"Little more than a guess"? You know not of what you speak.So your analysis of Powell research/article/graph is solely your own. That explains a lot, little more than a guess...
You guys can't have it both ways. When I point out that I can speak with authority about Powell's propaganda, basketcase says I'm being arrogant. He even committed the unpardonable sin of comparing me with Lovehobby.
Meanwhile, you make baseless statements that I'm just guessing.
At no point was I guessing. And neither one of you has been able to challenge a single point in my critique.
Well done, sir. Well done.On the scientific consensus:
http://climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus.
You wanted proof that NASA's climate program was politicized beyond acceptable limits under Hansen -- and then you provide the evidence yourself.
Take a look at the footnotes for the "consensus" claim. All of those sources have been discredited. To select one, the Doran study was proven to be utter crap in the analysis I provided earlier in this thread.
Let's review it again.
Here is the actual report: http://tigger.uic.edu/~pdoran/012009_Doran_final.pdf
We'll begin with the statistics. The survey was sent to 10,257 Earth scientists. Yet, as is made clear in the third column of the first page, only about 3,100 people responded and the results were broken down further so that the so-called 97% "consensus" number comes from an analysis of just 77 responses. Just 77 from a starting point of more than 10,000!
Even worse, look at the questions that were asked (also on the third column of the first page). Quoted directly:
1. When compared with pre-1800s levels, do you think that mean global temperatures have generally risen, fallen, or remained relatively constant?
2. Do you think human activity is a significant contributing factor in changing mean global temperatures?
The second question is the one that is so damning. It only asks about "human activity." Humans are engaged in all kinds of activities -- ie, cutting down large forests, building huge cities, etc. -- that go far beyond the release of man-made carbon dioxide emissions.
Pretty much everyone -- including me -- believes that man's existence on the planet affects the climate (although not necessarily in alarming ways). Whether you believe man-made carbon dioxide emissions affect the climate in any significant way is a completely different question.
The survey never asked the scientists about anything related to the theory of anthropogenic global warming, and the results were reduced to such a tiny level that they became statistically insignificant.
The survey is political propaganda and total rubbish.
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As for everyone in the scientific community standing behind the political activism of former GISS head James Hansen and his buddy Gavin Schmidt, that's certainly not the case. It wasn't even true for all of the scientists who had worked at NASA.
http://www.businessinsider.com/nasa-scientists-dispute-climate-change-2012-4
Here's an interesting quote from the letter:
Indeed.We believe the claims by NASA and GISS, that man-made carbon dioxide is having a catastrophic impact on global climate change are not substantiated.
How could anyone disagree with their recommendation that climate researchers should start looking at the empirical evidence?