Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes,
our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the
state of facts and evidence.
- John Adams
I almost spilled my coffee. I just stood there, dumbstruck right in my own
kitchen. Flipping through the Wall Street Journal the other morning while
waiting for the oatmeal to cool, my eye was caught by an article I had to
read all the way through - then and there. It was the text of an interview
with the latest Nobel Prize laureate. No, not the one named Al Gore.
Few may have noticed, but Mr. Gore shared this year's Nobel Peace Prize with
a real scientist, or rather a whole slew of them on the UN's
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. That group's work is as
unglamorous as its bureaucratic name. It's never even made a horror film
(GLOBAL WARNING!) about the earth's being inundated as the polar icecaps
melt.
This international panel just plods along trying to find out what's really
going on with the climate. Facts are stubborn things, as dour John Adams
once noted, and it takes a lot of patient research to find and evaluate
them, then suggest an appropriate response. It's about as exciting as
bookkeeping.
Being an alarmist is a lot easier; some politicians and pamphleteers make
highly successful careers of it. Real scientists may not be pleased by the
sensationalism that envelops the whole subject of global warming. But if
they speak up, they could be labeled heretics and exiled to the farthest
reaches of academic opprobrium. For global warming has become more of a
fighting faith than a topic for calm analysis. Disagree and you're liable to
be called not just wrong but anti-science. Today it is the ultimate heresy.
One of the scientific dissenters is John Christy, a member of both the UN
panel and the University of Alabama's faculty. (He's the director of that
university's Earth System Science Center.) In a break with tradition, Dr. Christy declined to perform the traditional pas de deux of mutual flattery when Nobel laureates share the same prize. Not when Al Gore's may be the first on record awarded essentially for the kind of PR that comes too close to being propaganda. It makes you wonder what propagandist will get it next year - Michael Moore?
It turns out there are indeed reasonable things to be said about global
warming - and on television at that. I was amazed. The transcript of Dr.
Christy's interview with CNN's Miles O'Brien is worth reading: (Just set
down your coffee cup first.)
Miles O'Brien: I assume you're not happy about sharing this award with Al
Gore. You going to renounce it in some way?
John Christy: Well, as a scientist at the University of Alabama in
Huntsville, I always thought that - I may sound like the Grinch who stole
Christmas here - that prizes were given for performance, and not for
promotional activities. And, when I look at the world, I see that the carbon
dioxide rate is increasing, and energy demand, of course, is increasing. And
that's because, without energy, life is brutal and short. So, I don't see
very much effect in trying to scare people into not using energy, when it is
the very basis of how we can live in our society.
O'Brien: So, what about the movie ("An Inconvenient Truth") do you take
issue with, then, Dr. Christy?
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