Lewis Carroll died too soon. Just imagine
the fun he’d have with the cliquish clan of climate catastrophe researchers who
seek to control science, debate and public policy on global warming and energy –
and then get outraged when someone challenges their findings, methodologies or
integrity.
On October 1, Dr. Michael Mann of
Pennsylvania State University and “hockey stick” fame published an angry riposte
in Colorado’s obscure Vail Daily Voices (circulation
15,000), expressing his umbrage over an article that had appeared in the free
coffee shop newspaper a day earlier.
“An individual named Martin Hertzberg
did a grave disservice to your readers by making false and defamatory
statements about me and my climate scientist colleagues in his recent
commentary in your paper,” Mann began. (Hertzberg is a research scientist and
former US Navy meteorologist.) The
thin-skinned Penn State scientist then ranted:
“These are just lies, regurgitation of dishonest
smears that have been manufactured
by fossil fuel industry-funded climate
change deniers, and those who do their bidding by lying to the public about the science.” [emphasis added]
Meanwhile, NASA scientist Dr. James
Hansen, recipient of huge monetary awards for strident climate disaster claims,
wants oil and coal company CEOs prosecuted for “crimes against humanity.”
So Mann and
Hansen are honest scientists, trying to do their jobs. But Hertzberg and anyone
else who questions the “imminent manmade climate change catastrophe” thesis are
dishonest crooks, liars, Holocaust deniers, hired guns for fossil fuel
interests, criminals threatening all humanity.
Hertzberg’s
views were defamatory, but Mann’s and Hansen’s accusations are mild, rational
and truthful.
(Readers can find Mann’s
letters and lively discussions about them and Hansen on Dr. Anthony Watts’
WattsUpWithThat.com climate change website. Hertzberg’s letter appeared,
mysteriously disappeared, then reappeared in the Vail Voices online archives as the controversy raged and ebbed.)
The bizarre saga gets even stranger when
viewed alongside Dr. Mann’s kneejerk lawsuit against Dr.
Tim Ball, a Canadian scientist, historical
climatologist and
retired professor who has frequently voiced his skepticism about claims that
hydrocarbon use and carbon dioxide emissions are the primary cause of climate
change and present an imminent risk of widespread planetary cataclysms. Dr.
Ball has analyzed Canadian and global climate history, and does not regard
computer models as much more than virtual reality scenarios that should never
be the basis for real-world public policy.
Dr. Ball had poked fun at Dr. Mann, playing
word games that suggest the computer guy should not be at Penn State, but in a
similarly named state institution. Unfortunately, Mann is not easily amused, as
Dr. Ball should have known from the PSU professor’s testy reaction to the “Hide the
decline” animation and other
spoofs that various AGW “deniers” posted online.
Mann insisted that Dr. Ball’s little
joke was libelous and took him to court. Mann’s legal principal seems to be
that libel is fine only when he and Hansen practice the craft, albeit with far
less good humor than others display. More importantly, Dr. Ball does not live
or work in the United States.
US libel cases are governed by the First
Amendment, “public figure” rules and other safeguards that ensure open, robust
debate, and make it difficult and expensive to sue people over slights,
affronts, insults, disagreements and jokes.
Canada, unfortunately, has more limited
free speech protections. So Dr. Mike sued Dr. Tim in Canada, assuming victory
would be rapid and sweet. Surprise! Dr. Ball decided to slug it out.
In
Canada, the principal defenses against libel claims are that the alleged
defamation constitutes “fair comment” or was in fact “the truth.” Ball chose
the latter defense.
Doing
so means the penalty for losing could be higher than under “fair comment” rules.
But arguing that his statement was based on truth allows Dr. Ball to seek “discovery”
of evidence that Dr. Mann’s actions reflect a use of public funds to alter or
falsify scientific data, present highly speculative results as solid facts, or
otherwise engage in something that a reasonable person would conclude
constitutes dishonest activity or criminal culpability, undertaken moreover through
the use of taxpayer funds.
Proving
that will not be easy, especially since Mann has steadfastly refused to provide
such potential evidence to anyone, including Virginia Attorney General Ken
Cuccinelli. That evidence might include Climategate emails; computer codes and
data used, misused or used selectively to generate global warming spikes in
historical graphs; and questionable research or proposals used to secure
additional government grants, misinform citizens or lawmakers, or promote
costly or harmful public policies.
The US
government alone spent an estimated $79
billion on climate, renewable energy and related research between 1989 and
2009 – and many billions more since then. Obviously, there is a lot at stake
for scientists, universities, government agencies and other institutions
engaged in trying to demonstrate a link between human greenhouse gas emissions
and climate, weather, agricultural, sea level and other “disasters.” The
reputations and credibility of researchers and their institutions are likewise
at stake.
Keeping
people alarmed, insisting that numerous disasters will soon result from carbon
dioxide emissions and a few degrees of planetary warming – and silencing anyone
who questions climate chaos claims – are essential if this money train is to be
kept on the tracks.
Dr. Mann is likely aided by Penn State
lawyers, largely paid for with climate research taxpayer dollars the university
wants to safeguard, by preventing criticism or scientific disclosure and
transparency.
A judge and jury will decide the Mann
vs. Ball case, after carefully weighing all the evidence on whether Dr. Ball’s
allegations and insinuations were factual, accurate and truthful.
Dr. Mann’s research was conducted
primarily with public money. It is being presented as valid, peer-reviewed
science. It is also being used to champion and justify major policy
recommendations at state, national and international levels. And those
recommendations call for carbon taxes and other penalties for using hydrocarbon
energy; the replacement of affordable, dependable fossil fuel energy with
expensive, unreliable wind and solar facilities; a roll-back of living
standards in rich developed nations; and limited or minimal energy and economic
development in poor countries.
Therefore, as I have argued previously, the
public has a right
to demand that Mann & Comrades show their work, not merely their
answers and policy demands. Thus far, serious
questions about Mann’s research remain unanswered. The public also has a right
to require that Mann, Penn State & Company provide their source
material, not just their results – along with anything else that may be
relevant to gauging the validity, accuracy and honesty of the work and its
conclusions and policy recommendations.
We the People have a further right, duty
and obligation to protect free speech, robust debate, the
integrity of the scientific method, our personal freedoms, and our access to
the reliable, affordable energy that makes our jobs and living standards
possible. One way you can do this is by supporting Dr. Tim Ball’s legal defense
fund. Just click here
or go to http://DrTimBall.com/
The
Rational Argumentator