Climate changes. People play a role in that change. How significant a role is unclear but probably not that great. Moreover, the changes that are occurring are neither unprecedented nor catastrophic: indeed society is probably more endangered by the precautionary measures environmentalists are advocating that it is by the changes that are taking place -- especially when those measures suck money away from other priorities and real issues (see post below).
Ecomyths is a blog designed to help people think for themselves. Empirical data are contrasted with theories to examine axiomatic myths: ideas taken to be so well accepted that they don't need to be proven. It seeks to change ideas, correct fallacies and challenge dominant constructs by having people read, think and reflect for themselves about contemporary issues. Facts don't change your perspective. Your perspective changes your facts.
Friday, August 31, 2007
Changing views question Global Warming Consensus
Climate changes. People play a role in that change. How significant a role is unclear but probably not that great. Moreover, the changes that are occurring are neither unprecedented nor catastrophic: indeed society is probably more endangered by the precautionary measures environmentalists are advocating that it is by the changes that are taking place -- especially when those measures suck money away from other priorities and real issues (see post below).
Poverty and development redux
The reason welfare is bad is not because it costs too much, nor because it "undermines the work ethic," but because it is intrinsically at odds with the way human beings come to live satisfying lives. Charles Murray, US author
The prevailing Western attitude towards both poverty and development can be seen similarly as fundamentally at odds with the way human being live satisfying lives. We achieve satisfaction by striving towards goals and seeking to improve our situation: happiness comes from having hope in a better future, from having someone to share that future with and by undertaking something meaningful towards the attainment of that improved future.
Monday, August 27, 2007
Climate hype cooling
All ecomyths go through cycles of great attention and then ebbing enthusiasm. My prediction? Now that global warming has morphed into climate change, it will slowly become absorbed into the next dominant narrative for eco-hype. Same rhetoric, same actors, different set of acronyms: eco-hype recycles endlessly.
Friday, August 24, 2007
Just how closely connected are ClimateForChange.ca and the federal Liberal Party?
As this post documents very clearly, at least one political party in Canada has taken to hiding its policy advocacy behind the front of a supposed 'environmental group. That this party calls itself "liberal" is the real oxymoron, as they appear to adopt tactics that contradict any definition of libertarianism.
Oh, yes, my bad. I was forgetting that in the case of ecomyths it's the end that justifies the means, any means apparently.
If the cause is sufficiently just (and as the same people define what is and is not moral, their cause has to be just doesn't it?) then procedure, rule of law, and concepts like justice, can all be superseded by the need to act: what a blessing the precautionary principle is to such zealots -- don't have to prove anything, except the possibility of harm -- and you can justify any intervention.
Especially interventions that supply more revenue, jobs and careers for those raising the possibility of harm in the first place, the definition of morality in play, the media reaction, education....wow, maybe even a scientific consensus -- that will intimidate some, alienate others, isolate any critics.
And just why is George Orwell still classified as fiction?
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Climate Audit and the role of blogs
Blogging and the msm
Deconstructing the moral fable of climate change
- My main concern with eco-ethics is that it allows us to stop thinking about the meaning and point to life. It is like a layer of scaffolding built across society, which allows every individual, and every institution, to avoid the questions that they find hard to answer. Eco-ethics allows us to avoid the question of human purpose, by directing all our actions towards the clouds.
Saturday, August 18, 2007
Planet Gore on National Review Online
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Blog benefits: understanding climate feedback
This post is a good example, asking whether the approach to feedback mechanisms in climate research has been correct. The drawback? That climate science has become so ideologically polarized that normal scientific exchange is no longer in play.
A second use of blogs, is related and involves the communication of complex scientific ideas in a more generalized form so that non-specialists can understand and appreciate the implications of scientific enquiries.
This post is good example and relates to the same issue of feedback mechanism in climate change.
Finally, a caveat and an answer.
A lot of web material, blogs especially, have a pre-disposed ideology. Some, like this site, outline that ideology: for some it remains implicit and it is left to the reader to filter the message from the dogma. Sadly, there are also web tools that appear to be value neutral, or may be presumed by some to be free of ideology, when they are not. For example, the highly popular wikipedia offers lots of useful information but as an open source resource, it is reflective of the edits of its contributors.
Well now a program has been developed that will at least reveal who has been editing which wikipedia entries: very useful when the topic being edited is subject to radically different ideological interpretations.
Monday, August 13, 2007
Causes of death
Global warming? Look at the numbers
- there is no temperature trend now that the correct figures are being used
- the corrections only came about because of the activities associated with the Climate Audit blog of Steve McIntyre, who previously exposed the myth of the Hockey Stick temperature graph, and
- few (none?) of the usual global warming zealots have had the good grace to acknowledge that the science "does not track", "have the traction" or otherwise fit any of the contemporary public policy buzzwords implying doom and gloom as contended by advocates over the past decade or so.
China's river of life
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
Trash incineration
Why? Not because garbage actually is that problematic. Lots of landfilling space in Ontario, we could even join the 21st century and incinerate -- but as this editorial describes, support for incineration continues to soften in the heart of Canada.
Waste is a very popular ecomyth. Waste need not be a problem: it is easily disposed of through a range of context-specific options ranging from sanitary landfills (where land is plentiful), to incineration (where it is not, and/or energy costs are high) all the way through to the extended use of goats (where technology is too expensive an option).
So why all the angst in a province like Ontario about garbage? Well trash means consumption. For ideological environmentalists to simply dispose of trash is to legitimize consumption -- the real sin -- thus garbage, household garbage, is another way to attack the "overly" consumptive lifestyle that is destroying the planet.
Force people to deal with, i.e. restrict, their garbage and you force them to face up to their sins of consumption. Don't apply technology (or even common sense) and supply a solution: enforce demand management, constraint and let everyone see in their own homes how bad they are for the planet.
Such hogwash. Especially when the vast majority of what is sorted and organized into municipal recycling efforts, ultimately ends up in the landfill anyway.
Their will be no enlightened trash management in Ontario until first this ideology of eco-poverty is broken. It is perhaps our most prevalent ecomyth.
JunkScience.com's Ultimate Global Warming Challenge
Ah, you do have to use science though: but that shouldn't be a problem given the "consensus" and all that.
Can't wait to see the first entry. Any entry come to that. Problem with global warming is the same for all ecomyths: asserting it's so, doesn't make it so.
A lie is a lie: doesn't matter how often or how loudly it is repeated. Saying it is, doesn't mean it is -- especially in science.
No use getting upset with me: write out your proof, send it in and collect $100,000: much more productive and creative. But again, that's another thing about critics -- they don't actually create anything of value.
Side bet: more people criticise the contest (and/or its sponsors) than actually submit entries.
Monday, August 06, 2007
Ideology and the Lessons still unlearned
Sadly, no. Ecomyths are the result of ideology and the continued imposition of beliefs despite the scientific evidence that contradict those beliefs.
A good example is well explained here. It is the situation in Britain where a program was introduced into schools to promote healthy eating by giving kids a free fruit or vegetable serving each day. The follow up evaluation showed the program had no long term influence on the eating habits of children. Yet, despite the data clearly showing the program to be a massive (and expensive) failure, the academics conducting the evaluation recommended that the program be expanded, rather than cancelled.
Their thinking? Everyone knows fruits and veggies are good for you, kids have to eat right and if this program hasn't worked, then we will just double our efforts until it does. If at first you don't succeed, try, try, try again. (Especially easy when it's the government's money you are spending and you get to be a recipient).
This is ideology, not science. The science has just shown the program to have had no behavioural effect. Moreover, its starting premise also is flawed, as the most well-conducted studies following hundreds of thousands of people for decades continue to show "no relationship between fruits and vegetables and cancer and no statistically significant associations with major chronic disease or cardiovascular disease."
Does this make fruits and vegetables bad? No, of course not. But is does make them much less of an invisible cloak of protection against cancer and disease than they are often portrayed as being, and certainly not a life essential to be foisted on kids at government expense.
The definition of insanity is to continue to do the same thing you've been doing all along and expect a different result.
Saturday, August 04, 2007
Aerosols: heating or cooling?
Friday, August 03, 2007
A horrendous development
And if you are unsure what Britain would look like under such a scheme, I recommend watching V for Vendetta.
Sadly life has started to mimic art, rather than art merely acting as a parody of life's comical aspects. The scope of governmental intrusion into daily life in Britain really is astounding: at what point do people say enough?
Wednesday, August 01, 2007
The Contrarian View
Agree or disagree. Doesn't matter.
The point of the blog is to have you consider for yourself, your truth and where it is leading you in your life and why.
Kinda the whole purpose of this whole blogging thing in the first place.