
Sen. Lout-enberg?
December 10, 2004
Source
JunkScience.com
Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) complained to the Washington Post in a published letter (Dec. 11) that too much space was given to the views of Myron Ebell of the Competitive Enterprise Institute in a Dec. 2 Post article on global warming. Lautenberg's letter is below. My comments are in bold and indented.
Tell Sen. Lout-enberg what you think of his desite to censor those who dare disagree with global warming ortho-doxy.Juliet Eilperin's Dec. 2 news story on climate change, "Humans May Double the Risk of Heat Waves," is the latest example of the media's "he said, she said" treatment of what reputable scientists say is one of the greatest threats to the human race.
Even worse, the article countered the findings of the world's top climate scientists by quoting an oil industry-funded economist.I dont know what Frank is referring to here. The media usually takes the side of the global warming alarmists!
Such reporting is not credible, nor does it illuminate a subject of significant importance.Myron may not be a scientist, but I cant think of too many people that know as much as he does about the science, economics and politics of the global warming controversy.
The article began by citing a peer-reviewed study published in the revered scientific journal Nature, which reported that the risk has more than doubled for the type of lethal heat wave responsible for 35,000 deaths in Europe last year.Uh, Frank, in journalistic circles, giving adequate voice to opposing sides is called balance.
But the last half of the article is squandered on the views of Myron Ebell, an economist -- not a climate scientist -- whose "studies" at the American Enterprise Institute are funded by Exxon Mobil.Frank may not know this, but the journal Nature doesnt really have any credibility on the global warming issue any more. It decided in the 1990s that manmade global warming was real and that it would only print studies that supported its pre-determined position. In any event, the study in question isnt really science -- like most other global warming fearmongering, its computer modeling that is constructed to produce pre-determined answers. Garbage-in, garbage-out, as they say.
The article fails to mention this shameless conflict of interest.Actually, Myron is at the Competitive Enterprise Institute -- a completely different organization than the American Enterprise Institute. I guess to Frank, all free-market/limited government supporters look alike! Im not quite sure why Frank is throwing stones at AEI for being supported by ExxonMobil -- Frank has accepted campaign contributions from Exxon and other energy companies in the past - more than $275,000 between 1989-1996.
Shooting the messenger is typical strategy of the junk science crowd. Rather than address the substance of Myrons comments, Frank chose to engage in ad hominen attack. And what about the conflict of interest among the authors of the Nature study? After all, the study authors are from the U.K.s Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research -- an organization that is funded by the U.K. government, whose official policy is that manmade global warming is real. Hadley is so predisposed towards global warming that it even describes the science supposedly underlying the global warming movie The Day After Tomorrow as real enough.
The problem with this type of reporting was highlighted at a recent Senate Commerce Committee hearing. Robert Correll, senior fellow at the American Meteorological Society, warned, "The trouble with a debate of this nature is you put 2,600 [scientists] against two or three or four [scientists who disagree]."
Corrells statement is misleading in two respects. First, Correll has the numbers way wrong. Most importantly, it doesnt really matter how many scientists are on one side or the other. In science, hypotheses are supported by data, not opinion polls.
Ebell is not in the same league as the qualified climate scientists who report that the climate is changing before our eyes;
only the intensity and the speed of those changes are unknown.Frank, climate has always been changing and always will be changing -- thats the nature of climate. Im tempted to say that Franks almost old enough to remember when advancing glaciers in the 14th century announced the onset of the deadly Little Ice Age in Europe!
Your newspaper does an injustice to its readers by giving Ebell's caterwauling equal weight with the widely accepted viewsThe direction of climate change is also unknown - and for my money, Id rather that climate warm up than cool down, which is famine-inducing.
of reputable and unbiased scientists.Widely accepted by who? Frank Lautenberg? Environmental activist groups? The liberal media?]
I suppose that depends on what the meaning of reputable and unbiased is!
-- Frank R. Lautenberg
Washington
The writer is a Democratic senator from New Jersey.