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Posts Tagged ‘climategate’

Nature magazine against open science

by snork ( 75 Comments › )
Filed under Climate, Media, Science at December 30th, 2009 - 5:00 am

Via ClimateAudit, here’s an editorial in Nature Magazine, excusing the breaking of UK FOI (equivalent to the US FOIA) law and the conspiracy to break the law by the “team”. The argument basically comes down to this:

If there are benefits to the e-mail theft, one is to highlight yet again the harassment that denialists inflict on some climate-change researchers, often in the form of endless, time-consuming demands for information under the US and UK Freedom of Information Acts. Governments and institutions need to provide tangible assistance for researchers facing such a burden.

Gosh. I should remember that defense if I ever get my taxes audited. These geniuses say the IRS should do my taxes for me, because it’s too hard for me to do.

A couple of asides: this is the same Nature Magazine referred to in the famous CRUtape letter in the phrase “Mike’s Nature trick”. And after being made fools of by this comment, they defend it with the hackneyed (and wrong) argument that “trick” is innocent and clever:

One e-mail talked of displaying the data using a ‘trick’ — slang for a clever (and legitimate) technique, but a word that denialists have used to accuse the researchers of fabricating their results.

Excuse me while I barf. That’s either ignorant or disingenuous. The “trick” had nothing to do with the actual dendro reconstruction, it was entirely about decieving the public. That was its only purpose. The ‘clever’ part, I’ll leave you to decide, but the ‘legitimate’ part is just plain wrong. Which leads me to conclude that the editors are either too ignorant to be editors of a science magazine, or too dishonest to be editors of a science magazine.
The other aside: the loaded language. It’s truly breathtaking that a supposedly dignified journal can used such incendiary language. Read the piece; it’s not that long. I loaded it into my word processor, and came up with these statistics:

Total words: 974
Instances of “denial, denialist”, or variations: 8
Instances of “conspire, conspiracy”, or variations: 3
Instances of “theft or stolen”: 5
Instances of “fringe or paranoid”: 2

The editors of Nature Magazine are a disgrace. The general MSM has nothing on them in terms of bias and unprofessionalism. Dan Rather in a lab coat.

Extra bonus: IPCC officially piles on, says “nothing to see here except the cyber theft”.

Comments on blogs and in the media about the contents of a large number of private emails stolen  from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of  East Anglia, United Kingdom, have questioned  both the validity of the key  findings of the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report (AR4) and the integrity  of  its authors. IPCC WGI condemns the illegal act which led to private emails  being posted on the  Internet and firmly stands by the findings of the AR4 and by the community of researchers worldwide  whose professional standards and careful scientific work over many years have provided the basis for  these conclusions.

My answer to that is [expletive deleted], you bunch of [expletive deleted] [expletive deleted].

Extra extra bonus: A comment @ the ClimateAudit link, from none other than the Steve Mosher who broke the Climategate story:

Steven Mosher Posted Dec 29, 2009 at 5:44 PM | Permalink | Reply

Thanks steve. So I downloaded it and found my request. The[n] for kicks I started to search around for others..

Greenpeace, Associated press, who really burdened people?

JeffRuch Of a public Employee union. He’s got more requests than you. Including requests for all emails containing words like climate change, scientists talking to the press.

Context context context. people need to put your requests in context with all the other requests. So folks can check on wildlife organizations, etc.

have fun folks

Well, golly. They piss and whine about all the FOIA requests from “denier” blogs, and how much of a burden it is to tend to them,  and looky here. Most of the FOIAs are coming from “friendlies”.  [expletive deleted]

And there’s more…

Jeez Louise, why’s all of this hitting at the same time two days before New Years?  New Scientist magazine (aka “Nude Socialist”) joins the dogpile:

This anger is understandable. Over the past two decades, the CRU has compiled the most authoritative record of recent temperatures on the planet. It is how we know the world is warming. Yet its researchers have been inundated over the past few years with what feel like unreasonable and malicious demands for their raw data. They fear the hacking of their emails is the culmination of a concerted attack by data terrorists.

They deserve to be protected. The trouble is that there should also be a place in the scientific dialogue for critics to make their views known, for the heretics who are not part of the scientific consensus.

Moving right along…

Back at ClimateAudit, there’s a second thread. And in the first one, they’re rapidly discovering that (see “extra extra bonus”) this is not only a flimsy excuse on its merits, but the actual numbers of FOIA requests have been anything but onerous.

That hissing sound you hear is the sound of 10,000 climate activists collectively pissing their pants. Oh, the urine footprint.

Climategate – the semi-prequel

by snork ( 146 Comments › )
Filed under Climate, Economy, Free Speech, Politics, Science, Technology at December 28th, 2009 - 11:00 am

This is a long one, but it’s because it’s filled with gems that are so valuable, they can’t be cut.

As the Climategate story was breaking, I wrote a couple of pieces entitled “Climate – the prequel“, and “Climaegate the pre-prequel“. The first was about Melanie Phillips sounding the alarm bell in 2007 about chicanery at the CRU. The second was about the 1961 speech by Dwight Eisenhower, in which he warned us about the dangers of a government-science complex. This fits between those, dating from 1974.

On Dec 24, I wrote up a piece on an abysmally poor science experiment that the BBC showed, and related it to what Richard Feynman referred to as “Cargo Cult Science”. Having re-read the 1974 speech that I had linked in that article, I was struck by how many things that he said in that speech that were directly relevant and directly in contradiction to the conduct of the CRU scientists, and their apologists. Here, again, is the speech (sorry; it’s in PDF format). I will excerpt the relevant paragraph in which he defines Cargo Cult Science:

In the South Seas there is a Cargo Cult of people. During the war they saw airplanes land with lots of good materials, and they want the same thing to happen now. So they’ve arranged to make things like runways, to put fires along the sides of the runways, to make a wooden hut for a man to sit in, with two wooden pieces on his head like headphones and bars of bamboo sticking out like antennas – he’s the controller – and they wait for the airplanes to land. They’re doing everything right. The form is perfect. It looks exactly the way it looked before. But it doesn’t work. No airplanes land. So I call these things Cargo Cult Science, because they follow all the apparent precepts and forms of scientific investigation, but they’re missing something essential, because the planes don’t land.

That’s the description of “Cargo Cult Science”. He goes on to say:

Now it behooves me, of course, to tell you what they’re missing. But it would be just about as difficult to explain to the South Sea Islanders how they have to arrange things so that they get some wealth in their system. It is not something simple like telling them how to improve the shapes of the earphones. But there is one feature I notice that is generally missing in Cargo Cult Science. That is the idea that we all hope you have learned in studying science in school – we never explicitly say what this is, but just hope that you catch on by all the examples of scientific investigation . It is interesting, therefore, to bring it out now and speak of it explicitly. It’s a kind of scientific integrity, a principle of scientific thought that corresponds to a kind of utter honesty – a kind of leaning over backwards.

Keep that in mind as you read the CRUtape letters™.

For example, if you’re doing an experiment, you should report everything that you think might make it invalid – not only what you think is right about it: other causes that could possibly explain your results; and things you thought of that you’ve eliminated by some other experiment, and how they worked—to make sure the other fellow can tell they have been eliminated.

Well, well. It’s almost as if Dr. Feynman read the CRUtape letters in 1974. Here’s CRUtape letter 942777075.txt:

From: Phil Jones <p.jones@xxxxxxxxx.xxx>
To: ray bradley <rbradley@xxxxxxxxx.xxx>,mann@xxxxxxxxx.xxx, mhughes@xxxxxxxxx.xxx
Subject: Diagram for WMO Statement
Date: Tue, 16 Nov 1999 13:31:15 +0000
Cc: k.briffa@xxxxxxxxx.xxx,t.osborn@xxxxxxxxx.xxx

Dear Ray, Mike and Malcolm, Once Tim’s got a diagram here we’ll send that either later today or first thing tomorrow. I’ve just completed Mike’s Nature trick of adding in the real temps to each series for the last 20 years (ie from 1981 onwards) amd  from 1961 for Keith’s to hide the decline. Mike’s series got the annual land and marine values while the other two got  April-Sept for NH land N of 20N. The latter two are real for  1999, while the estimate for 1999 for NH combined is +0.44C  wrt 61-90. The Global estimate for 1999 with data through Oct is +0.35C cf. 0.57 for 1998.
Thanks for the comments, Ray.

Cheers
Phil

Apologists (we all know who they are) are claiming that the “trick”, and “hiding the decline” are no big deal in the big picture, since they don’t impact the ultimate IPCC findings. That’s largely true, but misses the key point that Feynman was making – that it’s the scientist’s responsibility to be scrupulous in making sure that his personal biases don’t affect the work. In this case, it’s even worse than that – there’s an open conspiracy – yes that’s a correct usage of the word – to mislead. What this exposes about the mindset and the group dynamic flies completely in the face of the scrupulous, as Feynman puts it “leaning over backward”, openness and honesty.

Feynman continues:

Details that could throw doubt on your interpretation must be given, if you know them. You must do the best you can – if you know anything at all wrong, or possibly wrong – to explain it. If you make a theory, for example, and advertise it, or put it out, then you must also put down all the facts that disagree with it, as well as those that agree with it. There is also a more subtle problem. When you have put a lot of ideas together to make an elaborate theory, you want to make sure, when explaining what it fits, that those things it fits are not just the things that gave you the idea for the theory; but that the Finished theory makes something else come out right, in addition.

This brings up a broader issue not really related to the work that CRU does, but the work that the modelers do – can they predict anything, including the behavior of the earth in the 20th century, with their models? To make a long story short, not without embedding prior knowledge into them. In other words, they fail this test.

Feynman continues:

In summary, the idea is to try to give all of the information to help others to judge the value of your contribution; not just the information that leads to judgment in one particular direction or another.

The Climategate affair was entirely about people wanting to repeat the science, and having to use FOIA requests to demand the data (which wouldn’t have been necessary if they had been behaving like good scientists as Feynman describes), and Jones et al still refusing. It’s again as if Feynman was talking about Jones, et all in 1974.

Feynman goes on:

We’ve leaned from experience that the truth will out. Other experimenters will repeat your experiment and Find out whether you were wrong or right. Nature’s phenomena will agree or they’ll disagree with your theory. And, although you may gain some temporary fame and excitement, you will not gain a good reputation as a scientist if you haven’t tried to be very careful in this kind of work. And it’s this type of integrity, this kind of care not to fool yourself, that is missing to a large extent in much of the research in Cargo Cult Science.

(more…)

Meltdown Mann

by snork ( 141 Comments › )
Filed under Climate, Economy, Free Speech, Media, Progressives, Science, United Nations at December 21st, 2009 - 6:00 pm

One of the chief figures in the climategate debacle is Dr. Michael Mann of Penn State. Next to Jones, he was probably the most notorious and obnoxious. He, of course, is famous for the now long debunked MBH (Mann-Bradley-Hughes) “hockey stick” graph, made using goofy statistics and Californian trees.

Not knowing when to keep his mouth shut, he takes to the pen in this oped in the WaPo. If you have the time, look at the comments. The WaPo readers aren’t having any of it.

Particularly bizarre, illogical, and utterly left wing, is this:

Palin wrote that Alaska’s climate is changing but referred to “thawing permafrost and retreating sea ice” as “natural, cyclical environmental trends.” In fact, such changes are among the effects scientists predicted would occur as greenhouse gas levels increase.

In context, the statement doesn’t even fit. But it was red meat for the left-wing fanatics that he imagines that we all are. Could have just as easily come from a certain little green weenie. You can’t have a proper defense of the shenanigans at CRU without dragging Sarah Palin into it.

Steve McIntyre did a reasonable fisking of it at his blog here. The basic problem with the whole piece is that it’s a complete non-sequitur. It’s actually not a new argument, it’s basically the fake-but-accurate argument warmed over.  But it does have an additional bit of fakery: the “independent lines of evidence” claim.

Here’s the short refutation of the “independent lines of evidence” argument: If these other lines of evidence were so robust, why does he hang on to his phony hockey stick by his fingernails?

Imagine that you’re on a jury. The prosecutor tells you that he has the sworn testimony of a drug-peddling pimp, and lots of other evidence that he doesn’t talk about. If the other evidence is so solid, why does he make the testimony of the pimp the centerpiece of his case?

Sorry, Mike. You already shot your best shot. Now your hockey stick goes down in history next to Piltdown Man. That was quite a meltdown, Mann.

Update: Mann is a victim.

Climategatekeeping – Wikipedia Edition

by snork ( 39 Comments › )
Filed under Climate, Economy, Free Speech, Media, Politics, Science, Socialism, Technology, United Nations at December 20th, 2009 - 1:00 pm

Steve McIntyre has had a series of posts at his site, entitled “Climategatekeeping”, 1, 2 and so on. The focus is various bits of evidence that the hockey team members were conspiring (in the truest sense of the word) to keep unfriendly papers from being published in the journals and in the IPCC reports. You can read them here, and here. For example, this one is pretty hard to spin:

Mike [Mann],
I’d rather you didn’t. I think it should be sufficient to forward the para from Andrew Conrie’s email that says the paper has been rejected by all 3 reviewers. You can say that the paper was an extended and updated version of that which appeared in CR. Obviously, under no circumstances should any of this get back to [Roger] Pielke.
Cheers
Phil [Jones]

‘Pielke’ is Roger Pielke Sr., of Colorado State. He’s a bad guy. He can’t be allowed to know what the “team” is up to. Yes, this qualifies as “conspiracy” under the legal definition.

The third in the series has a twist: it is about something that a lot of people have been aware of for quite a while, but still needs to be communicated to the public: that there has been a very active troll guarding the Wikipedia bridge, making sure that only hellfire-and-damnation interpretations of AGW make it into the text, and anything unfriendly is almost immediately pounced upon and airbrushed out by this troll. His name is William Connolley.

Lawrence Solomon at the Canadian National Post wrote this on the matter:

Connolley took control of all things climate in the most used information source the world has ever known – Wikipedia. Starting in February 2003, just when opposition to the claims of the band members were beginning to gel, Connolley set to work on the Wikipedia site. He rewrote Wikipedia’s articles on global warming, on the greenhouse effect, on the instrumental temperature record, on the urban heat island, on climate models, on global cooling. On Feb. 14, he began to erase the Little Ice Age; on Aug.11, the Medieval Warm Period. In October, he turned his attention to the hockey stick graph. He rewrote articles on the politics of global warming and on the scientists who were skeptical of the band. Richard Lindzen and Fred Singer, two of the world’s most distinguished climate scientists, were among his early targets, followed by others that the band especially hated, such as Willie Soon and Sallie Baliunas of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, authorities on the Medieval Warm Period.

All told, Connolley created or rewrote 5,428 unique Wikipedia articles. His control over Wikipedia was greater still, however, through the role he obtained at Wikipedia as a website administrator, which allowed him to act with virtual impunity. When Connolley didn’t like the subject of a certain article, he removed it — more than 500 articles of various descriptions disappeared at his hand. When he disapproved of the arguments that others were making, he often had them barred — over 2,000 Wikipedia contributors who ran afoul of him found themselves blocked from making further contributions. Acolytes whose writing conformed to Connolley’s global warming views, in contrast, were rewarded with Wikipedia’s blessings. In these ways, Connolley turned Wikipedia into the missionary wing of the global warming movement.

Who does that remind us of?

We already knew that Wikipedia isn’t a reliable source for information on controversial issues, but rarely have we seen such naked gatekeeping as in this case. One can only conclude that the senior management supports this kind of one-sided editorializing masquerading as open information, and is willing to take a hit to their credibility for the cause. BTW, have you noticed, that just like another site that goes unnamed, their level of tip jar begging has increased dramatically lately? Hey guys, do you think maybe there’s a reason why people are hanging on to their change?

As an aside, sometimes we Americans get annoyed by some of the more obnoxious Canadians whom we have to deal with, but let me take this opportunity to salute McIntyre, Solomon, Levant, McKitrick, and many other of our neighbors to the North, for punching well above their weight on this issue, and showing leadership and true grit well beyond their numbers. If I had a hat, I’d take it off to these gentlemen (and ladies). Three cheers for Canada!