Saturday, December 05, 2009

Warning Signs: Climategate: A Willful Ignorance
The IPCC should be disbanded as a threat to mankind. The EPA should be required by Congress to produce scientific proof that CO2 is a “pollutant” to be regulated. It cannot!
Boxer Undeterred By Global Warming E-Mails Scandal - Peter Roff (usnews.com)
"We may well have a hearing on this, we may not. We may have a briefing for senators, we may not," Boxer said. "Part of our looking at this will be looking at a criminal activity which could have well been coordinated," she said, announcing a diversionary tactic that could give the scientists who may have perpetrated a scientific fraud of greater significance than the "Piltdown Man" a free pass.
Byrd to coal industry: lose the attitude and embrace [massive fraud]
Get the chip off your shoulder, get out of denial about climate change, and stop fear-mongering about the widespread opposition to mountaintop removal coal mining, wrote Byrd, the longest serving member of Congress in American history.
Equation of panic unravels
Consider just that: This model is the chief tool by which researchers predict the Earth will warm 4 to 7 degrees Celsius in the next century. It is, the e-mail reveals, a semi-functional contraption that, without constant fiddling, produces uncongenial results. Lest you think we can sort this out by re-running the numbers, it transpires that the center discarded its original data. Their predictions now are uncheckable, unfalsifiable -- in short, not science but faith.
Doyle defends climate legislation Business groups say bill will slow state's recovery
Doyle will join two other governors -- Arnold Schwarzenegger of California and Chris Gregoire of Washington -- for the climate talks in Copenhagen, Denmark, which begin next week.

Doyle will attend the conference from Dec. 14-18. He will be joined by a small number of others in his administration, said spokesman Lee Sensenbrenner.

The trip will be paid for by the Climate Registry and Climate Action Reserve, two organizations involved in the fledgling carbon emissions market.

No comments: