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The news and dis­cus­sion sur­round­ing global warm­ing, decline, cli­mate change, and sci­en­tific fraud per­pe­trated by Phil Jones, Michael Mann, Keith Briffa, James Hansen, and com­pany is still unfold­ing. Here are sev­eral Web sites offer­ing more detailed non-​fanatical infor­ma­tion and dis­cus­sion than you’ll find in the MSM:
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Highly Recommended!

Copenhagen’s political science

Gover­nor Sarah PalinPalin writes the fol­low­ing in the Wash­ing­ton Post:

With the pub­li­ca­tion of dam­ag­ing e-​mails from a cli­mate research cen­ter in Britain, the rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal move­ment appears to face a tip­ping point. The rev­e­la­tion of appalling actions by so-​called cli­mate change experts allows the Amer­i­can pub­lic to finally under­stand the con­cerns so many of us have artic­u­lated on this issue.

Climate-​gate,” as the e-​mails and other doc­u­ments from the Cli­mate Research Unit at the Uni­ver­sity of East Anglia have become known, exposes a highly politi­cized sci­en­tific cir­cle — the same cir­cle whose work under­lies efforts at the Copen­hagen cli­mate change con­fer­ence. The agenda-​driven poli­cies being pushed in Copen­hagen won’t change the weather, but they would change our econ­omy for the worse.

The e-​mails reveal that lead­ing cli­mate “experts” delib­er­ately destroyed records, manip­u­lated data to “hide the decline” in global tem­per­a­tures, and tried to silence their crit­ics by pre­vent­ing them from pub­lish­ing in peer-​reviewed jour­nals. What’s more, the doc­u­ments show that there was no real con­sen­sus even within the CRU crowd. Some sci­en­tists had strong doubts about the accu­racy of esti­mates of tem­per­a­tures from cen­turies ago, esti­mates used to back claims that more recent tem­per­a­tures are ris­ing at an alarm­ing rate.

This scan­dal obvi­ously calls into ques­tion the pro­pos­als being pushed in Copen­hagen. I’ve always believed that pol­icy should be based on sound sci­ence, not pol­i­tics. As gov­er­nor of Alaska, I took a stand against politi­cized sci­ence when I sued the fed­eral gov­ern­ment over its deci­sion to list the polar bear as an endan­gered species despite the fact that the polar bear pop­u­la­tion had more than dou­bled. I got clob­bered for my actions by rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal­ists nation­wide, but I stood by my view that adding a healthy species to the endan­gered list under the guise of “cli­mate change impacts” was an abuse of the Endan­gered Species Act. This would have irre­versibly hurt both Alaska’s econ­omy and the nation’s, while also reduc­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties for respon­si­ble development.

Our rep­re­sen­ta­tives in Copen­hagen should remem­ber that good envi­ron­men­tal pol­i­cy­mak­ing is about weigh­ing real-​world costs and ben­e­fits — not pur­su­ing a polit­i­cal agenda. That’s not to say I deny the real­ity of some changes in cli­mate — far from it. I saw the impact of chang­ing weather pat­terns first­hand while serv­ing as gov­er­nor of our only Arc­tic state. I was one of the first gov­er­nors to cre­ate a sub­cab­i­net to deal specif­i­cally with the issue and to rec­om­mend common-​sense poli­cies to respond to the coastal ero­sion, thaw­ing per­mafrost and retreat­ing sea ice that affect Alaska’s com­mu­ni­ties and infrastructure.

But while we rec­og­nize the occur­rence of these nat­ural, cycli­cal envi­ron­men­tal trends, we can’t say with assur­ance that man’s activ­i­ties cause weather changes. We can say, how­ever, that any poten­tial ben­e­fits of pro­posed emis­sions reduc­tion poli­cies are far out­weighed by their eco­nomic costs. And those costs are real. Unlike the pro­pos­als China and India offered prior to Copen­hagen — which actu­ally allow them to increase their emis­sions — Pres­i­dent Obama’s pro­posal calls for seri­ous cuts in our own long-​term car­bon emis­sions. Meet­ing such tar­gets would require Con­gress to pass its cap-​and-​tax plans, which will result in job losses and higher energy costs (as Obama admit­ted dur­ing the cam­paign). That’s not exactly what most Amer­i­cans are hop­ing for these days. And as pub­lic oppo­si­tion con­tin­ues to stall Congress’s cap-​and-​tax leg­is­la­tion, Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency bureau­crats plan to reg­u­late car­bon emis­sions them­selves, doing an end run around the Amer­i­can people.

In fact, we’re not the only nation whose peo­ple are ques­tion­ing cli­mate change schemes. In the Euro­pean Union, energy prices sky­rock­eted after it began a cap-​and-​tax pro­gram. Mean­while, Australia’s Par­lia­ment recently defeated a cap-​and-​tax bill. Surely other nations will fol­low suit, par­tic­u­larly as the cli­mate e-​mail scan­dal con­tin­ues to unfold.

In his inau­gural address, Pres­i­dent Obama declared his inten­tion to “restore sci­ence to its right­ful place.” But instead of stay­ing home from Copen­hagen and send­ing a mes­sage that the United States will not be a party to fraud­u­lent sci­en­tific prac­tices, the pres­i­dent has upped the ante. He plans to fly in at the cli­max of the con­fer­ence in hopes of seal­ing a “deal.” What­ever deal he gets, it will be no deal for the Amer­i­can peo­ple. What Obama really hopes to bring home from Copen­hagen is more pres­sure to pass the Democ­rats’ cap-​and-​tax pro­posal. This is a polit­i­cal move. The last thing Amer­ica needs is mis­guided leg­is­la­tion that will raise taxes and cost jobs — par­tic­u­larly when the push for such leg­is­la­tion rests on agenda-​driven science.

With­out trust­wor­thy sci­ence and with so much at stake, Amer­i­cans should be wary about what comes out of this politi­cized con­fer­ence. The pres­i­dent should boy­cott Copenhagen.

Source: Sarah Palin, “Copenhagen’s polit­i­cal sci­ence,” Wash­ing­ton Post, Decem­ber 92009

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