I bet while you were sleeping in that boxcar in Gunnison,â writes reader H Shaeffer, âyou pondered about the climate then as much as you are now pondering about the Chesapeake Bay climate. âThe only difference then, you knew there wasnât a damn thing you could do about it. Iâm surprised you guys didnât burn the boxcar down.
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â September 8, 2023 |  [View Online]( |  [Sign Up]( Garbage In, Garbage Out âHistorically, the claim of consensus has been the first refuge of scoundrels; it is a way to avoid debate by claiming that the matter is already settled.â â Michael Crichton , âThereâs not much doubt about âclimate changeâ,â responds reader D Shultz, âit has been going on for eons.â âSome 15,000 years ago,â agrees G Pisauro, âwe had an ice age, and sea levels were much, much lower. The earth has been warming ever since. Mankind barely survived the last ice age, and now we are thriving precisely because the climate is warmer.â CONTINUED BELOW... 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If the glaciers in Iceland are melting, may the cause be all of the heat from the earth and all of the volcanoes on Iceland, heating and melting the glaciers from underneath? Itâs clear to any kindergarten scholar⦠even at the freezing pointâ32 degrees Fahrenheitâwater melts ice. Plop a cube in your glass, soon itâll be gone and the water level will have risen. Glaciers and icebergs melt faster underwater than they do in air. Sea level rises. âIt would just be nice if politicians actually followed the science,â D Shultz continues. âWhat a concept, I know! Theyâd learn Co2 emissions contribute about 1/100th to the âgreenhouse effect' than the amount water vapor does. âA little learning would go a long way to help prevent the financial destruction of world economies, and deal with the impacts of climate change by learning the real cause.â Weâre aware readers like Pisauro and Schultz have studied the climate science v. policy conundrum longer and with greater intent than ours. Mr. Shultz recommends a couple of books to help: Hot Talk/Cold Science by Fred Singer and Global Warming: The Great Deception by Guy Mitchell. To the list weâd add Michael Shellenbergerâs Apocalypse Never. It never hurts to hear both sides of the âdebate,â if we dare call it that. âIn all the discussion about climate policies,â reader D Darley writes, âwhat is the impact of shutting down perfectly good and useful systems like coal and gas power plants has on GDP? Looking at entire cities, industries, agricultural infrastructureâthese all rely on cheap energy.â Darley then asks:  What will be the negative impact on GDP of willingly and with forethought, shutting down perfectly useful assets? The big GDP plus is the trillions spent on replacement, most financed by borrowing. When do we view the true cost of these âclimateâ boondoggles? And further down the rabbit hole we goâ¦Â We set out online with good intentions. At first blush, Darleyâs question regarding the cost of implementing climate policies to reach âNet Zero by 2050â seemed like a natural one to answer if youâre a policy wonk and your goal is to radically, rapidly, reinvent the global economy. Youâd think. But not so fast. What I discovered is far more pernicious. We thought digital censorship was bad. What about unwitting collective delusion? You can try this search experiment at home if you like. Type in this sentence: âWhat are the costs of implementing climate change policy?â Itâs actually hard to find an answer. We found one. But without fail, some versions of the answer include this qualifier âthe costs of not doing anything far outweigh the costs of doing something ânow!â.â Itâs fait accompli. Without any way of actually calculating the impacts of climate change from now into the future, politicians, pundits, journalists begin with the assumption that âclimate change is here and itâs going to get worse.â The drag on global GDP is expected to be somewhere around 1%-2% per year until Net-Zero 2050. But the cost of âdoing nothingâ could reach 20% of global GDP by 2100. Those stats appear frequently. âGlobal GDPâ in this case is, of course, a placeholder for those countries who are in a position to finance the policies by going further into debt. Ahem. Most articles also end with some version of the assumption âthe only way to mitigate the effect of climate change is for policy makers to spend [a sh$t-ton of your money.]â [***] emphasis added. Bloomberg NEF, Bloombergâs green-energy research team, puts the price tag at $200 Trillion. Okay, weâre getting somewhere. But then continues âwhich would be a bargain!â Not only would it be cheaper for rich Western countries to invest the $200 Trillion to preserve life as we know it on the planet, but we have to shell it out by 2030 or the price tag will rise. That or weâll all die. Oh boy. CONTINUED BELOW... POWERED BY PARADIGM DIRECT [Free Live Event] Infinite Cash Flow Trading Method Revealed⦠Are your retirement plans at risk? Is your portfolio plummeting while inflation soars? Join Fox Business correspondent, Charles Payne, this Wednesday at 7PM EST and unlock "The Secret Cash Flow Trade." Discover how to generate consistent passive income, protect against market shocks, and target positive returns in any market. Don't miss this opportunity for financial success. [Reserve your spot now!]( # CONTINUED... Even âBardâ â Googleâs slick AI competitor to ChatGPT â gets in on the action. When I asked the Bard: âHave any studies been done on the negative impact of climate policy on GDP?â The Bard replied: âI'm designed solely to process and generate text, so I'm unable to assist you with that.â Hmn. When I asked the language model where and when Greta Thunberg screamed âI donât want you to be positive. I want you to panic!â... then followed it with âwhere and when did Al Gore admonish the world that âWeâre boiling the oceans!â... I learned they were both addressing the World Economic Forum in Davos, in 2019 and 2023 respectively.  Thankfully, I also got some unsolicited clarification from the robot. With respect to Thunberg. Bard summed Gretaâs tantrum thus: Thunbergâs speech was met with mixed reactions. Some people praised her for her passion and urgency, while others criticized her for being too alarmist. However, there is no doubt that Thunbergâs speech has helped to raise awareness of the climate crisis and the need for urgent actionâ¦.Thunberg's message is simple: the climate crisis is real, it is urgent, and we need to act now. She is a powerful voice for change, and she is helping to make the world a better place. Bard praised the diminutive hobgoblin: âThere is no doubt that Thunberg's speech has helped to raise awareness of the climate crisis and the need for urgent action. She has also inspired a global movement of young people to demand action on climate change.â We witnessed a bit of Thunbergâs army of mutant teens last night when some knucklehead glued his bare feet to the cement floor in the upper deck of Arthur Ashe stadium during a womenâs semi-final match at the US Open. He and a couple other âuseful idiotsâ (Leninâs term, not ours) were wearing t-shirts that read âEnd Fossil Fuels.â Yeah, smart. Their protest interrupted the match for 48 minutes while security guards figured out how to use their bottle of Goo Gone to free the schmuck. Regarding Goreâs âboiling oceansâ the minstrel was apologetic. Bard: It is important to note that the term âboilingâ is not literally accurate. The oceans are not actually boiling, but they are getting warmer⦠and⦠It is clear that climate change is a serious threat to the planet and to human society. We need to take urgent action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and mitigate the impacts of climate change. Weâre surprised that Bard could have opinions, emotions and bias; itâs a soulless machine, after all. Computer programmers have an acronym we find useful daily when reviewing our own writing: GIGO. It stands for âgarbage in, garbage outâ. Bard and ChatGPT scrub the Internet for responses to your queries. They can only assemble what they find there. When I was studying philosophy at St. Johnâs College, one of the biggest crimes you could commit in a seminar is known as âtautology.â Roughly speaking, you construct your argument to lead your opponent to a predetermined conclusion. In other words, you set up a straw man, just to see him burn. A tautology is a crime because itâs intellectually dishonest. Whatâs an even greater crime is when the tautology becomes accepted as truth. Youâll find âthe scientific community agreesâ or âthe scientific consensus isâ that climate change is real and itâs only going to get worse as the starting and ending point of most articles on the subject. âThe matter has already been settled,â the consensus says. Those who challenge the âconsensusâ are immediately, and quite vehemently, dismissed as âdeniers.â (Another popular t-shirt online reads âDenial Is Not A Policy.â You can find it alongside your Ukrainian flag and âLove is Loveâ lawn posters.) In August of this year, the Nobel prize winning physicist John Clauser caused some consternation in the scientific community when he signed the Global Climate Intelligence Group (CLINTEL) âs World Climate Declaration. Mr. Clauser is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and won his Nobel Prize for contributions that have paved the way for the development of new technologies in quantum computers and quantum cryptography. By signing CLINTELâs Declaration, he joined fellow Nobel anointed physicist Ivan Giaever. The declaration makes some bold statements that sit like a boil on the arse of the scientific consensus. Among them, these top assertions: - Natural as well as [human] factors cause warming - Warming is far slower than predicted - Climate policy relies on inadequate models - Co2 is plant food, the basis of all life on Earth, Co2 is not a pollutant - Global warming has not increased natural disasters - Climate policy must respect scientific and economic realities Far from denying climate change is afoot, the signatories of CLINTELâs declaration encourages scientists to follow the real data. What they take umbrage with is the interpretation of the data and policy response to what scientific data actually suggest. There are over 1600 scientists on the list hailing from the far corners of the earth. As part of the declaration, they advocate adaptation over mitigation. To prove their point, the CLINTEL founders point to Oslo, Norway and the city state of Singapore.  Let us look at todayâs difference in mean temperature between Oslo (one of the big cities near the North Pole) and Singapore (one of the big cities near the Equator), see Figure 2. Measurements show that the difference is as much as 22oC, twenty times bigger than the global warming between 1850 and 2020 and almost 14 times bigger than the so-called âscaryâ global warming between 1850 and 2050.  Despite of this huge mean temperature difference of 22oC, both cities are very prosperous and the citizens in both cities are enjoying life. So, why do the media tell us that a global warming of 1.6oC or more will lead to a disaster (âthe end is nearâ), while 22oC difference between Oslo and Singapore turns out to be no problem whatsoever? Global mean temperature from 1850-2050, together with the average temperature of the prospering cities Oslo and Singapore in 2020. Note that the global warming of 1.6 °C is marginal with respect to the difference of 22 °C between the two cities (almost factor 14) (Source: CLINTEL) The answer is adaptation! Mankind shows an impressive history, having survived many big changes in its living environment, including big changes in the Earthâs climate. Thanks to our ingenuity, human beings have always found clever solutions to cope with all past challenges, again and again. If you visit Oslo and Singapore, you see an impressive demonstration of humanâs capability to adapt to climate differences of 22oC. To believe the outcome of a climate model, is to believe what the model makers have put in. This is precisely the problem of todayâs climate discussion to which climate models are central. Climate science has degenerated into a discussion based on beliefs, not on sound self-critical science. Should not we free ourselves from the naive belief in immature climate models? What was the phrase? Oh, yeah. Garbage in, garbage out. âIn the past decades the public has been flooded with fear-mongering stories,â Berkhout says, âtelling them that global temperatures will rise to catastrophically high levels.â Guus continues: âClimate activists claim that the cause of all this impending doom is the increasing amount of CO2 produced by human activities. The proposed solution is the so-called net-zero emission policy, aimed at lowering human net CO2-emissions to the levels of the pre-industrial era of the late 1700s.â Granted, reading history is a hobby, but even a cursory knowledge of it suggests that life, when the Colonies were still an appendage of the British Empire, was a tad more brutish and short then than it is today.  No matter. Policy makers prefer the immature climate models because in mitigation lies the honey pot at the end of the rainbow. Recall the $130 trillion raised for net-ero policy at COP26 in 2021 [link to previous TDM]. That money is going somewhere. Letâs not forget the craven political class get their rocks off, too, from the clout and influence when a growing global mob of useful idiots vote. Journalists will go along with just about anything. That is, as long as it doesnât rock their own boats. Identifying and repeating the consensus is what theyâre paid to do. And they have deadlines to meet! God bless âem. Thereâs more to climate science, of course. For our part, we donât like being told what to think⦠or do. We encourage you to visit [CLINTELâs site]( and make up your own mind. Happy Friday, Addison Wiggin, The Daily Missive P.S. âHey Addison, I bet while you were sleeping in that boxcar in Gunnison,â writes reader H Shaeffer, âyou pondered about the climate then as much as you are now pondering about the Chesapeake Bay climate. âThe only difference then, you knew there wasnât a damn thing you could do about it. Iâm surprised you guys didnât burn the boxcar down. âFor reference, you told me about your boxcar days at an Agora conference in Vancouver. I also attended Western State one year way back in 1956. I knew exactly what you were talking about.â Ah, those were the days. Thanks for sticking around! P.P.S. âIt is interesting that politicians are more concerned with climate change than pollution,â writes reader Scott, who shares my middle name, âItâs is the olâ switch-er-oo.â âWe can bypass polluting corporations but we have to clamp down on carbon emissions. It's amazing that they throw the most absurd ideas for acceptance and disregard what is observable and testable. Seems like the data science produces are "guesstimations" of what they want the public to think is real, thereby scaring us into good behavior, and that's observably funny.â Not so funny, really. As we mention above, their âguesstimationsâ are spit out by carefully constructed computer models. But we do share your sardonic sense of humor. âClimate change is being used to control us through fear,â Robert Kennedy Jr. said during a dinner speech on July 12th this year. One of the VIP guests at Freedom Fest in Memphis later that month, Kennedy gave a long excoriating speech about how big corporate polluters in the Hudson Valley, New York have so twisted legislation that they get subsidies and tax breaks to clean up their own messes. âFreedom and free markets are a much better way to stop pollution. Polluters make themselves rich by making the public pay for the damage they do,â RFK Jr. later tweeted along with a video of his position on the issue. âYou show me a polluter, Iâll show you a fat cat using political clout to escape the discipline of the free market.â P.P.P.S Thank you if youâve responded with your thoughts, questions and suggestions. We got a fair share of reasonable and intelligent responses. 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