Meteorologist Likens Fear of Global
Warming to 'Religious Belief'
By Marc Morano
CNSNews.com Senior Staff Writer
December 02,
2004
Washington (CNSNews.com) - An MIT meteorologist Wednesday
dismissed alarmist fears about human induced global warming as nothing more than
'religious beliefs.'
"Do you believe in global warming? That is a
religious question. So is the second part: Are you a skeptic or a believer?"
said Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Richard Lindzen, in a
speech to about 100 people at the National Press Club in Washington,
D.C.
"Essentially if whatever you are told is alleged to be supported by
'all scientists,' you don't have to understand [the issue] anymore. You simply
go back to treating it as a matter of religious belief," Lindzen said. His
speech was titled, "Climate Alarmism: The Misuse of 'Science'" and was sponsored
by the free market George C. Marshall Institute. Lindzen is a professor at MIT's
Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences.
Once a person
becomes a believer of global warming, "you never have to defend this belief
except to claim that you are supported by all scientists -- except for a handful
of corrupted heretics," Lindzen added.
According to Lindzen, climate
"alarmists" have been trying to push the idea that there is scientific consensus
on dire climate change.
"With respect to science, the assumption behind
the [alarmist] consensus is science is the source of authority and that
authority increases with the number of scientists [who agree.] But science is
not primarily a source of authority. It is a particularly effective approach of
inquiry and analysis. Skepticism is essential to science -- consensus is
foreign," Lindzen said.
Alarmist predictions of more hurricanes, the
catastrophic rise in sea levels, the melting of the global poles and even the
plunge into another ice age are not scientifically supported, Lindzen
said.
"It leads to a situation where advocates want us to be afraid, when
there is no basis for alarm. In response to the fear, they want us to do what
they want," Lindzen said.
Recent reports of a melting polar ice cap were
dismissed by Lindzen as an example of the media taking advantage of the public's
"scientific illiteracy."
"The thing you have to remember about the
Arctic is that it is an extremely variable part of the world," Lindzen said.
"Although there is melting going [on] now, there has been a lot of melting that
went on in the [19]30s and then there was freezing. So by isolating a section
... they are essentially taking people's ignorance of the past," he
added.
'Repetition makes people believe'
The climate change
debate has become corrupted by politics, the media and money, according to
Lindzen.
"It's a sad story, where you have scientists making meaningless
or ambiguous statements [about climate change]. They are then taken by advocates
to the media who translate the statements into alarmist declarations. You then
have politicians who respond to all of this by giving scientists more money,"
Lindzen said.
"Agreement on anything is taken to infer agreement on
everything. So if you make a statement that you agree that CO2 (carbon dioxide)
is a greenhouse gas, you agree that the world is coming to an end," he added.
"There can be little doubt that the language used to convey alarm has
been sloppy at best," Lindzen said, citing Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbles and
his famous observation that even a lie will be believed if enough people repeat
it. "There is little question that repetition makes people believe things [for]
which there may be no basis," Lindzen said.
He believes the key to
improving the science of climate change lies in altering the way scientists are
funded.
'Alarm is the aim'
"The research and support for
research depends on the alarm," Lindzen told CNSNews.com following his
speech. "The research itself often is very good, but by the time it gets through
the filter of environmental advocates and the press innocent things begin to
sound just as though they are the end of the world.
"The argument is no
longer what models are correct -- they are not -- but rather whether their
results are at all possible. One can rarely prove something to be impossible,"
he explained.
Lindzen said scientists must be allowed to conclude that
'we don't have a problem." And if the answer turns out to be 'we don't have a
problem,' we have to figure out a better reward than cutting off people's
funding. It's as simple as that," he said.
The only consensus that
Lindzen said exists on the issue of climate change is the impact of the Kyoto
Protocol, the international treaty to limit greenhouse gases, which the U.S.
does not support.
Kyoto itself will have no discernible effect on global
warming regardless of what one believes about climate change," Lindzen said.
"Claims to the contrary generally assume Kyoto is only the beginning of
an ever more restrictive regime. However this is hardly ever mentioned," he
added.
The Kyoto Protocol, which Russia recently ratified, aims to
reduce the emission of greenhouse gases to 1990 levels by the year 2010. But
Lindzen claims global warming proponents ultimately want to see a 60 to 80
percent reduction in greenhouse gasses from the 1990 levels. Such reductions
would be economically disastrous, he said.
"If you are hearing Kyoto will
cost billions and trillions," then a further reduction will ultimately result in
"a shutdown" of the economy, Lindzen said.
See Related Article:
John McCain's 'Global Warming' Hearings Blasted by Climatologist
-- 11/19/2004
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