Thursday, October 25, 2007

The Global-Warming Debate Isn't Over

By John Stossel

First he won the Oscar -- then the Nobel Peace Prize. He's being called a "prophet."
Impressive, considering that one of former Vice President Al Gore's chief contributions has been to call the debate over global warming "over" and to marginalize anyone who disagrees. Although he favors major government intervention to stop global warming, he says, "the climate crisis is not a political issue. It is a moral and spiritual challenge to all of humanity".
Give me a break.

If you must declare a debate over, then maybe it's not. And if you have to gussy up your agenda as "our greatest opportunity to lift global consciousness to a higher level," then it deserves some skeptical examination.
Everyone has heard that Earth's atmosphere is heating up, it's our fault, and it's a crisis. No wonder 86 percent of Americans think global warming is a serious problem and 70 percent want the government to do something now.
But is it a crisis? The globe is warming, but will it be catastrophic? Probably not.
In "An Inconvenient Truth," Gore says that "sea levels worldwide would go up 20 feet."
But the group that shared last week's Nobel Prize, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, says in a hundred years, the oceans might rise 7 to 24 inches.
Gore also talks about drowning polar bears. He doesn't mention that the World Conservation Union and the U.S. Geological Survey say that today most populations of polar bears are stable or increasing.
And while man's greenhouse gasses may increase warming, it's not certain that man caused it. The most impressive demonstration in Gore's movie is the big graph of carbon-dioxide levels, which suggests that carbon levels control temperature. But the movie doesn't tell you that the carbon increases came after temperatures rose, hundreds of years later.
There's much more. A British court ruled that U.K. teachers could show Gore's documentary to students only if they also explain nine errors in the movie.
I wanted to ask Gore about that and other things, but he wouldn't talk to me. Why should he? He says "the debate is over."
"It's absurd for people to say that sort of thing," says Paul Reiter of the Pasteur Institute.
John Christy and Roy Spencer, who won NASA's Medal for Exceptional Achievement for figuring out how to get temperature data from satellites, agree that Earth has warmed. "The thing that we dispute is, is it because of mankind?" Spencer says.
Some scientists say the warming may be caused by changes in the sun, or ocean currents, or changes in cloud cover, or other things we don't understand. If it's all man's fault, why did the Arctic go through a warm period early last century? Why did Greenland's temperatures rise 50 percent faster in the 1920s than they are rising now?
The media rarely ask such questions.
The media also treat the IPCC as impartial scientists, but Reiter and Christy, who were members of the IPCC, say it is not what the public thinks it is. Many of the people involved in writing its report "are not scientists at all," Reiter says. "They were essentially activists." Members of groups like Greenpeace were involved. Skeptics were often ignored.
Christy says, "We were not asked to look at a particular statement and sign our names to it."
Adds Reiter, "I resigned."
But the IPCC still listed him as part of the so-called consensus of scientists. He says he had to threaten to sue to get his name removed from the report, although the IPCC denies that.
Skeptics like Reiter, Christy, Spencer and Tim Ball, who studies the history of climate change and heads the Natural Resources Stewardship Project, are often smeared as "deniers," lumped in with Holocaust deniers and accused of being "on the take" from energy businesses." Gore impugns skeptical scientists by saying "the illusion of a debate has been purchased."
But the scientists I interviewed don't get money from business.
Some get threatened. Ball received an e-mail that said: "You will not live long enough to see global warming!"
Is this what the global-warming debate has come to?

7 comments:

phonebook said...

Nine errors eh? It sounds as if Mr. Gore didn't do his research. I had the opportunity to see his movie last year and I didn't like it much then. The movie was sensational, and I think things might have been exaggerated to get his personal view across. It's saddening that things like this pop up, causing Americans to continuously rethink what's happening and what needs to be done, if anything.
On a side note: Mr. Gore is wrong. The debate is not over. It has only begun again, fueled by his nine errors.

Anonymous said...

jli thik that's ppathetic if they can only show the movie if tehre are 9 errors in it. THere usually isn't tha many mistakes in a PG 13 movies, adn if it is, it's that someone is wearing the wrong color of suit. I think Al Gore is an intellenget enough man to know there is a difference between 20 feet, adn 7 to 24 inches.
BUt none of this matters, becuase Global warming doesn't exist anyway. OUr climate is cycical and is jst going warming up after a mini ice age. It might exist for the next generation, but who knows by then the earth could be destroyed by some freak meteor or by then the rapture could have happened. Global warming isn't a problem except to convince everyone that it doesn't exist.

Beef Sandwich said...

Alrighty. So global warming. I tell you what, turn your stinkin thermostats down and it'll feel like normal. Personally, it doesn't exist . So quit loosing your lunch over it. What a waste of food. I mean, so what if the world is a couple degrees warmer. Some people could use a bit more heat in their diets anyways. And some sun I might add.
I think the Noble Peace Prize has lost some of its legitimacy in the last few years. I mean, C'mon now! Einstein to Gore is a big jump. Now don't get me wrong, I'm sure Gore wasn't in it to gain support or anything like that, but still, he sure did stretch the truth in a couple parts.
And if this rising water thing is truly a problem, i say we just start making "Filtered, Salt-Free, Bottled Ocean Water." I mean, people by enough bottled water as it is. If Walmart replaced their water now with ocean water and left buyers no choice, I'm sure sales would barely falter if any. People need more water in their diets anyways and by taking the water from the ocean, at least lakes around the states wouldn't dry out.

ham sandwhich said...

Hmm, I'll try to make this short. I think the main problem is that its one man's word against another's and who are we to trust? Regardless if it's our fault or just a cycle we should try to reduce the amount of crap we pump into the air, and dump in our oceans. Global warming may not be the main problem but we should try to conserve our planet and its natural resources because when we're screwing up the planet we're merely hurting ourselves.

Anonymous said...

NO! Global warming isn't a problem at all, because frankly, it does NOT EXIST!!!
"Scientific research through U.S. Government satellite and balloon measurements shows that the temperature is actually cooling - very slightly - .037 degrees Celsius." this is from a creditable .org site and also that the polar ice caps have been melting for a million years, so it's not a big deal.
For those of you out there who still believe it exists, here is a way that you can help end global warming: At night turn your pillow over before you go to sleep because the other side is always cooler.

John McCain 2008 said...

Clearly Al Gore is good at persuading people to his opinion, and not fact. And who's to say that Global Warming isn't a normal trend and that people are affecting the climate? Nobody was there when the Ice Age hit. How do we know that the same thing didn't happen then. It could be just a natural and normal thing that our world goes through. One thing that really got me that Gore said was about the polar bears and how it's totally contradicting. The polar bear population is increasing. Next time Gore should use credited scientists and not just a bunch of allied activists.

MasterChief said...

As a Spartan, I feel deeply for all things, even things like Al Gore. If I ever watch his documentary, I will keep in mind that most of it is false, based on opinions, and that it was made by Al Gore. Personally, I do believe something is going on with our world and something has to be done about it. Whatever we do, we might be successful or we might not be. The only one who actually knows what is going on is God(if it's okay to religiously express my opinion, Mr. K). I also believe that in the end, when all is said and done, this will have been just another cycle that Nature liked to put us through. Let's just hope that this one is set on Gentle.