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Whom Can You Trust on Climate Change?

December 8, 2009

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The public and the media, for the most part, have failed to address a key point of the climate debate. Before attempting to educate anyone about how to interpret temperature and carbon dioxide data, there needs to be a better understanding of how scientific studies undergo quality control before being released to the general public. This is especially important in light of last week’s leak of controversial e-mails from prominent climate scientists.

The peer-review publication process is the mechanism the scientific community uses to prevent bad science, that is, to prevent data obtained with questionable methods or incorrect interpretations of data from being published. Solid science benefits from objective critical review, which can result in improved methods and more insightful interpretation of data. There is a body of literature, the peer-reviewed scientific journals, where the very best in scientific data and new discoveries gets published after being evaluated by independent experts working on similar or related problems in the same field.

In the initial stages of the peer-review process, an author submits a manuscript to a journal editor they believe is appropriate for their topic. The editor then typically selects two to four independent professionals to review the manuscript. Frequently, the editor will attempt to hand-pick reviewers who have published in the same field and, if possible, those who have reached alternative conclusions or developed contradictory hypotheses.

Reviewers are typically unpaid. More importantly, reviewers usually remain anonymous, and follow journal guidelines with respect to whether or not the manuscript should be accepted or rejected. For the most part, the peer-review process is geared in such a way that it is more likely that a good study will get rejected than that a bad study will get published.

Without the peer-review process, independent experts are unable to vet the information before it is foisted upon the public. This creates greater opportunity for money, politics, or mere opinions to taint the message. Hence, with respect to the climate change debate, for most people the issue should really boil down to whether or not one trusts the scientific review process. I don’t mean to insult people by suggesting they lack the capacity to understand climate data themselves. I’m an oceanographer and I still need to rely on the interpretation of more specialized experts for some climate change evidence.

A 2004 review of the scientific literature examined the 928 climate studies published in peer-reviewed journals from 1993-2003 to determine what evidence really exists for a human connection to climate change. This literature review, which itself was independently peer-reviewed before publication, found that 75 percent of the studies reported evidence of a human connection to climate change, 25 percent reported climate data with no bearing on the question, and, amazingly, not a single peer-reviewed study during that time period presented evidence refuting the idea of human-mediated climate change.

At times the media will attempt to raise concerns about the details of climate studies published in peer-reviewed journals. Given the rigorous and, at times, harsh nature of the review process, it is highly unlikely that these points were not considered by the expert reviewers who recommended a study for publication.

The e-mails that were stolen from a British university don’t seriously call the majority of climate change studies into question. The evidence and sources are far too diverse for one group of unprofessional scientists to be responsible for our view of climate change.

Obviously, the effect of these leaked e-mails is still very serious and reflects poorly on the scientists involved. It undermines the public trust in the unbiased ideal of the scientific process. Given that there is no better source for climate change information than the peer-reviewed literature, the real shame would be if the public grows to distrust the best information because of the apparent bias of a few scientists exposed in these e-mails.

Kevin B. Johnson is associate professor of oceanography at the Florida Institute of Technology.

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Comments on Whom Can You Trust on Climate Change?

  • Rigorous peer-review?
  • Posted by Ryan Wisnesky , Graduate Student, Computer Science at Harvard University on December 8, 2009 at 5:15am EST
  • How rigorous can the peer-review process be if the source code used to analyze the raw data is not also thoroughly reviewed? From looking at the leaked source code comments it appears that even the programmers who wrote the code (over a period of years) were unsure how it actually works. If nothing else, this scandal suggests the ever increasing importance of code review for all scientific disciplines.

  • Just one part of peer review
  • Posted by Greg McColm , Associate Professor of Mathematics & Statistics at University of South Florida on December 8, 2009 at 8:30am EST
  • I think that this column overstresses what is just one part of the process. The practice of getting two to four anonymous referees to write reports/ recommendations is the primary filter to publication itself. But just because something is published doesn't mean that it is automatically accepted or even acceptable: it simply means that some referees persuaded an editor that the article was sufficiently interesting, coherent, and APPARENTLY sound enough for publication. (Notice not a peep about raw data.) In some fields, articles are routinely reviewed after publication (in mathematics, there are two major reviewing systems, the Mathematics Reviews and Zentralblatt, that publish mini-reviews of all articles -- well, almost all -- within their range). These mini-reviews are not always polite, and while I have not written any of the scathing ones, I have noted errors in some of the papers I have reviewed.

    Next, comes the big word. Confirmation. Science means that the work is replicable: and I don't mean just checking the author's raw data: I mean that the generation of that type of data that would produce that type of result should be replicable. If a work is sufficiently important, people will try replicating it or working on variations to see how far it goes. This is another place where errors show up -- even in mathematics: one of the major reasons why the "four-color conjecture" became the biggest problem in graph theory is because it was stuck in our craw, for proofs had been blessed by top mathematicians and published before blowing up. For a century graph theorists went around muttering, "Will someone kindly clean up the mess?" It does take a while: it took a decade for the (two!) false proofs of the four-color conjecture to be impeached. Even confirmation can take time: it took three decades for Louis Leakey to come up with effective confirmation that Raymond Dart's conjecture of an African apeman was sound.

    THERE IS NO OFFICIAL BODY TELLING SCIENTISTS WHAT TO BELIEVE OR NOT, which makes conspiracy impractical. There are cliques -- we're human, after all -- and we make mistakes and even get confused (cancer is caused by a virus! not it's not! yes, some cancers are caused by viruses! others are not! and besides, that isn't a virus! and so on...); these are public debates, albeit in journals, and even the consensus (the Earth is no more than a few million years old) can be wrong. Which, of course, brings us to string theory...

  • You Are Kidding, Right ?
  • Posted by Kimmon D. Johnson on December 8, 2009 at 8:45am EST
  • "For the most part, the peer-review process is geared in such a way that it is more likely that a good study will get rejected than that a bad study will get published."

    It is the other part that concerns me and others, Mr. Johnson. I have been on enough campuses and worked around scientists and academics a sufficient time to know the internecine battles which take place in the much vaunted peer review process. I don't believe in papal infallibility either.

    When mere professional status or inflated egos are the only stakes on the table, the consequences of corrupting that process are narrow. However, when the future prosperity and taxable incomes of billions of people are in the balance, the integrity and transparency of review cannot be overstated.

    The petit nobility of the CRU and their defenders look remarkably foolish trying to salvage this reeking scandal. If scientists are going to accept the enormous responsibility of determining truthful data upon which governments and citizens around the world will make fundamental trillion dollar decisions for the future, then the entire process should be fully accessible to all, peer and non-peer alike. Let every stage, from forensic accumulation to the full computer modeling codes be set forth for the scrutiny of everyone whose lives will be affected.

    Anything less than this is unacceptable on any grounds.

  • Don't overlook opponents' vested interests
  • Posted by midwest prof on December 8, 2009 at 9:30am EST
  • It's important not to overlook how gleeful skeptics have been in the story of supposedly tainted research. Unable to challenge the mountains of research, they long to find something like this and then claim it offers proof of how shoddy the entire body of work has always been. My morning newspaper offered two quotes from Wall Street Journal editorials castigating the science and scientists involved, suggesting the entire project of documenting global warming begin again. These are defenders of corporate players who have an enormous financial interest in encouraging skepticism about global warming, and they have no science on their side. Scientists with strong egos and flamboyant personalities are more likely to enjoy their work and endure the criticism of opponents, but they must realize how their memos appear to opponents who would selectively quote and willfully distort their contents.

  • Keep your eye on the ball
  • Posted by Cranky Old Prof on December 8, 2009 at 10:00am EST
  • Peer review has its pros and cons. But here it is a red herring. We are talking about informal e-mails among colleagues that were stolen, and have now been badly misconstrued in order to advance a political agenda. You don't have to believe me. Read someone who has actually read the relevant e-mails: http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2009/11/i-read-through-160000000-bytes-of.html

  • Question
  • Posted by hoosier , physics at IU on December 8, 2009 at 10:00am EST
  • Is this the first peep from InsideHigherEd on this topic?

    Interesting.

  • you've REALLY got to be kidding!
  • Posted by Bruce McCullough , Professor, Decision Sciences at Drexel University on December 8, 2009 at 10:45am EST
  • This sentence is nonsense: "The peer-review publication process is the mechanism the scientific community uses to prevent bad science."

    Really? How many peer reviewers check the data or the code? None. Shannon Love put it best over at Chicago Boyz, and her title got it right: "Scientific Peer-Review is a Lightweight Process"

    http://chicagoboyz.net/archives/10481.html

    The real assessment of the article begins AFTER the article is published, not before.

  • Another joke?
  • Posted by LAJerry at NSCS on December 8, 2009 at 11:00am EST
  • "unable to challenge the mountains of research"
    "they have no science on their side"

    Midwest, you are joking, right?

    If not, please take your head out of the sand, and open your mind.

  • Posted by Engineering Grad Student on December 8, 2009 at 11:30am EST
  • As far as I know, hoosier, this is the first peep from IHE on this topic. It is interesting. What's more interesting is that this column is all about the peer review process in climate science, and it doesn't mention an interesting view of the peer-review process revealed in the e-mails:

    "I can't see either of these papers being in the next IPCC report. Kevin and I will keep them out somehow - even if we have to redefine what the peer-review literature is !"

    This is from Phil Jones, the head of the Hadley CRU (who has stepped down from his position while he is under investigation) to Michael Mann, a leading climatologist at Penn State (who is also under investigation by his university).

    All that said, I do applaud Kevin for at least acknowledging that this episode is damaging to the public trust in the scientific process. The UK Met Office is one of three sources from which the IPCC draws temperature data, and it makes extensive use of the Hadley CRU data. The Met Office has announced it will be reviewing 160 years if temperature data in light of this episode. Issues of integrity aside, this has resulted in enormous waste of personnel resources.

  • No Kidding Intended
  • Posted by Steven Lazarus , Associate Professor at Florida Tech on December 8, 2009 at 11:30am EST
  • I am a bit disturbed by the pejorative-laden commentary (e.g., 'vaunted', 'petit nobility', etc.) by K. D. Johnson. This issue is not about anecdotes regarding the number of campuses one has inhabited - which is irrelevant. The _single_ issue broached by my colleague Kevin Johnson is one related to the ignorance of the scientific review process. To suggest that that the informal correspondence within the email of some scientists somehow supersedes, in importance or relevance, thousands of peer-review journal articles is patently absurd. Given the blogger's comments, I can't see a more compelling argument for the need to educate the general public regarding this issue! The ad hominem nature of this particular posting is a diversion from the essential argument stated by my colleague, i.e., we have failed to educate the public regarding the nature of the review process. Significant errors (e.g., those associated with paradigm shifts) within the literature are eventually filtered out over time - whether egos factor in or not. This is not, unfortunately, the case with this type of forum where all comments and commentary ostensibly have equal weight and importance - a form of intellectual relativism that can be misleading as it tends to distort or misrepresent the science. I use these types of examples in the classroom to make sure my students understand the differences -- and yes, the flaws of the process are discussed as well. Note that the scientific literature is not devoid of debate -- rather the contrary is true. However, when thousands of papers are published across disparate disciplines regarding a specific subject matter, the consilience of evidence strongly suggests (but obviously does not guarantee) that the science is generally robust. Science should necessarily possess skepticism -- not paranoia and it most definitely should not be subject to external political manipulation.

  • Objectivity in peer review?
  • Posted by Jack Olson on December 8, 2009 at 11:45am EST
  • In the 1980's, a social worker named William Epstein decided to test the objectivity of journals of social work. He wrote two versions of a fictitious study about whether children suffering from asthma recover better if social welfare authorities removed them temporarily from their families. The first one offered data which supported the hypothesis that they did and the second offered data supporting the null hypothesis that they did not. He sent the first study to seventy journals of social work and the second to seventy other journals. He found that the study which reported a positive result was accepted by 53% of the journals which received it while the study which reported no effect was accepted by 14% of the journals which received it. The implication is that peer review among social researchers is far from objective. It is biased in the direction which argues for more legal authority and power for social workers. Yet, when Epstein disclosed his results, his colleagues didn't ask themselves whether their peer review process was biased. Instead, the National Association of Social Workers charged him with violating professional ethics by trying to get fictitious studies published (source: New York Times, 9/27/1988). The association eventually dropped the charges but noted that Epstein could still be charged with further ethics violations for discussing the case with reporters. When the courtiers whip the boy who said the Emperor isn't wearing any clothes, they prefer to do it in secret.

    In another test of peer review, Douglas Peters of the U of North Dakota and Steve Ceci of Cornell chose twelve articles from prominent psychology journals, written by professors from well-known universities and published 18-32 months previously. They changed the names and colleges of the authors to fictitious ones and submitted the articles to the same journals which had published them before. Ninety percent of the reviewers at the journals failed to recognize the articles. Of the twelve articles, eight were rejected for publication mostly for "serious methodological flaws." Since the same reviewers failed to detect the "serious methodological flaws" originally, Ceci and Peters concluded that the difference in result was due to the only things which had changed, the reputations of the authors and their institutions. Peters and Ceci couldn't get their study published in "Science" or "American Psychologist", but after they did get it published in "Behavioral and Brain Science", other professors ostracized them and they lost some of their grant support. (Source: "Profscam", by Charles Sykes, 1988). Rewards are reserved for those who tell their peers how objective peer review is, not those who question it.

  • Relevance?
  • Posted by cts on December 8, 2009 at 1:45pm EST
  • I don't understand the point of the comment about 2 exposures of poor review process in social science fields. Not to offend the social scientists, but are the publication standards the same as those in the 'hard' sciences?

    That said, it seems to me, based on the comment, that something is amiss with the reasoning in both of the cases described.

    That social workers would want more government intervention is hardly the only explanation for journals' perferring positive result studies. Might these not be more interesting, in general? And, in the second case, how does anyone know that precisely the same reviewers read the submitted papers both times?

  • supercedes?
  • Posted by justaguy , parent & taxpayer on December 8, 2009 at 2:30pm EST
  • "To suggest that that the informal correspondence within the email of some scientists somehow supersedes, in importance or relevance, thousands of peer-review journal articles is patently absurd."

    Who is suggesting this, Dr. Lazarus? I don't think anyone is. The emails don't supercede anything, but they do cast doubt upon the data, the science, and the peer reveiw process. As a member of the public, not the academy, "Whom Can You Trust on Climate Change?" is a crucial question to me. I don't know what to believe. "Trust us" doesn't work any more. And it is not just a question of conducting a public relations campaign, i.e., "the need to educate the general public regarding this issue!" Condescension toward those folks, such as myself, whose comments might (unfortunately) carry equal weight is not a great way to get started on restoring the public's confidence. Indeed it is the same sentiment that infects the emails that have come to light.

  • Pigeon-holing
  • Posted by DFS on December 8, 2009 at 3:15pm EST
  • Apparently, the Chicken Littles of the world assert that there is some political agenda behind the efforts of those who hacked and so revealed any 'discrepancies,' and so the motives behind them must drive the intention to discredit them?
    Please.
    E-mails are public. Remember that.
    Further, the political motivations, and the subsequent financial motivatiions, must be looked at from both sides. Who stands to gain my money, and your money, and our money?

  • Scary moral dynamics
  • Posted by Hannah , Ex-Adjunked on December 8, 2009 at 4:30pm EST
  • I don't know how much "solid" or "shoddy" research exists on either side. Those taking a side "see" only the "moiuntains" of research that supports their side and do summersaults when something goes rotten in the other side's research. The truth is, none of us knows the "real" truth about human involvement in climate change, which may or may not be something that would happen anyway, over the decades, whether humans existed or not. The real question is WHY a possbile repudiation of what seems like a ton of research supporting climate change should excuse our continuing to not care about preserving the environment. China is now outpacing us on unchecked belting out of pollution--but they are also becoming leaders in developing technology that does not pollute so much. Even if it is absolutely proven, beyond any reasonable doubt, that humans had no part in Greenland's melting ice caps thatcould put Texas under 50 feet of water--daily--and threatening hundreds of species with extinction, we should as a culture be less self-centered and lazy and do all we can to not destroy the earth's ecosytem. Polluting, under the guise of "creating jobs," ends up destroying longer-living humans in the long run, as our coal miners and China's infrastructure workers with black lung will attest to. It might have been "worth it" to grab a tiny paycheck for a polluting job that would kill you at age 35, back when most folks died at 40 anyway, but not when the aggregate human lifespan is 80 or so. I say, it does not matter whether or not humans caused climate changes. It takes minimal effort to think beyond instant gratifaction and convenience and truly RESPECT the earth and the environment. If we don't, we'll have much more to worry about than clilmate changes.

    As for the media and reliability of information--it just isn't possible anymore for most of us who are not fully and involved in an issue over many years to "know" anything. It's all what we want to believe from the scraps of information we choose to acknolwedge.

  • Yes, this is the first peep...
  • Posted by Christine on December 8, 2009 at 5:45pm EST
  • Almost three weeks since these emails became public and IHE is just posting their first story on it. Very interesting. This story has enormous implications for higher education.

  • Much ado about nothing
  • Posted by John Farley , Prof of Physics at UNLV on December 8, 2009 at 6:30pm EST
  • The stolen emails don't reveal much, at least not the ones I've looked at. Certainly the climate scientists don't like the "denialists." I suspect that my biologist colleagues don't like creationists, either. So what!

    The emails certainly don't show scientific fraud: even if all the conclusions based on data from the University of East Anglia were set aside, researchers using data from NASA and NOAA (both in the US) have reached the same conclusions.

    There have been cases where the emails discuss controversies about reconciling discrepant data or dealing with ambiguity in interpretation. In the cases I know about, those controversies have also been dealt with in the published scientific literature also. So this adds very little.

    Of course it's embarrassing to some extent for the scientists involved: all their earlier drafts of articles are now public.

    I wouldn't like to see an early draft of my own doctoral dissertation (three decades ago, totally unrelated to climate) published on the Internet. In the last few months before submission of the dissertation, important errors were caught and removed. I got them all. I hope! :)

    What do other readers of IHE think? Do you want rough drafts of your scholarly publications (and emails with co-authors) published on the internet, warts and all? Or would you want to be judged only by the final version?

  • Yep...Much Ado About Nothing
  • Posted by A Chemist Says on December 8, 2009 at 9:00pm EST
  • I just wanted to second the comments of John Farley... Indeed the whole think is much ado about nothing. It is not as if those who are using these "emails" had an open mind about the possibility of human cause in climate change. More importantly, do they actually believe in climate change? I don't believe so, and thus I believe this whole thing about "hacked emails" is a nothing but a hot air! As someone said, NASA and othe American institutions who study climate change reached the same conclusions as the English University. So, ... much ado about nothing? Yep.

  • Posted by Ben Johnson on December 9, 2009 at 5:45pm EST
  • If this is the expected quality of research at East Anglia University I'm enrolling. I could probably sell anything there, if my politics were right. How can people not see a problem? Also NASA data does parallel CRU data because it was massaged like the missing CRU data. The raw NASA data shows us in a 10 year temperature decline.

  • Why So Long?
  • Posted by Richard Keith on December 9, 2009 at 10:30pm EST
  • Why two weeks before any comment in IHE on this globally important instance of academic fraud? Is someone afraid of an apoplectic reaction by their socialist constituency?

  • Three Things …
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on December 19, 2009 at 1:15pm EST
  • I’m certainly glad Bruce McCullough called attention to the essay by Shannon Love …

    “… the way that proponents of Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming (CAGW) wave [peer review] about as a talisman to ward off criticism, a lay person could be excused for thinking that peer review is a rigorous process that is central to the functioning of science and that verifies the conclusions of a scientist’s research.

    Peer review is nothing like that.

    Peer review isn’t even central to science. Science functioned fine for centuries without peer review and scientists who work in secret or in proprietary environments do not use it. Instead, peer review serves economic and social functions related to scientific publishing and does nothing else. Peer review somewhat protects the integrity of scientific media, not the quality of science itself.

    Peer review is a very superficial process more akin to a newspaper editor checking the grammar, spelling and punctuation in a letter to the editor before publishing it.”

    And I’m glad Cranky called attention to the article by Nate Silver … and, truthfully, who are you going to believe on this issue, Nate Smith or a bunch of brain dead politicians and political operatives pushing their political agendas?

    Three things …

    First, I am a mathematician/Statistician who has spent much of a 50-year academic and business consulting career working with social scientists, professional educators, and businesspeople. During that time, I have reviewed “research papers” for something on the order of 12-15 journals … and for none during the past 20 years. I have read so much intellectual garbage submitted for publication during those years it is just mind boggling. Indeed, I once unintentionally insulted a journal editor by asking him if he made a practice of sending unpublishable papers to me because he knew I would take them seriously and write scathing reviews. And, for better or worse, I always thought it was important to include my name with my reviews … although I recognize the dangers of a young scholar doing that today (academics tend to be a very insecure, petty, and vindictive lot).

    Second, early on in my career I published a number of papers in Public Choice (the discipline, not the journal), an academic discipline that one might characterize as Arrow’s Possibility Theorem plus a plethora of elementary and quasi-mathematical treatises that apparently have something to say bout politics and economics. In those days -- like many academic disciplines -- the number of prime movers was relatively small, on the order of 30-40 … and you may be certain everyone knew everyone else. Needless to say, there was no such thing as a blind review for that crew. One would write a paper, send working copies to all of hir friends, submit a copy for publication, and by the time it got to the reviewers, most of them had already seen the paper and knew who wrote it.

    And were the journal editors and editorial review boards aware of this? Of course … they were part of the gang of forty, sending their own papers to their friends and publishing them in a small number of journals that they themselves were editing … and, oh yes, that even includes a few Nobel laureates in the group. Shannon Love is exactly right when she says “Peer review isn’t even central to science.”

    Third (Manley‘s conjecture), there is in America great ignorance and suspicion of science amongst the populace … even to the extent that although upwards of 99+% of scientists may have converged on a particular line of thought, fewer than 40% of the population will concur (natural selection is one example … and I can give many more). It is tragically humorous that …

    1. “The survey, conducted among researchers listed in the American Geological Institute's Directory of Geoscience Departments, ‘found that climatologists who are active in research showed the strongest consensus on the causes of global warming, with 97 percent agreeing humans play a role.’”

    2. “The number [of Americans] who say that global warming is caused by humans has dropped from 54 percent last summer to 45 percent now” (CNN poll).

    And the clincher …

    3. “The biggest doubters were petroleum geologists (47%) and meteorologists (64%).”

    Meteorologists? … think about that! Amongst the biggest doubters of the notion of significant human contribution to global warming are your local weather broadcasters … the guys who, over the past fifty years, have barely improved their predictions of whether it’s going to snow, sleet, rain, be cloudy, or be clear in Asheville five days from now … and they would be completely tongue-tied without satellite photos.

    Third, the idea that the climatologists speak with (almost) a single voice on the issue of global warming because it would be professional suicide for one of them to go against the grain is pure bunk. There is nothing that would make a young climatologist’s career like having a theory and the data that refutes the prevailing theory. The 97% of those who study climates and climate change are “sticking together” because that’s where the evidence lies. And the remaining 3%? Personally, I think we should pay a lot of attention to what they have to say. And when Michelle Macklin and James M. Inhofe start talking about global warming … well, it’s time to turn on Jeopardy.

    In any event, read the short articles at the URLs provided by Bruce McCullough and Cranky.

  • Frizbane
  • Posted by DFS on December 22, 2009 at 12:45pm EST
  • Now that you've pompously identified yourself again for us as the end-all penultimate of authoritative knowledge -- :)
    What one thing has Michelle Malkin said incorrectly about climate change? One should provide at least one obvious utterance by the one who would cause one such as you to watch Jeopardy.
    I'm not her sychophant, but she never claimed to be an expert, either, unlike Al Gore.

  • To DFS … From the Ever Pompous Frizbane Manley
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on December 22, 2009 at 6:00pm EST
  • Omigod, DFS, what are you doing to me. My house in Virginia is under two feet of snow, I’m out here on Hawaii playing tennis 1.3 times a day … and you’re asking me to justify the fact that one could pick any social, political, or economic topic at random, get on line, and within five minutes find a Michelle Malkin quotation about the topic that is nothing short of pure baloney. Whew!

    Okay, to set the stage, first go here …

    http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2009/11/i-read-through-160000000-bytes-of.html

    Nate Silver will tell you, “I read through 160,000,000 bytes of hacked files and all I got was this lousy e-mail …

    ‘From: Phil Jones
    To: ray bradley ,mann@[snipped], mhughes@[snipped]
    Subject: Diagram for WMO Statement
    Date: Tue, 16 Nov 1999 13:31:15 +0000
    Cc: k.briffa@[snipped],t.osborn@[snipped]
    Dear Ray, Mike and Malcolm,

    Once Tim’s got a diagram here we’ll send that either later today or first thing tomorrow. I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (ie from 1981 onwards) amd [sic] from1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline. Mike’s series got the annual land and marine values while the other two got April-Sept for NH land N of 20N. The latter two are real for 1999, while the estimate for 1999 for NH combined is +0.44C wrt 61-90. The Global estimate for 1999 with data through Oct is +0.35C cf. 0.57 for 1998.

    Thanks for the comments, Ray.

    Cheers, Phil’

    There you have it! The smoking gun! Irrefutable proof of the Anthropogenic Global Warming Super-Duper Major-Mega International Socialist Conspiracy!

    Actually, what you have is a scientist, Dr. Jones [and in 1999 for God‘s sake], talking candidly about sexing up a graph to make his conclusions more persuasive. This is not a good thing to do -- I'd go so far as to call it unethical -- and Jones deserves some of the loss of face that he will suffer. Unfortunately, this is the sort of thing that happens all the time in both academia and the private sector -- have you ever looked at the graphs in the annual report of a company which had a bad year? And it seems to happen all too often on both sides of the global warming debate (I'd include some of the graphics from An Inconvenient Truth in this category, FWIW.)

    But let's be clear: Jones is talking to his colleagues about making a prettier picture out of his data, and not about manipulating the data itself.”

    Now, DFS, go to …

    http://michellemalkin.com/2009/11/20/the-global-warming-scandal-of-the-century/

    where you will see the lovely Michelle Malkin refer to this as “The Global Warming Scandal of the Century …

    With pursed lips and closed eyes and ears, the White House is clinging to the old eco-mantra that the science of global warming is settled. Never mind all the devastating new information about data manipulation, intimidation and cult-like cover-ups to hide the decline in global temperatures over the last half-century.”

    Right, "the global warming scandal of the century."

    Please, please, please don’t get the idea that I think those idiots at the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit had their brains in gear when they made some of their reporting decisions, but global warming has been so politicized by a bunch of climatological know-nothings, it’s not surprising to me that some of the scientists have a somewhat jaundiced view about the knowledge of the general population.

    Just to put it in perspective, imagine that you’re a biologist who has been studying natural selection for the past twenty years … and then imagine your thoughts when you hear that more than 60% of those @#*&%%*$ Americans do not believe in the evolution of the species.

    http://www.usnews.com/blogs/god-and-country/2009/02/11/gallup-darwins-birthday-poll-fewer-than-four-in-ten-believe-in-evolution.html

    Sorry to cut out on you like this, but I’m off to the courts.

    Happy holidays … and no more questions until 2010.

  • Thank you, Frizbane
  • Posted by DFS on December 28, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Enjoy your tennis in Hawaii. Enjoy your probably still snow-covered life when you return.

    Thanks for the information. When Michelle too viciously attacked Newt Gingrich -- for the wrong reason, since an obvious reason was already there, and then for the right reason, even though she should have then directed her 'attack' towards another -- I have not been in lockstep with her.

    However, I see no reason to abandon Gauss's life goal.