn't begin to define your stands on issues.
I never took any side with Monsanto regarding anything, I oppose all forms of genetic engineered foodstuffs You must be confusing me with someone else. Please apologize.
As far as nuclear electric generation, can I ask you for some credentials to judge these technical issues? I have yet to encounter a critic of nuclear power who has any technical knowledge of same. An don't insult me with your remarks that if someone has technical knowledge, that their views, based on science, are biased. That is anti-science postmodernist nonsense.
The toxic waste generated by the coal electric generation is a far more serious problem than nuclear waste. and even the worst nuclear accident pales next to consequences of global warming and ocean acidification.
Sioux Rose is right,
This guy pjd412 is a troll. SR, he might not be the same guy using the moniker pjd412 (perhaps they take shifts, who knows.) He waxes left for a while, and then takes cheap personal shots at anyone who is against the status quo of the Corporate Police State.
Such subterfuge. I've noticed we've had a whole infection of these left posing goose-steppers here at CD lately. They rotated out old Thomas More and Nebraska Nathan and rolled in a bunch of Pentagram drones with non-names in their screen ID's. They say things like "spot-on" and "reasonable man theory" which is mil-speak straight from the academy.
The sad thing is that our tax dollars are paying for these drones.
At least that's what I think.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
Can't cope with opposition? Demand ideological purity? You need to get a bigger tent.
You've got a good point drosera. But when the I.P. address of several posters turns out to be the pentagon, which has happened in the past, it dovetails with reported programs by CD on Pentagon phych-ops programs initiated by the Bush administration to infiltrate all opposition groups to corporate pollution and war.
While we might be able to bring the DOD inside the peace tent, I'm not holding my breath.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
Cockburn started Counterpunch, with Jeffrey St. Clair, so they won't be getting rid of him. I don't get him either. He's an old socialist and has decades of journalistic credentials, and though no one needs an editor more than him, he's an excellent journalist. There are few like him around anymore. But like you say, he's in full-blown AGW denial mode, relying on a handful of crackpot scientists who've spent years "debunking" the preponderant science. I thought it was his addiction to restored '60s and '70s gas guzzlers that made him so recalcitrant, and hadn't known of the truck fetish and camper habit. He's had a number of old cars he drives all over the country. But I think part of his complaint arises from what McKibben mentions as resentment over elites, like Gore, who are presumed to be cashing in on cap and trade investments. Cockburn sees the global warming movement as a contrivance of these cynical elites just finding another way to cash in. Somehow he believes ordinary people are being screwed if measures are put in place to curb warming. I'm sure he thinks McKibben is just a willing dupe of these elites. Whatever he thinks, the guy definitely drank the kool-aid and sounds more like a Limbaugh or Beck on the whole subject. All the evidence in the world that he's wrong only confirms in his mind that he's right, exactly as with the rightwingers.
Well stated, Ephraim.
I've never had this experience personally, but it occurs to me that I've come to take Cockburn with an increasing dose of salt, as if he were a wise and respected elder relative succumbing to dementia. In many respects, he's clear as a bell-- but when he lapses into certain delusions, he's hopeless.
I mean the latter with all due respect; it always behooves one to consider who exactly is the demented one when perspectives conflict.
There are so many Cockburns about that when I first discovered "anti-truther (9/11)" statements attributed to him, I hoped it was a different "Alexander Cockburn"-- a reactionary son, perhaps! Upon further research, I discovered that alas! it's the same man. That's when I learned that he wasn't only a fierce would-be 9/11 debunker, he's also a AGW debunker.
He's also a big supporter of the Lee Harvey Oswald Lone Nut explanation and defender of the Warren Commission; in this, at least, he's joined by the late I.F. Stone.
I do struggle with the idea of sifting through someone's output and simply ignoring or tossing out the bits one doesn't like, but there it is. Without arousing hard feelings by naming names, I can think of other writers who manifest this kind of "alter ego" in certain categories; when they are good, they are very, very good-- and when they are bad, they are horrid.
· Yr Obd't Servant
This is why we need to be careful to not look for and trust in information sources in the same way we look for or trust in saints or reincarnations of the Buddha.
Cockburn is useful for trustworthy info when he is useful for trustworthy info, useful for questioning of one's own prejudices when he is useful for questioning of one's own prejudices, and useful for contemplating the limits of objectivity when he is useful for contemplateing the limits of objectivity.
Tuning out/ castigating anyone who holds heretical views on any matter -as the above poster promised they would with Cockburn- seems like less of a lefty-progressive thing to do and more of a Spanish Inquisition kinda thing to do, don't it?
-matti.
Cockburn's ex-wife, so I have heard, teaches climatology (or related field) at UCLA. The rumor goes that his denial is personal.
It's the most logical explanation I've heard so far...
I agree with you about Cockburn, who is also a Peak Oil denier.
As to your post from yesterday, if we hit a climate tipping point, or massive positive feedback runaway, catastrophic climate change could happen in as little 50 years. See Lovelock's "Revenge of Gaia and from Wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian%E2%80%93Triassic_extinction_event
The key phrase is used is "tipping point" where linear change ends and we enter non-linear change.
As for Avatar, I am hardly advocating that we exclusively immerse ourselves in 3D films to the exclusion of the natural world - you created a straw man there that you could easily flame.
As for entheogens, they are proven intelligence and consciousness accelerators, not to mention healing agents and visionary tools, possessing both health and spiritual benefits. If YOU CHOOSE not to avail yourself of these medicines, you are free to do so, but...your opinion on the subject has little weight if you aint going to directly investigate the experiential and experimental eveidence for yourself, evidence that is stacked up to the proverbial ceiling!
Humanity is sick on a mass scale and entheogens help cure, and there is no way i will waste my time arguing the subject after decades of investigation
Cockburn is a coward--he refuses to debate his most controversial views. He *owns* Counterpunch, so no hope of him disappearing from that site. Cockburn will not debate 1) global warming, 2) peak oil, or 3) any substantive issue concerning 9/11--all critical issues that should concern us. Three strikes and I call him out. Cockburn likes to make fun of so-called 'conspiracy' theories--except for the official ones which he supports. He's good with insults and lancing straw figures. The old duff loves cars. His case is particularly pathetic and is emblematic of the weakness of mind that is common to many leading leftists. Few of them have the honor to debate in public. Sad, Cockburn got it right on the war against Yugoslavia and he was not a fool following the Democratic Party like so many others more frequently contributing articles for Common Dreams.
As for Bill's article, he writes: "Indeed, the IPCC managed to include, among other glitches, a spurious date for the day when Himalayan glaciers would disappear. It won’t happen by 2035, as the report indicated -- a fact..."
No, it is NOT a fact. We won't know until 2035! Don't give an inch or the MSM will take a mile. It may not be 'consensus' to have included that information in the report, but many of the past reports were WRONG because they have consistently underestimated the rapidity of climate change. Expect them to miss again. The factors causing global warming are myriad and interwoven, many of them are feedback loops, many are like time bombs from the past that we cannot do anything about now.
One thing is for sure, the corporations and governments that want BAU continue to triumph over science and their latest 'hack' and spurious news avalanche was timed to bury Copenhagen. They won again because they own the media. They will spin this issue, like so many others, into faux tale that takes us to a collective future too horrifying to imagine.
It's not realy a straw man, I really see very few young poeple who know about the natural world - go hiking and backpacking and can name the trees and birds, compared to when I was young.
They also interact very little with other humans face-to-face which is going to have vewry big consequences.