This one is very helpful.Updated Dec 18, 2019, 12:28 PM
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-18 12:28:00 UTC
This one is very helpful.Updated Dec 18, 2019, 12:28 PM
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-18 12:28:00 UTC
—“Physicists, Geologists, and Astronomists know that AGW is false, its meteorologists driving the narrative. CO2 does not create AGW, and it’s, and we are at low CO2 levels. We are 10%+ greener b/c of CO2 (not rain). It’s dangerous for man for us to have possibility of deception on this scale.”—
I’m a skeptic. But then I study incentives, biases, and deceits.
FROM JUDITH CURRY – THIS WEEK
“THE TOXIC RHETORIC OF CLIMATE CHANGE”
Posted on December 14, 2019
by Judith Curry
—“I genuinely have the fear that climate change is going to kill me and all my family, I’m not even kidding it’s all I have thought about for the last 9 months every second of the day. It’s making my sick to my stomach, I’m not eating or sleeping and I’m getting panic attacks daily. It’s currently 1 am and I can’t sleep as I’m petrified.” – Young adult in the UK
Letter from a worried young adult in the UK
I received this letter last nite, via email:
“I have no idea if this is an accurate email of your but I just found it and thought I’d take a chance. My name is XXX I’m 20 years old from the UK. I have been well the only word to describe it is suffering as I genuinely have the fear that climate change is going to kill me and all my family, I’m not even kidding it’s all I have thought about for the last 9 months every second of the day. It’s making my sick to my stomach, I’m not eating or sleeping and I’m getting panic attacks daily. It’s currently 1am and I can’t sleep as I’m petrified. I’ve tried to do my own research, I’ve tried everything. I’m not stupid, I’m a pretty rational thinker but at this point sometimes I literally wish I wasn’t born, I’m just so miserable and Petrified. I’ve recently made myself familiar with your work and would be so appreciative of any findings you can give me or hope or advice over email. I’m already vegetarian and I recycle everything so I’m really trying. Please help me. In anyway you can. I’m at my wits end here.”
JC’s response
We have been hearing increasingly shrill rhetoric from Extinction Rebellion and other activists about the ‘existential threat’ of the ‘climate crisis’, ‘runaway climate chaos’, etc. In a recent op-ed, Greta Thunberg stated: “Around 2030 we will be in a position to set off an irreversible chain reaction beyond human control that will lead to the end of our civilization as we know it.” From the Extinction Rebellion: “It is understood that we are facing an unprecedented global emergency. We are in a life or death situation of our own making.”
It is more difficult to tune out similar statements from responsible individuals representing the United Nations. In his opening remarks for the UN Climate Change Conference this week in Madrid (COP25), UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said that “the point of no-return is no longer over the horizon.” Hoesung Lee, the Chair for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said “if we stay on our current path, [we] threaten our existence on this planet.”
So . . . exactly what should we be worried about? Consider the following statistics:
Over the past century, there has been a 99% decline in the death toll from natural disasters, during the same period that the global population quadrupled.
While global economic losses from weather and climate disasters have been increasing, this is caused by increasing population and property in vulnerable locations. Global weather losses as a percent of global GDP have declined about 30% since 1990.
While the IPCC has estimated that sea level could rise by 0.6 meters by 2100, recall that the Netherlands adapted to living below sea level 400 years ago.
Crop yields continue to increase globally, surpassing what is needed to feed the world. Agricultural technology matters more than climate.
The proportion of world population living in extreme poverty declined from 36% in 1990 to 10% in 2015.
While many people may be unaware of this good news, they do react to each weather or climate disaster in the news. Activist scientists and the media quickly seize upon each extreme weather event as having the fingerprints of manmade climate change — ignoring the analyses of more sober scientists showing periods of even more extreme weather in the first half of the 20th century, when fossil fuel emissions were much smaller.
So . . . why are we so worried about climate change? The concern over climate change is not so much about the warming that has occurred over the past century. Rather, the concern is about what might happen in the 21st century as a result of increasing fossil fuel emissions. Emphasis on ‘might.’
Alarming press releases are issued about each new climate model projection that predicts future catastrophes from famine, mass migrations, catastrophic fires, etc. However these alarming scenarios of the 21st century climate change require that, like the White Queen in Alice and Wonderland, we believe ‘six impossible things before breakfast’.
The most alarming scenarios of 21st century climate change are associated with the RCP8.5 greenhouse gas concentration scenario. Often erroneously described as a ‘business as usual’ scenario, RCP8.5 assumes unrealistic long-term trends for population and a slowing of technological innovation. Even more unlikely is the assumption that the world will largely be powered by coal.
In spite of the implausibility of this scenario, RCP8.5 is the favored scenario for publications based on climate model simulations. In short, RCP8.5 is a very useful recipe for cooking up scenarios of alarming impacts from manmade climate change. Which are of course highlighted and then exaggerated by press releases and media reports.
Apart from the issue of how much greenhouse gases might increase, there is a great deal of uncertainty about much the planet will warm in response to a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide – referred to as ‘equilibrium climate sensitivity’ (ECS). The IPCC 5th Assessment Report (2013) provided a range between 1 and 6oC, with a ‘likely’ range between 1.5 and 4.5oC.
In the years since the 5th Assessment Report, the uncertainty has grown. The latest climate model results – prepared for the forthcoming IPCC 6th Assessment Report – shows that a majority of the climate models are producing values of ECS exceeding 5oC. The addition of poorly understood additional processes into the models has increased confusion and uncertainty. At the same time, refined efforts to determine values of the equilibrium climate sensitivity from the historical data record obtain values of ECS about 1.6oC, with a range from 1.05 to 2.7oC.
With this massive range of uncertainty in the values of equilibrium climate sensitivity, the lowest value among the climate models is 2.3oC, with few models having values below 3oC. Hence the lower end of the range of ECS is not covered by the climate models, resulting in temperature projections for the 21st century that are biased high, with a smaller range relative to the range of uncertainty in ECS.
With regards to sea level rise, recent U.S. national assessment reports have included a worst-case sea level rise scenario for the 21st century of 2.5 m. Extreme estimates of sea level rise rely on RCP8.5 and climate model simulations that are on average running too hot relative to the uncertainty range of ECS. The most extreme scenarios of 21st century sea level rise are based on speculative and poorly understood physical processes that are hypothesized to accelerate the collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. However, recent research indicates that these processes are very unlikely to influence sea level rise in the 21st century. To date, in most of the locations that are most vulnerable to sea level rise, local sinking from geological processes and land use has dominated over sea level rise from global warming.
To further complicate climate model projections for the 21st century, the climate models focus only on manmade climate change – they make no attempt to predict natural climate variations from the sun’s output, volcanic eruptions and long-term variations in ocean circulation patterns. We have no idea how natural climate variability will play out in the 21st century, and whether or not natural variability will dominate over manmade warming.
We still don’t have a realistic assessment of how a warmer climate will impact us and whether it is ‘dangerous.’ We don’t have a good understanding of how warming will influence future extreme weather events. Land use and exploitation by humans is a far bigger issue than climate change for species extinction and ecosystem health.
We have been told that the science of climate change is ‘settled’. However, in climate science there has been a tension between the drive towards a scientific ‘consensus’ to support policy making, versus exploratory research that pushes forward the knowledge frontier. Climate science is characterized by a rapidly evolving knowledge base and disagreement among experts. Predictions of 21st century climate change are characterized by deep uncertainty.
As noted in a recent paper co-authored by Dr. Tim Palmer of Oxford University, https://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/early/2019/11/26/1906691116.full.pdf, there is “deep dissatisfaction with the ability of our models to inform society about the pace of warming, how this warming plays out regionally, and what it implies for the likelihood of surprises.” “Unfortunately, [climate scientists] circling the wagons leads to false impressions about the source of our confidence and about our ability to meet the scientific challenges posed by a world that we know is warming globally.”
We have not only oversimplified the problem of climate change, but we have also oversimplified its ‘solution’. Even if you accept the climate model projections and that warming is dangerous, there is disagreement among experts regarding whether a rapid acceleration away from fossil fuels is the appropriate policy response. In any event, rapidly reducing emissions from fossil fuels to ameliorate the adverse impacts of extreme weather events in the near term increasingly looks like magical thinking.
Climate change – both manmade and natural – is a chronic problem that will require continued management over the coming centuries.
We have been told that climate change is an ‘existential crisis.’ However, based upon our current assessment of the science, the climate threat is not an existential one, even in its most alarming hypothetical incarnations. However, the perception of manmade climate change as a near-term apocalypse and has narrowed the policy options that we’re willing to consider. The perceived ‘urgency’ of drastically reducing fossil fuel emissions is forcing us to make near term decisions that may be suboptimal for the longer term. Further, the monomaniacal focus on elimination of fossil fuel emissions distracts our attention from the primary causes of many of our problems that we might have more success in addressing in the near term.
Common sense strategies to reduce vulnerability to extreme weather events, improve environmental quality, develop better energy technologies and increase access to grid electricity, improve agricultural and land use practices, and better manage water resources can pave the way for a more prosperous and secure future. Each of these solutions is ‘no regrets’ – supporting climate change mitigation while improving human well being. These strategies avoid the political gridlock surrounding the current policies and avoid costly policies that will have minimal near-term impacts on the climate. And finally, these strategies don’t require agreement about the risks of uncontrolled greenhouse gas emissions.
We don’t know how the climate of the 21st century will evolve, and we will undoubtedly be surprised. Given this uncertainty, precise emissions targets and deadlines are scientifically meaningless. We can avoid much of the political gridlock by implementing common sense, no-regrets strategies that improve energy technologies, lift people out of poverty and make them more resilient to extreme weather events.
The extreme rhetoric of the Extinction Rebellion and other activists is making political agreement on climate change policies more difficult. Exaggerating the dangers beyond credibility makes it difficult to take climate change seriously. On the other hand, the extremely alarmist rhetoric has frightened the bejesus out of children and young adults.
JC message to children and young adults: Don’t believe the hype that you are hearing from Extinction Rebellion and the like. Rather than going on strike or just worrying, take the time to learn something about the science of climate change. The IPCC reports are a good place to start; for a critical perspective on the IPCC, Climate Etc. is a good resource.
Climate change — manmade and/or natural — along with extreme weather events, provide reasons for concern. However, the rhetoric and politics of climate change have become absolutely toxic and nonsensical.
In the mean time, live your best life. Trying where you can to lessen your impact on the planet is a worthwhile thing to do. Societal prosperity is the best insurance policy that we have for reducing our vulnerability to the vagaries of weather and climate.
JC message to Extinction Rebellion and other doomsters: Not only do you know nothing about climate change, you also appear to know nothing of history. You are your own worst enemy — you are triggering a global backlash against doing anything sensible about protecting our environment or reducing our vulnerability to extreme weather. You are making young people miserable, who haven’t yet experienced enough of life to place this nonsense in context.
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-18 12:20:00 UTC
UNIVERSITY = SECULAR THEOLOGY.
You want to know the source of the disease in this era of pseudoscience, sophism, and denial.
Harvard and Stanford hide overhead vs instructional salaries.
MIT’s financial report is Soviet in it’s obscurantism.
Yale doesn’t. Yale is ~50% overhead and 50% instructor salaries.
Here is Harvard’s business plan: “Undergrad: Who is most likely to contribute to endowment?. Grad: Who is going to cost us the least to serve as a research workforce?”. Harvard is a 4B a year industry.Updated Dec 18, 2019, 12:01 PM
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-18 12:01:00 UTC
Updated Dec 18, 2019, 10:59 AM
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-18 10:59:00 UTC
Like I said – Cognitively Female. Either Reversal or suppression of gender dimorphism. But why do I say it?
Because we are NOT affected, and we are the only people capable of agency, so it’s our responsibility to defend against it. And we can only defend against it through law – and education.
40% more likely for schizophrenia.
100% more likely for homosexuality.
Higher (%?) rates of OCD among devout.
Near universal female speech biase.
Near universal female moral cognitive bias.
Near universal use of female means of anti-social behavior
Near universal use of female means of conflict (undermining)
White matter bias.
We forget that women can work longer and more consistently, and that men’s vigilance, strength, and velocity comes at the expense of task switching, task tolerance, and work duration.
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-18 10:54:00 UTC
MY PAPER ON IMPEACHMENT, 1979?
Late seventies. University. Course on The American Presidency. Paper Required. Half the Grade. Twenty something people start the class. Seven of us finish. I do my paper on Impeachment. Prof doesn’t tell me it was the subject of his thesis. (ouch). I think I got a C? and I probably deserved it, since I read the books AND wrote it over spring break in about a week or so. That said, General position I came to (and he came to), is i) that no president would ever be impeached (removed from office). ii) that it is too politicized a process and a purely political process iii) because ‘high crimes’ isn’t sufficiently defined, and iv) it’s really hard to even try to commit a high crime in office. v) the worst that can happen is ‘bad judgement’ which isn’t a crime. vi) and anyone who did anything would leave office.
Nixon was questionable. Clinton’s was ridiculous. Trumps is even more ridiculous.
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-17 21:28:00 UTC
Updated Dec 17, 2019, 5:08 PM
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-17 17:08:00 UTC
As in Selection
Intent is irrelevant
Outcome Decides
— Julian le Roux
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-17 12:54:00 UTC
—“Would be sooo great if the Fed would further lower interest rates and quantitative ease. The Dollar is very strong against other currencies and there is almost no inflation. This is the time to do it. Exports would zoom!”—Donald J. Trump
@realDonaldTrump
—“The dollar will weaken soon, but exports will not zoom. The biggest effect will be to increase the cost of our imports, leading to even higher trade deficits. There is plenty of inflation now, but it’s about to get much worse. We can’t make America great again by printing money!”—Peter Schiff @PeterSchiff
Let’s just keep in mind that our trade deficit is tiny. We’re practically autarkic, and we could be with ease. If we repatriated autos and electronics (which we should for every single reason imaginable) we wouldn’t have a trade deficit worth talking about)
We could take the country entirely autarkic, pay a two to three year cost for it, and emerge with a century-long benefit from it.And that is the problem with democracy and monetary inflation that causes short term investment in what is largely rents rather than long term returns.
—“That is the dumbest suggestion ever… That is exactly what USSR tried to do and failed miserably…. Come on man, study up on the past before you talk about the future…”—
That’s a different question, and you’re leaping to a conclusion.
How Autarkic is france? Why?
The reasons for the failure of the soviet union are as long as the failure of the roman empire. The primary reasons are (a) effectively a universal minimum/maximum wage, (b) incentives because of it (c) corruption because of it, (d) centralization rather than transformation b/c.
The sole reason for the failure of the USSR was socialism…. The govt spent too much on defense and could no longer afford to keep their union together. People need to be free to make whatever economic choices they want, and should not be made dependent on a govt bound to fail
I think you need to read something that isn’t propaganda. They converted a very primitive backward people (1/3 of which still live in villages today using outhouses) into urbanization and industrialization.The chinese haven’t failed using the same strategy, because they use debt.
Where the Russians used price control on labor. But central investment and planning of transformation is optimum velocity if catching up. Private capital is superior for returns on capital and limiting corruption. Russians created black markets in everything. Chinese haven’t.
State financing of core industries has always been a competitive advantage and the USA has ‘hidden it’ by using the military as means of R&D, that the private sector privatizes and converts to a market good. Other countries keep the returns on those investments. We don’t.
So the prevailing argument at present, is that we have stopped using the military as a sufficient means of indirect investment in R&D, and because of unions, saw capital and skill flight (like the russians/ukrainians did after 92).
So do we keep using the military for basic and technological research or do what world does, which is use state(debt) to finance longer term returns, and continue to turn the returns to the private sector or capture some of those returns to pay down the debt directly?
And that is the explanation for the decline in productivity (aside from the decline in the IQ of the population due to destruction of middle class reproduction, urbanization, and the Baumol effect urban prices produce in the economy?
—“No economic system is more productive than unfettered capitalism. The problem is some are just WAY more productive than others and class envy inevitably occurs. This is why there is welfare. So unproductive classes don’t cut the heads off productive classes. French Revolution”—
Define unfettered capitalism because you’re a sucker for another of the tribe’s false dichotomies.
There is no more productive system than rule of law of reciprocity within the limits of proportionality.
The result is markets. Jewish capitalism != European rule of law
—“Unfettered capitalism occurs when govt does not insert itself into the economy to the benefit of those who can lobby the govt best. The US has always been mercantilist. Never have we been true capitalists.”—
You know, all libertarian tropes are half truths that use the abrahamic technique of deception, to bait you into hazard.
1) How do you distinguish productive from parasitic transfers? 2) how do you prevent externalities?
3) Can private capital produce returns on 20+ yr horizons?
4) What is the demarcation between productive voluntary transfer and rent seeking?
5) What is the demarcation between profitability, productivity, and privatization of commons, socialization of losses?
Libertarianism=private property marxism. Communism=common property marxism.
6) rule of law and the institution of property = commons, and the function of the state (military, judiciary) is to defend commons, and the function of the government(however it’s done) is to produce and maintain commons. And the purpose of markets is production of consumption.
So whenever someone is using the term ‘capitalism’ instead of rule of law (Lule of Law of Sovereignty in demonstrated interests (property) and reciprocity (productive, fully informed, warrantied voluntary transfer, free of externality) they’re participating in 2nd gen Big Lies.
The false dichotomy of Capitalism / socialism-communism, like Marxism, Neoconservatism (trotskyism), Libertarianism (rothbardianism), Feminism, Postmodernism and Denialism(Political correctness) are just the modern era’s equivalent of judaism, christianity and islam: big lies.
You either have rule of law by Sovereignty, Demonstrated Interest, Reciprocity, Testimonial Truth and Contract, or you have discretionary rule that seeks to license some form of violation of sovereignty and reciprocity by deceit.
Capitalism is another lie by half truth.
Rule of law by reciprocity within the limits of proportionality (defection), where Reciprocity consists of productive, fully informed, warrantied, voluntary transfer of demonstrated interests, free of imposition upon the demonstrated of interests of others by externality.
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-17 12:37:00 UTC
Speaking a lie does not require intent, but a failure of due diligence not to lie. Speaking the truth does not require one intends to.
Intent determines punishment, harm does not, and so restitution does not. That’s the difference between permissive ingroup moral and scientific judicial.
So it’s that I do understand – that most lies hide under cover of moral pretense w/o intent, but is always failure of due diligence, assumed or by intent, that are the basis for sophistry, plausible denial, and esp abrahamic deceit.
Positivism is dead. Science = falsification. Truth = falsification. Intent is irrelevant in crime.
Harm exists whether you intend it or not.
If you don’t want to pay for your unintended harms, don’t take actions the consequences of which you don’t understand.
Source date (UTC): 2019-12-17 09:12:00 UTC