nelsondogg
Footballguy
This just like when Piltdown man disproved evolution years ago.
I think a lot of theories get dismissed because of their association with other theories.How many of the AGW people are also anti-evolutionist?Neither do 9/11 "Truthers", or "Birthers", or revisionist historians who believe the Holocaust never happened. But, in large part because of the internet, these guys all write boatloads of stuff that a lot of people avidly read because they want to believe it. The difference with the climate change skeptics is that they have some mighty powerful donors; otherwise, they'd be in the same boat as the rest of these conspiratorial people I've mentioned here. I already tend to classify them there.As they say in detective work, follow the money. People who don't want to toe the line on global warming don't get invited to the first class deluxe hotels in Tokyo and Geneva.
I can tolerate you going after GW, tough guy, but taking stabs at Wiki?... You've gone too far! I take off my cyber glove and strike you across the cyber cheek.Anyway, thanks for the chuckle. "Typical Wikipedia slime job" is one of the quaintest terms I've read in a while. Well, he may or may not be linked to the oil industry, but he isTypical Wikipedia slime job....This story is just getting out, but there are other sources....OneI'm curious about climate change, because I think it's genuinely important to determine whether it's a real thing, whether it poses a real threat, and whether we can do anything about it if it does. I don't pretend to know the answer to any of this, so I'm always looking for good, unbiased info.
With this, I got as far as the byline.
Wikipedia:
Timothy Francis Ball, Ph.D., is a retired university professor and global warming skeptic. He heads the Natural Resources Stewardship Project and is the former head of Friends of Science, a non-profit organization, closely linked to the oil industry...
Two
Three
Four
Justify the average family to spend over $1,000 per year more on energy?!jon_mx said:We are spending millions of dollars to study the problem. Perhaps my rhetoric is a bit over the top, but for 15 years the other side was not covered one bit in the media. Anyone who suggested we were not all going to die in 20 years was the equivalent to a holocaust denier. The models have intentionally been grossly over-estimated the problems and they need to be called to the mat for it. Especially since they are using phony numbers to justify the average family to spend over $1000 per year more on energy. That is theft in my opinion.
Can you unpack that statement just a little bit for us...preferably with a link or two?I don't know about you, but in the last ten years my family has probably cut our consumption of fossil fuels by over 40% and has cut our consumption of electricity by over 30%. Don't know what it averages for the entire year, but at least from Oct-Apr, my heating/cooling bill is down by over two-thirds. So for me, it's more like SAVING thousands/year...not spending an extra $1,000/year more on energy.
Well, I hate to use unreliable source, but according to the Obama Administration.....Cap and Trade to cost Families $1760 per yearJustify the average family to spend over $1,000 per year more on energy?!jon_mx said:We are spending millions of dollars to study the problem. Perhaps my rhetoric is a bit over the top, but for 15 years the other side was not covered one bit in the media. Anyone who suggested we were not all going to die in 20 years was the equivalent to a holocaust denier. The models have intentionally been grossly over-estimated the problems and they need to be called to the mat for it. Especially since they are using phony numbers to justify the average family to spend over $1000 per year more on energy. That is theft in my opinion.Can you unpack that statement just a little bit for us...preferably with a link or two?I don't know about you, but in the last ten years my family has probably cut our consumption of fossil fuels by over 40% and has cut our consumption of electricity by over 30%. Don't know what it averages for the entire year, but at least from Oct-Apr, my heating/cooling bill is down by over two-thirds. So for me, it's more like SAVING thousands/year...not spending an extra $1,000/year more on energy.
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Couple questions for you as a follow-up:1. IYHO, is cap and trade only about global warming...or is it also about energy independence?! No schtick, a serious question.jon_mx said:Well, I hate to use unreliable source, but according to the Obama Administration.....
Cap and Trade to cost Families $1760 per year
It has little to do with global warming, it has everything to do with making everything more expensive and driving consumption down. Liberals have been trying to do this long before they even conceived of global warming. Liberals see growth and development as evil and want to stop it, and the environment is often the tool used to achieve that end. I really can't buy the argument that liberals are driven by energy independence since they fight any and all efforts to get domestic sources of coal, natural gas and oil. And certainly nuclear power is fought every step of the way. So energy independence, I don't think so.Couple questions for you as a follow-up:1. IYHO, is cap and trade only about global warming...or is it also about energy independence?! No schtick, a serious question.jon_mx said:Well, I hate to use unreliable source, but according to the Obama Administration.....
Cap and Trade to cost Families $1760 per year
2. The average $$$ per family/household isn't a "flat tax," but is based upon average consumption rates from current/traditional fuel sources, correct? So if the average family were facing an increase in expenditures of $1,760 per year, might there be incentive for at least a good percentage of those families to alter their consumption practices? Might there be incentive for new and/or more-efficient/affordable fuels to be introduced into the marketplace?
I'll shut up and listen.![]()
See though, here's where you lose me (and, I assume, a lot of other people). I'm an independent...and my take is that "liberals"/Democrats don't see growth and development as evil. Growth and development equals jobs, and more jobs equal higher standards of living for everyone! Rather, they see growth and development that makes other pay for said growth and development as being inappropriate. An example: asthma. The number of cases of asthma in our country have skyrocketed...at the same time that an ever-growing percentage of our population is living in urban/suburban areas and the parts per million (PPM) of many particles/chemicals believed to be a major contributing factor in asthma and other respiratory illnesses have been on the rise as more and more pollution is deposited into our air/water. Coincidence? Maybe...although most people in the scientific community would seem to attribute these PPM increases directly to the actions of human consumption.So, should the people breathing the air and drinking the water be the ones to pay for our growth and development as a society with their health and skyrocketing health care costs...or should the organizations directly profiting from the building of said products and infrastructure pay for it? If answering that question in the latter makes a person a flaming, bra-burning, pot-smoking liberal (instead of an independent), then I guess pass me the blunt and hand me a lighter.Liberals see growth and development as evil and want to stop it, and the environment is often the tool used to achieve that end.

How did you cut your consumption of fossil fuel and electricity? BTW - good job.datonn said:Justify the average family to spend over $1,000 per year more on energy?!jon_mx said:We are spending millions of dollars to study the problem. Perhaps my rhetoric is a bit over the top, but for 15 years the other side was not covered one bit in the media. Anyone who suggested we were not all going to die in 20 years was the equivalent to a holocaust denier. The models have intentionally been grossly over-estimated the problems and they need to be called to the mat for it. Especially since they are using phony numbers to justify the average family to spend over $1000 per year more on energy. That is theft in my opinion.Can you unpack that statement just a little bit for us...preferably with a link or two?I don't know about you, but in the last ten years my family has probably cut our consumption of fossil fuels by over 40% and has cut our consumption of electricity by over 30%. Don't know what it averages for the entire year, but at least from Oct-Apr, my heating/cooling bill is down by over two-thirds. So for me, it's more like SAVING thousands/year...not spending an extra $1,000/year more on energy.
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How did this thread not end right here? Too much to read?linkETA: there is some good additional discussion in the comments.The CRU hack
Filed under:
* Climate Science
— group @ 20 November 2009
As many of you will be aware, a large number of emails from the University of East Anglia webmail server were hacked recently (Despite some confusion generated by Anthony Watts, this has absolutely nothing to do with the Hadley Centre which is a completely separate institution). As people are also no doubt aware the breaking into of computers and releasing private information is illegal, and regardless of how they were obtained, posting private correspondence without permission is unethical. We therefore aren’t going to post any of the emails here. We were made aware of the existence of this archive last Tuesday morning when the hackers attempted to upload it to RealClimate, and we notified CRU of their possible security breach later that day.
Nonetheless, these emails (a presumably careful selection of (possibly edited?) correspondence dating back to 1996 and as recently as Nov 12) are being widely circulated, and therefore require some comment. Some of them involve people here (and the archive includes the first RealClimate email we ever sent out to colleagues) and include discussions we’ve had with the CRU folk on topics related to the surface temperature record and some paleo-related issues, mainly to ensure that posting were accurate.
Since emails are normally intended to be private, people writing them are, shall we say, somewhat freer in expressing themselves than they would in a public statement. For instance, we are sure it comes as no shock to know that many scientists do not hold Steve McIntyre in high regard. Nor that a large group of them thought that the Soon and Baliunas (2003), Douglass et al (2008) or McClean et al (2009) papers were not very good (to say the least) and should not have been published. These sentiments have been made abundantly clear in the literature (though possibly less bluntly).
More interesting is what is not contained in the emails. There is no evidence of any worldwide conspiracy, no mention of George Soros nefariously funding climate research, no grand plan to ‘get rid of the MWP’, no admission that global warming is a hoax, no evidence of the falsifying of data, and no ‘marching orders’ from our socialist/communist/vegetarian overlords. The truly paranoid will put this down to the hackers also being in on the plot though.
Instead, there is a peek into how scientists actually interact and the conflicts show that the community is a far cry from the monolith that is sometimes imagined. People working constructively to improve joint publications; scientists who are friendly and agree on many of the big picture issues, disagreeing at times about details and engaging in ‘robust’ discussions; Scientists expressing frustration at the misrepresentation of their work in politicized arenas and complaining when media reports get it wrong; Scientists resenting the time they have to take out of their research to deal with over-hyped nonsense. None of this should be shocking.
It’s obvious that the noise-generating components of the blogosphere will generate a lot of noise about this. but it’s important to remember that science doesn’t work because people are polite at all times. Gravity isn’t a useful theory because Newton was a nice person. QED isn’t powerful because Feynman was respectful of other people around him. Science works because different groups go about trying to find the best approximations of the truth, and are generally very competitive about that. That the same scientists can still all agree on the wording of an IPCC chapter for instance is thus even more remarkable.
No doubt, instances of cherry-picked and poorly-worded “gotcha” phrases will be pulled out of context. One example is worth mentioning quickly. Phil Jones in discussing the presentation of temperature reconstructions stated that “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) and from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline.” The paper in question is the Mann, Bradley and Hughes (1998) Nature paper on the original multiproxy temperature reconstruction, and the ‘trick’ is just to plot the instrumental records along with reconstruction so that the context of the recent warming is clear. Scientists often use the term “trick” to refer to a “a good way to deal with a problem”, rather than something that is “secret”, and so there is nothing problematic in this at all. As for the ‘decline’, it is well known that Keith Briffa’s maximum latewood tree ring density proxy diverges from the temperature records after 1960 (this is more commonly known as the “divergence problem”–see e.g. the recent discussion in this paper) and has been discussed in the literature since Briffa et al in Nature in 1998 (Nature, 391, 678-682). Those authors have always recommend not using the post 1960 part of their reconstruction, and so while ‘hiding’ is probably a poor choice of words (since it is ‘hidden’ in plain sight), not using the data in the plot is completely appropriate, as is further research to understand why this happens.
The timing of this particular episode is probably not coincidental. But if cherry-picked out-of-context phrases from stolen personal emails is the only response to the weight of the scientific evidence for the human influence on climate change, then there probably isn’t much to it.
There are of course lessons to be learned. Clearly no-one would have gone to this trouble if the academic object of study was the mating habits of European butterflies. That community’s internal discussions are probably safe from the public eye. But it is important to remember that emails do seem to exist forever, and that there is always a chance that they will be inadvertently released. Most people do not act as if this is true, but they probably should.
It is tempting to point fingers and declare that people should not have been so open with their thoughts, but who amongst us would really be happy to have all of their email made public?
Let he who is without PIN cast the the first stone.
Update: The official UEA statement is as follows:
“We are aware that information from a server used for research information
in one area of the university has been made available on public websites,”
the spokesman stated.
“Because of the volume of this information we cannot currently confirm
that all of this material is genuine.
“This information has been obtained and published without our permission
and we took immediate action to remove the server in question from
operation.
“We are undertaking a thorough internal investigation and we have involved
the police in this enquiry.”
On electricity, my wife and I worked very hard to identify all the "vampire load" that existed in our house, then changed the way things like computers, televisions, printers, etc. are accessing said electricity. If things don't have to be on overnight, they are unplugged (not just turned off). We also upgraded the wiring in our 1913 home and upgraded our 2nd/3rd floor panel from fuses to circuit breakers...which helps a bit. Finally, we insulated the HECK out of the home! It's 3,400 square feet...and when we moved in, it had a strip of burlap in the attic under the floor boards as the only, ahem, "insulation" to be found in the entire home! February 2003, our heating bill was $630! February 2009, our heating bill was well under $200. And that also has to factor in the increased costs per therm/unit over the past six years too. Part of that is also due to our upgrading to a new boiler (steam heat) that is roughly 25% more efficient than the previous unit. Other than that, we've been slowly replacing older appliances, light bulbs/fixtures, etc. with new high-efficiency units as the need (and our budget) has allowed.Related to fossil fuels, a lot of that reduction has come from me religiously pursuing new and creative ways to NOT have to drive to meet face-to-face with clients and partners for my business. I ride my bike or walk to pretty much any/all meetings within two miles of my home unless it is extremely cold or icy during Winter months...and I've been using VoIP, web cams and any number of other technologies to avoid having to spend hours in the car in uncomfortable clothes, just to have a handshake and make small talk with clients. When I can't get out of those in-person meetings though, I make sure to make a day of it...scheduling as many meetings in that city/area as I possibly can while I'm in town (with people who I know might eventually request a meeting with me)...to reduce the overall quantity of total trips required in a year. I was joking with my wife on Thursday, after I got back from a meeting in New Ulm, MN. I asked her: "When was the last time I actually had to leave the house for a meeting?" She told me it was the first week of October...about five weeks earlier. I hadn't put ONE MILE on our car in over five weeks...while continuing to make sure our small firm of 12 designers remained 100% operational.How did you cut your consumption of fossil fuel and electricity? BTW - good job.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columni...e-warmists.htmlMatthias said:Jesus.
Look at what is happening to the coral reefs. Look at what is happening to the arctic ice cap. Look is what happening to plant/animal growth and migration patterns.
Do you yahoos really want to say that all of this is just great, business as usual because you can find some PhD somewhere to say that it is?
Because some people don't want to accept the truth.How did this thread not end right here? Too much to read?
The term "trick" as it's used in math and science is explained in detail in the comments section of the article I posted earlier I highly recommend reading that comment thread. The author responds to hundreds of comments individually.ETA: I tracked down the links to "trick" as it relates to math & science in the comments and here they are.adamjw2 said:Let's look at only the facts of what occurred here:
1. The information was retrieved, but without their consent.
2. All of the information has not yet been released, only small samples which help the skeptics' anti-global warming view.
3. The small portion of information that has been released to the public contains multiple emails attempting to hide information that would hurt the Global Warming agenda.
One of the emails written in 1999 by Dr. Phil Jones actually says:
"just completed Mike's Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (i.e., from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith's to hide the decline".
Dr. Jones confirmed the email is genuine.
Hopefully more details will help provide a clearer picture, but for now there seems to be, at the least, something fishy here.
the scientists discuss manipulating data to get their preferred results. The most prominently featured scientists are paleoclimatologists, who reconstruct historical temperatures and who were responsible for a series of reconstructions that seemed to show a sharp rise in temperatures well above historical variation in recent decades.In 1999, Phil Jones, the head of CRU, wrote to activist scientist Michael “Mike” Mann that he has just “completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps … to hide the decline”(0942777075). This refers to a decline in temperatures in recent years revealed by the data he had been reconstructing that conflicted with the observed temperature record. The inconvenient data was therefore hidden under a completely different set of data. Some “trick.”Mann later (2003) announced that “it would be nice to try to ‘contain’ the putative ‘MWP,’ even if we don’t yet have a hemispheric mean reconstruction available that far back” (1054736277). The MWP is the Medieval Warm Period, when temperatures may have been higher than today. Mann’s desire to “contain” this phenomenon even in the absence of any data suggesting that this is possible is a clear indication of a desire to manipulate the science. There are other examples of putting political/presentational considerations before the science throughout the collection.
From the article I posted earlier:the scientists discuss manipulating data to get their preferred results. The most prominently featured scientists are paleoclimatologists, who reconstruct historical temperatures and who were responsible for a series of reconstructions that seemed to show a sharp rise in temperatures well above historical variation in recent decades.In 1999, Phil Jones, the head of CRU, wrote to activist scientist Michael “Mike” Mann that he has just “completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps … to hide the decline”(0942777075). This refers to a decline in temperatures in recent years revealed by the data he had been reconstructing that conflicted with the observed temperature record. The inconvenient data was therefore hidden under a completely different set of data. Some “trick.”Mann later (2003) announced that “it would be nice to try to ‘contain’ the putative ‘MWP,’ even if we don’t yet have a hemispheric mean reconstruction available that far back” (1054736277). The MWP is the Medieval Warm Period, when temperatures may have been higher than today. Mann’s desire to “contain” this phenomenon even in the absence of any data suggesting that this is possible is a clear indication of a desire to manipulate the science. There are other examples of putting political/presentational considerations before the science throughout the collection.
One example is worth mentioning quickly. Phil Jones in discussing the presentation of temperature reconstructions stated that “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) and from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline.” The paper in question is the Mann, Bradley and Hughes (1998) Nature paper on the original multiproxy temperature reconstruction, and the ‘trick’ is just to plot the instrumental records along with reconstruction so that the context of the recent warming is clear. Scientists often use the term “trick” to refer to a “a good way to deal with a problem”, rather than something that is “secret”, and so there is nothing problematic in this at all. As for the ‘decline’, it is well known that Keith Briffa’s maximum latewood tree ring density proxy diverges from the temperature records after 1960 (this is more commonly known as the “divergence problem”–see e.g. the recent discussion in this paper) and has been discussed in the literature since Briffa et al in Nature in 1998 (Nature, 391, 678-682). Those authors have always recommend not using the post 1960 part of their reconstruction, and so while ‘hiding’ is probably a poor choice of words (since it is ‘hidden’ in plain sight), not using the data in the plot is completely appropriate, as is further research to understand why this happens.
The real question is, why is their science so secretive. This information was gathered in response to a freedom of information request, which was eventually denied. But apparently someone wanted to release anyways. This information has already been somewhat scrubbed, so it is surprising it is as damning as it was. If this is such awesome indisputable science, let the data be open for review. Their is no honesty in this debate, it is all spin and there is no reason to believe any of it.adamjw2 said:Let's look at only the facts of what occurred here:1. The information was retrieved, but without their consent.2. All of the information has not yet been released, only small samples which help the skeptics' anti-global warming view.3. The small portion of information that has been released to the public contains multiple emails attempting to hide information that would hurt the Global Warming agenda. One of the emails written in 1999 by Dr. Phil Jones actually says:"just completed Mike's Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (i.e., from 1981 onwards) and from 1961 for Keith's to hide the decline".Dr. Jones confirmed the email is genuine. Hopefully more details will help provide a clearer picture, but for now there seems to be, at the least, something fishy here.
So this whole thing is just someone not understanding what they read, then making incorrect conclusions supporting their delusions about fictional conspiracies?WOW, that is going to leave a welt.From the article I posted earlier:the scientists discuss manipulating data to get their preferred results. The most prominently featured scientists are paleoclimatologists, who reconstruct historical temperatures and who were responsible for a series of reconstructions that seemed to show a sharp rise in temperatures well above historical variation in recent decades.In 1999, Phil Jones, the head of CRU, wrote to activist scientist Michael "Mike" Mann that he has just "completed Mike's Nature trick of adding in the real temps … to hide the decline"(0942777075). This refers to a decline in temperatures in recent years revealed by the data he had been reconstructing that conflicted with the observed temperature record. The inconvenient data was therefore hidden under a completely different set of data. Some "trick."Mann later (2003) announced that "it would be nice to try to 'contain' the putative 'MWP,' even if we don't yet have a hemispheric mean reconstruction available that far back" (1054736277). The MWP is the Medieval Warm Period, when temperatures may have been higher than today. Mann's desire to "contain" this phenomenon even in the absence of any data suggesting that this is possible is a clear indication of a desire to manipulate the science. There are other examples of putting political/presentational considerations before the science throughout the collection.One example is worth mentioning quickly. Phil Jones in discussing the presentation of temperature reconstructions stated that "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) and from 1961 for Keith's to hide the decline." The paper in question is the Mann, Bradley and Hughes (1998) Nature paper on the original multiproxy temperature reconstruction, and the 'trick' is just to plot the instrumental records along with reconstruction so that the context of the recent warming is clear. Scientists often use the term "trick" to refer to a "a good way to deal with a problem", rather than something that is "secret", and so there is nothing problematic in this at all. As for the 'decline', it is well known that Keith Briffa's maximum latewood tree ring density proxy diverges from the temperature records after 1960 (this is more commonly known as the "divergence problem"–see e.g. the recent discussion in this paper) and has been discussed in the literature since Briffa et al in Nature in 1998 (Nature, 391, 678-682). Those authors have always recommend not using the post 1960 part of their reconstruction, and so while 'hiding' is probably a poor choice of words (since it is 'hidden' in plain sight), not using the data in the plot is completely appropriate, as is further research to understand why this happens.
bonus!Matthias said:http://www.examiner.com/x-27872-Miami-Envi...tic-trade-routehttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columni...e-warmists.htmlMatthias said:Jesus.
Look at what is happening to the coral reefs. Look at what is happening to the arctic ice cap. Look is what happening to plant/animal growth and migration patterns.
Do you yahoos really want to say that all of this is just great, business as usual because you can find some PhD somewhere to say that it is?
Do you yahoos really want to say that everything is caused by human beings as opposed to this wonderfully complex system we call "Earth"?Matthias said:Jesus.
Look at what is happening to the coral reefs. Look at what is happening to the arctic ice cap. Look is what happening to plant/animal growth and migration patterns.
Do you yahoos really want to say that all of this is just great, business as usual because you can find some PhD somewhere to say that it is?
So you are suggesting that humans have no impact on earth?Do you yahoos really want to say that everything is caused by human beings as opposed to this wonderfully complex system we call "Earth"?Matthias said:Jesus.
Look at what is happening to the coral reefs. Look at what is happening to the arctic ice cap. Look is what happening to plant/animal growth and migration patterns.
Do you yahoos really want to say that all of this is just great, business as usual because you can find some PhD somewhere to say that it is?
As the leaked messages, and especially the HARRY_READ_ME.txt file, found their way around technical circles, two things happened: first, programmers unaffiliated with East Anglia started taking a close look at the quality of the CRU's code, and second, they began to feel sympathetic for anyone who had to spend three years (including working weekends) trying to make sense of code that appeared to be undocumented and buggy, while representing the core of CRU's climate model.
One programmer highlighted the error of relying on computer code that, if it generates an error message, continues as if nothing untoward ever occurred. Another debugged the code by pointing out why the output of a calculation that should always generate a positive number was incorrectly generating a negative one. A third concluded: "I feel for this guy. He's obviously spent years trying to get data from undocumented and completely messy sources."
Programmer-written comments inserted into CRU's Fortran code have drawn fire as well. The file briffa_sep98_d.pro says: "Apply a VERY ARTIFICAL correction for decline!!" and "APPLY ARTIFICIAL CORRECTION." Another, quantify_tsdcal.pro, says: "Low pass filtering at century and longer time scales never gets rid of the trend - so eventually I start to scale down the 120-yr low pass time series to mimic the effect of removing/adding longer time scales!"
WoW!!!! Let me say that I always believed that GW was a joke in so far as being man made, but as a programmer for 15 years I have to say, THE CODE DOESNT LIE!!! This is way more damning then the emails. Even the poor programmer couldn't account for the errors in data. Sad really that some still believe in the church of GWing.Crimes have been committed, lies have been told, science has been politicized, and opposing points of view have been subverted, all at the taxpayers expense.
Let the RICO indictments and transparency tell the real truth about what kind of scam CRU has been running.
more info: Congress May Probe Leaked Global Warming E-Mails
As you read the link, notice the part where some of the leaked emails indicate the CRU computer model is an unreliable hack job. Even if we ignore the email content, the code producing the climate model used by governments and agencies in making policy decisions is complete crap. No wonder these "scientists" are breaking Freedom of Information Act laws and hiding data that doesn't support their claims.
Someone needs to explain to me what makes this scandal irrelevant. Continuing to ignore this stuff won't make it go away.
As the leaked messages, and especially the HARRY_READ_ME.txt file, found their way around technical circles, two things happened: first, programmers unaffiliated with East Anglia started taking a close look at the quality of the CRU's code, and second, they began to feel sympathetic for anyone who had to spend three years (including working weekends) trying to make sense of code that appeared to be undocumented and buggy, while representing the core of CRU's climate model.
One programmer highlighted the error of relying on computer code that, if it generates an error message, continues as if nothing untoward ever occurred. Another debugged the code by pointing out why the output of a calculation that should always generate a positive number was incorrectly generating a negative one. A third concluded: "I feel for this guy. He's obviously spent years trying to get data from undocumented and completely messy sources."
Programmer-written comments inserted into CRU's Fortran code have drawn fire as well. The file briffa_sep98_d.pro says: "Apply a VERY ARTIFICAL correction for decline!!" and "APPLY ARTIFICIAL CORRECTION." Another, quantify_tsdcal.pro, says: "Low pass filtering at century and longer time scales never gets rid of the trend - so eventually I start to scale down the 120-yr low pass time series to mimic the effect of removing/adding longer time scales!"
they thought it was great when someone hacked Palins email.Interesting that the liberals, who usually worship whistleblowers exposing corporate corruption, suddenly have gone all "law and order" on this one. How dare someone hack into a science website?
http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=M...WQ2ZTMwNDkxNDc=The CRU scandal has already ensnared Britain's leading climate "scientist" Phil Jones (whom one principled leftie says has only "a few days left in which to make an honourable exit") and his American counterpart Michael Mann (as in "Mann-made global warming").
Given that these two men and their respective institutions are the leading warm-mongers on the planet, and the guys who dominate the IPCC, Copenhagen et al, it would be most unlikely if the widespread data-raping were confined only to the United Kingdom and the United States. Here's an interesting snippet from my colleagues at Investigate magazine in New Zealand re their National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research:
NIWA’s David Wratt has told Investigate magazine this afternoon his organization denies faking temperature data and he claims NIWA has a good explanation for adjusting the temperature data upward. Wratt says NIWA is drafting a media response for release later this afternoon which will explain why they altered the raw data.
At least they only "altered" the data, unlike the CRU, which managed to lose it.
Upon examination of said "raw data", it seems that the country's temperature increased 0.06° over a century - ie, nada. But by the time Dr James Salinger (a big cheese at NIWA, the CRU and the IPCC), had "adjusted" the data New Zealand was showing an increase of 0.92° - ie, some 15 times greater than the raw data showed. Why?
It might be that "climate change" is an organized criminal conspiracy to defraud the entire developed world. Or there might be a "good explanation". I'd be interested to hear it. Fortunately for NIWA et al, among the massed ranks of "environmental correspondents", plus ça climate change, plus c'est la même chose.
Fantastic post. Very responsible and proactive.On electricity, my wife and I worked very hard to identify all the "vampire load" that existed in our house, then changed the way things like computers, televisions, printers, etc. are accessing said electricity. If things don't have to be on overnight, they are unplugged (not just turned off). We also upgraded the wiring in our 1913 home and upgraded our 2nd/3rd floor panel from fuses to circuit breakers...which helps a bit. Finally, we insulated the HECK out of the home! It's 3,400 square feet...and when we moved in, it had a strip of burlap in the attic under the floor boards as the only, ahem, "insulation" to be found in the entire home! February 2003, our heating bill was $630! February 2009, our heating bill was well under $200. And that also has to factor in the increased costs per therm/unit over the past six years too. Part of that is also due to our upgrading to a new boiler (steam heat) that is roughly 25% more efficient than the previous unit. Other than that, we've been slowly replacing older appliances, light bulbs/fixtures, etc. with new high-efficiency units as the need (and our budget) has allowed.Related to fossil fuels, a lot of that reduction has come from me religiously pursuing new and creative ways to NOT have to drive to meet face-to-face with clients and partners for my business. I ride my bike or walk to pretty much any/all meetings within two miles of my home unless it is extremely cold or icy during Winter months...and I've been using VoIP, web cams and any number of other technologies to avoid having to spend hours in the car in uncomfortable clothes, just to have a handshake and make small talk with clients. When I can't get out of those in-person meetings though, I make sure to make a day of it...scheduling as many meetings in that city/area as I possibly can while I'm in town (with people who I know might eventually request a meeting with me)...to reduce the overall quantity of total trips required in a year. I was joking with my wife on Thursday, after I got back from a meeting in New Ulm, MN. I asked her: "When was the last time I actually had to leave the house for a meeting?" She told me it was the first week of October...about five weeks earlier. I hadn't put ONE MILE on our car in over five weeks...while continuing to make sure our small firm of 12 designers remained 100% operational.How did you cut your consumption of fossil fuel and electricity? BTW - good job.
A long reply! Sorry. However, that's some ideas of how my wife and I have been able to slash our consumption of electricity and fossil fuels by quite a bit over the past decade or so. Hope that helps!![]()
There is never an excuse for altering raw data without making notation (even then it's really only done in extreme cases). This wouldn't even pass high school muster.http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=M...WQ2ZTMwNDkxNDc=The CRU scandal has already ensnared Britain's leading climate "scientist" Phil Jones (whom one principled leftie says has only "a few days left in which to make an honourable exit") and his American counterpart Michael Mann (as in "Mann-made global warming").
Given that these two men and their respective institutions are the leading warm-mongers on the planet, and the guys who dominate the IPCC, Copenhagen et al, it would be most unlikely if the widespread data-raping were confined only to the United Kingdom and the United States. Here's an interesting snippet from my colleagues at Investigate magazine in New Zealand re their National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research:
NIWA’s David Wratt has told Investigate magazine this afternoon his organization denies faking temperature data and he claims NIWA has a good explanation for adjusting the temperature data upward. Wratt says NIWA is drafting a media response for release later this afternoon which will explain why they altered the raw data.
At least they only "altered" the data, unlike the CRU, which managed to lose it.
Upon examination of said "raw data", it seems that the country's temperature increased 0.06° over a century - ie, nada. But by the time Dr James Salinger (a big cheese at NIWA, the CRU and the IPCC), had "adjusted" the data New Zealand was showing an increase of 0.92° - ie, some 15 times greater than the raw data showed. Why?
It might be that "climate change" is an organized criminal conspiracy to defraud the entire developed world. Or there might be a "good explanation". I'd be interested to hear it. Fortunately for NIWA et al, among the massed ranks of "environmental correspondents", plus ça climate change, plus c'est la même chose.
Cap and trade hits our coal industry the hardest and coal is one of our most abundant resources.Couple questions for you as a follow-up:1. IYHO, is cap and trade only about global warming...or is it also about energy independence?! No schtick, a serious question.Well, I hate to use unreliable source, but according to the Obama Administration.....
Cap and Trade to cost Families $1760 per year
2. The average $$$ per family/household isn't a "flat tax," but is based upon average consumption rates from current/traditional fuel sources, correct? So if the average family were facing an increase in expenditures of $1,760 per year, might there be incentive for at least a good percentage of those families to alter their consumption practices? Might there be incentive for new and/or more-efficient/affordable fuels to be introduced into the marketplace?
I'll shut up and listen.![]()
i.e. "scientists" altering data to fit their hypothesis.There are some stupid people in the world.
Sure, or non-scientists thinking they understand an issue as complex as climate change.i.e. "scientists" altering data to fit their hypothesis.There are some stupid people in the world.
can't ....hold... it.....in..... losing...... the.........battle.... here....it......comes.......................................AL GORE!!!!Sure, or non-scientists thinking they understand an issue as complex as climate change.i.e. "scientists" altering data to fit their hypothesis.There are some stupid people in the world.
Al Gore is the voice, not the argument. Just saying.can't ....hold... it.....in..... losing...... the.........battle.... here....it......comes.......................................AL GORE!!!!Sure, or non-scientists thinking they understand an issue as complex as climate change.i.e. "scientists" altering data to fit their hypothesis.There are some stupid people in the world.Couldn't resist that softball!
As if global warming scientists understand it. There is so many assumptions and unknowns in their models, it is a joke. I would put more weight in a random number generator predicting the future climate than the global warming 'science' industry. At least a random number generator is not biased towards a predetermined output. It is so easy to tweak assumptions to make it looks catastrophic, which is the least likely of all scenarios. But they have to make it catastrophic to get political action, despite of all the recent data that conflicts with everything they have ever told us.Sure, or non-scientists thinking they understand an issue as complex as climate change.i.e. "scientists" altering data to fit their hypothesis.There are some stupid people in the world.
Reread the posts above mine and then tell me where your "response" is a non-sequitur. You got 30 minutes.So you are suggesting that humans have no impact on earth?Do you yahoos really want to say that everything is caused by human beings as opposed to this wonderfully complex system we call "Earth"?Matthias said:Jesus.
Look at what is happening to the coral reefs. Look at what is happening to the arctic ice cap. Look is what happening to plant/animal growth and migration patterns.
Do you yahoos really want to say that all of this is just great, business as usual because you can find some PhD somewhere to say that it is?

OMG! I'll bet he appears on FOX News or Hannity, too!I'm curious about climate change, because I think it's genuinely important to determine whether it's a real thing, whether it poses a real threat, and whether we can do anything about it if it does. I don't pretend to know the answer to any of this, so I'm always looking for good, unbiased info.With this, I got as far as the byline.
Wikipedia:Timothy Francis Ball, Ph.D., is a retired university professor and global warming skeptic. He heads the Natural Resources Stewardship Project and is the former head of Friends of Science, a non-profit organization, closely linked to the oil industry...

You hippie. It's our Patriotic duty as Americans to waste resources.On electricity, my wife and I worked very hard to identify all the "vampire load" that existed in our house, then changed the way things like computers, televisions, printers, etc. are accessing said electricity. If things don't have to be on overnight, they are unplugged (not just turned off). We also upgraded the wiring in our 1913 home and upgraded our 2nd/3rd floor panel from fuses to circuit breakers...which helps a bit. Finally, we insulated the HECK out of the home! It's 3,400 square feet...and when we moved in, it had a strip of burlap in the attic under the floor boards as the only, ahem, "insulation" to be found in the entire home! February 2003, our heating bill was $630! February 2009, our heating bill was well under $200. And that also has to factor in the increased costs per therm/unit over the past six years too. Part of that is also due to our upgrading to a new boiler (steam heat) that is roughly 25% more efficient than the previous unit. Other than that, we've been slowly replacing older appliances, light bulbs/fixtures, etc. with new high-efficiency units as the need (and our budget) has allowed.Related to fossil fuels, a lot of that reduction has come from me religiously pursuing new and creative ways to NOT have to drive to meet face-to-face with clients and partners for my business. I ride my bike or walk to pretty much any/all meetings within two miles of my home unless it is extremely cold or icy during Winter months...and I've been using VoIP, web cams and any number of other technologies to avoid having to spend hours in the car in uncomfortable clothes, just to have a handshake and make small talk with clients. When I can't get out of those in-person meetings though, I make sure to make a day of it...scheduling as many meetings in that city/area as I possibly can while I'm in town (with people who I know might eventually request a meeting with me)...to reduce the overall quantity of total trips required in a year. I was joking with my wife on Thursday, after I got back from a meeting in New Ulm, MN. I asked her: "When was the last time I actually had to leave the house for a meeting?" She told me it was the first week of October...about five weeks earlier. I hadn't put ONE MILE on our car in over five weeks...while continuing to make sure our small firm of 12 designers remained 100% operational.How did you cut your consumption of fossil fuel and electricity? BTW - good job.
A long reply! Sorry. However, that's some ideas of how my wife and I have been able to slash our consumption of electricity and fossil fuels by quite a bit over the past decade or so. Hope that helps!![]()