99.9% of Scientists Agree Climate Emergency Caused by Humans (theguardian.com) 281
knaapie writes: It may still be fuel for hot debate on social media, but 99.9% of scientist actually agree on the fact that humans are altering the climate. The Guardian reports that the degree of scientific certainty about the impact of greenhouse gases is now similar to the level of agreement on evolution and plate tectonics, the authors say, based on a survey by Cornell University of nearly 90,000 climate-related studies. This means there is practically no doubt among experts that burning fossil fuels, such as oil, gas, coal, peat and trees, is heating the planet and causing more extreme weather.
"It is really case closed. There is nobody of significance in the scientific community who doubts human-cased climate change," said the lead author, Mark Lynas, a visiting fellow at Cornell University. In contrast, the paper cites a 2016 study by the Pew Research Center that found only 27% of US adults believed that "almost all" scientists agreed the climate emergency was caused by human activity. And according to the Center for American Progress, 30 US senators and 109 representatives "refuse to acknowledge the scientific evidence of human-caused climate change." Several big media organisations and social networks also promote climate-sceptical views that have little or no basis in science. Lynas said the study should encourage them to review their policies. "This puts the likes of Facebook and Twitter in a quandary. It is pretty similar to vaccine misinformation; they both lack a basis in science and they both have a destructive impact on society. Social networks that allow climate misinformation to spread need to look at their algorithms and policies or to be forced to do so by regulators."
"It is really case closed. There is nobody of significance in the scientific community who doubts human-cased climate change," said the lead author, Mark Lynas, a visiting fellow at Cornell University. In contrast, the paper cites a 2016 study by the Pew Research Center that found only 27% of US adults believed that "almost all" scientists agreed the climate emergency was caused by human activity. And according to the Center for American Progress, 30 US senators and 109 representatives "refuse to acknowledge the scientific evidence of human-caused climate change." Several big media organisations and social networks also promote climate-sceptical views that have little or no basis in science. Lynas said the study should encourage them to review their policies. "This puts the likes of Facebook and Twitter in a quandary. It is pretty similar to vaccine misinformation; they both lack a basis in science and they both have a destructive impact on society. Social networks that allow climate misinformation to spread need to look at their algorithms and policies or to be forced to do so by regulators."
Headline expansion (Score:3, Insightful)
The paper says "Scientists agree that humans are changing the environment." The headline says, "Scientists agree Climate Emergency Caused by Humans."
One of these things is not like the other.
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So do you believe the second headline to be false?
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Can you provide any insights to the cause? The scientific community might welcome your valuable contributions.
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Can you provide any insights to the cause?
The cause of what?
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Your mother being a whore.
The strength of your intellect is overpowered.
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I don't see anything about a climate emergency in the paper you linked to.
Although the paper you linked to hi-lights a methodological problem with the current paper, it doesn't allow for "no position" in the analysis, it automatically moves those to the "endorse" category. The paper you links to does it correctly.
Re:Headline expansion (Score:4, Informative)
I don't really see a need to turn our world and way of life on its head because of a few % points of a degree change over a long term.
Long term you say? Your definition of long term needs some work. Here's a graphical explanation https://xkcd.com/1732/ [xkcd.com]
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I don't really see a need to turn our world and way of life on its head
I don't really see how repowering things with often-cheaper alternatives would turn our world and way of life on its head. Recent global-warming-worsened weather events have certainly flipped a lot of people's lives around in a bad way though...I thought you lived in a gulf state but I'm guessing you're somewhere in the midwest where you only have to worry about fracking earthquakes, or this would be obvious to you.
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I don't either IF it is done slowly and economically viably.
Let's take cars for example...build up electric in parallel with what we currently have...and let electric compete...once it is in place and is as convenient, and compete for the customer...let's go.
But shutting off the spigot, increasing taxes and pushing all this before it is truly ready is just asking for economic and soci
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The storm count may not stand out, but the storm power and storm damage should be catching your attention:
https://yaleclimateconnections... [yaleclimat...ctions.org]
Spending money on EV/renewable subsidies now would reduce the cost of this damage in the future - worse yet, fossil energy is still being widely subsidized, both directly and indirectly by the US military (to the tune of at least 25c/gal in military spending).
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funny that you should put "super storm sandy" in quotes, what's interesting is that while it was big enough to be named, it had downgraded by the time it hit NYC. I wonder if it wasn't just a big terrible storm just because it hit a place that wasn't all that prepared for it.
I'm reminded of the phrase: A recession is when your neighbor is out of work, a depression is when you're out of work... IE, it's all in the perspective of the person involved.
I'm 100% sure that Sandy would be 100% forgotten by now if i
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Look at the methodology employed. Apparently they decided this by doing a keyword search for 'skeptical' climate terms among the 88k papers.
This research appears to be more about making headlines than anything.
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Re:Headline expansion (Score:5, Interesting)
The paper says "Scientists agree that humans are changing the environment." The headline says, "Scientists agree Climate Emergency Caused by Humans."
One of these things is not like the other.
Well if you're going to criticize them for misstating the title to reflect their bias then you shouldn't also misstate the title to reflect your bias (ie, the meaningless "changing the environment" phrase). In fact, the phrase you quoted doesn't appear in the paper, much less its title. The actual paper is titled:
Greater than 99% consensus on human caused climate change in the peer-reviewed scientific literature
I don't believe their review touched on the severity of the changes. In fact, whether something is an "emergency" or even "requires urgent action" is quite a different and much more ambiguous question than whether humans are causing the climate to change.
But it seems quite clear that scientists overwhelmingly believe that humans are having a significant impact on the climate.
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I don't believe their review touched on the severity of the changes.
Yes, you agree with me. We might also add that "Climate Emergency" as a term is rather poorly defined.
Re: Headline expansion (Score:2)
This is the exact kind of nitpicking that avoids the issue. I don't know if you have kids but consider your kids and everyone else's kids will have to live under an authoritarian state which you cannot imagine because you want to bicker over "climate change vs "climate emergency" and this bickering will be ceaseless until enough people surrender their liberty to such an authoritarian rule. Now, I know you are already thinking of replying with some cliche founding father quote about liberty but do you honest
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I don't know if you have kids but consider your kids and everyone else's kids will have to live under an authoritarian state which you cannot imagine because you want to bicker over "climate change vs "climate emergency" and this bickering will be ceaseless until enough people surrender their liberty to such an authoritarian rule.
Uh, you are crazy. That is not a supported hypothesis.
Re: Headline expansion (Score:2)
It cannot be. Social sciences have no supported hypothesis. Predicting the outcome of people is more chaotic than imaginable. It's the difference between what we call prophecy and supported hypothesis, though perhaps they stem from the same essence.I am making an educating guess. Mark the words and wait and see. Funny enough by the time you wait, it won't matter. This is the bitter humor. As Regina says, we are laughing with God.
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It's amazing that you make a guess about something you say is chaotic and unimaginable.
Strawman [Re: Headline expansion] (Score:2)
This is the exact kind of nitpicking that avoids the issue. I don't know if you have kids but consider your kids and everyone else's kids will have to live under an authoritarian state which you cannot imagine because
Because bullshit. A bunch of right-wing ideologues are saying "admitting that climate is changing due to human actions inevitably and necessarily means that we must institute a totalitarian dictatorship, there's no other choice," but that's bullshit. This is a right-wing strawman.
Yet another distraction that's trying to attack anybody from discussing actually solving the problem.
Re: Strawman [Re: Headline expansion] (Score:2)
I am not right-wing. I am a "leftist"as much as a poor dichotomy can explain the dimensionality of a human being. The reality is if we only see in two sides there are only two sides and the bickering makes it clear the consensus side has failed.
It's not a straw man, it's simple quantum mechanics applied to social phenomenon. measurements change reality and thus you measure reality in a dichotomy, which meabs the outcome can only be autocracy considering a lack of consensus. but hey, I don't blame you, these
More precision (Score:4, Interesting)
The paper says "Scientists agree that humans are changing the environment." The headline says, "Scientists agree Climate Emergency Caused by Humans."
One of these things is not like the other.
We can be more specific.
Everyone agrees that humans are changing the environment, not everyone agrees that it is an emergency.
Alarmists try to muddy the waters by saying that people who aren't on-board with their proposed solutions are "deniers", typically Republicans, but that's completely false. In recent senate hearings, not a single Republican questioned the claim.
The point of disagreement is whether it's an emergency, whether we should enact short-sighted changes that won't work, or whether to enact long-haul changes that would have a real effect.
The best analyses we have come from the UN, which shows that climate change won't be much of a problem in 2100; meaning: in productivity terms the loss of 3 years productivity at that time due to CC, in a context of productivity growing exponentially with a doubling period of about 30 years.
In the meantime, consider that 20 years ago: BEVs weren't a thing, solar power farms weren't a thing, wind farms weren't a thing, and poverty was rampant across the globe.
Today we have some 7% of energy from renewables, BEVs which are posed to decrease oil consumption overall by 47%(*), world poverty decrease from 30% (1997) to 9% (2017), faster than UN projections.
What will the next 20 years bring?
We just saw an article about shipping-container-sized nuclear reactors, the implication being that they would run for awhile and then be replaced whole with the used part taken away for proper recycling. I read about a company who's making drop-in nuclear reactors with the same form factor as peaker plant boilers. I read about small-scale pebble-bed reactors that can't be used for terrorism, will power a town for 20 years unattended, and can be easily refueled.
We're developing a smart grid. Rooftop solar is poised to take off. More people are working at home. ISPs are finally building out fibre (due to StarLink), which will reduce friction. Carbon capture/sequestration is being tested. Grid-scale batteries are being tested. Offshore wind generation is ramping up.
We've only realized that we're the stewards of the planet for about 50 years, and the last 20 years have seen tremendous progress on the issue, and the best estimates we have indicate that we'll have the problem solved before it becomes critical.
Climate change is most definitely *not* an emergency ...unless you need website clicks.
(*) Tesla alone is building about 1M vehicles a year, compared to 1.32 billion existing vehicles. The major manufacturers will be making equivalent BEV models by this time next year, such as the electric F150 (2022). With 20 years of production, that will put a serious dent in the number of ICE vehicles, and oil/gasoline needed.
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Something that is steadily destroying the habitability of the planet such that it will not be possible to live here long before we've figured out how to get off this rock isn't an emergency?
Yes, deniers still exist [Re:More precision] (Score:2)
We can be more specific. Everyone agrees that humans are changing the environment, not everyone agrees that it is an emergency. Alarmists try to muddy the waters by saying that people who aren't on-board with their proposed solutions are "deniers",
And, as if to deliberately mock you, the very next post following this one informs us that in peer-reviewed studies, "the books are cooked" and that "scientists use circular logic".
Yes, deniers exist.
(and goes on to... fossils aren't old! Evolution is just a theory!)
The point of disagreement is whether it's an emergency, whether we should enact short-sighted changes that won't work, or whether to enact long-haul changes that would have a real effect.
The main fossil-fuel-funded think-tanks have moved on from the old "the science is a hoax!" propaganda to their next line of defense, "it's not as bad as they say," and the line of defense beyond that, "and anything we could possibly do to add
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Imagine being so fundamentally disconnected from reality, that you think that "climate" is not a part of the "environment" but outside it.
That infamous sketch about the ship that had a bow fall off and it "being towed outside the environment" comes to mind.
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I never said climate is different than environment. I didn't even try to imply it.
Like 99.9% of people voted for Saddam or Mao (Score:2, Interesting)
Scientists use circular logic all the time to reinforce their views. Example: how old is this fossil? It's whatever the strata we found it in. How old is the strata? Well, it's the age of the fossils in it.
They frequently push people out of their group for the crime of disagreeing with them.
No wonder people are losing trust in science (and government) every day.
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Example: how old is this fossil? It's whatever the strata we found it in. How old is the strata? Well, it's the age of the fossils in it.
really isn't how that sort of thing has ever worked and isn't even a good example of hostility.
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Like humanity.
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I like what Facebook has been doing, not actually censoring but instead placing a link to a fact check over wrong posts.
In the past I have recommended on Youtube forcing people to watch a short movie the demonstrates a logical fallacy, before allowing them to watch conspiratorial movies.
In brief, I think a good portion of the problem would be fixed by encouraging rational thinking skills.
Another big chunk of the problem is empathy. So if white people and black people hate each other, the problem will never
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my understanding is that carbon dating only works for items less than ~75K yo.... so not much use for fossil dating, as they easily go far older than that
something like potassiumn isotope dating might work better
behold a layman's understanding!! pls correct me if wrong, I'm just a layman
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Seems correct: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Ecce (Score:2)
Scientists use circular logic all the time to reinforce their views. Example: how old is this fossil? It's whatever the strata we found it in. How old is the strata? Well, it's the age of the fossils in it.
Behold, the science denialist's understanding of carbon dating.
Behold! The armchair scientist that doesn't know what he's talking about. (Carbon dating is limited to 50,000-ish years, rock strata are typically much older.)
nobody of significance (Score:2)
"It is really case closed. There is nobody of significance in the scientific community who doubts human-cased climate change,"
Who determined who was "significant" and who was not? What was the criteria used in the determination? What were the "significant" people agreeing to? Was their agreement institutional, or individual?
education vs beatdown (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm good with the posting up until "... forced to do so by regulators..."
so it seems like we have a choice....
1: let individuals decide for themselves and deal with the fallout from a few knuckleheads that will always be obstinate
or
2: empower some organization to determine and then force compliance with what is considered 'facts' and again, we will have to deal with the fallout from all that entails
brushing aside the hysterics around my false dichotomy, I believe that the downsides of #2 are worse than #1
there are no 100% solutions to this one, only tradeoffs; and since part of individual rights is the right to be wrong (hehe), it leads me to think that education, information and persuasion are the keys to change, not coercion, censorship and the oppression
sure it may take longer, perhaps much longer than just having someone show up with a big stick to beat down critics, but, considering the tradeoffs, letting individuals decide for themselves is more representative of the world I'd like to live in
no need to respond citing "...can't yell fire in a theater..." and/or "...but think of the harm they do spouting falsities..." and the like; while there a few certain instances in which an individual can't just do/say anything they want, the topic of climate change is nowhere near that level
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When there's a suggesting that renewables should get any help there's an outcry saying they need subsidies because they are too expensive.
I'd be fine if the the government wasn't already picking sides, but that's not the reality.
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On a positive note, you agree with the complete post, except for the last 6 words. I can live with that...
Otherwise, I agree with what you say.
The problem...
What used to be a niche number of weirdos that no one ever listened to now have the complete internet as an audience.
This combined with horrendously bad and 'just in it for the money' algorithms to propel their views on any social media echo chamber.
The only answer we have been able to come up with...
China style censorship with a democratic touch.
What r
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didn't say I agreed with it, nor that I disagreed with it; is it only a positive note if we agree? 'good with it' means that its approach to educate and persuade is more prefereable to the coercive approach
the alternative I mentioned: "let people decide for themselves" and its downsides is a far better option than any other
better does not mean perfect.... 'tradeoffs' is my angle
"China style censorship with a democratic touch" may sound nice on certain topics, but it is truly a malignancy that would be
Selection bias (Score:3)
'“It is really case closed. There is nobody of significance in the scientific community who doubts human-caused climate change,” said the lead author, Mark Lynas, a visiting fellow at Cornell University'.
Could it be that only scientists who believe in AGW write papers about it? Perhaps it may even be true that only papers that talk up AGW get published.
"The general public does not yet understand how certain experts are, nor is it reflected in political debate".
It doesn't matter how certain experts are - only what is the case.
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Could it be that only scientists who believe in AGW write papers about it? Perhaps it may even be true that only papers that talk up AGW get published.
Scientific journals are not talk shows; they are not there to provide viewpoints from "both sides". If only one side has evidence supporting it, then only one side is going to get papers published.
Are 99.9% of scientists climate experts? (Score:2, Informative)
No, they are not. They are scientists in many diverse fields, most of which have nothing at all to do with climate science. So why do we care that the average neuroscientist agrees that climate change in man made? That's the first problem with these sweeping statements, which is really a way of coercing everyone else into believing. Well, if 99.9% of "scientists" believe, then it must be true. There is no debate, and if you dare to question it, you're stupid.
The second problem is the study of climate scienc
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Why do conservatives love playing the victim card? Waahhhh people mock my crazy opinions!
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First of all, if you read TFA, it says 99.9% of climate studies, not scientists in general. And secondly, very few legitimate grants require the prediction of results in advance. The whole idea of a "study" is to examine the evidence in an unbiased fashion and report the results.
Even if some of these studies were biased, there wouldn't be such an overwhelming consensus.
Unless, of course, you're a science denier, and then you get to make up your own facts.
What should we do about this climate emergency? (Score:2)
I keep seeing more articles on Slashdot on how bad global warming is getting but very little on what we should so about it, or how much as been done. There's plenty of great things happening to lower greenhouse gas emissions, and I believe it is important to discuss them. This is important if only for our mental health, far too many people are depressed over this. People need to know that things are being done, and we are far from out of ideas.
The biggest problem I see are politicians that are bolting th
slowly boiling frogs... (Score:2)
It'll be too late, when most wealthy people actually feel the impact.
By wealthy, that's pretty much anyone in the western world who has a solid roof over their head and enough food to eat.
The climate breakdown/change/crisis/warming - whichever one you want to choose - is still abstract to so many people.
It remains abstract, until their house burns down or floods, due to extreme weather events.
It remains abstract, until the supermarket shelves are empty.
We have two choices really, over an undetermined amount
Correction: 99.9% of "Scientists" agree... (Score:2)
Also, there is no such a thing as a "climate emergency". And I am actually a real scientist, who actually works in this field. I'm not a "scientist" on television, I actually know what I'm talking about. But no one will believe that, because the television said something else.
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In fact, I have found that as a general rule, you can assume that if people are trying there utmost to make it clear that everybody agrees on something, it is probably not true. If it really was so obvious, noone would be talking about how very, very obvious it is.
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Agreed, this is why I still don't believe the sky is blue. I can't see it from my nuclear fallout shelter, and all those photos from the internet look doctored to me. Even my former fucking friends claim the sky really IS blue, but they obviously have an agenda now.
Lazer focus on irrelevant things (Score:2)
What difference does causation make?
If climate change was caused by space aliens and people could do something about it does this mean action is not worth taking because people didn't cause it?
If climate change is caused by humans does this mean action is worth taking because humans caused it?
Do either of these positions make any sense? The question is not causation it is what if anything can be done and what are the expected costs and benefits of a given action.
There seems to be a lot of noise surroundi
Apocalypse Never : Jordan Peterson Interview (Score:2)
Have a listen to Jordan Peterson Interview a long term environmental activist who calls out the climate alarmist movement as a political power trip not actually wanting sensible solutions.
https://youtu.be/aLxZF_EWaLE [youtu.be]
Misleading article title (Score:2)
This is not a surprise.
Nope (Score:2)
You will not get 99.9% consensus on whether or not water is wet.
If you really want your cause to spread, stop hallucinating consensus that isn't there and focus on actually making persuasive arguments.
99% of scientists thought ulcers were from stress (Score:2)
Until recently, 99.99% of scientists though ulcers were caused by stress.
99.99% of scientists thought sickness was caused by bad humors.
99.99% of scientists thought that there were only four elements.
99.99% of scientists believe that reality is objective.
* not sure about that last one myself, but it seems to be.
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What was the question? (Score:2)
Does human activity change climate: Well obviously -at SOME level.
Does it case "warming". You need to define what that term means: average surface temperature? Energy balance? sea level? Water temperature? Averaged over the globe how?
Without knowing the EXACT question its difficult to know how to interpret this.
That said,while its outside of my field, I think there is sufficient evidence that human activity is modifying clim
FOR SCIENCE! (Score:2)
Unpopular Opinion incoming:
-I believe that climate change is real.
-I believe that humans cause climate change.
-I do NOT believe that science is conducted by polls.
-I do NOT believe that polls of scientists, including scientists in unrelated fields constitutes valid science. They constitute polls.
-I believe that those polls are gamed for political agendas.
-I do NOT believe that any intelligent person - let alone scientist - would look at the world around them and deny that humans cause climate change.
-I do
Climate refugees & food shortages... (Score:3)
Re:And 95% of doctors (Score:4, Insightful)
Because tv commercials are the same thing as 90,000 scientific studies.
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So I'll indulge your silliness and ask whose pushing the agenda and what they get as a benefit? The scientists looking for a payday? Yeah I see plenty of scientists driving Bentleys because they crank out false data for some vague agenda.
Lemme get this straight (Score:3)
Is this a serious question? Who would want to control people?
You must either think that is not possible or people with money and power to do this are benevolent.
Scientists, conspired, over 100 years ago, to make a plan to fake everyone out into thinking climate change, by humans, was destroying the planet, so they could control people (who aren't controlled atm?) via a message their great great grandchildren, who might be? scientists? political leaders? could ultimately manipulate??
Take your meds.
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Sure, but that was only before the effects of cigarettes had been subjected to scientific analysis.
Not true, the correlation between cancer and tobacco was found in the 1700s [annclinlabsci.org], and harm from smoking was suspected in the 1600s. It was studied more scientifically by the 1920s [scielosp.org].
The reason that advertisements referenced doctors is specifically because doctors were worrying more and more about the health problems of smoking. By the time that advertisement was created, a lot of average people were worried about the health effects of smoking. The advertisement was trying to calm them down.
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:5, Informative)
The headline is very misleading.
0.1% were openly skeptical.
That doesn't mean that the other 99.9% were totally supportive, or even "agree" that there is a climate emergency.
There is a strong consensus among climatologists that global warming is anthropic and is a serious problem, but misrepresenting the data to exaggerate that consensus diminishes the credibility of science and hurts the struggle for political action.
Pointing at the denialists and saying that they lie too, is not a valid justification. The situation is not symmetrical. Scientists need credibility to convince the public. Denialists only need to sow doubt.
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The headline is very misleading.
But my post wasn't. Welcome to 2021, science means shit-all in the face of Youtube videos. Everyone is now their own expert!
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:4, Insightful)
If the people on YouTube were worth listening to then why aren’t they publishing research papers? Anyone can upload videos that pander to idiots for monetization. Actual research is hard.
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If the people on YouTube were worth listening to then why aren’t they publishing research papers?
Because WAY more people watch YouTube than read journals.
The denialists aren't trying to convince scientists. They are trying to sow doubt among the public.
Anyone can upload videos that pander to idiots
Those "idiots" vote.
Many scientists see the public as "idiots", talk down to them, and think they can be swayed by misrepresentations and exaggerations like those in TFA. Then the denialists point out the "lies", treat the voters as their intellectual equals, and win the argument.
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It wasn't even 1/3, it was closer to 1/5.
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A big problem is that scientists dismiss those YouTube videos but don't actually watch them.
Yep, and with good reason too. There's a normal scientific process, it's an easy one to follow and doesn't require being some member of a members only inner cult. Write down your hypothesis, your test, describe the process you went to, the results, your analysis and how that confirmed or rejected your hypothesis and to what confidence interval. It's not hard.
If you can't do those basic steps then your opinions are just worth less than dogshit.
So scientists are oblivious to how much their misrepresentations and exaggerations are helping the denialists.
Scientists don't misrepresent nor exaggerate. They just present a
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We need a study to find out how many scientists believe that the mainstream media is deceptive and harmful and doesn't know how to report on science.
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We need a study to find out how many scientists believe that the mainstream media is deceptive and harmful and doesn't know how to report on science.
This is not bad journalism. It is bad science. The misrepresentation is in the actual paper.
A link to the paper is in TFA.
Problem is there's 0 consensus in climate models (Score:3)
There's a real problem that there's 0 consensus in the actual climate models (models being very very plural), and of course there shouldn't be because there are so many of them and they're all wrong. ("wrong" being defined as they predict something and the actual results don't match reality, some much more wrong than others)
And it really doesn't help civil discourse when the people who point out that climate models keep getting things wrong are all shouted down as climate deniers, stop it with your 'flat ea
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There's a real problem that there's 0 consensus in the actual climate models
When all of them are showing a large temperature increase, it really doesn't matter that one says 2.1 degrees and another says 2.6.
And it really doesn't help civil discourse when the people who point out that climate models keep getting things wrong
Again, it really doesn't matter that the predicted 2.3 +- 0.6 turned out to be 2.1.
It also doesn't help when you folks constantly argue in bad faith, provide no evidence for your arguments, and then demand you be treated the same as people with actual evidence.
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Agree. There's some room in the middle between global warming denier and Greta Thunberg
Greta Thunberg is not a scientist. When you are talking about what the scientists say, please stop quoting Greta Thunberg.
Oh, and stop quoting @AOC at Twitter, too. There are plenty of actual real scientist out there to quote.
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OK, but she admits that and is a very well informed lay person. Her main message is "listen to the scientists". She also practices what she preaches. I am not talking about some of her publicity stunts, like crossing the oceans by wind power. That was strictly to stimulate discussion, but there are other less dramatic actions that are more telling. For instance, she is a teen with disposable income who has not bought a new item of clothing for years. She acquires only secon
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Sure, the same way there is a difference between calling the fire service immediately when your house is on fire, and waiting until your house is a pile of ashes before doing anything about it. The middle way is to wait until half the house has gone to act.
Climate change is not the only problem mankind faces, but it is probably the one cause of the mass extinction event that is underway that, 20 years ago, could easily have been avoided.
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No, 98.7% entirely agree with AGW theory [iop.org]
1. Your link is to a study from 9 years ago. We have way more data today.
2. It doesn't say that 98.7% "entirely agree". It says 32.6% "endorsed AGW" while 0.7% rejected it.
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Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:5, Insightful)
That's an excellent rationale. I shall use it to justify my meth addiction. It keeps me from crashing.
Re:Screw your freedumbs. Get jabbed. (Score:4, Insightful)
As opposed to "we simply cannot tell at this point whether masks help or hurt" so he didn't recommend their use, which you magically transform into "see, he was WRONG". Insinuating he's part of the money trail is just plain stupid given his years of public service. If he'd wanted to cash in, you'd think he'd have done it before he was 80 years old.
Re: (Score:2)
So you're for firing people who get caught in a lie?
And once caught in a lie, "anything further from [that person would be] tainted "?
Re:Screw your freedumbs. Get jabbed. (Score:4, Insightful)
You get skepticism for a month. After that, you're just a skeptical idiot.
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:5, Insightful)
wreck our economies, etc.
We've asked for a soft landing for the last 30-40 years. Time's out.
It's like we're on a road tip and we told you a mile before it was time to turn, and you didn't slow down. And now you're pissed that you'll have to cram on the brakes in the last 50 feet. So pissed that you're thinking about not hitting the brakes at all. (and I'm thinking I regret letting you drive the car)
That's much healthier for society and mankind than a few percentage points of a degree warmer in some parts of the earth.
Money is just fake bullshit we made up. You can recover from a recession with hard work and discipline. You can't as easily revive extinct coral or prevent a flood or farm in a dust bowl.
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry I don't believe we have 11 years left and the earth implodes.
This is an excellent example of how to argue like an asshole.
Obviously the Earth isn't going to implode. Duh. This is the worst kind of strawman argument, a blatantly stupid one. You should at least try to construct a plausible strawman to knock down.
What will happen, though, is the a bunch of stuff will die, and life on Earth is likely to get very difficult for humans. Not that we can't adapt, but relocating populations from flooded coastlines (or turning our coastlines into Holland), moving our agriculture from current breadbasket regions to currently non-arable regions, dealing with much more powerful and frequent storms, etc., is going to be incredibly expensive -- especially because the fights over good land and resources that will be generated by those changes will in turn create massive refugee crises and very likely wars (there's a good argument that we've already seen the first of these: the war in Syria and the rise of ISIS may well have been ultimately caused by climate change).
If the US loses its leadership in the world, and cedes it to China...likely as not, we'll never recover.
Does that really matter, at all, in the face of the kind of social and economic disruption I describes above? So petty...
Also, I have to point out that if you truly believe that we must do very stupid things in order to maintain our dominant position, you clearly don't actually believe that our system is better than theirs. And if you don't believe that, why do you want to cause such hardship for your grandchildren just to maintain it?
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, obviously the best solution is to immediately halt all fossil fuel exploration, refinement and use....wreck our economies, etc.
Asshole.
Let me say this louder:
1. Acknowledging that the science is correct is not the same as advocating any one particular course of action. These are different things.
2. The argument "I don't like the consequences of admitting that this is real, therefore I will assert that the science is fake" is an argument that makes no sense at all, but if you scratch any denier you discover that this is the actual argument that they are making.
3. If you don't like any one particular course of action: stop attacking the science is fake and instead propose a different course of action.
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, you've mentioned too many shades of grey and they're unable to deal with it.
Everything with them is Black or White...except for politics, where it's Red or Blue.
The Great National IQ Reduction Program has led us to this.
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:4, Interesting)
Asshole.
Not a great start if your goal is to actually change minds. Attacking people rarely accomplishes this.
Let me say this louder: 1. Acknowledging that the science is correct is not the same as advocating any one particular course of action. These are different things.
This is absolutely correct in a vacuum, but we don't live in a vacuum. There are very loud groups of people in the climate activist camps shouting exactly this: anyone that accepts the science must also, ipso facto, accept our radical solutions, or they are a bad person that doesn't care about future generations or anyone but themselves. That, once we've settled the science, people should be automatically willing to submit to any number of specified and as-yet-unspecified sacrifices, without questioning them or trying to find a less destructive route to take. You can't expect people to simply ignore this reality and act like this is an honest discussion they're refusing to join.
2. The argument "I don't like the consequences of admitting that this is real, therefore I will assert that the science is fake" is an argument that makes no sense at all, but if you scratch any denier you discover that this is the actual argument that they are making.
I agree it is silly, but I understand why they're doing it. It is the same reason we use buffers in computers. They fully realize what the real argument is, and they're trying to put off having it. Strategically, the method is sound, though certainly dishonest.
If it makes you feel any better, there are plenty of people in the climate activism camp that are being, in my estimation, dishonest about their real intentions with some of the "consequences" they are suggesting, i.e. to use climate change as a lever for imposing other beliefs of theirs on society. The bolder, more honest among these will even say things like "But it's all interconnected, and you cant save the planet without also addressing this social or political issue." But this, too, is dishonest in that there may be other solutions they don't want to hear, and you should blame these people just as much as you blame cayanne8 for the dumpster fire this topic has become.
3. If you don't like any one particular course of action: stop attacking the science is fake and instead propose a different course of action.
Or not. There is such a thing as a bridge too far fore people that value their own dignity. I've looked at some of the things that "need to change" and I've already seen quite a few things proposed that I couldn't support, and would actively resist, even if they would work. And there are hills that I am willing to die on, i.e. if you can't find another way to fix this, then it is just too bad for us and too bad for the future. Thankfully, I don't believe in unsolvable problems. But if that makes me a bad person so be it. Let the hate flow through you, I guess.
Re: (Score:3)
Not a great start if your goal is to actually change minds. Attacking people rarely accomplishes this.
Your error is assuming the denier is operating in good faith.
Decades of history demonstrate this is false. As a result, it's not about changing their mind. They're a fucking idiot who will never change their mind.
This is about the other people reading what that fucking idiot writes, and may mistakenly believe he has a point.
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:4, Insightful)
Not really....
Yes, really.
Acknowledging that the science is correct is not the same as advocating any one particular course of action.
If you don't like a particular course of action, that's fine: come up with a different one and advocate it.
Re:Yeah but the 0.1% are (Score:4, Informative)
I live fairly north, in an area right next to one of the largest freshwater lakes on the planet. I'll be fine. I'm almost glad that the consequences of this are going to hit within my lifetime. I'll make some popcorn and listen to several billion idiots whine about how the lefties conspired to collapse most of our breadbasket ecosystems. The ones that aren't starving, dying from extreme weather events, or trying to migrate towards the poles, that is.
The intelligent people tried to deal with this proactively. There simply weren't enough of us. We got out-voted. So be it. Physics doesn't give a rats ass about what Tucker Carlson says, even if you worship at his feet. Reality will bite, whether you like it or not.
Re: (Score:2)
It's only a few points of LDL cholesterol levels versus my keeping the bacon industry alive and well.
Those few percentage points can be disasterous.
Note that the point of the story is that scientists agree that this is man-made. This opposes the oft held view on Slashdot that humans are tiny and puny and unable to affect climate in any way, and this is just a natural cycle, and since we can't change climate they argue that we can't fix it either. All that is wrong - the climate change is affected by human
Re: (Score:2)
That is precisely what I"m earring from the Bernie's and AOC's if they had their way.
Two problems here. ...and that is not precisely what are hearing. That is what you are making up. Bernie, for example, is advocating (quoting from his web site) "complete decarbonization of the economy by 2050 at latest." That is not "stopping all fossil fuel use immediately, 100%".
1. neither Bernie nor AOC is a scientist. They are not even mainstream Democrats; they are the left fringe.
2.
Re: (Score:2)
The scientific method is not a democracy. It has nothing to do with a vote, census count or anything else.
True, but for decades the deniers have been shouting "the scientists don't agree"!
Well, guess what: the scientists do agree.
The deniers have now switched to their backup argument, "it doesn't matter whether the scientists agree!" The fact that they had to switch to their backup argument is a step forward.
Re: (Score:3)
prove that its false
That isn't how science works either.
Re: (Score:2)
Really? When.
While the notion that the earth is flat has risen and fallen in the centuries since human civilization began, I don't know of any era where people who you could have reasonably called scientists of the period were suggesting that the earth was flat.
We have known that the earth was a ball for quite literally thousands of years.
Re: (Score:2)
all scientists believed that the sun revolved around the earth
Not really. But publishing anything to the contrary would put one at odds with the pope [wikipedia.org] and subject to an inquisition. So the records of publication can't be taken seriously as a reflection of actual belief.
Re: (Score:2)
That would be full denialism, causal denialism, and obstructionism respectively.