By Charles Krauthammer
Thursday, February 20, 2014
I repeat: I’m not a global warming believer. I’m not a
global warming denier. I’ve long believed that it cannot be good for humanity
to be spewing tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. I also believe that
those scientists who pretend to know exactly what this will cause in 20, 30 or
50 years are white-coated propagandists.
“The debate is settled,” asserted propagandist in chief
Barack Obama in his latest State of the Union address. “Climate change is a
fact.” Really? There is nothing more anti-scientific than the very idea that
science is settled, static, impervious to challenge. Take a non-climate
example. It was long assumed that mammograms help reduce breast cancer deaths.
This fact was so settled that Obamacare requires every insurance plan to offer
mammograms (for free, no less) or be subject to termination.
Now we learn from a massive randomized study — 90,000
women followed for 25 years — that mammograms may have no effect on breast
cancer deaths. Indeed, one out of five of those diagnosed by mammogram receives
unnecessary radiation, chemo or surgery.
So much for settledness. And climate is less well
understood than breast cancer. If climate science is settled, why do its
predictions keep changing? And how is it that the great physicist Freeman
Dyson, who did some climate research in the late 1970s, thinks today’s
climate-change Cassandras are hopelessly mistaken?
They deal with the fluid dynamics of the atmosphere and
oceans, argues Dyson, ignoring the effect of biology, i.e., vegetation and
topsoil. Further, their predictions rest on models they fall in love with: “You
sit in front of a computer screen for 10 years and you start to think of your
model as being real.” Not surprisingly, these models have been “consistently
and spectacularly wrong” in their predictions, write atmospheric scientists
Richard McNider and John Christy — and always, amazingly, in the same direction.
Settled? Even Britain’s national weather service concedes
there’s been no change — delicately called a “pause” — in global temperature in
15 years. If even the raw data is recalcitrant, let alone the assumptions and
underlying models, how settled is the science?
But even worse than the pretense of settledness is the
cynical attribution of any politically convenient natural disaster to climate
change, a clever term that allows you to attribute anything — warming and
cooling, drought and flood — to man’s sinful carbon burning.
Accordingly, Obama ostentatiously visited
drought-stricken California last Friday. Surprise! He blamed climate change.
Here even the New York Times gagged, pointing out that far from being supported
by the evidence, “the most recent computer projections suggest that as the
world warms, California should get wetter, not drier, in the winter.”
How inconvenient. But we’ve been here before. Hurricane
Sandy was made the poster child for the alleged increased frequency and
strength of “extreme weather events” like hurricanes.
Nonsense. Sandy wasn’t even a hurricane when it hit the
United States. Indeed, in all of 2012, only a single hurricane made U.S.
landfall . And 2013 saw the fewest Atlantic hurricanes in 30 years. In fact, in
the last half-century, one-third fewer major hurricanes have hit the United
States than in the previous half-century.
Similarly tornadoes. Every time one hits, the
climate-change commentary begins. Yet last year saw the fewest in a
quarter-century. And the last 30 years — of presumed global warming — has seen
a 30 percent decrease in extreme tornado activity (F3 and above) versus the
previous 30 years.
None of this is dispositive. It doesn’t settle the issue.
But that’s the point. It mocks the very notion of settled science, which is
nothing but a crude attempt to silence critics and delegitimize debate. As does
the term “denier” — an echo of Holocaust denial, contemptibly suggesting the
malevolent rejection of an established historical truth.
Climate-change proponents have made their cause a matter
of fealty and faith. For folks who pretend to be brave carriers of the
scientific ethic, there’s more than a tinge of religion in their jeremiads. If
you whore after other gods, the Bible tells us, “the Lord’s wrath be kindled
against you, and he shut up the heaven, that there be no rain, and that the
land yield not her fruit” (Deuteronomy 11).
Sounds like California. Except that today there’s a new
god, the Earth Mother. And a new set of sins — burning coal and driving a fully
equipped F-150.
But whoring is whoring, and the gods must be appeased. So
if California burns, you send your high priest (in carbon-belching Air Force
One, but never mind) to the bone-dry land to offer up, on behalf of the
repentant congregation, a $1 billion burnt offering called a “climate
resilience fund.”
Ah, settled science in action.
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