No one seems to know who first said it first, but we do
get the government we deserve. It may not be the one we thought we were voting
for, but that is the peril of democracy.
The American people, Ross Douthat reports, want their
government to deal with jobs, the economy, entitlements, health care costs… you
know, the nation’s most important problems.
The Obama administration is focused on gun control,
immigration and climate control.
For their part, Congressional Republicans have been busy
trying to destroy themselves over immigration.
Douthat calls it “the great disconnect” and he explains that
the Obama administration has gotten caught up in the kind of fashionable
liberal thought that is associated with New York’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Apparently, Obama has dispensed with calls for social
justice and has glommed on to the favorite causes of the lefty 1 %. Would you
reject a chance to belong to the new American aristocracy?
Douthat describes what he aptly calls Bloombergism:
… gun
control, immigration reform and climate change aren’t just random targets of
opportunity. They’re pillars of Acela Corridor ideology, core elements of
Bloombergism, places where Obama-era liberalism overlaps with the views of
Davos-goers and the Wall Street 1 percent. If you move in those circles, the
political circumstances don’t necessarily matter: these ideas always look like
uncontroversial common sense.
For those of you who do not inhabit the great cosmopolitan
metropolis I would point out that as Mayor Mike completes his twelve year term,
minority youth unemployment is over 40%, but we are supposed to be consoling ourselves with
rent-a-bike stations that have popped up around the city.
If you buy a subscription you can take one of these shiny
new silver and blue bicycles out for a ride. You can return it to any
rent-a-bike station you choose. It beats taking the subway to work.
Don’t you dream of riding a bicycle through the streets of
Manhattan during rush hour traffic? Don’t you want to arrive at work sweaty and
unkempt after having sucked up the carbon monoxide and other pollutants that
cling to New York’s streets?
While the mayor agonizes over Big Gulps his crack scientists
ignored the fact that exercising on New York’s polluted streets will cause you
to absorb so many toxic chemicals that it will neutralize the value of your
exercise.
The Obama administration attack on global warming also seems poorly timed. All major newspapers have reported that the
climate has not warmed during the past fifteen years. We humans have spewed
massive amounts of pollutants into the atmosphere during this time and the
climate has shrugged.
These facts have embarrassed the global warming crowd. It
has called on its minions to keep the faith, because the global climate
apocalypse is nigh.
As I have occasionally noted, the global warmists are more
prophets than scientists. There is no such thing as a scientific fact about
what will happen tomorrow, to say nothing of what will happen a century from
now. To think otherwise is to be ignorant of science.
The Democracy in America blog in The Economist reports on the latest research:
GLOBAL
warming has
slowed. The rate of warming of over the past 15 years has been lower than
that of the preceding 20 years. There is no serious doubt that our planet
continues to heat, but it has heated less than most climate scientists had
predicted. Nate
Cohn of the New Republic reports: "Since
1998, the warmest year of the twentieth century, temperatures have not kept up
with computer models that seemed to project steady warming; they’re perilously
close to falling beneath even the lowest projections".
Mr Cohn
does his best to affirm that the urgent necessity of acting to retard warming
has not abated, as does Brad
Plumer of the Washington Post,
as does this
newspaper. But there's no way around the fact that this reprieve for the
planet is bad news for proponents of policies, such as carbon taxes and
emissions treaties, meant to slow warming by moderating the release of
greenhouse gases. The reality is that the already meagre prospects of these
policies, in America at least, will be devastated if temperatures do fall outside the lower bound
of the projections that environmentalists have used to create a panicked sense
of emergency. Whether or not dramatic climate-policy interventions remain
advisable, they will become harder, if not impossible, to sell to the public,
which will feel, not unreasonably, that the scientific and media establishment
has cried wolf.
The Economist blogger does accept that global warming might
heat up again, but he rcommends that we also consider the effects of the
policies that have been proposed to fix the problem:
Dramatic
warming may exact a terrible price in terms of human welfare, especially in
poorer countries. But cutting emissions enough to put a real dent in warming
may also put a real dent in economic growth. This could also exact a terrible
humanitarian price, especially in poorer countries. Given the so-far unfathomed
complexity of global climate and the tenuousness of our grasp on the full set
of relevant physical mechanisms, I have favoured waiting a decade or two in
order to test and improve the empirical reliability of our climate models,
while also allowing the economies of the less-developed parts of the world
to grow unhindered, improving their position to adapt to whatever heavy weather
may come their way. I have been told repeatedly that "we cannot afford to
wait". More distressingly, my brand of sceptical empiricism has been often
met with a bludgeoning dogmatism about the authority of scientific consensus.
Yes, indeed. It is certainly the case that scientific facts
are not determined by taking a poll of scientists. The fact that scientists are
promoting global warming as dogma ought to provoke more than a goodly amount of
skepticism.
Scientists are perplexed and puzzled by the new data, but
not as much as the policy makers who follow the lead of the 1%ers whose class consciousness requires them to adhere
strictly to the same dogmas and to indulge in the Bloombergian version of
noblesse oblige:
As a
rule, climate scientists were previously very confident that the planet would be warmer than it is
by now, and no one knows for sure why it isn't. This isn't a crisis for climate
science. This is just the way science goes. But it is a crisis for climate-policy advocates who based their
arguments on the authority of scientific consensus.
When it comes to global warming, the new aristocracy is
trafficking in a big lie. The Economist blogger explains:
If this
is true, then the public has been systematically deceived. As it has been
presented to the public, the scientific consensus extended precisely to that
which is now seems to be in question: the sensitivity of global temperature to increases in atmospheric
carbon dioxide. Indeed, if the consensus had been only that greenhouse gases
have some warming
effect, there would have been no obvious policy implications at all.
The blogger concludes:
The
moralising stridency of so many arguments for cap-and-trade, carbon taxes, and
global emissions treaties was founded on the idea that there is a consensus
about how much warming there would be if carbon
emissions continue on trend. The rather heated debates we have had about
the likely economic and social damage of carbon emissions have been based on
that idea that there is something like a scientific consensus about the
range of warming we can
expect. If that consensus is now falling apart, as it seems it may be, that is,
for good or ill, a very big deal.
8 comments:
Question: Is carbon dioxide a pollutant?
That whole notion seems strange. CO2's power is portrayed by climate scientists as simply hegemonic... we talk about almost no other climate factors. Does anyone else find this strange? We can't predict what weather phenomena will do within minutes or hours, yet we are told we can predict what the Earth's climate will be decades from now. It doesn't pass the reasonable test.
On the scientific front, alarmists have been saying "science says..." about climate change for some time now, and their doomsday predictions have not come to pass. It doesn't sound like science, it sounds like speculation, and this kind of "scientific" speculation carries significant costs, including losses in jobs, a subject which the Obama Administration has treated as a peripheral matter 5 years.
We human beings are not powerful in the scale of global climate. The Earth is not fragile, and it shows us this time and again, like the global temperature data has the last 15 years.
Tip
I second your idea-- it's more than passing strange that people keep saying that carbon dioxide is a dangerous pollutant.
So... if it seems strange, why would we continue to hear this cacophony over and over and over again? Pardon my cynicism, but I say follow the money. Who gets the research money? Where does the tax money go? Do we penalize CO2 as a dangerous substance? If yes, what will we use those penalty monies for, and what will happen with human behavior? What are the consequences of reducing CO2? No one is talking about these things! It's maddening.
We are making progress toward nuclear fusion power, which will render this all moot. What's the next scientific warning? Too much steam in the cooling process? Too much H2O?
Tip
Consensus: Reminds me of the old joke/story wherein an elementary school teacher asks the kids how can we tell if this animal is a boy or a girl. Finally, one kid says, "We could vote."
"As the concentration of carbon dioxide increases, people start to experience carbon dioxide intoxication, which may progress to carbon dioxide poisoning and sometimes death. Elevated blood and tissue levels of carbon dioxide are termed hypercapnia and hypercarbia." CO2 poisoning is reasonable or unreasonable?
CO2 is a heat trapping greenhouse gas which has had lower than present concentrations for very very long time scales.
There are many forms of natural polution which have to do with the measurement of some quantity and the consequences, not with any "absolute truth" about the substance or quantity.
The theory of lead polution from burning leaded gasoline took 20 years to confirm ... lead was accumulating in the North Pole in concentrations not seen in the ice core drillings.
The theory of ozone depletion took decades to confirm. The ozone hole in the South Pole grew larger year after year.
Humans were causing lead to accumulate and ozone to deplete with potentially significant ethical and moral consequences. The CO2 concentration may or may not be a dominant factor impacting global warming ... there are more variables in this model so there may always be reason for doubt. But the warming effect of greenhouse gases is less subject to doubt.
http://www.globalwarming.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ChristyJR-McKinley_Text1.pdf
http://www.globalwarming.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ChristyJR_130530_McKinley-PDF-of-PPT.pdf
The real science does NOT show much of what the AGW believers try to intimate. It was never science. When they start producing computer models that can predict the pass then we might give those models some interest. The problem with models is that someone has to determine what attributes are important, how those attributes are weighted, what attributes are discarded, et al. By the time one builds a computer model it has been corrupted by the people who built it with their suppositions. NOTE: that many of these models use time periods that fit their suppositions and ignore time periods that do not. It is why one sees such an odd inclusion of data points.
Yes there is global warming and there is also global cooling. The closes that AGW alarmists get to anything resembling a science is the Science of Theology.
I always chuckle when I read about the "consensus". When Copernicus and Galileo were publishing their work, the "consensus" model was the Ptolemaic system that had been successful for a thousand years.
"Consensus scientific progress" is an oxymoron.
According to Mr. Obama's reported statement today, I am a member of the Flat Earth Society.
Where do I go to pick up my membership card?
Tip
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