glacial retreat (2)
Ok, we're still waiting for evidence of retreat there.17 June 2000
"Great climate change may signal the advent of chaos, fundamental upheavals. You know, the usual apocalyptic derangements - planet goes to toast, reason dethroned, the dissolution of all order and pattern. David Suzuki has been telling us this for decades at least."
6 April 2002
"But despite years of 'warnings' of global warming, conferences and conventions hyping its imminence, it seems to me that we are as far away from that sunny utopia as ever."
28 September 2002
"A lot of scientists agreeing on something is not the same thing as a scientific consensus. Any sentence that begins 'A majority of the world's scientists agree . . .' is not reporting a scientific finding; it's announcing a preference. It's a poll. Real science doesn't do polls. ... When we hear of a consensus on global warming we are being told - covertly, but told nonetheless - that it isn't a scientific fact." [Replace "global warming" with "evolution" in this, and see if that makes any sense to you whatsoever.]
7 December 2002
"The science of climate control is still in short pants."
19 February 2006
"I think even people who support, vaguely, the idea of 'doing something' to stop global warming sense that the much touted 'scientific consensus' on the subject is more of a rhetorical boost for an imperfectly comprehended subject than an actual finding. We have no 'consensus' on any scientific law. It is either right or wrong - because Nature doesn't operate on a show of hands. And consensus in this context is the word that's reached for when 'fact' is unobtainable."
4 November 2006
"The science is not complete. The models are not perfect. … Most pernicious in this context is the attempt to declare, 'The debate is over.' It isn't over."
9 December 2006
"I also know there is no science of the future: We may decorate reports with graphs and charts, and conjure pages of the most exquisite and arcane equations, but the very best we can offer on climate a hundred years from now is a series of sophisticated and ever-ramifying probabilities that are themselves subject to a myriad of unforeseeable contingencies."
27 January 2007
"Global warming, I grow daily more aware, is a very promiscuous phenomenon. It gets credit for everything. The world wants its politicians to 'do something' about global warming. Most likely, alas, they will."
Labels: global warming; climate change; globe and mail; rex murphy
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