Knives come out in climate debate: guess who's paying the thugs?
Here's just one example of how a sophisticated propaganda campaign aims to derail Copenhagen
Passed on for your consideration, an excellent analysis of the latest propaganda piece to hit the climate debate: the so-called "Story of Cap-and-Trade" video on YouTube. Now, triangulate that with this recent study by the Center for Public Integrity.
It's hysterically funny that some people think climate scientists are involved in a conspiracy to trump up global warming; if they are, they're doing so for free and at risk of their careers and reputations. One can only admire evil conspirators who work so selflessly for... what kind of gain, exactly? On the other hand, the motives of the people with the fossil fuel money are very clear, as is the paper trail that leads from them to many of the same lobbying agencies that the tobacco companies used to try to keep us smoking. But... nah... it couldn't be them that're lying... could it?
(Oh, and if you're confused about who to believe, how about Scientific American? They have an excellent article on which climate-change denial arguments are bogus, and why.) An excerpt:
Claim 5: Climatologists conspire to hide the truth about global warming by locking away their data. Their so-called "consensus" on global warming is scientifically irrelevant because science isn't settled by popularity. It is virtually impossible to disprove accusations of giant global conspiracies to those already convinced of them (can anyone prove that the Freemasons and the Roswell aliens aren't involved, too?). Let it therefore be noted that the magnitude of this hypothetical conspiracy would need to encompass many thousands of uncontroversial publications and respected scientists from around the world, stretching back through Arrhenius and Tyndall for almost 150 years. (See this feature on “Carbon Dioxide and Climate,” by Gilbert N. Plass, from Scientific American in July 1959.) It is also one so powerful that it has co-opted the official positions of dozens of scientific organizations including the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the Royal Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Geophysical Union, the American Institute of Physics and the American Meteorological Society.