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Yes, Sen. Boxer, There IS A Climate Science Denial Lobby - MSNBC

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hatrack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-06-07 12:27 PM
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Yes, Sen. Boxer, There IS A Climate Science Denial Lobby - MSNBC
Aug. 13, 2007 issue - Sen. Barbara Boxer had been chair of the Senate's Environment Committee for less than a month when the verdict landed last February. "Warming of the climate system is unequivocal," concluded a report by 600 scientists from governments, academia, green groups and businesses in 40 countries. Worse, there was now at least a 90 percent likelihood that the release of greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels is causing longer droughts, more flood-causing downpours and worse heat waves, way up from earlier studies. Those who doubt the reality of human-caused climate change have spent decades disputing that. But Boxer figured that with "the overwhelming science out there, the deniers' days were numbered." As she left a meeting with the head of the international climate panel, however, a staffer had some news for her. A conservative think tank long funded by ExxonMobil, she told Boxer, had offered scientists $10,000 to write articles undercutting the new report and the computer-based climate models it is based on. "I realized," says Boxer, "there was a movement behind this that just wasn't giving up."

If you think those who have long challenged the mainstream scientific findings about global warming recognize that the game is over, think again. Yes, 19 million people watched the "Live Earth" concerts last month, titans of corporate America are calling for laws mandating greenhouse cuts, "green" magazines fill newsstands, and the film based on Al Gore's best-selling book, "An Inconvenient Truth," won an Oscar. But outside Hollywood, Manhattan and other habitats of the chattering classes, the denial machine is running at full throttle—and continuing to shape both government policy and public opinion.

Since the late 1980s, this well-coordinated, well-funded campaign by contrarian scientists, free-market think tanks and industry has created a paralyzing fog of doubt around climate change. Through advertisements, op-eds, lobbying and media attention, greenhouse doubters (they hate being called deniers) argued first that the world is not warming; measurements indicating otherwise are flawed, they said. Then they claimed that any warming is natural, not caused by human activities. Now they contend that the looming warming will be minuscule and harmless. "They patterned what they did after the tobacco industry," says former senator Tim Wirth, who spearheaded environmental issues as an under secretary of State in the Clinton administration. "Both figured, sow enough doubt, call the science uncertain and in dispute. That's had a huge impact on both the public and Congress."

Just last year, polls found that 64 percent of Americans thought there was "a lot" of scientific disagreement on climate change; only one third thought planetary warming was "mainly caused by things people do." In contrast, majorities in Europe and Japan recognize a broad consensus among climate experts that greenhouse gases—mostly from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas to power the world's economies—are altering climate. A new NEWSWEEK Poll finds that the influence of the denial machine remains strong. Although the figure is less than in earlier polls, 39 percent of those asked say there is "a lot of disagreement among climate scientists" on the basic question of whether the planet is warming; 42 percent say there is a lot of disagreement that human activities are a major cause of global warming. Only 46 percent say the greenhouse effect is being felt today.

EDIT

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20122975/site/newsweek/
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Maat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-06-07 12:35 PM
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1. I take great pains to call them 'deniers,'
for there is NO doubt. People like certain relatives of mine need to quit focusing upon what is going on in someone's vagina - and concentrate on driving fuel-efficient cars, and changing their lightbulbs, etc.
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phantom power Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Aug-06-07 01:52 PM
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2. There are at least 3 major structural advantages held by the denialists
1) Nobody wants to believe that bad things are happening, and that we are responsible, and that painful change is required. So, the denialists are the ones who get to tell people what they want to hear, either consciously or subliminally.

2) There is a large 25% contingency of Americans who will believe that any fact is a fabrication of biased liberals, if Sean Hannity or Rush Limbaugh tell them to. So, that 25% is pretty much a freebie for any denial campaign.

3) The "report the controversy" philosophy of contemporary news media means that reporters will happily write up any story as a "controversy," even if that controversy is between 10 paid climate change deniers, versus fifty thousand climate scientists.
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