Squelching Opposition to the Greens
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
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From the
New York Times of September 21:
LONDON, Sept.
20 A British scientific group, the Royal Society, contends
that Exxon
Mobil is spreading inaccurate and misleading information
about climate
change and is financing groups that misinform the public on
the issue.
The Royal
Society, a 1,400-member organization that dates back to the 1600s
and has counted Isaac Newton and Albert
Einstein as members, asked Exxon Mobil in a letter this month
to stop financing these groups and to change its public reports
to reflect more accurately the opinions of scientists on the issue.
There is
a false sense somehow that there is a two-sided debate going
on in the scientific community about the origins of climate
change, said Bob Ward, the senior manager for policy communication
at the Royal Society.
The reality
is that thousands and thousands of scientists around
the world agree that climate change is linked to greenhouse gases,
he said, with one or two professional contrarians
who disagree.
The Royal Society
is totally dishonest in its claims and is out to intimidate and
silence those with whom it disagrees. There are not one or two contrarians
who dispute the claims of the Greens concerning global warming but
over 17,000 scientists. These scientists in fact have actually signed
a petition stating their opposition in no uncertain terms. As the
organizers of the petition point out, the signers so far include
2,660 physicists, geophysicists, climatologists, meteorologists,
oceanographers, and environmental scientists who are especially
well qualified to evaluate the effects of carbon dioxide on the
Earth's atmosphere and climate. As they further point out,
the signers also include 5,017 scientists whose fields of
specialization in chemistry, biochemistry, biology, and other life
sciences make them especially well qualified to evaluate the effects
of carbon dioxide upon the Earth's plant and animal life.
(The complete
list of signatories is online, organized both alphabetically
and by state of residence of the signers. The
list of the 2,660 signers who are physicists, geophysicists, et
al. is online. The
list of the 5,017 signers who are scientists specialized in chemistry,
biochemistry, et al. is online.)
The petition
was organized by Frederick
Seitz, who is the Past President of the National Academy of
Sciences and President Emeritus of Rockefeller University. The
petition itself is online. It reads:
We urge the
United States government to reject the global warming agreement
that was written in Kyoto, Japan in December, 1997, and any other
similar proposals. The proposed limits on greenhouse gases would
harm the environment, hinder the advance of science and technology,
and damage the health and welfare of mankind.
There is
no convincing scientific evidence that human release of carbon
dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gasses is causing or will,
in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth's
atmosphere and disruption of the Earth's climate. Moreover, there
is substantial scientific evidence that increases in atmospheric
carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects upon the natural
plant and animal environments of the Earth.
The petition
is accompanied by an eight-page review of scientific information
on the subject of "global warming" titled Environmental
Effects of Increased Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide. I will make
no attempt to summarize that review here. I will content myself
merely with endorsing one of its essential conclusions, namely,
that Predictions of global warming, which the Royal
Society alleges to be indisputable, scientifically proven fact,
are based on computer climate modeling, a branch of science
still in its infancy.
There is absolutely
no empirical basis for the Royal Societys assertion. It is
certainly not the case that a laboratory experiment has ever been
performed, or could ever be performed, based on a side-by-side comparison
of two identical planet Earths. In one of these planet Earths, an
Industrial Revolution takes place and is followed by a catastrophic
rise in temperature, while in the other, in which there is no Industrial
Revolution, there is no catastrophic rise in temperature. That would
be an experimentally established fact. There simply is no such experimentally
established fact.
Moreover, repeated
long periods of global warming have taken place on the one and only
planet Earth that does exist, without any contribution whatever
by Man, his industry, or by increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide
caused by nature itself. In other words, the Royal Society has no
actual empirical basis for its claims. All it has is computer climate
modeling, which is no more reliable and accurate than weather
forecasting, which is actually all that it is, only on a scale
of centuries rather than days. This is the basis on which the Royal
Society wants to squelch opposition to the Greens and their agenda
of global government control and massive economic deprivation.
What we have
in the Royal Societys behavior is an obvious attempt at intimidation
and the imposition of a conformity of thought on a major public
issue. Imagine the uproar if the kind of letter sent by the Royal
Society to Exxon had instead been sent by Exxon to the 1,400 members
of the Royal Society urging them to stop their support of that organization
because of its views on global warming. I can hear the denunciations
now: Inquisition, violations of free speech,
strong-arm tactics, Fascism, . . . .
Well, all of
that is precisely what all of the worlds alleged defenders
of freedom of speech and press should be saying right now about
the tactics of the Royal Society. Those tactics are a perfect illustration
of what noted MIT climate expert Prof. Richard Lindzen described
last April in his Wall Street Journal article Climate
of Fear. Joined with the arbitrary power of a host of
government agencies that between them control virtually every aspect
of its existence, they are capable of forcing Exxon to submit. In
fact, I for one will not be surprised if Exxon ends up being compelled
to be to the oil industry what Philip Morris has become to the tobacco
industry, namely, a company that seems to exist for no other purpose
than to discourage as much as possible the purchase of its products.
Such self-abasing behavior is what can result when a company is
at the mercy of arbitrary government power inflamed against it by
vicious propaganda coming from those, such as the Royal Society,
who pose as the fount of intellect and morality.
As
it happens, the petition I have referred to has no financial support
from Exxon or any other company in the oil, coal, or natural gas
industries. Can the same thing be said about governmental support
of The Royal Society and the endless studies dedicated
to advancing the Green agenda?
The Royal Society
should apologize to Exxon and to the respected scientists
Seitz, Lindzen, and the more than 17,000 others who oppose its views
whose reputations it has besmirched.
September
25, 2006
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, and is
the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2006 George Reisman
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