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16 Democrat AGs Begin Inquisition Against ‘Climate Change Disbelievers’

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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The anti-vaxers feel the same way as you. They also claim some kind of massive political/corporate conspiracy is trying to silence them.
Should we muzzle them, then? Should we prosecute the 9/11 conspiracies, the Holocaust deniers, etc? Of course not. Just consider how difficult and complex the subject of climate happens to be and how many disciplines it runs across. Do we really want lawyers deciding the matter? What do you think it's going to happen to the scientific community in the face of inquisition? They will produce "legal" results-they have to eat, after all. Have we not learned anything from our history?
 

fuji

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Again, you are misrepresenting the case. No one is being muzzled. On the contrary, the question is whether they are being honest about what they know.

It is not the science or the research that is the subject of this case, but what do oil executives know versus what they say in public.
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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Again, you are misrepresenting the case. No one is being muzzled. On the contrary, the question is whether they are being honest about what they know.

It is not the science or the research that is the subject of this case, but what do oil executives know versus what they say in public.
Actually, I'm ignoring your "contributions", here. Mainly because you don't understand even simple concepts. Like the "chilling effect" on the First Amendment rights.
 

fuji

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Actually, I'm ignoring your "contributions", here. Mainly because you don't understand even simple concepts. Like the "chilling effect" on the First Amendment rights.
What you are doing is intentionally misrepresenting what the case is about.

It is about whether or not corporations are engaging in fraud. It is not about limiting anyone's scientific research.
 

buttercup

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Feb 28, 2005
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It is about whether or not corporations are engaging in fraud. It is not about limiting anyone's scientific research.
The "global warming controversy" is not so much about the scientific research, as it is about how masses of data should be interpreted. It's about whether one is justified in drawing Conclusion.C from data.D -- which is largely a matter, not of science, but of deciding what statistical levels have to be to be regarded as significant. That, and deciding how accurate a model has to be proved to be, before it can be trusted.

The freedom to continue those debates must be protected, even if it means letting some fraudsters go unpunished.
 

fuji

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The "global warming controversy" is not so much about the scientific research, as it is about how masses of data should be interpreted. It's about whether one is justified in drawing Conclusion.C from data.D -- which is largely a matter, not of science, but of deciding what statistical levels have to be to be regarded as significant. That, and deciding how accurate a model has to be proved to be, before it can be trusted.

The freedom to continue those debates must be protected, even if it means letting some fraudsters go unpunished.
This isn't even about that, those debates aren't affected at all. This is about public statements made by companies, not about academic debates by scientists.

The question is simple: did companies say something when their own internal documents show they KNEW it was false.
 

Frankfooter

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Apr 10, 2015
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This is wrong on so many levels. Fortunately, for those of us who are not fans of Fascism, such prosecution will not survive the First Amendment. For a scientific hypothesis to get politicized to such an extent as to try to muzzle the counter point, even if right, it is against everything a free society stands for and an end to free scientific inquiry.
Did you say the same thing when the tobacco industry was sued for lying about the harm of their products?

You can group the deniers into two camps.
1) fossil fuelled lobbyists paid to spread disinformation
2) anti-science types who soak up this disinformation

Once you start suing those who are paid to spread disinformation and who pay to spread disinformation then the anti-science types, like you, will either have to read the legit science or have to search for ever kookier, crazy wingnut types like Tim Ball (quoted on this site often) to find their 'research'. Then they can join the 9/11 truthers, anti-vaxxers, area 51 searchers and other wacko conspiracy types to their hearts content. What it means is that paid lobbyists won't risk being sued to spread disinformation on the MSM so you'll be stuck with wacko's like Tim Ball as your movement's spokesmen.

Scientists who have disputing theories about climate change will still be able to do their research and publish it, as they are now. People would be free to discuss and argue about the science. Nothing would change on that end, only on those who are being paid to spread disinformation.

From the original article:
Speaking at a press conference on March 29, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said, “The bottom line is simple: Climate change is real.” He went on to say that if companies are committing fraud by “lying” about the dangers of climate change, they will “pursue them to the fullest extent of the law.”
These are the same people that went after Exxon after they were found to have done research that found that anthropogenic climate change is real then went and buried that research and started funding disinformation organizations like the Heartland Institute.
 
S

**Sophie**

This isn't even about that, those debates aren't affected at all. This is about public statements made by companies, not about academic debates by scientists.

The question is simple: did companies say something when their own internal documents show they KNEW it was false.
Depends. If you think they are guilty of fabricating their numbers, or using invalid methodologies to analyze them, or some other case of actual scientific malfeasance, sure, investigate them for fraud, and the rest of the science community will help you. If the reason you want to investigate them for fraud is that they published results that disagree with your position on a political issue, or criticized the methodology of the studies you used to support your position, that is a very bad thing for science, and I would argue is far more dangerous.
 

fuji

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Depends. If you think they are guilty of fabricating their numbers, or using invalid methodologies to analyze them, or some other case of actual scientific malfeasance, sure, investigate them for fraud, and the rest of the science community will help you. If the reason you want to investigate them for fraud is that they published results that disagree with your position on a political issue, or criticized the methodology of the studies you used to support your position, that is a very bad thing for science, and I would argue is far more dangerous.
The prosecution will have to show that they intended to mislead, not just disagree with their research. In other words, that their OWN research concluded that fossil fuels cause global warming but then they went out and claimed the opposite.

The only way the methods of a study would come into play was if there were emails clearly orchestrating the results, showing clear intent to create fake information, like an email from management instructing somebody to fudge the data.
 

Frankfooter

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Depends. If you think they are guilty of fabricating their numbers, or using invalid methodologies to analyze them, or some other case of actual scientific malfeasance, sure, investigate them for fraud, and the rest of the science community will help you. If the reason you want to investigate them for fraud is that they published results that disagree with your position on a political issue, or criticized the methodology of the studies you used to support your position, that is a very bad thing for science, and I would argue is far more dangerous.
That's not what the present court cases are about.
Exxon is being sued because they did their own research which found that the oil they sold causes climate change then they went and hid that research and hired lobbyists to spread disinformation.

Exxon Confirmed Global Warming Consensus in 1982 with In-House Climate Models

The company chairman would later mock climate models as unreliable while he campaigned to stop global action to reduce fossil fuel emissions.

Steve Knisely was an intern at Exxon Research and Engineering in the summer of 1979 when a vice president asked him to analyze how global warming might affect fuel use.

"I think this guy was looking for validation that the greenhouse effect should spur some investment in alternative energy that's not bad for the environment," Knisely, now 58 and a partner in a management consulting company, recalled in a recent interview.

Knisely projected that unless fossil fuel use was constrained, there would be "noticeable temperature changes" and 400 parts per million of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the air by 2010, up from about 280 ppm before the Industrial Revolution. The summer intern's predictions turned out to be very close to the mark.

Knisely even concluded that the fossil fuel industry might need to leave 80 percent of its recoverable reserves in the ground to avoid doubling CO2 concentrations, a notion now known as the carbon budget. In 2013, the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change formally endorsed the idea.

"The potential problem is great and urgent," Knisely wrote. "Too little is known at this time to recommend a major U.S. or worldwide change in energy type usage but it is very clear that immediate research is necessary."
http://insideclimatenews.org/news/1...onsensus-in-1982-with-in-house-climate-models

Exxon Sowed Doubt About Climate Science for Decades by Stressing Uncertainty

Collaborating with the Bush-Cheney White House, Exxon turned ordinary scientific uncertainties into weapons of mass confusion.
http://insideclimatenews.org/news/2...-Science-for-Decades-by-Stressing-Uncertainty


That is why they are being sued.
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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Did you say the same thing when the tobacco industry was sued for lying about the harm of their products?

You can group the deniers into two camps.
1) fossil fuelled lobbyists paid to spread disinformation
2) anti-science types who soak up this disinformation

Once you start suing those who are paid to spread disinformation and who pay to spread disinformation then the anti-science types, like you, will either have to read the legit science or have to search for ever kookier, crazy wingnut types like Tim Ball (quoted on this site often) to find their 'research'. Then they can join the 9/11 truthers, anti-vaxxers, area 51 searchers and other wacko conspiracy types to their hearts content. What it means is that paid lobbyists won't risk being sued to spread disinformation on the MSM so you'll be stuck with wacko's like Tim Ball as your movement's spokesmen.

Scientists who have disputing theories about climate change will still be able to do their research and publish it, as they are now. People would be free to discuss and argue about the science. Nothing would change on that end, only on those who are being paid to spread disinformation.

From the original article:


These are the same people that went after Exxon after they were found to have done research that found that anthropogenic climate change is real then went and buried that research and started funding disinformation organizations like the Heartland Institute.
The medical profession had verifiable, PAST results linking tobacco to cancer. There was a cause and effect- proven beyond any doubt. This is not the case with the global warming.
 

Frankfooter

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The medical profession had verifiable, PAST results linking tobacco to cancer. There was a cause and effect- proven beyond any doubt. This is not the case with the global warming.
Exxon could make that argument had they not done their own research which found that their work caused climate change. Exxon in particular is screwed for that reason, other companies will probably try your argument, but the problem is that 97% of climatologist's and the very vast majority of scientist's research has found the science very solid. For instance, if you've got 97% of doctors telling you that cyanide is bad for your health you'd be an idiot to argue that cyanide should be a healthy part of your diet. Now you've got 97% supporting the claim that releasing CO2 is changing our climate and risking major changes to our way of life. How certain do you think you have to be before you are allowed to continue this damaging behaviour?
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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Exxon could make that argument had they not done their own research which found that their work caused climate change. Exxon in particular is screwed for that reason, other companies will probably try your argument, but the problem is that 97% of climatologist's and the very vast majority of scientist's research has found the science very solid. For instance, if you've got 97% of doctors telling you that cyanide is bad for your health you'd be an idiot to argue that cyanide should be a healthy part of your diet. Now you've got 97% supporting the claim that releasing CO2 is changing our climate and risking major changes to our way of life. How certain do you think you have to be before you are allowed to continue this damaging behaviour?
97% consensus is bs. Show me cause/effect with predictable results- we can then begin a conversation. Until then it's all wind and piss.
 

Frankfooter

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97% consensus is bs.
No, its not.
Based on the evidence, about 97% of climate scientists agree that human-caused climate change is happening.
http://whatweknow.aaas.org/
AAAS is the largest organization of scientists around, by the way. They know what they are talking about.

Show me cause/effect with predictable results- we can then begin a conversation. Until then it's all wind and piss.
CO2 and greenhouse gases cause climate change.
Every time.
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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No, its not.

http://whatweknow.aaas.org/
AAAS is the largest organization of scientists around, by the way. They know what they are talking about.


CO2 and greenhouse gases cause climate change.
Every time.
Really? Humans caused the climatic changes that collapsed the Akkadian empire? Or the Egyptian Kingdom? We know for certain that a rapid climatic change wiped out those entities. As with other rapid changes, we have only speculations. And now, they tell me that they have a definite answer to climatic anomalies of the present? Sorry, I'm too aware of history to buy this truck load of manure. Sell it to the stupid kids.
 
S

**Sophie**

A concensus? Hardly!!

The “97 percent” statistic first appeared prominently in a 2009 study by University of Illinois master’s student Kendall Zimmerman and her adviser, Peter Doran. Based on a two-question online survey, Zimmerman and Doran concluded that “the debate on the authenticity of global warming and the role played by human activity is largely nonexistent among those who understand the nuances and scientific bases of long-term climate processes” — even though only 5 percent of respondents, or about 160 scientists, were climate scientists. In fact, the “97 percent” statistic was drawn from an even smaller subset: the 79 respondents who were both self-reported climate scientists and had “published more than 50% of their recent peer-reviewed papers on the subject of climate change.” These 77 scientists agreed that global temperatures had generally risen since 1800, and that human activity is a “significant contributing factor.”

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/artic...ge-no-its-not-97-percent-consensus-ian-tuttle

 

Moviefan-2

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Oct 17, 2011
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A concensus? Hardly!!

The “97 percent” statistic first appeared prominently in a 2009 study by University of Illinois master’s student Kendall Zimmerman and her adviser, Peter Doran. Based on a two-question online survey, Zimmerman and Doran concluded that “the debate on the authenticity of global warming and the role played by human activity is largely nonexistent among those who understand the nuances and scientific bases of long-term climate processes” — even though only 5 percent of respondents, or about 160 scientists, were climate scientists. In fact, the “97 percent” statistic was drawn from an even smaller subset: the 79 respondents who were both self-reported climate scientists and had “published more than 50% of their recent peer-reviewed papers on the subject of climate change.” These 77 scientists agreed that global temperatures had generally risen since 1800, and that human activity is a “significant contributing factor.”

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/artic...ge-no-its-not-97-percent-consensus-ian-tuttle

It's worse than just the pitifully tiny number used to justify the "97%" claim.

When you look at the questions that were asked, they were only asked whether they thought human activity is a "significant contributing factor" to climate change. They were never specifically asked about the hypothesis that man-made emissions have been the dominant cause of warming since 1950.

Whenever researchers are asked questions that are better aligned with the hypothesis, the results are never anywhere near a consensus (one study in the U.S. got results that were barely over 50%).
 

fuji

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The medical profession had verifiable, PAST results linking tobacco to cancer. There was a cause and effect- proven beyond any doubt. This is not the case with the global warming.
We didn't know those studies existed until after the investigation of the Tobacco companies, which revealed THEY had that proof a decade before everybody else, and decided to suppress it.

Again, the question being investigated here is whether the oil companies are internally aware of evidence that contradicts their public statements.
 

Frankfooter

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Really? Humans caused the climatic changes that collapsed the Akkadian empire? Or the Egyptian Kingdom? We know for certain that a rapid climatic change wiped out those entities.
Have you been reading links that moviefan sends you?
Because that's an incredibly wacko theory you got going.
 

Frankfooter

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Apr 10, 2015
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A concensus? Hardly!!

The “97 percent” statistic first appeared prominently in a 2009 study by University of Illinois master’s student Kendall Zimmerman and her adviser, Peter Doran. Based on a two-question online survey, Zimmerman and Doran concluded that “the debate on the authenticity of global warming and the role played by human activity is largely nonexistent among those who understand the nuances and scientific bases of long-term climate processes” — even though only 5 percent of respondents, or about 160 scientists, were climate scientists. In fact, the “97 percent” statistic was drawn from an even smaller subset: the 79 respondents who were both self-reported climate scientists and had “published more than 50% of their recent peer-reviewed papers on the subject of climate change.” These 77 scientists agreed that global temperatures had generally risen since 1800, and that human activity is a “significant contributing factor.”

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/artic...ge-no-its-not-97-percent-consensus-ian-tuttle

I clicked on your link and the first sentence contains this claim:
the apparent global-warming standstill, now almost 19 years long —

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/artic...ge-no-its-not-97-percent-consensus-ian-tuttle
I point that out because it really establishes the total lack of credibility of everything else in that opinion piece.
This is what they call a 'standstill':



This is what NASA says about the consensus, are you claiming they are lying?
Or are you trying to claim that the author of your opinion paper is smarter then the sum total knowledge of all of NASA and the AAAS?
Multiple studies published in peer-reviewed scientific journals1 show that 97 percent or more of actively publishing climate scientists agree: Climate-warming trends over the past century are extremely likely due to human activities. In addition, most of the leading scientific organizations worldwide have issued public statements endorsing this position. The following is a partial list of these organizations, along with links to their published statements and a selection of related resources.
http://climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus/


 
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