KUUF Social
Justice Committee
Summary:
Explains why "They" are putting so much money [from us!] into denying
climate change: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when
his salary depends on his not understanding it." -- Upton Sinclair.
for
TUESDAY 29 DECEMBER 2009
A Convenient Delusion
Monday 28 December 2009
by: Earnest Partridge | The Crisis Papers
"Reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be
fooled."
-Richard Feynman
The same sort of public relations wizardry that once convinced a sizeable
portion of Americans that cigarette smoking was harmless, that Saddam Hussein
had weapons of mass destruction and had a hand in the 9/11 attacks, that Al
Gore claimed to have invented the internet, and that John Kerry's war record
was fraudulent, is now convincing an increasing number of our citizens that
global warming is at least of little consequence, or, at most, a massive hoax.
This trend is reported by the Pew Research Center which, in August, 2006, found
that 77% of the public believed that there is solid evidence that the earth is
warming. In October, 2009, that number had dropped to 57%. In the same period,
the percentage of those who denied that there is such evidence increased from
17% to 33%. An early Pew poll found that "global warming ranked dead last
among 40 concerns ranked by the 1503 respondents to the poll."
Unfortunately, as John Adams observed, "facts are stubborn things; and
whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion,
they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence." Here are some of those
stubborn facts:
Climate change skeptics have succeeded in convincing
much of the public that global warming is a live issue of contention among
climate scientists. The facts tell us otherwise. For example, in December,
2004, Science Magazine (AAAS) reported:
The American Meteorological Society, the American
Geophysical Union, and the AAAS all have issued statements in recent years
concluding that the evidence for human modification of climate is compelling.
... [While these reports] might downplay legitimate
dissenting opinions, [that] hypothesis was tested by analyzing 928 abstracts,
published in refereed scientific journals between 1993 and 2003, and listed in
the ISI database with the keywords "climate change."
... Of all the
[928] papers, 75% .. either
explicitly or implicitly accept[ed] the consensus
view; 25% dealt with methods or paleoclimate, taking
no position on current anthropogenic [human-caused] climate change. Remarkably,
none of the papers disagreed with the consensus position. (My
emphasis, EP).
Furthermore, according to a survey conducted by Peter Doran of the
University of Chicago 97% of climatologists active in research concur that
global warming is real and that human activity plays a role in it.
While I could go on with this recitation, it is not my task to offer yet
another argument that global warming is a fact. Thousands of peer-reviewed
scientific papers support that conclusion. These papers are by qualified
climate scientists, which I am not. No citation here of scientific data will
persuade a single individual determined not to be persuaded. So instead, I pose
a different question: how credible is the denialists'
rejection of this scientific consensus?
No skeptic has ever offered me a plausible explanation as to how thousands of
climate specialists from around the world -- the vast majority of such
specialists -- can all be so profoundly mistaken about conclusions from
research, both independent and coordinated, conducted at the cost of billions
of dollars. Not that there is a shortage of implausible explanations.
For example, William Bennett (the Secretary of Education in the Reagan
Administration) recently told Sean Hannity on FOX
that all those scientists were "driven by ideology," though he never
identified the ideology that united the scientists from dozens of different
nations and cultures. He did, however, compare all those scientists to the Nazi
doctors who performed experiments on concentration camp prisoners.
A more common explanation is that climate scientists pretend to believe in
global warming in order to get research grants. But clearly, if that is the
researchers' motivation, there is much more cash to be found from the energy
corporations and their foundations. Moreover, the "grant-search"
explanation begs an even greater mystery: What could possibly motivate the
funding agencies (primarily governments) into encouraging gullible scientists
to conclude that the climate is warming due to human effects. Most governments,
and especially the US government, have a stake in the status-quo and in
placating international corporations and industries.
In a sense, however, William Bennett is correct: scientists the world over are
united by an "ideology," though "ideology" is hardly the
correct word. That "ideology" is what Jacob Bronowski
called "the habit of truth":
By the worldly standards of public life, all scholars
in their work are of course oddly virtuous. They do not make wild claims, they
do not cheat, they do not try to persuade at any cost, they appeal neither to
prejudice or to authority, they are often frank about their ignorance, their
disputes are fairly decorous, they do not confuse what is being argued with
race, politics, sex or age, they listen patiently to the young and to the old
who both know everything. These are the general virtues of scholarship, and
they are peculiarly the virtues of science. Individually, scientists no doubt
have human weaknesses. . . But in a world in which state and dogma seem always
either to threaten or to cajole, the body of scientists is trained to avoid and
organized to resist every form of persuasion but the fact. A scientist who
breaks this rule, as [Soviet agronomist, Trofim]
Lysenko has done, is ignored. . .
The values of science derive neither from the virtues of its members, nor from
the finger-wagging codes of conduct by which every profession reminds itself to
be good. They have grown out of the practice of science, because they are the
inescapable conditions for its practice. (Science and Human
Values, Harper and Row, 1972, pp. 59-60).
Is the scientific affirmation of anthropogenic global warming a
"hoax," as Sen. Inhofe would have us believe.
Possibly. But to believe this one would also have to
believe either that (a) hundreds of millions of dollars of funded and
peer-reviewed research have systematically led to a false conclusion, or (b)
that thousands of scientists from around the world are engaged in a giant
conspiracy, or (c) that all these scientists are simply fools. Sorry, but that
is much more than I can swallow.
On a personal note, I am convinced that these scientists are neither knaves nor
fools, for I know many of them and have worked with them. In 1991 I organized a
scholarly conference on Environmental Ethics at Cal State Fullerton. Keynoting
that event were Stephen Schneider (climate scientist, Stanford University) and
John Holdren (now the President's Science Advisor).
Previously I worked for two years under a National Science Foundation grant at
the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) in
Boulder, where I got to know several climate scientists, including Steve
Schneider (then at the National Center for Atmospheric Research) and John
Birks, a collaborator with Paul Crutzen, a Nobel
Laureate. While my work was in applied seismology, not climate science, I was
nonetheless able to gain a moral measure of these individuals. They were
neither knaves nor fools. They were, each and every one of them, scrupulous
scientists. Moreover, they had families and hoped for a prosperous future for
their children and their posterity. Accordingly, they were and are appalled at
what their research was and is disclosing about the future prospects of the
earth and of humanity.
And so should we all be.
How then do we explain the
persistence of global warming denial? Upton Sinclair's observation is
instructive: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when
his salary depends on his not understanding it.. Thus
the behavior of tobacco industry executives when presented with laboratory and
statistical evidence from cancer researchers, and the
response of the chemical industry to the publication of Rachel Carson's Silent
Spring and the effect of CFCs on atmospheric ozone. Thus the proliferation of
industry sponsored and scientifically trained "biostitutes"
(to use Robert Kennedy Jr's term) many of whom, I am
confident, sincerely and firmly believe what they are paid to believe. This
enlistment of scientific "experts" has been effective for, as Ross Gelbspan noted in 1995:
The people who run the world's oil and coal companies
know that the march of science, and of political action, may be slowed by
disinformation. In the last year and a half, one of the leading oil industry
public relations outlets, the Global Climate Coalition, has spent more than a million
dollars to downplay the threat of climate change. It expects to spend another
$850,000 on the issue next year. Similarly, the National Coal Association spent
more than $700,000 on the global climate issue in 1992 and 1993. In 1993 alone,
the American Petroleum Institute, just one of fifty-four industry members of
the GCC, paid $1.8 million to the public relations firm of Burson-Marsteller
partly in an effort to defeat a proposed tax on fossil fuels....
These 1994 figures grossly understate the current industry PR expenditures.
Continuing:
For the most part the industry has relied on a small
band of skeptics Dr. Richard S. Lindzen, Dr. Pat
Michaels, Dr. Robert Balling, Dr. Sherwood Idso, and
Dr. S. Fred Singer, among others who have proven extraordinarily adept at
draining the issue of all sense of crisis. Through their frequent
pronouncements in the press and on radio and television, they have helped to
create the illusion that the question is hopelessly mired in unknowns.
And what if brute reality raises its ugly head? Just suppress it. As Andrew Revkin of the New York Times reports:
For more than a decade the Global Climate Coalition, a
group representing industries with profits tied to fossil fuels, led an
aggressive lobbying and public relations campaign against the idea that
emissions of heat-trapping gases could lead to global warming.
The role of greenhouse gases in climate change is not well understood, the
coalition said in a scientific backgrounder provided
to lawmakers and journalists through the early 1990s, adding that scientists
differ on the issue.
But a document filed in a federal lawsuit demonstrates that even as the
coalition worked to sway opinion, its own scientific and technical experts were
advising that the science backing the role of greenhouse gases in global
warming could not be refuted.
The scientific basis for the Greenhouse Effect and the potential impact of
human emissions of greenhouse gases such as CO2 on climate is well established
and cannot be denied, the experts wrote in an internal report compiled for the
coalition in 1995.
The "biostitution" of climate science
should come as no surprise. We've seen it with the tobacco, chemical, atomic,
advertising and financial services industries. Why should the coal and
petroleum industries be any different?
Nonetheless, the "stubborn facts" of atmospheric chemistry and
physics are what they are, totally indifferent to public relations campaigns
and their effect upon public opinion. "In nature," Robert Ingersoll
observed, "there are neither rewards nor punishments. There are
consequences." The world governments and multi-national corporations may
choose to ignore those consequences. Nature will not.
That being so, "climate skeptics" are doing a great
disservice to humanity as they obstruct and forestall urgent action in the face
of a planetary emergency. Skepticism in science is, in principle,
commendable, as long as it is conducted responsibly according to rigors of
scientific method -- of Bronowski's "habit of
truth.. But I find little if any such
"responsibility" among the climate skeptics. Not William Bennett, not
Sean Hannity and his FOX colleagues, most assuredly
not Senator Inhofe, and not at such regressive think-tanks as the Competitive
Enterprise Institute, the American Enterprise Institute, and the Cato
Institute.
If global warming is as real and as serious as the consensus of climate
scientists say that it is, then unconstrained free market industrialization has
much to answer for, and mitigation of the dire consequences thereof will
require the kind of coordinated action at the national and international level
that free-market absolutists deplore (as I argue in my essay
, "Climate Reality Bites the Libertarians"). What is required
is a world-wide economic and industrial mobilization on the scale of that which
took place in the United States after the Pearl Harbor attack. Instead, what we
are offered are pipsqueak palliatives, too little and too late.
Today, as the Copenhagen fiasco indicates, the deniers and their corporate
sponsors appear to have the upper hand. Thus the public
belief in and concern about global warming continue to erode. Quite
frankly, I am very pessimistic.
And yet, the aforementioned history of corporate abuse offers some hope. The
public eventually got the message: cigarettes kill, and today the per-capita
consumption of cigarettes in the United States is about a third of what it was
in 1965. Eventually, Rachel Carson was vindicated, as DDT was removed from the
market. Likewise, CFCs were eventually phased out.
Eventually!
Trouble is, if the climate scientists are to be believed, an
"eventual" solution to global warming is no solution at all.
We face the acute urgency of NOW.
The lost Bush/Cheney decade has already condemned humanity to untold misery.
But it is not too late to avoid still worse catastrophes. Meanwhile, the carbon
continues to be pumped into the global atmosphere, the seas are becoming still
more acidic, and "peak oil" is upon us.
Comments
Tue, 12/29/2009 - 21:57 - Rick (not
verified)
Personally, I agree with climate
scientists, that global warming is real. Of course I'm not in denial, like most
American's (actually Humans). I also feel, that most
Humans really would like to go the way of the dinosaurs. In any case, I think
we have run out of time. As for Peak Oil, another major issue, already upon the
world. If you're into this kind of stuff, check out this site:
http://www.kunstler.com/index.php Peak Water will become another major issue as
well.
Tue, 12/29/2009 - 22:11 - rbe1 (not
verified)
I fully expect the number who disbelieve global warming to increase to close to
50%, the number of Americans who get their ideas from Rush Limbaugh.
Tue, 12/29/2009 - 22:14 - herbert browne
(not verified)
Everybody KNOWS that scientists hate
the oil companies... because the oil companies won't give them any money to do
research. So, they're gonna THREATEN them all- with
blame for Global Warming- until the petrodollars start rolling in for all their
petty little pet projects. When that happens, they'll all change their tune
(just like the doctors who worked for Philip Morris did) ^..^
Tue, 12/29/2009 - 22:36 - Regina
(not verified)
The mass denial of scientific
information is sorrowful evidence of the failure of American education. Most
Americans are dangerously ignorant of basic science, irrespective of years
actually spent in school. The pseudo-populism now rampant among us is a growing
danger on many issues, not only global warming. The flipness
with which the general population rejects scientists as "elitists" is
evidence of shallow thinking and susceptibility to the harangues of
know-nothings in those areas of the media that have sprung up without any
grounding in journalism. The quote above from Richard Feynman is exactly right.
© 2009 truthout