Quadrant Online - Walter Starck - A crime against humanity
That the utter disregard for truth exhibited in the CRU emails can be either invisible or insignificant to AGW defenders is indicative of the vast chasm between their faith and the open rational empirical world of real science.What's at stake with Climategate and global warming
The other very big deal revealed in the CRU files has been the amateur hairball of undocumented unverified computer coding on which much of their climate work is based. That output from such hopelessly inept programming has been accepted by the IPCC as a foundation element for their assessments and become the basis for major national and international policies would be a travesty beyond belief were it not real.
The leaked emails and documents show that the alarmist position is in part a facade, concealing shabby data handling and shabbier ethics--it's as if the data could be mailed in by a six-year-old because the issue was decided, and it was more entertaining to pore over the enemies list and decide which journal to boycott and which scientist to insult.Instapundit » Blog Archive
PJTV: Warmists Give ClimateGate The Cold Shoulder. “What do Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, the Center for American Progress have to say about the growing Climategate scandal?”Climategate: Is Peer-Review in Need of Change? — MasterResource
Perhaps some good will yet come out of this whole Climategate mess—a fairer system for the consideration of scientific contribution, one that could less easily be manipulated by a small group of influential, but perhaps misguided, individuals.The Global Gravy Train Takes A Major Political Hit « JoNova
History will record December 1, 2009 as the day of the first major political damage to the momentum of the Global Warming Scam.Brit Hume: ClimateGate Suggests Global Warming May Be A Fraud
Fox News's Brit Hume Monday said the growing ClimateGate scandal suggests manmade global warming may be a fraud.Copenhagen conference: India, China plan joint exit - India - The Times of India
The four countries, which include Brazil and South Africa, agreed to a strategy that involves jointly walking out of the conference if the developed nations try to force their own terms on the developing world
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