Thank whatever god (or not) that you worship for Russ Baker (author of Family of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, the Powerful Forces That Put It in the White House, and What Their Influence Means for America (Bloomsbury Press, 2009)). He's got the goods about the paid liars fraudulently explaining global climate change. Seems that Citizens United smooth sailing (or some such other nonsense springing from Big Money) has emboldened the bad guys to just go ahead and not tell where anyone with lies to spread comes from. And it won't surprise you that the bought-and-paid-millions-for USA Today is the vehicle for these outright lies! (Emphasis marks and editing inserted - Ed.) Russ Baker
January 14, 2011
The other day, USA Today ran an article reporting that 2010 had tied 2005 as the warmest year since record-keeping began in 1880. That’s disturbing data, or course. But what really caught my eye was who they chose to question the significance of the news: a climatologist with….the Cato Institute. That’s a policy outfit heavily funded by the very companies whose emissions heat up the earth’s atmosphere. Consider how he was presented:
"…It was the 34th consecutive year that the global temperature was above average, according to the data center. The last below-average year was 1976.
“This warmth reinforces the notion that we’re seeing climate change,” says David Easterling, chief of scientific services at the data center in Asheville, N.C .
Not so fast, says Pat Michaels, a climatologist with the Cato Institute in Washington. “If you draw a trend line from the data, it’s pretty flat from the 1990s. We don’t see much of a warming trend over the past 12 years.”
He says the gloom-and-doom projections on global warming are likely to be too hot. “The projections will have to come down,” Michaels says.
There are plenty of “serious science” organizations out there, so the significance of USA Today’s choice is worth pondering.
What I wanted to know was — were readers supposed to take that person’s views as serious science, or to stop and question his credibility? Was it perhaps intended as an unstated comment on how difficult it is to find a credentialed scientist who still insists that man-made warming should be dismissed as a problem?
At the Cato Institute’s website, one finds titles of such books, papers and studies as Meltdown: The Predictable Distortion of Global Warming by Scientists, Politicians, and the Media, and “A Harsh Climate for Trade: How Climate Change Proposals Threaten Global Commerce. Cato was founded by the billionaire Koch brothers, whose Wichita-based Koch Industries is America’s largest privately held oil company. It’s funding sources are a who’s who of the fossil fuels industry.
Don’t you think a reader has a right to know that — and that precious few serious scientists would accept employment there as a “climatologist”? Any more than most doctors would want to be the “public health specialist” at a tobacco company. Yet in this most recent article, USA Today only describes Michaels as “a climatologist with the Cato Institute,” without telling readers what Cato is.
It’s interesting to note the evolution of Michaels’ professional title within the pages of USA Today. Prior to appearing as a “climatologist” in this article, he last appeared in an article in July 2010, as “climate researcher Patrick Michaels of the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank” — a less scientific title, clearly connected with an ideological think tank. (USA Today could have gone one step further and let readers know that Cato is, with very rare exception, opposed to government regulation, period.)
Back in December, 2009, Michaels was identified as “a climatologist,” with no affiliation at all! That, of course, gives readers nothing to go by at all:
One has to go back to November, 2009, to find a quote in USA Today where Michaels is identified so as to give readers a clear sense of the pressures attendant on this “climatologist”:…Skeptics of man-made global warming, such as climatologist Patrick Michaels, say the e-mails show that scientists conspired to hide evidence that contradicted their theories on global warming, and tried to prevent opposing views from being published in scientific journals.
That’s a strikingly more complete identification. But USA Today had no choice in this one instance, because Michaels himself was directly involved in the East Anglia e-mails controversy, as revealed in the following paragraph:…”The East Anglia temperature records aren’t the core problem,” says climatologist Patrick Michaels of the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C., which advocates for limited regulation.
And what was Michaels’ job title just five days earlier in another article in the very same paper?Michaels, a skeptic of the worst implications of a warming climate, comes under criticism in the e-mails for a 2007 Journal of Geophysical Research paper he co-wrote. The paper said that industry and urban heat explain half of the temperature rise seen over land. “Attempts to influence editors not to publish papers you don’t like: That’s the real issue,” Michaels says.
Not a “climatologist” at all — a serious sounding title which confers legitimacy and gravitas on his pronouncements—but a “senior fellow” at a “libertarian think tank.”…The publication of the e-mails bolsters global warming skeptics and could reduce the odds of the Senate passing a climate bill early next year, said Patrick Michaels, a senior fellow for environmental studies at the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank.
Just a quibble? Hardly. These things make a real difference in shaping public perceptions. They thereby influence what we as a society decide to do, or not do. About an issue that could, if the vast majority of scientists are right, make all the difference in the world. Literally.
Have you noticed how increasingly stoopid the "members" of Congress have become in the last decade? I thought it couldn't get much worse than DeLay and his "delayed" (you know what I mean) brigades which were instrumental in Clinton's impeachment and the promotion of all things wondrous in the Cheney/Bush junta, but I was wrong.
The question of the hour asked today by that mysterious web presence, Woody at Walled-In Pond, is ever present in my mind today (emphasis marks added - Ed.):
A story on AOLonline today caught my eye. It reports that approximately 49% of 'elected officials' couldn't correctly answer even HALF of the questions.
Case rested?For five years now, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute has been conducting a national survey to gauge the quality of civic education in the country. We've surveyed more than 30,000 Americans, most of them college students, but also a random sample of adults from all educational and demographic backgrounds.
Included in the adult sample was a small subset of Americans (165 in all) who, when asked, identified themselves as having been "successfully elected to government office at least once in their life" - which can include federal, state or local offices.
The survey asks 33 basic civics questions, many taken from other nationally recognized instruments like the U.S. Citizenship Exam. It also asks 10 questions related to the U.S. Constitution.
So what did we find? Well, to put it simply, the results are not pretty.
Elected officials at many levels of government, not just the federal government, swear an oath to "uphold and protect" the U.S. Constitution.
But those elected officials who took the test scored an average 5 percentage points lower than the national average (49 percent vs. 54 percent), with ordinary citizens outscoring these elected officials on each constitutional question. Examples:
Only 49 percent of elected officials could name all three branches of government, compared with 50 percent of the general public. Only 46 percent knew that Congress, not the president, has the power to declare war - 54 percent of the general public knows that. Just 15 percent answered correctly that the phrase "wall of separation" appears in Thomas Jefferson's letters - not in the U.S. Constitution - compared with 19 percent of the general public. And only 57 percent of those who've held elective office know what the Electoral College does, while 66 percent of the public got that answer right. (Of elected officials, 20 percent thought the Electoral College was a school for "training those aspiring for higher political office."
Suzan _______________
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