Showing posts with label Rick Perry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rick Perry. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Can We Really Call Climate Science A Science?


Soviet Politburo September 8, 1927
“Trotsky: Let us present our platform to the party congress. What are you afraid of?
Stalin: Comrade Trotsky demands equality between the Central Committee and his opposition group. In whose name do you speak so insolently?
Trotsky ally: Why are you trying to hide our platform? What does this say about your courage?
Stalin: We are not prepared to turn the party into a discussion club.”
George Orwell, Animal Farm, Chapter 7
“They had come to a time when no one dared speak his mind, when fierce, growling dogs roamed everywhere, and when you had to watch your comrades torn to pieces after confessing to shocking crimes.”
E-mails from  Phil Jones (East Anglia University)
July 8, 2004
“I can’t see either of these papers being in the next IPCC report. Kevin and I will keep them out somehow — even if we have to redefine what the peer-review literature is!”
March 11, 2003
“I will be emailing the journal to tell them I’m having nothing more to do with it until they rid themselves of this troublesome editor.”
There is no disagreement that the earth’s temperature has always changed over time. There are periods of warming and cooling. It appears we are in a period of warming. The debate between “warmists” and “skeptics” is about whether human Co2 emissions are the cause of warming, whether the relatively small effects of these emissions will compound into larger changes, and, if so, whether, the benefits of remediation outweigh the costs. By “warmists,” I mean  Global Warming Alarmists who believe that warming is caused by humans and will have disastrous consequences for humankind if unchecked by remediation, no matter how costly.
go to Forbes.com

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Psst: The Tea Party Is Mainstream Despite Everything You Hear

Democrat politicians paint the Tea Party as an extreme fringe of American politics. Vice President Joe Biden famously described Tea Party Republicans as “terrorists.” According to Democrat Sen. Jay Rockefeller, the Tea Party are “extremists” who have “hijacked” the Republican Party.  Other Democrats are less restrained, telling us: The Tea Party is like the Nazis or KKK, is a serious threat to our national security, and Tea Party members should “go straight to hell.”  Some even whisper the Tea Party “wants to lynch blacks.”
Establishment figures condescendingly describe the Tea Party as “an amorphous collection of individuals” which includes “affluent suburban libertarians, rural fundamentalists, ambitious pundits, unreconstructed racists, and fiscally conservative housewives.” They shudder to consider: What would happen to our foreign policy if those hicks got in charge!
The Democrats’ media allies either ignore huge Tea Party rallies or feature clown-like demonstrators dressed as Uncle Sam or revolutionary figures. They single out Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann as representatives of the sinister free-market ideology of the Christian right.
National Public Radio and other “balanced” news organizations decry the plague on both parties. The beleaguered president must contend with his far-left, and noble moderate Republicans must bear their Tea Party cross. They ask plaintively: With extremists on both sides, how we can have civilized discourse and compromise?
Democratic politicians and their media allies can scarcely restrain their glee when national polls find the Tea Party’s popularity slipping. Given the onslaught from all sides, I personally find it remarkable that the Tea Party commands the large support it does.
The dominant narrative of the Tea Party as an extremist fringe group isolated from the American mainstream is distant from the truth. American public opinion polls, in fact, show that those who have “read, heard or seen anything about the Tea Party” are more supportive and majorities credit the Tea Party with energizing the political process and making government more responsive to the people.
If the Tea Party is a kook fringe, then its agenda should be far out of line with American public opinion. I surveyed a large number of Tea Party sites to distill what I consider to be its “core” platform. I then studied public opinion polls to determine whether the American people agree with the Tea Party’s core principles.