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Discussion > Masstra2014 questions to sceptics.

Chandra, are you for real,

For further reading try Real Climate

Real Climate does not suffer people asking questions unless of the fawning type, as you have already rubbed Maestra up the wrong way with your Real Climate imitation I doubt you will do your cause any good by sending him there.

Feb 1, 2014 at 5:28 PM | Registered CommenterBreath of Fresh Air

And then of course there's Tamino's Closed Mind, not to mention (Non)Skeptical Science and its failed cartoonist owner, cheerleader and charlatan extraordinaire.
Not for one minute am I suggesting, Maestra, that you shouldn't go and have a look at any of the sites that Chandra suggests (Science of Doom is less biased than the others). Just don't think that you are getting an objective viewpoint.
Neither should you take our word for everything but it is useful to bear in mind that scepticism should be the hallmark of the good scientist and this site has played host in the past to a wide assortment of scientists of all shades (correction most shades) of opinion in the climate debate and we hope will again in the future.
I don't recognise Chandra's description of us as

Those you are asking here do not study climate and have a strong ideological reason for wanting to believe that CO2 is not causing changes to the climate.
Most of us, I think, do study climate, if only because there is not a lot of point in being sceptical about something if you don't know what you are being sceptical about and nor do I recognise his description of our attitude to CO2 though the climate modellers, by their own admission, are desperate for CO2 to be the main driver of climate because "nothing else makes the models work". (The same models that are consistently over-estimating the warming!)
And as for "black and white" certainties, I fear there are more of those bouncing around in Chandra's brain than you will find on this site!

Feb 1, 2014 at 7:36 PM | Registered CommenterMike Jackson

Chandra, you're not Millie are you. You sound like here you see.

Feb 2, 2014 at 1:22 AM | Unregistered Commentergeronimo

maestro2014. I would recommend you visit Tamino, Skeptical Science and Realclimate, just keep in mind the reverence shown by Feynman for observations and compare how much of their stuff is based on observations. Try putting a cogent sceptical question on any of them. Skeptical Science will publish it then withdraw it if receives support, RC just won't publish it. If you do get into discussion stick to empirical stuff, preferably from the IPCC reports and recent papers on sensitivity otherwise they'll run rings round you with gobbledygook.

If you find them persuasive, and surprisingly the clisci community does given that there are no cliscis on Skeptical Science or Tamino, then so be it you can stick with alarmism. RC is contemptuous of what Gavin Schmitt calls "citizen scientists" but oddly Kevin Trenberth has just released a paper with the - well schoolboys I assume - over at Skeptical Science. Very odd.

Feb 2, 2014 at 4:35 AM | Unregistered Commentergeronimo

Years back I innocently posted a few questions on RC. The tone of the replies gave me information that was far more informative than their content.

Feb 2, 2014 at 1:45 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

Maestra2014 -
I well recall when I first started reading about climate, how many sites I visited. By all means, visit those sites in Chandra's posts. I would add the following: The Blackboard (Lucia Liljegren), Climate Audit (Steve McIntyre), Climate Etc. (Judith Curry), and Roger Pielke Jr's blog (Roger Pielke Jr, in case that wasn't apparent).

I realize that this can easily turn into a time sink. However, I think you will rather quickly form opinions of which voices contribute the least information. In a bright light, our pupils automatically constrict to avoid retinal over-exposure which would wash out images; in a like manner, you will learn to squelch those who aren't helping you attain understanding. Always remember, though, that, much as a stopped clock is right twice a day, those who are not often helpful can still make good points sometimes.

[While I've tried to stay as neutral as possible, I can't help but warn you about the comments at Climate Etc., which generally turn into a "food fight" quite rapidly. However, there are some excellent comments buried within the chaff. Perhaps avoid at first reading -- limit yourself to the main posts -- and wade in later.]

Feb 2, 2014 at 1:59 PM | Registered CommenterHaroldW

It is notable that the BH regulars went to some lengths to explain the issues, while Chandra dismissed them and all sceptics as ideologues and told us we must believe the warmists. So much projection.

A point which I don't think has been mentioned is that there are quotes out there from some major players in the warmist game where they explicitly admit their ultimate goals and the need to invent and exaggerate the catastrophist stuff in order to achieve them. I don't have links to hand but someone hopefully will.

Also, "follow the money" and "who benefits?" are always interesting.

Feb 2, 2014 at 2:25 PM | Unregistered CommenterNW

NW
I agree there are plenty of sites around that will give you some rather telling quotes.
I assembled a few choice quotes some time ago: this is only a small sample.

We've got to ride the global warming issue. Even if the theory of global warming is wrong, we will be doing the right thing -- in terms of economic socialism and environmental policy." Timothy Wirth, former U.S. Senator (D-Colorado) Wirth was the guy that orchestrated Hansen's Senate testimony in 1988 on what was projected to be (and in fact turned out to be) the warmest day of the year in DC — and he made sure the air-conditioning wasn't working (allegedly!).

A global climate treaty must be implemented even if there is no scientific evidence to back the greenhouse effect Richard Benedict, State Dept. employee working on assignment from the Conservation Foundation

"...the only hope for the world is to make sure there is not another United States: We can't let other countries have the same number of cars, the amount of industrialization, we have in the U.S. We have to stop these Third World countries right where they are. And it is important to the rest of the world to make sure that they don't suffer economically by virtue of our stopping them." Michael Oppenheimer, Environmental Defense Fund.
He fails to explain how that latter objective is to be achieved.

Nuclear power must be dealt with irrationally. . . . Nuclear plants are carcinogens. Let's get that story out. . . . Their lies will catch up to them. We need endless Chernobyl reminders. Ralph Nader. Whose lies, Ralph?

Cannibalism is a "radical but realistic solution to the problem of overpopulation. Lyall Watson, The Financial Times, 15 July 1995. Yeuk!

Global Sustainability requires the deliberate quest of poverty . . . reduced resource consumption . . . and set levels of mortality control. Professor Maurice King. 'Mortality control' — I like that!

Giving society cheap, abundant energy . . . would be the equivalent of giving an idiot child a machine gun. Paul Ehrlich, Stanford University. Good old Ehrlich! Remember Cassandra? She was the one who kept on (correctly) prophesying doom but no-one believed her. I call Ehrlich Ardnassac. He keeps prohesying doom; everyone believes him; he hasn't been right yet!

The secret to David McTaggart's (early officer in Greenpeace) success is the secret to Greenpeace's success: It doesn't matter what is true . . . . it only matters what people believe is true . . . . You are what the media define you to be. [Greenpeace] became a myth, and a myth-generating machine. Paul Watson, co-founder of Greenpeace. 'Myth-generating machine'! What we naive little people call 'liars'.

Complex technology of any sort is an assault on human dignity. It would be little short of disastrous for us to discover the source of clean, cheap, abundant energy, because of what we might do with it. Amory Lovins, Rocky Mountain Institute.

and my all-time favourite
Isn't the only hope for the planet that the industrialized civilizations collapse? Isn't it our responsibility to bring that about? Maurice Strong, Head of the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. Strong and the Club of Rome were the main instigators of the AGW scam and this is essentially what they had in mind. CO2-induced global warming happens to be the most convenient tool at the moment. Others will no doubt be found as and when necessary.

There are plenty more where these came from and out in the wider world as well!

Feb 2, 2014 at 5:22 PM | Registered CommenterMike Jackson

NW -

I think that Maestra2014 confined herself to technical questions so perhaps better not to burden her with the nontechnical stuff.

The mother lode for the sort of stuff you mention is probably the Climategate emails, for anyone who wants to lift the stone of climate science and see the creepings and crawlings that were going on. I always found it interesting the excuses made for all that was revealed:

- "Who doesn't have emails they would be embarrassed to be revealed to the public?" (Well, me for one; I was always told to assume that emails could finish anywhere and to have no expectation of privacy. And that does not lessen the significance of what the emails revealed)

- "They are taken out of context" (when the context made them 10× worse)

-"They were stolen private emails" (as if that made any difference to what they revealed, it's debatable they were private as they were FOI-able, and most likely they were released by a sysadmin with authorised access, which would not have been unlawful).

Feb 2, 2014 at 5:34 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

On reflection, the emails would not be a good starting point for someone who was not already familiar with some of the events (hiding of data, thwarting of FOI requests, 'hiding the decline' (in proxy data), the hockey stick story and so on.

Feb 2, 2014 at 6:09 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

Maestra2014

You have started, as we all did, with questions. That is already further than most do. Enjoy the ride should you decide to continue but be prepared to be insulted, astonished, indignant, bemused and exasperated. Just take it at your own pace for this will be a long-haul. But now is a good time as I believe the best bits are yet to come.

Feb 2, 2014 at 7:18 PM | Unregistered Commenterssat

Geronimo complains about his experience with submitting "cogent skeptical questions" to the sites I suggested. I have not seen his questions and so cannot know for sure, but I expect what he thinks cogent (clear, logical, and convincing) is in fact anything but, except to him and maybe some others here. Many science sites have little patience with people making unsupported assertions of scientific "fact" that are really just ignorant, opinionated, rants. They usually expect extraordinary statements to be backed by evidence, which Geronimo is unlikely to be able to present. That he finds people run rings round him with "gobbledygook" is his way of saying that he doesn't understand the responses that his "questions" provoke.

There are many ways of asking a question and the manner in which you ask and your responses to the answers offered says a lot about your intentions and preconceptions. Loaded questions will provoke a hostile response. I'd be surprised if sites would respond badly to honest, non-loaded, questions - give us some examples of such behaviour.

Feb 2, 2014 at 7:40 PM | Unregistered CommenterChandra

I think a discussion of our assessment of websites is not helpful to Maestra2014. Let her make her own judgment.

Feb 2, 2014 at 8:17 PM | Registered CommenterHaroldW

I actually stumbled upon many of the above-suggested blogs/websites when I began this little journey of mine. I have read and re-read and read some more. Here's what I know: based on my experience, I have yet to find another blog where the frequent posters were as patient with a "newbie" such as myself --- and who took the time to answer my questions, regardless of how simplistic they must have appeared upon first asking --- than here. I'm slightly better than novice these days, and have a firm enough grasp of the prevailing concepts that I can see now how elementary my first questions were. This makes me appreciate that much more how kind and thorough the posters are here. It would have been easy to dismiss me. That was certainly not my experience.

I'm not sure why Chandra is so adamant about getting me to challenge the posters here --- for that with which I don't agree, I simply let go. I find no need to be belligerent or confrontational, as my original intention for coming here was to learn about a viewpoint to which I had not previously been exposed in such depth. And, wouldn't you know it? I've learned a ton.

Feb 2, 2014 at 11:28 PM | Unregistered Commentermaestra2014

Hi Chandra, I won’t berate you for your ignorance because I’ve always felt making snide remarks about someone you don’t know puts one in the class of a poison pen letter writer, and I don’t have an image of myself as such a person. A very small number of points, the first being if you’re going to take away someone’s character it’s good manners, not to say prudent because people might be confused, to spell their pseudonym the way they do, it’s “geronimo” with a deliberate small “g”.

I am delighted that you looked up the meaning of “cogent” presumably a word new to you, and as ever with people you’d assumed it would be new to the denizens of this blog so explained it for them. Thank you for your efforts but I’m pretty sure the rest of the blog knows its meaning being a fairly well educated bunch of women and men.

As you don’t appear to have read what I said, I explained the missing heat to Masstra2014 as best I understand it, and told him so. I invited the more intelligent blog members to correct me if I was wrong. I am, rightly, modest in my understanding of the issues and always willing to be corrected. You didn’t correct me, so I’m assuming you haven’t had chance to see what the correction would be over on SkS yet. Or, most probably there isn’t one because what I gave was a simple narrative of the situation, and of course, those who keep up with events would know that Dr. Trenberth has recently begun to back away from this rather strange theory of a Dr. No of heat sitting somewhere in a deep oceanic cavern waiting to bring havoc on the human race. Although I wouldn’t expect you to know that.

I also advised Masstra2014 to ask simple cogent (there’s that word again, don’t you get a thrill of excitement now you know what it means) purely around the science and the IPCC. I explained that to do anything else would result in him/her being barraged with gobbledygook. You have helpfully supplied the reasons I think the responses as gobbledygook as being my not being able to understand them. Which has reasonable merit because I don’t understand what “hundreds of independent lines of evidence” means in the absence of citations, nor do I understand what “mainstream science” is, can you point to any other scientific discipline that has the notion of “mainstream science”? Nor do I understand why anybody would take a scientific paper that used “interpolation” of real world data seriously (“interpolation” in this context means making up data where there isn’t any). I would have though this a most dangerous form of scientific endeavour, wouldn’t you? Nor do I understand why there is a single human being on the planet who believes that models are anything other than the output of the beliefs of the people who constructed them. So all that stuff is gobbledygook to me.

As for understanding climate science the maths isn’t much more, as Martin A says than a first year Engineering undergraduate would need to know, except of course for the statistics, where, I have to say the climate scientists themselves seem woefully ignorant. Well according to statisticians that is.

You are a naughty girl Chandra, and I know a similarly naughty girl called Banerjee, are you by any chance related?

Feb 3, 2014 at 7:32 AM | Unregistered Commentergeronimo

I think Chandra is an Indian boy's name even though it may have a feminine sound to European (or Merkan) ears.

(Also, meastra2014 refers to 'herself', if I remember right.)

But irrespective of their sex, Chandra has really amazing powers of projection (in the sense used by psychologists), as has already been pointed out and confirmed by their latest comment.

"There are many ways of asking a question and the manner in which you ask and your responses to the answers offered says a lot about your intentions and preconceptions. Loaded questions will provoke a hostile response. I'd be surprised if sites would respond badly to honest, non-loaded, questions - give us some examples of such behaviour."

Well, yes.

When Chandra says "give us some examples" I think they actually mean "give ME some examples".

Well sorry chandra, can't be bothered.

But not all sites are the same. I have asked questions (politely and purely technical questions) on various sites. On Realclimate, the answers implied (some were explicit) that I must be quite ignorant or stupid to ask be asking such ridiculous questions.

On the other hand, two or three times, on Science of Doom, I have been given comprehensive answers by the site owner, with links to relevant papers or web pages. Other commenters there have added additional helpful information and other references.

Feb 3, 2014 at 9:21 AM | Registered CommenterMartin A

I am not going to further respond to the troll who is working hard at derailing the thread as always.

Thanks for the links Mike, those were the ones I was thinking of.

Martin, yes, the Climategate emails are also useful to show the politicisation of the science and also the sheer incompetence of it. There are many archived threads on various sites where sceptics pick out the highlights.
"Out of Context" was one of the main rebuttals chosen by the warmist community, ignoring the fact that there was no context which could justify any of it.

So much of the underlying "science" turns out to be not science at all, but statistical manipulation of Other Peoples Data (we are not allowed to know which people and what data, partly because the information has been lost) by so called climate scientists who have no statistical qualifications and evidently inadequate knowledge of the field.

Feb 3, 2014 at 1:49 PM | Unregistered CommenterNW

Maestra2014, you have made remarkably quick progress in assimilating a huge body of work. I am impressed. Seriously! I wish I shared your mental acuity. Would you care to share with us your analysis of the questions you posed earlier?

Little-g-geronimo, You confuse me and I think you are confused yourself. Do you believe that CO2 causes an energy imbalance or not? If you do, then do you really doubt that most of the resulting accumulated energy goes into the oceans? You won't have trouble finding graphs that show increasing OHC but you claim there has been no increase. As by your own admission, you are not that knowledgable, you are presumably relying on someone else to tell you that OHC is not increasing. Do your sources have any more idea on the subject than you?

You object to being told that there are "hundreds of independent lines of evidence" without being spoon-fed one to read and deny (using your superior knowledge); you object to climate science being referred to as "mainstream science" seemingly ignorant of there being "skeptical" branches of the subject where Pattern Recognition in Physics, or Principia Scientifica, or even the dog astrology journal favoured by our host, are thought to present serious work; and as the icing on the cake you're now dissing interpolation. Seriously? Assuming you are referring to C&W13, do you really think that HadCRUT4 gives a more accurate global temperature by effectively assuming that the Arctic is at global average temperatures raher than by using interpolated temperatures of areas around/in the Arctic? Not even a self respecting skeptic can seriously believe that. And your hatred of models is predictable but as someone said, all models are wrong, but some are useful.

Martin A

> Well sorry chandra, can't be bothered.

In that case it is difficult for me to believe you, but I guess that will not worry you :-) I have seen your questions and their polite answers on SoD but can't find any on RealClimate. Did you use a different name there? I cannot imagine little-g formulating a bias free, non-loaded, question, but I have trouble thinking that questions such as those you posted on SoD would be rudley treated elsewhere - they did seem unbiased (although their context might change that, I guess).

Feb 3, 2014 at 1:49 PM | Unregistered CommenterChandra

Both sides of the climate debate have got quite tetchy of late. Sceptics are bored of being ignored, insulted or patronised with the same limited proof. The consensus supporters are aware of how time is slipping by and how they’re making no progress. Because they refuse to face the inherent weakness in the science and the solutions, they place the blame on us. Unfairly, we are a symptom not the disease.

There has been at least one report suggesting the authorities focus their attentions on those who agree AGW is a problem and ignore sceptics as an anomaly. I agree up to a point. If they can’t get those who say they believe in the problem to act, they’re never going to be successful with those who say they don’t. Unfortunately most sceptics are believers who, having realised how hard it would be to cut CO2, thought it would be a good idea to look at the science again.

If you give consensus sites a good look through you won’t find much discussion about how to cut CO2. Sure, you’ll get government sites glibly advising you to change your light bulbs and not leave things on standby. But what if you’ve done all the easy stuff and it’s barely dented your energy bills? Governments like the UK have picked all the low hanging energy fruit. We’ve got nuclear, all the hydro we can make room for and half of the remaining fossil fuels is gas. From here it starts to get hard and expensive. Making things like solar panels cheaper by taking money from someone in rented accommodation and giving it to someone who owns their own home is… well… evil. I’m not much of a believer in all people being equal but I’d never endorse robbing from the poor to give to the rich.

If there’s one problem that CO2 emissions could be compared to it’s obesity. Something most people accept is a problem but can’t control. The difference is, while people might fail at reducing weight, they often think about it. Many try to lose weight. Where are the CO2 reduction forums? The emissions self help groups? When did you ever hear people brag about how small their footprint was?

Would Chandra be more productive discussing how to act on CO2 at Real Climate or staying here and whinging?

PS Maestra2014, in case you were wondering, yes it is the attentions of people like Chandra that meant you got a frosty welcome at the start.

Feb 3, 2014 at 2:36 PM | Unregistered CommenterTinyCO2

Chandra: "I wish I shared your mental acuity." Don't we all, but you don't, which is unfortunate because you clearly think you have a greater mental accuity than normal. And you haven't. Sorry.

Dennis Thatcher a man of considerably more mental accuity than either of us said it best. "Better to keep you mouth shut and have people believe you're a blithering idiot than to speak out and remove all possible doubt."


TTFN

Feb 4, 2014 at 4:25 AM | Unregistered Commentergeronimo

In fact I stole it from Mark Twain. The exact words I used were "Better to keep quiet and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt".

DT

Feb 4, 2014 at 10:46 AM | Unregistered CommenterDenis Thatcher

Thanks Dennis, almost everything that's not Shakespeare can be traced back to Twain. Either way it's something that people with strong, uninformed, prejudiced views should take on board, no matter how much they approve of their own mental acuity.

Feb 4, 2014 at 12:42 PM | Unregistered Commentergeronimo

Little-g

> Either way it's something that people with strong, uninformed,
> prejudiced views should take on board

You probably don't see the irony in your stating that. I'm sure everyone else does.

Feb 4, 2014 at 1:30 PM | Unregistered CommenterChandra

I think the current incarnation of the resident troll has just about outstayed its welcome.

Feb 4, 2014 at 2:21 PM | Unregistered CommenterNW

NW
I think you're right.
My experience of geronimo's postings is that he seems to have more common sense in his little finger than the likes of Chandra will ever have in his whole brain.
It's interesting that Maestra2014 comes along here, asks us all for help in understanding climate science and almost immediately can spot Chandra for the fraud he is.
The only worthwhile comment on his deliberate (I assume) attempts to score points at the expense of regular contributors is "Pot. Kettle".

Feb 4, 2014 at 2:37 PM | Registered CommenterMike Jackson