Author Topic: The Inside Story on Climate Scientists Under Siege  (Read 113 times)

Abraham3

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The Inside Story on Climate Scientists Under Siege
« on: February 17, 2012, 07:30:19 PM »
http://motherjones.com/environment/2012/02/climate-scientist-michael-mann-video

It is almost possible to dismiss Michael Mann's account of a vast conspiracy by the fossil fuel industry to harrass scientists and befuddle the public. His story of that campaign, and his own journey from naive computer geek to battle-hardened climate ninja, seems overwrought, maybe even paranoid.
 
But now comes the unauthorized release of documents showing how a libertarian think tank, the Heartland Institute, which has in the past been supported by Exxon, spent millions on lavish conferences attacking scientists and concocting projects to counter science teaching for kindergarteners.
 
Mann's story of what he calls the climate wars, the fight by powerful entrenched interests to undermine and twist the science meant to guide government policy, starts to seem pretty much on the money. He's telling it in a book out on March 6, The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars: Dispatches From the Front Lines.
 
"They see scientists like me who are trying to communicate the potential dangers of continued fossil fuel burning to the public as a threat. That means we are subject to attacks, some of them quite personal, some of them dishonest," Mann said in an interview conducted in and around State College, home of Penn State University, where he is a professor.
It's a brilliantly sunny day, and the light snowfall of the evening before is rapidly melting.
 
Mann, who seems fairly relaxed, has just spoken to a full-capacity—and uniformly respectful and supportive—crowd at the university.
 
It's hard to square the surroundings with the description in the book of how an entire academic discipline has been made to feel under siege, but Mann insists that it is a given.
 
"It is now part of the job description if you are going to be a scientist working in a socially relevant area like human-caused climate change," he said.
 
He should know. For most of his professional life has been at the center of those wars, thanks to a paper he published with colleagues in the late 1990s showing a sharp upward movement in global temperatures in the last half of the 20th century. The graph became known as the "hockey stick".
 
If the graph was the stick, then its publication made Mann the puck. Though other prominent scientists, such as NASA's James Hansen and more recently Texas Tech University's Katharine Hayhoe, have also been targeted by contrarian bloggers and think tanks demanding their institutions turn over their email record, it's Mann who's been the favorite target.
 
He has been regularly vilified on Fox News and contrarian blogs, and by Republican members of Congress. The attorney general of Virginia has been fighting in the courts to get access to Mann's email from his earlier work at the University of Virginia. And then there is the high volume of hate mail, the threats to him and his family.
 
"A day doesn't go by when I don't have to fend off some attack, some specious criticism or personal attack," he said. "Literally a day doesn't go by where I don't have to deal with some of the nastiness that comes out of a campaign that tries to discredit me, and thereby in the view of our detractors to discredit the entire science of climate change."
 
By now he and other climate scientists have been in the trenches longer than the US army has been in Afghanistan.
 
And Mann has proved a willing combatant. He has not gone so far as Hansen, who has been arrested at the White House protesting against tar sands oil and in West Virginia protesting against coal mining. But he spends a significant part of his working life now blogging and tweeting in his efforts to engage with the public—and fending off attacks.
 
On the eve of his talk at Penn State, a coal industry lobby group calling itself the Common Sense Movement/Secure Energy for America put up a Facebook page demanding the university disinvite their own professor from speaking, and denouncing Mann as a "disgraced academic" pursuing a radical environmental agenda. The university refused. Common Sense appeared to have dismantled the Facebook page.
 
But Mann's attackers were merely regrouping. A hostile blogger published a link to Mann's Amazon page, and his opponents swung into action, denouncing the book as a "fairy tale" and climate change as "the greatest scam in human history".
 
It was not the life Mann envisioned when he began work on his postgraduate degree at Yale. All Mann knew then was that he wanted to work on big problems, that resonated outside academia. At heart, he said, he was like one of the amiable nerds on the television show Big Bang Theory.
 
"At that time I wanted nothing more just to bury my head in my computer and study data and write papers and write programs," he said. "That is the way I was raised. That is the culture I came from."
 
What happened instead was that the hockey stick graph, because it so clearly represented what had happened to the climate over the course of hundreds of years, itself became a proxy in the climate wars. (Mann's reconstruction of temperatures over the last millennium itself used proxy records from tree rings and coral).
 
"I think because the hockey stick became an icon, it's been subject to the fiercest of attacks really in the whole science of climate change," he said.
 
The UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change produced a poster-sized graph for the launch of its climate change report in 2001.
 
Those opposed to climate change began accusing Mann of overlooking important data or even manipulating the records. None of the allegations were ever found to have substance. The hockey stick would eventually be confirmed by more than 10 other studies.
 
Mann, like other scientists, was just not equipped to deal with the media barrage. "It took the scientific community some time I think to realize that the scientific community is in a street fight with climate change deniers and they are not playing by the rules of engagement of science. The scientific community needed some time to wake up to that."
 
By 2005, when Hurricane Katrina drew Americans' attention to the connection between climate change and coastal flooding, scientists were getting better at making their case to the public. George W. Bush, whose White House in 2003 deleted Mann's hockey stick graph from an environmental report, began talking about the need for biofuels. Then Barack Obama was elected on a promise to save a planet in peril.
 
But as Mann lays out in the book, the campaign to discredit climate change continued to operate, largely below the radar until November 2009 when a huge cache of email from the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit was released online without authorization.
 
Right-wing media and bloggers used the emails to discredit an entire body of climate science. They got an extra boost when an embarrassing error about melting of Himalayan glaciers appeared in the UN's IPCC report.
 
Mann now admits the climate community took far too long to realize the extent of the public relations debacle. Aside from the glacier error, the science remained sound. But Mann said now: "There may have been an overdue amount of complacency among many in the scientific community."
 
Mann, who had been at the center of so many debates in America, was at the heart of the East Anglia emails battle too.
 
Though he has been cleared of any wrongdoing, Mann does not always come off well in those highly selective exchanges of email released by the hackers. In some of the correspondence with fellow scientists, he is abrupt, dismissive of some critics. In our time at State College, he mentions more than once how climate scientists are a "cantankerous" bunch. He has zero patience, for example, for the polite label "climate skeptic" for the network of bloggers and talking heads who try to discredit climate change.
 
"When it comes to climate change, true skepticism is two-sided. One-sided skepticism is no skepticism at all," he said. "I will call people who deny the science deniers…I guess I won't be deterred by the fact that they don't like the use of that term and no doubt that just endears me to them further."
 
"It's frustrating of course because a lot of us would like to get past this nonsensical debate and on to the real debate to be had about what to do," he said.
 
But he said there are compensations in the support he gets from the public. He moves over to his computer to show off a web page: I ❤ climate scientists. He's one of three featured scientists. "It only takes one thoughtful email of support to offset a thousand thoughtless attacks," Mann said.
 
And although there are bad days, he still seems to believe he is on the winning side.
 
Across America, this is the third successive year of weird weather. The US Department of Agriculture has just revised its plant hardiness map, reflecting warming trends. That is going to reinforce scientists' efforts to cut through the disinformation campaign, Mann said.
 
"I think increasingly the campaign to deny the reality of climate change is going to come up against that brick wall of the evidence being so plain to people whether they are hunters, fishermen, gardeners," he said.
 
And if that doesn't work then Mann is going to fight to convince them.
 
"Whether I like it or not I am out there on the battlefield," he said. But he believes the experiences of the last decade have made him, and other scientists, far better fighters.
 
"Those of us who have had to go through this are battle-hardened and hopefully the better for it," he said. "I think you are now going to see the scientific community almost uniformly fighting back against this assault on science. I don't know what's going to happen in the future, but I do know that my fellow scientists and I are very ready to engage in this battle."

James West
Climate Desk Producer
James West is a producer for the Climate Desk.
« Last Edit: February 17, 2012, 07:37:49 PM by Abraham3 »

Abraham3

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Re: The Inside Story on Climate Scientists Under Siege
« Reply #1 on: February 17, 2012, 07:41:27 PM »
Coal-Powered PAC Runs Harassment Campaign Against Climate Scientist Michael Mann
 
By Brad Johnson on Feb 2, 2012 at 4:42 pm

A coal-industry astroturf group is running a public campaign to harass Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann for his “radical agenda” of climate science. The Common Sense Movement/Secure Energy for America Political Action Committee (CSM/SEAPAC) has established a website asking people to criticize the Penn State Speakers Forum for allowing Michael Mann to speak about the climate change challenge. “Join us in calling on the administration to disinvite the disgraced academic,” the group says on its Facebook page.
 
On the webpage, CSM/SEAPAC accuses Mann of “manipulating scientific data to align with his extreme political views on global warming”:
 
On February 9th, the Penn State Forum Speaker’s Series is featuring Professor Michael Mann in a speech regarding global warming. This is the same professor who is at the center of the ‘Climategate’ controversy for allegedly manipulating scientific data to align with his extreme political views on global warming. Join us in calling on the administrators of Penn State to end its support of Michael Mann and his radical agenda.
 
The suggested text for the letter to editor says Mann is “conspiring with his left-wing cronies to intimidate and silence those who would dare to question his intentions,” tarring Mann with “questionable ethics” and “extreme political activism.”
 
Michael Mann, one of the most most respected scientists in the field of paleoclimatology, has been the victim of a long-running harassment and intimidation campaign by right-wing ideologues and conspiracy theorists, including political and legal threats by Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-OK) and Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli. After hackers stole emails from a climate unit in Great Britain, climate deniers renewed their attacks on Mann, forcing several academic inquiries, all of which debunked the slanderous charges.
 
SEAPAC is a wing of the Pittsburgh-based astroturf group Common Sense Movement, which is running the “I Am Coal” campaign. Contributors include James Clifford Forrest III, president of coal company Rosebud Mining, David Young, president of the Bituminous Coal Operators’ Association, and the top executives of Swanson Industries, a West Virginia mining equipment company.

SEAPAC’s suggested letter to the editor for its harrassment campaign against Mann:

***********************************************************************

On February 9th, the Penn State Forum Speaker’s Series is featuring Professor Michael Mann in a speech regarding global warming. Let’s remember that this is the same Michael Mann who is at the center of the Climategate controversy for allegedly manipulating scientific data to align with his extreme political views on global warming.

Mann’s own emails, which have now become public, show him admitting that the science on global warming is still in question and, even worse, conspiring with his left-wing cronies to intimidate and silence those who would dare to question his intentions.

At a time when Penn State should be doing everything possible to regain its status as a bastion of truth and integrity, the last thing they should be doing is supporting someone of such questionable ethics and motives with our tax dollars.
 
There is no place for this brand of extreme political activism, disguised as academics, at Penn State now or in the future. University leadership should be ashamed for continuing to provide Mann with such high visibility – at our expense.

*****************************************************************************
Update:

CSM/SEAPAC appears to be a project of the Bituminous Coal Operators’ Association (BCOA). David M. Young, president of BCOA, is not only a top contributor to CSM/SEAPAC, but is also listed as the PAC’s treasurer. The listed address of SEAPAC is the same as that of BCOA (801 Pennsylvania Avenue NW # 612). The association has lobbied in favor of HR 910, legislation that would have overturned the EPA’s scientific finding that greenhouse gases endanger the public. (HT Aaron Huertas)

Abraham3

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Penn State defies Facebook campaign calling for it to drop climate lecture
« Reply #2 on: February 17, 2012, 07:46:43 PM »
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/blog/2012/feb/03/penn-state-facebook-michael-mann

Penn State defies Facebook campaign calling for it to drop climate lecture

University cites its First Amendment commitment in supporting its climate scientist Michael Mann's right to give lecture

In an uncharacteristically angry post at the New York Times's Dot Earth blog, Andy Revkin has hit out at a "shameful attack on free speech". It relates to a Facebook campaign which is calling on Pennsylvania State University to "disinvite" Professor Michael E. Mann, the director of its Earth System Science Center, from giving a lecture next week entitled: "Confronting the Climate Change Challenge."

The Facebook campaign has been initiated by a seemingly conjoined group called the Common Sense Movement/Secure Energy for America Political Action Committee. Brad Johnson at ThinkProgress has investigated the people behind it and describes it as a "coal-industry astroturf group". Here's a video from the Common Sense Movement's "I Am Coal" campaign, which gives an insight into its worldview...

[Go to link above to see embedded video]

The group argues on its page:

At a time when Penn State should be doing everything possible to regain its status as a bastion of truth and integrity, the last thing they should be doing is supporting someone of such questionable ethics and motives with our tax dollars.
There is no place for this brand of extreme political activism, disguised as academics, at Penn State now or in the future. University leadership should be ashamed for continuing to provide Mann with such high visibility – at our expense.


Revkin is particularly angry – quite rightly - at the group's templated letter it is asking supporters to send to "daily newspapers near you", which includes the accusation that Mann, one of the world's most high-profile climate scientists whose private emails were among those illegally released online in 2009, is "conspiring with his left-wing cronies to intimidate and silence those who would dare to question his intentions".

Revkin even took to Facebook himself, posting: "Antidemocratic, hateful, and coal-backed smear campaign against a scientist I've sometimes disagreed with but who has every right to state his case at Penn State or anywhere else."

The efforts of those behind the campaign of intimidation against Penn State appear to have come to nothing, though. Common sense (of the real variety) reigns, as a spokesman has just confirmed to me:

Penn State has a deep and profound commitment to the First Amendment and the principles of free speech and expression. Our role as a university is to serve as a marketplace of ideas and by allowing this talk we are protecting the civil liberties of our students, faculty and staff. There are no plans to cancel his speaking engagement.

Michael Mann's research has undergone several rigorous national reviews and investigations and in each case his work has been upheld.

In 2011, the National Science Foundation completed a review and upheld Mann's work. The NSF review was the second major investigation at the national level of his controversial research into climate change. In 2006 the National Academy of Sciences completed an inquiry into Mann's findings at the request of Congress. Again, his research was confirmed.

In 2010, Penn State conducted its own four-month investigation into allegations of research misconduct against Mann and a panel of five University faculty members from various fields determined that the scientist violated no professional standards in the course of his work.


The spokesman added that such a lecture would typically attract 300-400 people. On the question of security, he said: "We evaluate every event on campus from a security perspective and will determine if additional steps are warranted."

He added: "We have received only a handful of comments [about the lecture], and the majority of those are supporting free speech."

Abraham3

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Re: The Inside Story on Climate Scientists Under Siege
« Reply #3 on: February 17, 2012, 07:53:18 PM »


It's pretty depressing to consider that even now, well into the 21st century, highly respected scientists are still harassed, intimidated, and attacked for their work. Ever since the far-right latched on to the hacked email event at the University of East Anglia, the well-regarded paleoclimatologist Michael Mann has been particularly victimized by conspiracy theorists and ideologues who claim global warming is a hoax.

He, his colleagues, even their families have received personal threats—just for working in a field that has produced some inconvenient findings for fossil fuel companies and, by extension, a particular political ideology.

But now, the harassment stands to accelerate. A coal industry group is now organizing an entire campaign to harass Michael Mann, who is giving a speech at the university where he works, Penn State. Brad Johnson reports:

A coal-industry astroturf group is running a public campaign to harass Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann for his “radical agenda” of climate science. The Common Sense Movement/Secure Energy for America Political Action Committee (CSM/SEAPAC) has established a website asking people to criticize the Penn State Speakers Forum for allowing Michael Mann to speak about the climate change challenge. “Join us in calling on the administration to disinvite the disgraced academic,” the group says on its Facebook page.
The group then asks people to send out a pre-written letter to local newspaper editorial boards lambasting the scientist. In short, it's disgusting. It's a public campaign to attack a scientist—not an elected official, not a prominent businessman, not an activist.

If we've reached a point where scientists can be subjected to such organized attacks, it bodes ill for our society at large. Such campaigns could eventually have a chilling effect on good science in general. Who will want to go through all that hassle, personal discomfort, and, perhaps, danger, to collect and analyze some data?

The Common Sense Movement and Secure Energy for America should be deeply, deeply ashamed.

Seen Johnson's full report here, and read the repulsive pre-written letter here

orogenicman

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Re: The Inside Story on Climate Scientists Under Siege
« Reply #4 on: February 17, 2012, 08:03:04 PM »
I wish someone had the cahones to take these people to court for personal harrassment, at the least.
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Lowell

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Re: The Inside Story on Climate Scientists Under Siege
« Reply #5 on: February 17, 2012, 10:55:00 PM »
Isn't there a general law against "conspiracy"? I remember something that was written to combat racketeering.
"TO ARGUE WITH A PERSON WHO HAS RENOUNCED THE USE OF REASON IS LIKE ADMINISTERING MEDICINE TO THE DEAD"
Thomas Paine