Saturday 5 December 2009

”I want to believe…”

Pudgy columnist Johann Hari is marshalling a fightback against all those people slowly coming to their senses over the ‘Climagegate’ emails:
Every day, I pine for the global warming deniers to be proved right. I loved the old world – of flying to beaches wherever we want, growing to the skies, and burning whatever source of energy came our way.
Of course, for some people, that world never left, did it?

I’m looking at you, Al Gore. And Bono. And Sting and Mrs Sting.
When I read the works of global warming deniers like Nigel Lawson or Ian Plimer, I feel a sense of calm washing over me. The nightmare is gone; nothing has to change; the world can stay as it was.

But then I go back to the facts. However much I want them to be different, they sit there, hard and immovable.
Well, post-Climategate, maybe not so immovable, eh?
And nobody disputes that the world has become considerably hotter over the past century. (If you disagree with any of these statements, you'd fail a geography GCSE).
Oh, really..?
Yet half our fellow citizens are choosing to believe the deniers who say there must be gaps between these statements big enough to fit an excuse for carrying on as we are. Shrieking at them is not going to succeed.

Our first response has to be to accept that this denial is an entirely natural phenomenon. The facts of global warming are inherently weird, and they run contrary to our evolved instincts. If you burn an odourless, colourless gas in Europe, it will cause the Arctic to melt and Bangladesh to drown and the American Mid-West to dry up? By living our normal lives, doing all the things we have been brought up doing, we can make great swathes of the planet uninhabitable? If your first response is incredulity, then you're a normal human being.
And if your second is ‘So, why are these people lying to me?’, congratulations. You’re smarter than Johann Hari…
But the basic science isn't actually very complicated, or hard to grasp. As more carbon dioxide is pumped into the atmosphere, the world gets warmer. Every single year since 1917 has been hotter than 1917. Every single year since 1956 has been hotter than 1956. Every single year since 1992 has been hotter than 1992. And on, and on.
And before 1917? Why no mention of that, Johann?
As the conservative journalist Hugo Rifkind put it, the Hadley Centre no more discredits climate science than Harold Shipman discredits GPs.
Because after Shipman, nothing changed, right? Everyone just shrugged and went on as before, right?

Well, no. The medical establishment started proceedings to put its own house in order. But the direction the watermelons have taken is a bit different, isn't it?
Part of the confusion in the public mind seems to stem from the failure to understand that two things are happening at once. There has always been – and always will be – natural variation in the climate. The ebb from hot to cold is part of Planet Earth. But on top of that, we are adding a large human blast of warming – and it is disrupting the natural rhythm. So when, in opinion polls, people say warming is "natural", they are right, but it's only one part of the story.
Hmm, remember when an oil spill was an ecological disaster that would ruin coastlines forever? Remember when Chernobal happened, and the scientists predicted that the area would be blighted for hundreds of years?

That's right. None of those things actually came to pass. The world went on.
That's why I won't use the word "sceptic" to describe the people who deny the link between releasing warming gases and the planet getting warmer. I am a sceptic. I have looked at the evidence highly critically, desperate for flaws. The overwhelming majority of scientists are sceptics: the whole nature of scientific endeavour is to check and check and check again for a flaw in your theory or your evidence.
And if that data goes against you, lie, obfuscate and dump it

Or accuse your opponents (via the ever impartial state broadcaster) of being involved in some huge conspiracy.
So let's – for the sake of argument – make an extraordinary and unjustified concession to the deniers. Let's imagine there was only a 50 per cent chance that virtually all the world's climate scientists are wrong. Would that be a risk worth taking? Are you prepared to take a 50-50 gamble on the habitability of the planet?
Well, if that was the real question, probably not.

But no-one’s arguing that, are they? Humans are adaptable. Why not simply adapt?

Oh. Right. Far too many vested interests, eh?

19 comments:

  1. And it's idiots like this that want to call us flat earthers!

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  2. The line that jumped out at me was "[if you don't believe in climate change] you'd fail a geography GCSE".

    And you'd never be able to get a job at UEA. Sigh.

    So this is how a civilisation dies.

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  3. "(If you disagree with any of these statements, you'd fail a geography GCSE)".

    Oh, really..?


    The unfortunate thing is, THIS is probably the only true thing he said in the whole article.

    You think for one SECOND, that the useless hippy, pot smoking, sandle wearing, crochet skirt wearing, poetry reading (!), arseholing bastards we call "Teachers" today, would let any one get away with the TRUTH in an exam?

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  4. "Every day, I pine for the global warming deniers to be proved right. I loved the old world – of flying to beaches wherever we want, growing to the skies, and burning whatever source of energy came our way."

    Who the hell is he kidding? His politics and entire worldview are centred on the usual socialist greed for other peoples money and the desperate need to control every aspect of other peoples lives. The idea that AGW is bringing the world to disaster but that, regardless of how near we apparently are to armaggedon and extinction, we can reverse this and control it just by bringing back socialism on a massive scale is the wettest wet dream fantasy for the likes of Hari. Should they succeed the 'old world' he mentions will still exist for the likes of him, Bono, Gordon Brown, Toynbee etc - the nomenklatura - but will be denied to the proles. This is the kind of world his kind have dreamed of for well over a hundred years.

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  5. Remember when Chernobal happened, and the scientists predicted that the area would be blighted for hundreds of years?

    Actually, the area immediately around Chernobyl is still blighted. The workers' town of Pripyat is empty to this day.

    It took the heroism of three Soviet navy divers to stop the Chernobyl reactor exploding and releasing radiation over a much larger area. They volunteered to swim through a lethally radioactive environment to a stuck, submerged valve to release the water before it reached the level of the radioactive core, boiled to steam and blew apart the reactor. Their names were Alexei Ananenko, Valeri Bezpalov, and Boris Baranov. RIP

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  6. Chernobyl, where people have blue hair and blond eyes.

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  7. I think, Johann (if tyhat is your real name), that it's significantly more than half us us that aren't paid up members of your fruity religion. But thanks for enlightening us on how one goes about failing a modern GCSE. I thought the only way to do that was to not turn up.

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  8. I'd love to know how you burn CO2, FFS. It's used as a fire suppressant in fire extuingshers. He certainly wouldn't pass his GCSE, What a fuckwit.

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  9. Well the 'scientists and experts' were wrong about the millenium bug

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  10. This is what happens when you fail to educate people -- you get people who are taken in by rope trick artists.

    The other reason for this failure is that the computer programming skills and the level of math that is required nowadays is getting too complex for a lot of scientists, who would be far better off working together with a mathematician/statistician who does the math stuff for them.

    We'd have far less hoaxes (the mouthwash hoax of your more recent post is also another classic case of math ignorance) and scarce money and resources wasted on other assorted fallacies.

    Btw, ever noticed that the middle of beLIEve reads 'lie'? ;>

    Ps.: you may enjoy this little book: http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/book.htm

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  11. You people are all seriously stupid. Completely bonkers. The only consolation I get from climate change is that you are all going to drown as the water rises past your silly necks and you try to sputter 'OK, I was wrong'.

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  12. @ Anonymous

    And I suppose after we die we're going to burn in a lake of fire forever because we did not take Jesus into our hearts? Your comment really, really resembles that kind of unhinged fundamentalist ranting.

    People describe your creed as being a religion for a reason, you mindless fool.

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  13. "His politics and entire worldview are centred on the usual socialist greed for other peoples money and the desperate need to control every aspect of other peoples lives."

    And he's dim enough to think that that doesn't simply shine through his writing, too..

    "Actually, the area immediately around Chernobyl is still blighted."

    Yes, for people. But it's hardly the deserted wasteland that everyone imagines (or is told) will result from a nuclear accident.

    "Their names were Alexei Ananenko, Valeri Bezpalov, and Boris Baranov. RIP"

    Indeed. That took great courage.

    "...thanks for enlightening us on how one goes about failing a modern GCSE. I thought the only way to do that was to not turn up."

    Heh!

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  14. "This is what happens when you fail to educate people -- you get people who are taken in by rope trick artists. "

    And that's probably the plan...

    "You people are all seriously stupid. Completely bonkers. The only consolation I get from climate change is that you are all going to drown as the water rises past your silly necks and you try to sputter 'OK, I was wrong'."

    Eh..? Water is going to cover the entire surface of the globe?

    I thought that was the plot of 'Waterworld', not 'An Inconvenient Truth'...

    "I'd like to burn Johann Hari."

    It'd be far more efficient than the old whale-oil lamps, I suspect. Though would probably burn for just as long...

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  15. you'd fail a geography GCSE

    Actually, you wouldn't, but that's because there are no fail grades at GCSE at all.

    If you just put your name on the paper you'd get 'unclassified' which is pretty weedy, but there are no fail grades - all the grades count as measures of attainment. It's just a question of how much or how little.

    This is true, I promise. I've just had the conversation up the school with a very red-faced teacher.

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  16. "(If you disagree with any of these statements, you'd fail a geography GCSE).
    Oh, really..?"

    Yes, probably, just as in Germany you would fail History if you veered away from the Government approved stance on the Holocaust ( and get arrested for being a denier).

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  17. banned said...

    " just as in Germany you would fail History if you veered away from the Government approved stance on the Holocaust ( and get arrested for being a denier)."


    Depends how it was written.

    Scholastic, accedemic (when they are not the same thing???) dispute and questioning is allowed.

    But as this is a highly politicised question, here, as everywhere in the world, you are likely to get an examiner who will mark you down if his opinion does not agree.

    And remember, this law, along with "You are not allowed to send your army outside of the NATO area, and other such beuties) was FORCED on us by the "Allies". WE did not choose it. So it MAY be advisable to stop throwing stones when you live in a greenhouse.

    (Furor Teotonicus)

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