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Science/Tech
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Title: The National Academy of Sciences is flunking as the referee in the global warming debate
Source: Canada Free Press
URL Source: http://www.canadafreepress.com/2006/avery070106.htm
Published: Jul 1, 2006
Author: Dennis T. Avery
Post Date: 2006-07-07 23:46:02 by BTP Holdings
Keywords: None
Views: 96
Comments: 10

The National Academy of Sciences is flunking
as the referee in the global warming debate

By Dennis T. Avery
Saturday, July 1, 2006

The Academy was supposed to referee an acrimonious debate in Congress and the science community over the infamous "hockey stick" global warming studies. Those two studies, published in 1998 and 1999, were led by Michael Mann, now at the University of Virginia. They appear to find dramatic 20th century warming, after 900 years of supposedly stable world temperatures. The study is controversial because it appeared to wipe out the Medieval Warming and Little Ice Age, two of the most widely documented climate events in history.

Nevertheless, it was widely published by the Clinton Administration and the UN climate change panel as "proof" of man-made global warming. And now, the National Academy has announced that it is "plausible" that today’s temperatures are the warmest in 1100 years, as Mann claimed.

Really?

Britain today has come out of the Little Ice Age which extended from 1400 to 1850, but it is essentially still too cold to grow wine grapes successfully. In 1068 AD, 938 years before today, Britain’s tax officials reported in the Domesday Book that nearly 50 British vineyards were growing wine grapes. Nor are German wine grapes grown as high on the hillsides today as they were in the Medieval period. Wine grape vines are one of humanity’s most accurate and sensitive indications of temperature in the pre-thermometer era.

More important, the Romans also reported growing wine grapes in Britain when they occupied that country in the 1st century. Thus we know that both the 1st and 11th centuries were warmer than today. Mann was wrong about the 21st century having "unprecedented warming."

The bigger scientific sin of both Mann and the National Academy is trying to hide the natural, moderate 1500-year climate cycle.

The top science journals since 1984 have widely reported on the 1500-year cycle, which was first discovered in the long Greenland and Antarctic ice cores in the 1980s. Since then, the 1500-year cycle has also been found in the seabed sediments of five oceans, in glacier advances and retreats worldwide, in ancient tree rings, and in historic documents from both Europe and Asia. It goes back at least a million years.

The 1500-year climate cycle has no correlation with CO2 in the atmosphere. It has had a strong correlation with the length of the sunspot cycles on the sun.

CO2 may be adding to the Modern Warming, but its impact is apparently not large. Remember that our warming started 90 years before human CO2 emissions began to surge about 1940. When human CO2 emissions did surge after 1940, global temperatures went down for 35 years! The Greenhouse Theory says the Polar Regions will warm first, but they aren’t doing it. The Antarctic has been cooling since the 1960s, except for the tiny Antarctic Peninsula. The Arctic was warmer in the 1930s than it is today.

Is the National Academy of Science fearful that if the public understood the natural climate cycle, the science community would lose the billions of dollars the government now spends on the CO2 climate scare?

The National Academy has a massive conflict of interest that is truly disturbing.

DENNIS T. AVERY is a senior fellow for Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C. and is the Director for Center for Global Food Issues ( http://www.cgfi.org ). He was formerly a senior analyst for the Department of State.


Poster Comment:

Yessiree, you betcha!

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


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#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)

Is the National Academy of Science fearful that if the public understood the natural climate cycle, the science community would lose the billions of dollars the government now spends on the CO2 climate scare?

Actually they're fearful that the public will come to understand that nobody understands, and that members of any field -- be it businessmen, government bureaucrats, commanders-in-chief, priests, and, yes, scientists -- anyone granted sovereign immunity, for reasons of urgency and expertise, will tend to hubris and abuse of power.

But hey, like the scientist said, one has to strike the right balance between being completely and rigorously forthcoming and being effective in selling a public policy prescription.

Scientists are to be given the benefit of the doubt when, and only when, their conclusions have zero policy implications.

In all other cases proof must be demanded. Scientific proof, i.e. accurate prospective predictions. Without these, all we have is an ontological debate. And while science makes use of ontological ideas, ontological ideas do not come from science.

In this sense the earth-centered model of the solar system isn't wrong. The Greeks weren't morons. The model was sufficient to them for their purposes, i.e. the prospective prediction, with imperfect accuracy, of some observables.


"Pigs are smarter than dogs. Dogs are predators."
"Bacon is tasty. Dogs got personality. And these fries are salty. Pass the mayonnaise."
"True, true, bacon is tasty. Still ain't kosher."
-- Pulp Animal Farm

Tauzero  posted on  2006-07-08   0:15:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Tauzero (#1)

Good explanation of why the sheeple are so confused over these issues, and so easily led like a bull with a ring in his nose. They just don't get it.

"To be nobody-but-yourself - in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else - means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can ever fight; and never stop fighting." E.E. Cummings

BTP Holdings  posted on  2006-07-08   0:24:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: BTP Holdings (#0)

Wow! The Canadian NewsMax is on line with the Bush/Standard Oil talking points. Who would have figured?

If this stuff is true, how come it only comes out in pure goob fooler publications like this one - and not respectable scientific journals. Limbaugh and General Motors have money. Can't they bribe some shills and get their propaganda out of the mud?

Actually, this is a little worse than NewsMax if the stories are to be believed. Here is a quick overview: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_Free_Press

Be that as it makes a nice vehicle for Hannity to get his spin out. Most Americans don't know what it is and Limbaugh can fob it off as some some sort of objective foreign journal - right up there with the Times and Le Monde. Good propaganda is an art.

.

...  posted on  2006-07-08   0:37:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: ... (#3)

Bush/Standard Oil talking points.

Really? Could you be more specific?

According to what I see on there, CFP has been accused of a wide variety of misdeeds, none of them showing exactly how this all might be beneficial to the establishment.

"To be nobody-but-yourself - in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else - means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can ever fight; and never stop fighting." E.E. Cummings

BTP Holdings  posted on  2006-07-08   10:08:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: BTP Holdings, Jethro Tull (#2)

To urgency and expertise we should add sympathy and empathy.

There are two kinds of bullies. The traditional bully in popular fiction is someone with strength or authority who uses that power to run roughshod over people. The other kind of bully is someone with comparatively less strength or power, who exploits others' sympathy or code of honor to run roughshod over them.

Not hitting the puny guy with glasses empowers the puny guy to be a right snot.

The second kind of bully, under the right conditions, can acquire sufficient power to become the first kind.

This is something those over 40 should understand.


In a propositional despotism with no clear consensus, it is possible for every person to be considered traitorous by some majority.

Tauzero  posted on  2006-07-08   11:49:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: BTP Holdings (#0)

It has had a strong correlation with the length of the sunspot cycles on the sun.

This is what is causing "global warming." It's why it's also getting warmer on Mars!

"Benjamin Franklin was shown the new American constitution, and he said, 'I don't like it, but I will vote for it because we need something right now. But this constitution in time will fail, as all such efforts do. And it will fail because of the corruption of the people, in a general sense.' And that is what it has come to now, exactly as Franklin predicted." -- Gore Vidal

YertleTurtle  posted on  2006-07-08   11:56:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: BTP Holdings (#0)

Britain today has come out of the Little Ice Age which extended from 1400 to 1850, but it is essentially still too cold to grow wine grapes successfully. In 1068 AD, 938 years before today, Britain’s tax officials reported in the Domesday Book that nearly 50 British vineyards were growing wine grapes. Nor are German wine grapes grown as high on the hillsides today as they were in the Medieval period. Wine grape vines are one of humanity’s most accurate and sensitive indications of temperature in the pre-thermometer era.

Seems to assume that the grapes have not changed. Do we know that for a fact to be true?

aristeides  posted on  2006-07-08   11:57:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: aristeides (#7)

Seems to assume that the grapes have not changed. Do we know that for a fact to be true?

If we assume they mean the heritage varieties and traditional wine making. Little has changed in this respect as far as I know. The last major change was the discovery of how to brew up champagne and sparkling wines.

"To be nobody-but-yourself - in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else - means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can ever fight; and never stop fighting." E.E. Cummings

BTP Holdings  posted on  2006-07-08   22:09:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: BTP Holdings (#8)

Didn't there have to be big changes in the wine grape population after the phyloxera epidemic of the 19th century?

aristeides  posted on  2006-07-09   9:24:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: aristeides (#9)

This is what I found on phyloxera. The changes were in the rootstocks and grafting was done to keep the old varieties.

http://www.win eofthemonthclub.com/regions/spain/spain.html

"To be nobody-but-yourself - in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else - means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can ever fight; and never stop fighting." E.E. Cummings

BTP Holdings  posted on  2006-07-09   9:47:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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