Just for fun:

http://www.americanthinker.com/2007/08/twisting_science_to_fit_the_gl.html

Twisting Science to Fit the Global Warming Template
By James Lewis
The global warming crowd does not take kindly to being contradicted,
either by critics or data. Of course, critics can be defamed and data
can be skewed.  But unless the critics can be silenced, they can fight
back and expose phony data. When it begins to look like predictions of
doom are not turning out sufficiently catastrophic, a full Orwell is
called for. The media mobilize their templates to completely re-cast
the information.


This process was fully in evidence yesterday when the global news
service Reuters spun a report in Science magazine (which has been
quietly starting to warn its readership that maybe it would be prudent
to come in a bit from the end of the global warming limb) as if it
confirmed the seriousness of global warning, when in fact the report
contained devastating information of flaws in the doomsters
methodology and warned that the disaster has been postponed.

"Global warming will step up after 2009: scientists."
That's the Reuters headline on an article in this week's Science
magazine. But the Science article itself is an artful retreat from
previous, over-confident global warming predictions.


Here's the Reuters story

"WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Global warming is forecast to set in with a
vengeance after 2009, with at least half of the five following years
expected to be hotter than 1998, the warmest year on record,
scientists reported on Thursday." (italics added)
Here is Science magazine's own summary:

"Next Decade's Climate."

"Rising greenhouse gases are changing global climate, but during the
next few decades natural climate variations will have a say as well,
so researchers are scrambling to factor them in." [italics added]
Notice that the editors of Science repeat the global warming party
line, but emphasize the news: Climate modelers are finally "scrambling
to factor in" natural variation. That's funny. You would have thought
that model-builders would have done that ages ago. You mean they were
only doing greenhouse predictions, and ignoring all the rest?


That's the message a lot of scientific readers will get out of this
backhanded admission.


For example, write the editors,

"Stirrings in the North Atlantic Ocean today that have nothing to do
with the strengthening greenhouse-just natural jostlings of the
climate system-could lead to drought in Africa's Sahel in a decade or
two, they recognized. ... until now, climate forecasters who worry
about what greenhouse gases could be doing to climate have ignored
what's happening naturally. Most looked 100 years ahead, far enough so
that they could safely ignore what's happening now. No more. In this
week's issue, researchers take their first stab at forecasting climate
a decade ahead with current conditions in mind. The result is a bit
disquieting. Natural climate variability driven by the ocean appears
to have held greenhouse warming at bay the past few years ..."
Eeeek! Maybe it's not true at all???

"but the warming, according to the forecast, should come roaring back
before the end of the decade..." [italics added]
Phew!! Saved by the end of the sentence!


Now notice what Reuters "news" agency does with this story. According
to Science, the big news is that climate modelers are finally, finally
factoring in huge natural climate variations. By announcing that big
news, they are also admitting that climate modelers have previously
ignored nature.


OK. So what's the big new modeling prediction? A graph on the same
page (746) of the magazine shows real fluctuations in measured
temperatures that average to zero until 1998. Then there's a big peak
around 1998, which allows the modelers to claim there was a net rise
in temperature in the 90s. But the peak is followed by a trough
immediately afterward, in 2000. What makes the trend look upward as a
whole is the predicted future temperatures. Those are the ones we
haven't seen yet.


In otherwise, data that doesn't exist.


Let's push a little further. The editors begin their Letters section
with two interesting headline letters. One is a retraction of an
ancient climate event, by the original author who made the claim. The
next piece is called The Dangers of Advocacy in Science, by Robert A.
Gitzen of the University of Missouri. The out-take from that letter is
the following, printed separately in large-sized font: "WOULD ANYONE
DISAGREE that publishing overly liberal conclusions is poor
science...?"


By publishing and headlining Gitzen's letter is Science once again
hinting that all is not well on the global warming front?


What most people don't know is that real science is a giant debating
society, filled with skeptics. It is only mature science that is
stable and agreed-upon. But mature science comes only after centuries
of cumulative evidence, and constant, heated debate. It took 20
centuries after the planets were observed in the night sky, before
Newton and Copernicus settled the nature of the solar system.
Einstein's Relativity Theory happened three centuries afterwards, and
even in his own lifetime, part of Einstein's universe was overthrown
by Quantum Mechanics, which Einstein fought all his life. (He was
wrong on that).


Climate science is a new kid on the block. It's woefully immature, as
shown by the admission in this week's ScienceMag that current climate
models have only now attempted to account for natural variation. But
how can we tell how much of the observed variation is due to
"man-caused global warming" if we don't know how much is due to
natural variation? We can't.


This is still very immature science. It's only Reuters and its
ideological ilk who feel sure they know the answers. And they aren't
interested in real science.

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