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THE HUFFINGTON POST
All Science Is Wrong, Concludes Esteemed
Fox News Panel
B, Jonathan Chait. May 9. 2014
There is no issue where educated ignorance is on more perfect display than watching the
conservative movement confront scientific evidence of climate change. Educated
ignorance is not the same thing as the regular kind of ignorance. It takes real talent to
master. George F. Will and Charles Krauthammer are two of the intellectual giants of the
right, former winners of the Bradley Foundation's $250,000 annual prize,
Washington Post columnists, and Fox News All-Star panelists. They numbered among the
select conservative intellectuals chosen to dine with newly elected president Barack
Obama in 2009.
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On their Fox News All-Star Panel appearance this week, both men discussed the U.S.
National Climate Assessment, which they dismissed with various irritable mental
gestures. Their evasions and misstatements, clothed infaux-erudition, offer a useful
entrance point to study the current state of the right-wing mind.
What follows is an annotated analysis of Will and ICrauthammer's remarks, the
intellectual quality of which starts off low, and grows increasingly and even frighteningly
so as the program progresses. After a brief introduction of the climate report, we begin
with Krauthammer:
AECTE0 TO REACH NEARBY CITIES THROUGHOUT THE
What they tell you is that you should be scared about what's happening today. Of course,
if it's very cold in the winter, they blame it, here in the northeast, they blame it on global
warming, and the report says that global warming makes summers hotter and winters are
generally shorter and warmer.
In one sentence, Krauthammer claims "they" blame every cold winter on climate change,
but does not identify who "they" is. In the next sentence, he correctly says that the climate
assessment links climate change with shorter, warmer winters in the United States,
negating his previous point.
Any scientific theory that explains everything explains nothing, and no matter what
happens in climate is unpleasant, the word for that is weather, it's attributed to global
warming. If we continue global warming up here in the northeast, we're going to freeze to
death.
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It is not clear what Krauthammer means when he says climate science "explains
everything." Climate science is an attempt to model the complex impact of heat-trapping
gasses in the atmosphere. It does not attempt to explain "everything" more than, say, the
Theory of Gravity does. (In fact, it attempts to explain less, as it contains more room for
unpredictability.) It is also impossible to understand exactly what Krauthammer's line
about freezing to death even means. The report does in fact describe dangerous and costly
impacts in the Northeast:
"Heat waves, coastal flooding, and river flooding will pose a growing challenge to the
region's environmental, social, and economic systems. This will increase the vulnerability
of the region's residents, especially its most disadvantaged populations.
Infrastructure will be increasingly compromised by climate-related hazards, including sea
level rise, coastal flooding, and intense precipitation events.
Agriculture, fisheries, and ecosystems will be increasingly compromised over the next
century by climate change impacts. Farmers can explore new crop options, but these
adaptations are not cost- or risk-free. Moreover, inequities exist in adaptive capacity,
which could be overwhelmed by changing climate."
Krauthammer goes on to endorse comments by Senate Minority Leader Mitch
McConnell:
But the most important element is what McConnell was talking about, the negligible
gains. Assume they are right about global warming, assume that it is all caused by man.
The United States has reduced carbon emissions since 2006 more than any other country
on earth. We are right now at 1992 levels, according to the International Energy Agency,
and yet carbon emissions have gone up globally. Why? We don't control the emissions of
the other 96 percent of humanity, especially China and India. As we dismantle the coal
plants in our country, China and India together are adding one coal-fired plant every
week. The net effect is to shift the U.S. coal energy generating industry from here to India
and China. It will have zero effect.
If we could have a pact with other countries in which everybody would reduce their
emissions, I would sign on. In the absence of it, all that we're doing is committing
economic suicide in the name of do-goodism that will not do an iota of good.
Krauthammer asserts, with an air of unassailable confidence, that reducing U.S.
greenhouse gas emissions will have no significant impact on worldwide greenhouse gas
emissions, because "we don't control the emissions of the other 96 percent of humanity."
Krauthammer's implication that 96 percent of the greenhouse gas problem lies beyond
the direct control of the United States is untrue, since, while the United States may only
account for 4 percent of the world's population, it emits 16 percent of the world's
greenhouse gas emissions:
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Carbon footprints compared
Population
1.3 billion
314 million
Annual CO2 emissions
[
9.7 billion metric tons
Rest of
Percent of world
world CO2 38.4%
5.4 billion metric tons emissions
India
EU
6%
11%
Current CO2 emissions per capita
7.2 metric tons
17.3 metric tons
Projected CO2 emissions in mid-2030s
12 billion metric tons
55 billion metric tons
SOURCES:U.S.Energy Information Administration;PRI. Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency;
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; European Commission Joint Research Centre
Paul Horn for InsideClimate News
The strategy to limit climate change does not assume that limiting American emissions is
a sufficient step to mitigate catastrophic climate change. It assumes it is a necessary step
to mitigate catastrophic climate change. Countries like India and China have, in
fact, taken steps to reduce their energy intensiveness. Given that those countries' per
capita greenhouse gas emissions are a small fraction of ours, there is no plausible or
defensible path to securing an international agreement without a commitment by the
countries with the highest per-capita emissions, like the U.S., to participate.
After an interlude from others on the panel, George Will jumps in:
There is, however, no evidence for the increase in extreme weather.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change found otherwise in 2011:
There is evidence that some extremes have changed as a result of anthropogenic
influences, including increases in atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases. It is
likely that anthropogenic influences have led to warming of extreme daily minimum and
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maximum temperatures at the global scale. There is medium confidence that
anthropogenic influences have contributed to intensification of extreme precipitation at
the global scale. It is likely that there has been an anthropogenic influence on increasing
extreme coastal high water due to an increase in mean sea level.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration concluded, somewhat more
conclusively, "Human influences are having an impact on some extreme weather and
climate events."
Will continues:
I own a home on an island in South Carolina looking south in the direction of hurricanes,
and after Katrina I was really interested when they said this is a harbinger of increased
hurricane activity, which since then has plummeted.
The chance of a hurricane striking a given location is extremely variable. The lack of major
hurricanes striking the United States since 2005 is attributable to luck. It does not
contradict any major scientific conclusions about climate change.
Now, Mr. Holdren, who introduced this report, has his own record of very interesting
failed forecasts, not to mention Al Gore, who in 2008 said by 2013, for those of you
keeping score at home, that's last year, the ice cap in the North Pole would be gone. It's
not.
It is not clear what failed Holdgren forecasts Will is referencing. Al Gore, in his 2007
Nobel Prize acceptance speech, said, "One study estimated that it could be completely
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gone during summer in less than 22 years. Another new study, to be presented by U.S.
Navy researchers later this week, warns it could happen in as little as 7 years." As implied
by Gore's remarks, there is a high level of uncertainty surrounding the pace of polar ice
melting. There is agreement about the general trend, which is clearly in the direction of
more melting:
Arctic Sea Ice Extent
16
14
12
ae
1980s Average
2 1990s Average
2000's Average
in 6
2012(1st Lowest)
• 2007(2nd Lowesl)
4 -2011(3rd Lowest)
2013
2
Jan Feb Mar Apr Nay Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Gore has, at times, highlighted the more pessimistic studies, which predict ice-free
summers in "five to seven years." One time he paraphrased the prediction as "five years,"
leaving out the "to seven," and this has become a major talking point among climate-
science skeptics.
Will continues:
Now, there is, as Charles says, the policy question is how much wealth do we want to
spend directly or in lost production in order to have no discernible measurable effect on
the climate? People say, well, what about this report? There is a sociology of science.
Scientists are not saints in white laboratory smocks. They have got interests like
everybody else. If you want a tenure-track position in academia, don't question the
reigning orthodoxy on climate change. If you want money from the biggest source of
direct research in this country, the federal government, don't question its orthodoxy. If
you want to get along with your peers, conform to peer pressure. This is what's happening.
Will is arguing that climate scientists have been massively corrupted by federal funding
and peer pressure. ("They have got interests like everybody else.") He does not consider
the countervailing power of opposing financial interests that might lure scientists to
question of the scientific consensus, such as the lucrative funding made available in the
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right-wing think-tank world. He likewise discounts the possibility that scientists would
find the lure of being proven eventually correct to be a powerful reputational incentive,
let alone that they would actually care enough about being right to disregard social and
financial pressure. If Will has any specific sense of how these social pressures survived
the rigors of the scientific method and peer review, he does not explicate them.
Will is then asked about the 97 percent of climate scientists who share the consensus
analysis, and replies:
Who measured it? Where did that figure come from? They pluck these things from the
ether. I do not.
It comes from a peer-reviewed study which found that 97.1 percent of scientific papers
taking a position on anthropogenic climate change "endorsed the consensus position that
humans are causing global warming." Will continues:
The New Yorker magazine, which is impeccably upset about climate change, recently
spoke about the report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change as "the last
word on climate change." Now, try that phrase, "the last word on microbiology, quantum
mechanics, physics, chemistry." Since when does science come to the end? The New
Yorker has discovered the end of this. Who else has?
Will is referring to a blog post that appeared in The New Yorker last October, and hinging
a great deal of his argument on a pedantic argument over what "the last word" means.
Nothing in the post states or implies that that the field of climate science will cease to
grow and evolve. It does imply that, like microbiology, quantum mechanics, physics, and
chemistry, its basic findings are a matter of consensus.
A-ha - we knew science was biased!
At this point, the host asks Krauthammer if he, too scoffs at the 97 percent figure.
Krauthammer indeed scoffs:
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99 percent of physicists convinced that space and time were fixed until Einstein working
in a patent office wrote a paper in which he showed that they are not. I'm not impressed
by numbers. I'm not impressed by consensus. When I was a psychiatrist, I participated in
consensus conferences on how to define depression and mania. These are things that
people negotiate in the way you would negotiate a bill, because the science is unstable,
because in the case of climate, the models are changeable, and because climate is so
complicated.
It is hard to dispute this except to note that Krauthammer here has taken a radically
skeptical position not merely on climate science, but on all science. His argument implies
that no scientific argument merits respect. Given the provisional and socially constructed
peer pressure driving the consensus theory of aerodynamics, it is amazing that he is
willing to travel in an airplane.
Krauthammer continues:
The idea that we who have trouble forecasting what's going to happen on Saturday in the
climate could pretend to be predicting what's going to happen in 30, 40 years, is absurd.
Krauthammer is confusing the difference between modeling the long-term impact of heat-
trapping gasses with short-term atmospheric fluctuations. Scientists are not forecasting
precise daily temperatures decades in advance.
Krauthammer proceeds to make his most radical argument against science:
And you always see that no matter what happens, whether it's a flood or it's a drought,
whether it's one — it's warming or cooling, it's always a result of what is ultimately what
we're talking about here, human sin with the pollution of carbon. It's the oldest
superstition around. It was in the Old Testament. It's in the rain dance of the Native
Americans. If you sin, the skies will not cooperate. This is quite superstitious, and I'm
waiting for science which doesn't declare itself definitive but is otherwise convincing.
Now climate science is not merely corrupt, but aldn to superstition. Both he and Will
return to this astonishing claim.
Our scientific inquiry has reached very different results.
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At this point, Will returns to his argument that climate science is fundamentally corrupt:
A moment ago, we had a report here on our crumbling infrastructure, gave it a D,
emergency. Who wrote it? As we said on there, it was written by civil engineers, who
said, by golly, we need more of what civil engineers do and are paid to do. Again, there
is a sociology of science, there is a sociology in all of this, and engaging the politics of this,
we have to understand the enormous interests now invested in climate change.
Will here does not specifically extend his critique of climate science to all sciences, but it
surely applies. All fields of sciences have a "sociology"; all receive government grants. If
those things can induce climate scientists to manufacture a false consensus, the same
effect can work just as well in any other scientific field.
To watch Will and Krauthammer grasp for rationales to cast doubt on an established
scientific field merely because its findings pose a challenge to their ideological priors is a
depressing, and even harrowing, study in the poisonous effects of dogma upon a once-
healthy brain. They have amassed an impressive array of sound bites and factoids, and
can render them with convincing gravitas, and yet their underlying reasoning is absolutely
bonkers. The analogy Krauthammer suggests of the rain man — an authority figure
possessed of commanding prestige despite lacking even rudimentary analytic powers —
turns out to be apt; only he is describing himself.
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