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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Climatologist Ben Santer on the attribution of extreme weather events to climate change « Climate Progress
“When you warm up the planet, you experience that through changes in weather that makes up the climate,” says Dr. Benjamin Santer at the Lawrence Livermore National Lab.
East Anglia Confirmed Emails from the Climate Research Unit - Searchable
[Oct '09] From: Ben Santer <santer1@xxxxxxxxx.xxx>
...
I'm really sorry that you have to go through all this stuff, Phil. Next
time I see Pat Michaels at a scientific meeting, I'll be tempted to beat
the crap out of him. Very tempted.

I'll help you to deal with Michaels and the CEI in any way that I can.
American Thinker Blog: Snow Blind
The New York Times is self-destructing on Global Warming. Once again, Climate Change alarmists blame winter weather on Global Warming.

What is interesting in this New York Times op-ed is that the author (Judah Cohen) knocks the underpinning of climate change alarmism right out from under the whole movement:
EPA Green Priest Jackson: Regulation a ‘Moral Obligation’ - By Henry Payne - Planet Gore - National Review Online
From crèches on government property to Christian greetings in the workplace, Americans go to great lengths this religious season to separate Christmas from our public life. Not so the Obama administration and its campaign to tear down the wall separating the Green Church and the state.

In an extraordinary speech before The National Council of Churches in New Orleans this November, Environmental Protection Agency Chief Lisa Jackson — a committed Green and Christian — urged that the U.S. government and religious leaders unite in their “moral obligation” to heal the planet and “build on the religious and moral reasons for being good stewards of our environment.”
RealClimate: Science is self-correcting: Lessons from the arsenic controversy
Lesson two: Most everyone would be thrilled to overturn the consensus. Doing so successfully can be a career-making result. Journals such as Science and Nature are more than willing to publish results that overturn scientific consensus, even if data are preliminary – and funding agencies are willing to promote these results.

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