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Science

Bill Gates Warns Against Denying Climate Change (usatoday.com) 366

Reader JoshTops shares a USA Today report: Bill Gates warned against denying climate change and pushed for more innovation in clean energy, during an event Friday at Columbia University in New York. The billionaire philanthropist and Microsoft co-founder joined friend and fellow billionaire Warren Buffett for a question-and-answer session with students. "Certain topics are so complicated like climate change that to really get a broad understanding is a bit difficult and particularly when people take that complexity and create uncertainty about it," Gates said. The planet needs to find reliable, cheap and clean energy, "the innovations there will be profound," Gates said. In December, Gates announced that he and a group of investors would invest more than $1 billion in Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a fund that aims to finance the development of affordable energy that will reduce global greenhouse-gas emissions.
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Bill Gates Warns Against Denying Climate Change

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  • Nobody has to be trampled by the jackboots of your authoritarian scientific "facts" anymore, Bill Gates! People are free to choose their own facts in Trump's America!

    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:19AM (#53765329)

      I'm not dependent on your facts! I make my own facts! With Blackjack! And Hookers!

      • by haruchai ( 17472 )

        I'm not dependent on your facts! I make my own facts! With Blackjack! And Hookers!

        Comrade, those are patriotic servants of Mother Russia!
        Sincerely,
        Vlad

      • I'm not dependent on your facts! I make my own facts! With Blackjack! And Hookers!

        FAKE NEWS! FAKE NEWS! The hookers were never proven.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:24AM (#53765355)

      This is starting to grate on me. You realize that by not debating the factual nature of these facts you're saying "yes, these are facts". Literally alternative fact just means facts that support a different narrative than the one a particular group wants. If the alternative facts are, in fact, not facts, then debunk them as such, and that they are not facts, but lies. Don't refer to them as facts at any level, you just give false credence. As it is, you're just mocking an alternative narrative that is in no way less true than your own.

      • He said, you are free to choose your facts. Enjoy!

      • by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh@@@gmail...com> on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:44AM (#53765525) Journal

        Literally alternative fact just means facts that support a different narrative than the one a particular group wants.

        No, my post was satire in case I triggered the Poe effect. "Alternative facts" are lies. The "alternative fact" that Trump's inauguration crowd was bigger than Obama's was a lie. People tried to debunk the lie with clear photographic evidence but Trump and his goons continued to push the lie, so the only tool left in the arsenal now is mockery. The "alternative fact" that the ~375 gigatons of CO2 released into the atmosphere isn't having an effect far greater than any natural variation is a lie. And I'm mocking it.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @10:26AM (#53765925) Homepage Journal

          "Alternate facts" is a phrase developed by post-truth politicians and their advisers. When you find some inconvenient truth that contradicts your narrative, simply present some alternate "facts" to support it. These "facts" can be distortions or simply made up, it doesn't matter. People assume all politicians are lying all the time anyway, so just say anything because people care about the message, not if it is true or not.

          Thing is, they aren't supposed to use this phrase in public. It's one thing to lie, it's another to tell people "I'm lying to you". Even so, it doesn't actually seem to have damaged Trump very much.

          • Confirmation bias (Score:2, Insightful)

            by sjbe ( 173966 )

            People assume all politicians are lying all the time anyway, so just say anything because people care about the message, not if it is true or not.

            No, people assume politicians that oppose their ideology are lying all the time. They tend to assume their guy is "a straight talker" or some other baloney. Exhibit A is the irrational believe on our political right that Hillary Clinton is some sort of pathological liar and crook. This in spite the the actual objective evidence that she is not at all outside the range of normal for a high profile politician. In actuality she is relatively honest [motherjones.com] among that crowd. (a low bar I know) The same people see

            • by penandpaper ( 2463226 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @01:08PM (#53767387) Journal

              (Do you realize that only once since 1988 has a Republican candidate actually won the popular vote? That's 6 of the last 7 elections. Talk about evidence of a screwed up election system...)

              That means the democrats are doing a horrible job of selling their message to half the states and republicans are hated in the cities. News at 11. There has always been (and probably always will be ) a divide between the country and city. There was compromise between those groups just to even start this nation. I think it shows wisdom that that divide is the primary contention we have at the national level. The populated cities can't rule over the country-side in the Congress or the Executive and the more that democrats think they are mandated to do so because 'muh popular vote' will continue to alienate smaller states in the elections.

              A democratic nation must have compromise or else it will fail. The government was structured to accommodate the division and needs between rural and urban states which was contentious even during the Constitutional Convention. One cannot rule over the other and both must agree to have a functioning nation of independent free states.

              If you think the Senate is a good idea, why would that idea not be good when applied to a different branch of government?

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by ranton ( 36917 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @10:07AM (#53765755)

        Literally alternative fact just means facts that support a different narrative than the one a particular group wants.

        No, literally alternative facts are exaggerations or opinions proclaimed to be facts by those who continue to circumvent the free press in an attempt to mislead the public. The first use of the term (in nationwide media anyway) was by Kellyanne Conway when she defended the flat out lies told by Sean Spicer about attendance during Trump's inauguration.

        Your post is actually a good example of alternative facts. Your commentary on this topic would be insightful if any of your facts were actually true.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by gtall ( 79522 )

          Actually, it started in academia with postmodernism which was a reaction against ideologies and philosophy and the general march of progress, those being suspect and hence skepticism of everything was thought to be the cat's whiskers.

          Then they went a step further and started applying it to science. Not being scientists, they failed to understand the proper relationship between science and the real world.

          After that, the alt-right picked up on it and it translated into "we get to determine our own facts".

          In s

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        The alternatives have been debunked, what's bunk is your inability to accept the debunking.

      • Literally alternative fact just means facts that support a different narrative than the one a particular group wants.

        No - what you re talking about, is called alternative interpretations. Facts are observations that can be reproduced independently; when the aerial photos of the crowds attending Obama's inauguration clearly show there were far more people there than at Trump's, then it is something that can be verified independently - and quite easily as well. There are loads of reports from many different sources that all confirm that Obama had more people in his crowd; if there was only 1 photo, you might brush it off, b

      • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @11:29AM (#53766519) Homepage Journal

        Acutally, I would argue that many "alternative facts" don't even rise the level of lies. A lie has the pretense of representing a particular untrue scenario.

        A lie needs to be part of a network of other lies that present a consistent picture. This means you can unravel the whole skein of lies. You can't unravel "alternative facts" that way, because they don't make any pretense to consistency. There is no skein to unravel. So a better word for them is "bullshit [wikipedia.org]":

        "Bullshit" is commonly used to describe statements made by people more concerned with the response of the audience than in truth and accuracy, such as goal-oriented statements made in the field of politics or advertising.

        People justify their belief in bullshit because of the way it makes them feel. This isn't just a fault of education, it appears to be wired into our brains' [wikipedia.org] mechanisms for social identification and reward seeking. That's why bullshit is so effective politically.

        Probably the purest piece of political bullshit in living memory is the President's assertion that we should have "taken" Iraq's oil, and his suggestion that he might try to do it. I trust I don't have to explain why a country's oil reserves can't simply be looted, like an art treasure. That particularly bullshit hits both the reward and social identification notes, the exact way that anti-Semitic rants about "Jewish Bankers" did in 1930s Germany: the promise of easy riches from looting a hated alien. Hitler claimed that Jews were greedy bankers who promoted Bolshevism. Chew on that for a moment. The sheer idiocy of believing those things together didn't stop some very smart people [wikipedia.org] from buying it. Even the people manufacturing the bullshit believe it, and that's very different from lies.

        So consider the standard response whenever a piece of ominous environmental news comes out: this is the work of the alarmists. Consider the implicit reasoning here: this cannot be true because if it were it would be scary. The word for this kind of thinking is "denial".

        Now this doesn't mean there isn't climate alarmism, but what the alarmists are predicting is something very few scientists would agree with: the imminent extinction of the human race. What the evidence points to something in between the denialist and alarmist scenarios: one in which we are forced to confront and deal with unpleasant facts. Alarmism and denialism are pretty much the same thing.

      • by gmack ( 197796 )

        This doesn't work either. Anyone who disagrees with the alt facts are "fooled by" or "in the pocket of" big pharma/the left wing media/the globalists etc.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 30, 2017 @10:12AM (#53765801)

      Yeh, and while Trump is denying basic science, you're not looking at what he's actually doing. It's the magicians trick of distraction. When you see him do some big shouty thing that you're supposed to look at, look at the *other* stuff.

      So the anti EPA stuff co-incided with his CIA visit. The one, he stuffed the meeting with spotters, to watch the faces of the CIA staff to see who would swallow the pee he was spraying. And the one that resulted in two American spies getting arrested by Putin (but Putin says he arrested people who might have hacked the US election...... (!!)). Gee I wonder which traitor gave Putin the names? Nobody asks because Trump is busy signing every anti-environment contract he can find and you're paying attention to that instead.

      Currently it's "ban everyone from these Muslim countries", but you're missing the fact he's written a law here, something Congress does, The Federal Court has already said it wouldn't likely stand at trial, and yet there are some border officials are following Trump and not the law. In effect he's faced down the Republican congress and won. He writes the laws, they have their meetings. He doesn't need them to write laws, he does it, they pretend to follow it in order to pretend to have a role.

      What happened to the calls for him to divest his businesses and stop accepting foreign money? Lost in all the other stuff he's done.

      What about his tax returns? The fake numbers he gave in the election filing? Forgotten.

      You see how he sets the agenda by doing something really extreme, and what you miss is what he's doing at the same time. Really important stuff like blocking the head of Defence from security meetings, banning the US Director of National Intelligence from security meetings.... i.e. removing Congregational approved roles from basic government, so that Congress doesn't appoint anyone who has any role.

      • I'm very much aware of Trump's proclivity for using the Dead Cat Technique by now. I'm aware of all the issues you've mentioned except the arrested spies. Unfortunately most of the US population who aren't fervent Trump supporters has to understand this. Then there will be some effect.

      • And all of the Cheetos with him.
      • while Trump is denying basic science, you're not looking at what he's actually doing. It's the magicians trick of distraction.

        Would be helpful if the media wasn't in full 'everything he does is literally Hitler' mantra. An argument for voting for him over Clinton was the simple fact that the media doesn't like him and were in bed with Clinton. It is much easier for the electorate to get informed when you have the government and media at odds. Is it really Trump doing the magicians trick or is it the media convinced of their own hyperbole that they lost all perspective? It takes two to tango and they would rather argue about audien

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Kohath ( 38547 )

      Predictions of the future are not facts.

      • by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh@@@gmail...com> on Monday January 30, 2017 @10:28AM (#53765949) Journal

        If you want to nitpick, a set of facts about the present can predict a future condition which cannot be denied without denying the facts. A dropped brick will fall. A closed container receiving a constant stream of water will overflow. A human fed through a woodchipper will die. An increase in greenhouse gases will lead to an increase in heat retention.

      • One of the tenets of modern science is that it can be used for prediction. That is what makes a good scientific theory different than a mere conjecture. For example, Einstein's General Theory of Relativity could predict that gravity would bend light [wikipedia.org]. Today's astronomers use that prediction all the time when looking at distant stars.
  • by pipingguy ( 566974 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:18AM (#53765309)
    I presume that 'climate change' in this case refers to 'catastrophic anthropogenic climate change'.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Bongo ( 13261 )

      In nutrition there's this funny thing where, if you actually add up the calories burned in exercise, it becomes factually silly to think exercise has anything to do with weight loss, and yet, word + dog + medical establishment + science, all keep advising people to exercise more to lose weight. Yet it factually is quite silly to anyone with a calculator who actually thinks to add it up.

      I mean, that's just one of those things, where people don't talk facts, they talk on account of what message they think the

      • Very interesting comment, thanks.
      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

        Fallacies. More than one.

      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @11:28AM (#53766511) Journal

        Because if you are really trying to solve AGW, well, there is nothing to solve, because we are not going to stop catastrophic warming. I mean, years ago they were saying we have just just 3 years to save the planet, and such like, and yet a decade later we are still trying to get the world to agree to some such. Add up the calories, it doesn't matter if you "must do something" or "must make a start" or "head in the right direction"... we will not get there, the warming is locked in, and the amount we can reduce it by is negligible at this point.

        The idea is to stop *further* warming other than what is locked in. And yes we can make a huge difference.

      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

        and not just the piddling wind farms which look nice but don't run much,

        Meanwhile, back on planet earth there's more than enough wind to run the planet.

        http://landartgenerator.org/bl... [landartgenerator.org]

        Note the area required is smaller now because the technology has improved and there's still lots of potential for further improvements.

  • by Poisonous Drool ( 526798 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:18AM (#53765315)
    I have no problem with Bill Gate's wealth but I am annoyed that a guy that lives in a huge house and travels by private jet needs to lecture anyone about climate change. Don't be a virtue signaling hypocrite.
    • by Rich_Lather ( 925834 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:35AM (#53765445)
      Not to mention that he and his buddy, Buffet, both own sizeable portions of railroad companies that profit handsomely from moving Canadian oil sands bitumen.
      • Having that kind of wealth tends to lead to having the kind of power to make change. It's self-serving for oil tycoons to become solar tycoons; yet it also is beneficial to society. As well, there's plenty of supply and suppliers to go around: if they didn't do it, then someone else would--which is a valid point.

        If somebody's going to get their hands dirty either way, it may as well be you--and if getting your hands dirty puts you in a position to change the situation in the future, then you're a fool

    • Not to mention that he has been buying up shares in green energy firms for years. It's generally better to find a spokesman for a cause that doesn't have a financial interest in it.
      • Having a vested interest in the product your peddling doesn't make you a hipocrite, it makes you intelligent. Biased maybe, but quite irrelevant to the topic. Hell he's probably done more for his carbon footprint through pumping investment capital into these firms than his jet could possibly produce.

    • Somehow I think a person investing $1bn to reduce their carbon footprint and that of the rest of the world gets a pass for flying around in a private jet. Especially in a world where people don't want to spend $10 on an LED lightbulb.

    • You have said nothing to refute Gates' argument. You're using the logical fallacies called Tu quoque and Red Herring. Just diverting attention since from you can't generate a rational response.
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        No, it is an important point. Imagine someone said - we all need to share food better and not eat as much or the world will not be able to support us. But that person eats far more than anyone and has no plans to stop eating. This person wants everyone else to change behaviors when they are not willing. This person wants people who are "harming" society much less than him to make collective reductions so that he can continue his gluttonous behavior. This person wants the common man to reduce his quality

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Two hypocrite billionaires who's carbon footprint is more than dozens of families combined living their lavish lifestyles lecturing people who just want to work their shitty job so they can earn their check and try to live a decent lifestyle. When they tone down the way they live by several orders of magnitude, then maybe I'll listen. Until then, they and the climate religion zealots can go fuck themselves.

    • Even if they try to not be hypocritical and "go green", it's nontrivial to copy their "green" lifestyle.

      "Going green" isn't easy, and by fuck it ain't cheap. Yes, electric cars are "greener" than the old gas guzzler I drive but ... guess what, the gas guzzler costs 10k, the electric equivalent 40k. Easy for Mr. Gates to "do the right thing" and buy the e-car, now try that as a single mom working 2 jobs to make ends meet.

      If you want people to "go green", you have to make it affordable. Put your money where y

      • es, electric cars are "greener" than the old gas guzzler I drive but ... guess what, the gas guzzler costs 10k, the electric equivalent 40k.

        You are comparing a used gasoline powered car with a new electric vehicle. The average NEW car in the US is $33,560. You can purchase a new Chevy Volt for $33,220. A Tesla Model 3 is supposed to be $35,000. A Chevy Bolt costs around $36,000. And these are MSRP prices, not what would actually be paid. Furthermore electric/hybrid vehicles will be available for steep discounts on the used marker as well going forward.

        If you want people to "go green", you have to make it affordable.

        Ok, done. What are you waiting for?

        • There's going to be a period when the TCO of an electrical vehicle is far less than an ICE, but the up-front cost is higher (especially as fuel duties rise). This is a real problem for inequality, because poorer people often don't have the option of accepting a higher up-front cost for a lower TCO. As more and more of the better-off people are buying electric vehicles, the resale value of ICEs will drop and this will make things worse.
          • Then how about giving out subsidies that spread the TCO of electric cars over the ownership period?

            • Try pushing through a subsidy on second-hand electric vehicles (and it will need to be on second-hand ones if you want it to be competitive with dirt-cheap second-hand ICEs) and watch the automotive industry scream.
          • Poor people (and even rich people, but that's another story) tend to lease/finance cars instead of buying them outright.

        • Is that Trump-tax on cars already in? My KIA cost about 15k new.

          If there's an e-car with that price tag, please inform me!

      • If there was a reliable, cheaper, and cleaner alternative then the switch would happen regardless of what anyone thinks about climate change.

        In my case charging an e-car with power from a coal plant would just be trading one pollutant for another since I don't have an option to choose an alternative power company.

      • An electric car with a useful range, say 300km on a single charge requires a battery pack that will cost five thousand bucks US, minimum. Add in the cost of the rest of the car and it's not going to be cheaper new than 20-25 kbucks even for a subcompact.

        The really bad news is that a battery pack's cost holds up the second-hand cost of an electric car. I can buy a usable petrol or diesel car or a small van second-hand off Gumtree or Craigslist for a thousand bucks which would last me for a year with minimum

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Green energy is actually a great way to help the poor and developing nations. A solar panel is low maintenance and will keep generating electricity for decades, compared to something that requires a constant supply of fossil fuel. It will do it without damaging their health too.

  • Voltaire said it (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    "To determine the true rulers of any society, all you must do is ask yourself this question: Who is it that I am not permitted to criticize."

  • Urgent Issue (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jim Sadler ( 3430529 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:37AM (#53765459)
    Population explosion is part of the dire fact of global warming. It is an emergency issue and is about to bite us so hard we may not survive.Our military leaders consider it the number one threat to American security. There is wonderful progress on generating energy with less climate disruption yet we are still going to sink ever lower as every single person we add to our national or world population amplifies global warming and all forms of pollution. Every new home and new road and new farm is a blow struck against nature. Yet our politicians are unable to talk about restricting births or rolling back developed areas into natural areas.
  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:53AM (#53765605) Journal

    An interesting article [nytimes.com] on the Gates/Buffet adventure. They are investing in a start-up that is trying to build transportable burner nuclear reactors, IFR lite IIRC

  • Asimov's quote (Score:5, Insightful)

    by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Monday January 30, 2017 @09:57AM (#53765643) Journal

    The whole debate about climate change is because of three specific groups:

    Those who want to suppress the science because it might interfere with them making a profit, those who don't want to admit climate change because they believe having to change will interfere with their way of life, and those who think being ignorant and ignoring the facts is the way to go.

    This was summed up quite nicely by Asimov:

    "Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that 'my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.'"

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by argStyopa ( 232550 )

      What about me?

      I believe the climate is changing. It's always BEEN changing, but yeah, it seems like it's warming.

      I believe that humans are likely making it worse.

      I believe that the 'science' of climate change is about as 'science' as psychology: observations, reasonable inferences, but no replication, no null hypothesis. I believe that the FUD about global warming have led to a truly ridiculous universality (http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/globalwarming2.html) to the point of uselessness as

  • By investing in Nuclear.

    He's friggen rich, no commitees, no government oversight, little respect for the common idiot.

    DO NUCLEAR RIGHT. Even if it's just pebble bed or another of the safe ones it's still miles ahead of renewables.

    And it creates GOOD jobs. Not manufacturing installation maintenance crap jobs but real jobs for 2nd tier geniuses.

    It's frikken cheap, it's clean, it doesn't use a whole lot of scarce resources. What's the hold up Bill? Why invest in something that's already popular and bei
    • By investing in Nuclear.

      He's friggen rich, no commitees, no government oversight, little respect for the common idiot.

      Thanks for the advice voice on the internet. https://www.nytimes.com/2016/1... [nytimes.com]

      And please stop CAPITALISING random words. It makes you look desperate for believe, which is kind of ironic given your suggestion and Bill Gate's current investment portfolio.

      NOW i am GOING to HAVE DINNer.

  • Pick any two, right?
  • Here's the thing: Gates must absolutely spend his own money to develop this without any government subsidies or grants whatsoever. He must create a solution that costs less than current forms of energy in both the short term and the long term. None of this cheap now but costs a crap-ton to replace later bait-and-switch b.s. The production solution needs to compete in the marketplace without any government assistance. The solution must be manufactured in-country. Using cheap third-world labor is out. T

  • Eliminate the red tape and regulation that hampers our building of zero emission Nuclear power plants for our electricity needs. Then replace all coal plants with Nuclear plants.

    Until you do this step, stop hectoring me about climate change because if you don't do this step you are NOT serious about fixing Anything, you are just trying to enact legislation to control people's lives....

    Because everyone switching to electric cars is pretty useless (yes yes they're more efficient, but thats marginal) until th

    • by ebyrob ( 165903 )

      That's 1 / 2 the North American problem. The other half is stop using fossil fuel burning vehicles. (bikes, post-grid-update electrics, stay at home, maybe hydrogen)

      Of course, my boss claims solar based on mirrors (not the chemically polluting photovoltaics) can displace nuclear in places where hydro isn't feasible. But I say build out the nukes first then worry about something better. We know fossil fuels are going to end us, I'd rather lose a couple cities every 200 years than the entire human race.

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