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« Team letter writing | Main | NZ Science Media Centre hides the evidence »
Saturday
Feb182012

Doctors' letter

Commenters have been drawing attention to a public letter written by healthcare professionals and climate scientists, which called on the Heartland Institute to reveal all its funding. This was cited in a Guardian article, which was later amended to show that the letter had been removed.

This appears to be it, here. In fact it looks as if the document just moved to a different URL, although I've sent it to Webcite just in case.

What motivates the Heartland Institute? As climate scientists and health professionals, we view the systematic sowing of unjustified doubt about climate science as confusing at best, and inhumane at worst.

...

Given the disproportionate influence given to climate sceptics by the media, it is in the public, national, and global interest for all funding behind their activities to be revealed. This will help people to make up their own minds about the truth of the climate change threat, so that action can be planned on the basis of evidence rather than confusion.

Signatories include many familiar names including:

  • Chris Rapley, who was also on the disappearing Science Media Centre press release
  • Jim Hansen
  • Professor Sir Andy Haines (he of the completely doolally "carbon costs $1000 per tonne" claim).

 

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Reader Comments (48)

As Ive said many times before, even the most intelligent people can be as thick as two planks.

Regards

Mailman

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:12 PM | Unregistered CommenterMailman

Mailman:

If I were paid lots and lots of money and got lots of media attention and lots of accolades for doing nothing of any use to mankind, I could say all sorts of nonsense and appear to be as thick as two short ones.

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:23 PM | Unregistered CommenterPhillip Bratby

Given the disproportionate influence given to climate sceptics by the media, it is in the public, national, and global interest for all funding behind their activities to be revealed. This will help people to make up their own minds about the truth of the climate change threat, so that action can be planned on the basis of evidence rather than confusion.
Wonderful piece of meaningless guff.
To start with will somebody from their side of the argument please define what they mean by "disproportionate influence"? Even now the media in general appear to give as little air-time as possible to anything other than the "orthodox" view, the BBC especially giving considerable airing on a regular (almost obligatory) basis to some of the more outlandish claims.
Even if this influence is disproportionate it the idea that it is in the public, national, and global interest (don't over-state your case, guys, whatever you do) for all funding behind their activities to be revealed is a non sequitur as is the idea that knowing who funds sceptics will help people make up their minds.
I could go on to mention the somewhat illterate idea that the media "give influence" to anyone or to comment on the general semantic quality of the quote which looks as if it had been written by a computer or maybe a not very well-educated 13-year-old but perhaps I'd better not.

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:26 PM | Unregistered CommenterMike Jackson

Don't forget that by all accounts there was a hurried first draft of this flaccid screed published to the web. I wonder if anyone has taken a snapshot of the original version that was published on Friday?
If not we can at least thank Suzanne Goldenberg for quoting from it in her article. The original clearly had a more forthright tone.

In a letter that was published on Friday and then subsequently removed, more than 30 leading health professionals and scientists from the US, Britain, Australia and New Zealand called on Heartland to come clean. "What motivates the Heartland Institute? As climate scientists and health professionals, we view the systematic manipulation and suppression of climate science for private benefit as confusing at best, and inhumane at worst," the letter said.

My emphasis above.

I wonder how many other differences there were. But yet again the honesty and forthrightness of these moral giants means we are left guessing.

However I think this still remains a clear rebuttal to those claiming that the fake document has no bearing on the underlying facts if we see here evidence that if you withdraw that document it attenuates the level of self righteous foaming at the mouth ;)

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:29 PM | Unregistered CommenterThe Leopard In The Basement

It is no surprise that EVERYBODY wants to come out and dance about. There is something in this for all!

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:29 PM | Unregistered CommenterJack Savage

Medics are not scientists.

The regurgitation of unsubstantiated (and often wrong) statements merely show their very limited abilities.

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:33 PM | Unregistered CommenterMaxwellsDemon

Mailman:
True. I also think that there are few people more gullible than people who are experts in their own field, especially when presented with barely plausible nonsense from just outside their field.
We have seen, time after time, that many experts in other scientific fields are completely uncritical about climate "science" when they plainly haven't even stooped to examine the subject for a second. In their profound ignorance, they then have the gall to hysterically attack sceptics who actually have looked at the evidence in detail.

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:34 PM | Unregistered Commenterartwest

It goes onto say

The Hippocratic Oath, the values of which generations of health professionals have adhered to, declares ‘first, do no harm’. In 2009, The Lancet declared, "climate change is the biggest global health threat of the twenty-first century". Healthcare professionals have a duty to protect patients from disease and environmental harm. Biomedical treatment is just one form of healthcare.

The "first do no harm" principle can cut both ways. When proscribing high-risk and/or painful treatments then a medical professional must have a reasonable expectation that the patient will be better off. If a medical professional does not weigh up the risks then they fail in their duty of care. In the UK, if a GP used the same level of care towards diagnosis and proscribing as the worst excesses of the ClimateGate emails, then they would be struck off.

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:35 PM | Unregistered CommenterManicBeancounter

As climate scientists and health professionals, we view the systematic sowing of unjustified doubt about climate science as confusing at best, and inhumane at worst.

If you or one of your loved ones were suffering from a mysterious illness would you trust one of those quacks to diagnose it correctly and prescribe the right treatment?

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:38 PM | Unregistered CommenterRoy

Leopard

At least one more change. The original version quoted by Goldenberg had:

"so that action can be planned in the light of reality rather than the murky shadows of secretly funded disinformation."

Rather than:

"so that action can be planned on the basis of evidence rather than confusion."

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:44 PM | Unregistered CommenterDreadnought

Isn't it interesting how quickly the consensus advocate sites pulled together a consistent message about the Heartland release, had letters with prominent signatures, etc. And to release the Heartland leak on Vanlentines day, what a touch. A PR genius could not have imagined so much coninsidence.

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:46 PM | Unregistered CommenterSean

This really s sad. I almost spit my coffee at "the disproportionate" attention the press gives to skeptics. Again just like all warmer propaganda. Fake but accurate

Feb 18, 2012 at 4:53 PM | Unregistered CommenterDude

All of these signatories just a day after the infamous leak? Talk about Team coordination. They had that one all lined up and ready to go. I'm sure Mann's recent offensive was coordinated with this, too. This is how you know the Warmists have nothing, when they invest so much in attacking strawmen. It's not like their scientific case was ever going to get stronger though, was it?

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:04 PM | Unregistered CommenterMike Mangan

Sean

I don't usually do conspiracy theories, but I've been thinking along the same lines. Perhaps it's more collusion than conspiracy.

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:06 PM | Unregistered CommenterDreadnought

On second thoughts, this lot couldn't organise a conspiracy in a Masonic Lodge.

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:24 PM | Unregistered CommenterDreadnought

I don't notice much about the lack of BIG-OIL funding.

I didn't notice anything about the swine-flu scare and the millions that went into the coffers of the companies that gained so much from all the vaccinations we didn't need.

I didn't hear much about the Alderhay doctors who thought it was fine to hold back organs from dead children "just in case".

In short, why should we listen to quacks?

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:26 PM | Unregistered CommenterMike Haseler

Dreadnought


Yeah I missed that. Geez, these guys obviously had a hurried rewrite and thought it was worth another go - I think they should've kept schtum.

The Alarmists love their medical metaphors well I think I'd like to try one too -

If you were ill what kind of doctor do you want to treat you?

a) Someone measured, reasoning, who takes their time and shows honest dealings

or

b) Someone who goes off half cocked at the first idea they have, and then tries to cover up their tracks when it all goes wrong.

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:29 PM | Unregistered CommenterThe Leopard In The Basement

If I was health professional I'd care if 600 people died because of the cold over the last month.

I'd care that hundreds of old people are dying of hypothermia in the UK because of fuel poverty.

If I was a cruel heartless moron, I'd have signed this letter.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2100232/Frozen-death-fuel-bills-soar-Hypothermia-cases-elderly-double-years.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:31 PM | Unregistered CommenterBruce

"Given the disproportionate influence given to climate sceptics by the media"

Pitiful.

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:45 PM | Unregistered CommenterDaveS

Roy

If you or one of your loved ones were suffering from a mysterious illness would you trust one of those quacks to diagnose it correctly and prescribe the right treatment?
Generally speaking, yes. Because they have spent seven years training and whether they turn out to be right or not, they're our best chance.
On the other hand, as artwest points out, people tend to be remarkably gullible when it comes to fields other than their own particular speciality but in the broad discipline in which they operate.
I don't have a problem with doctors or anyone else coming to a different conclusion to me about global warming. What I do find annoying is the fact that so many of them make pronouncements or put their names to letters like these when it's quite evident that they have spent nowhere as much time as me (or the majority of contributors on this site I would suggest) actually coming to a reasoned conclusion, wrong though it might turn out to be.
Pavlov would just love some of these guys!

Feb 18, 2012 at 5:51 PM | Unregistered CommenterMike Jackson

How can qualified medics sink to infantile stuff like this. Worse than 'show you mine if you show me yours.'

Feb 18, 2012 at 6:03 PM | Unregistered CommenterPharos

I think it should be noted that the first draft began with "The Climate and Health Council release the following in response to Heartland Institute document leaks." which has now been removed.

This is presently in evidence by looking at the author's member page at the Climate and Health website and reading the Latest Activity section.

Feb 18, 2012 at 6:03 PM | Unregistered CommenterGareth

Leopard

Purely as a piece of rhetoric, I preferred the first version. Imagine Neil Kinnoch reading it out loud:

"the murky shadows of secretly funded (bang lectern, raise voice) OF SECRETLY FUNDED disinformation."

Feb 18, 2012 at 6:29 PM | Unregistered CommenterDreadnought

Relatively few medics have a scientific background or training. In fact most pre-med training is aimed boosting students memory ability to provide 'diagnoses', i.e. recognizing a particular set of symptoms and matching them up with a currently approved treatment, and if they can't come up with a match, they usually rely on laboratory workers to put them back on track. They also tend to have a 'do as I tell, not do as I do attitude'. The causal link between lung cancer and smoking came mainly from Doll and Peto's doctor's survey, as did most of the current knowledge of alcohol abuse and liver disease.

Feb 18, 2012 at 6:41 PM | Unregistered CommenterSalopian

@ Mike Jackson

"... they [doctors] have spent seven years training and whether they turn out to be right or not, they're our best chance."

I certainly agree that we should listen carefully to doctors when faced with a serious illness, but we should not accept what they say uncritically. I have known a number of cases where faulty diagnoses were made of patients who had serious diseases. In two cases my suspicion that the people affected had cancer (a completely different type of cancer in each case) proved to be right and the initial diagnosis by the doctors involved turned out to be wrong. In both cases, as a consequence of the doctors' mistakes, there was a delay of over a year in getting the correct treatment. In one case it was not too late. In the other case the patient might have died anyway, but I will never know.

A good doctor should not expect his/her opinions to be accepted without question, even when they are talking about subjects on which they are experts. Therefore they should certainly expect to be challenged when they pontificate about subjects on which they are not experts.

Feb 18, 2012 at 6:55 PM | Unregistered CommenterRoy

It looks like everyone is writing to the Guardian to complain about Heartland.

this from climate scientists Michael Mann, Kevin Trenberth, Ray Bradley, Jonathan Overpeck, Ben Santer, Gavin Schmidt and David Karoly, referred to by Richard Littlemore of Desmogblog as" a relative who's who of climate science excellence."

"As scientists who have had their emails stolen, posted online and grossly misrepresented, we can appreciate the difficulties the Heartland Institute is currently experiencing following the online posting of the organization’s internal documents earlier this week. However, we are greatly disappointed by their content, which indicates the organization is continuing its campaign to discredit mainstream climate science and to undermine the teaching of well-established climate science in the classroom."

Feb 18, 2012 at 7:16 PM | Unregistered CommenterGeorge

Yes, health professionals.

Next time I get a checkup I'll ask that my prostate exam include a full report on any missing heat or methane buildups.

This whole episode just keeps getting better. When will Desmond Tutu chime in?

Feb 18, 2012 at 7:46 PM | Unregistered Commenteredward getty

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is holding a live webcast from its 2012 Annual General Meeting, which will arm scientists, educators, students and citizens around the world with messages to help influence public perceptions and debate when the science supporting a position is not enough to carry the argument.

When I read the bold bits on a WUWT post, I just couldn't believe it. Sure, this had to be a denialist lie or a fake quote invented to make AAAS look bad.

Alas, the reality is stranger than fiction. AAAS did really say that.

To know climate science is to know madness.

Feb 18, 2012 at 7:55 PM | Unregistered CommentersHx

These folks and Mann et al. are terrified their climate ca$h is going to disappear.

Hooray!

Feb 18, 2012 at 9:11 PM | Unregistered CommenterBilly Liar

I don't assume that medical doctors do or do not have any particular credibility in discussing these matters, but in any case this "Climate and Health Council" appears to contain plenty of non-physicians. It would seem to be yet another advocacy organization masquerading rather badly as a professional association.

Feb 18, 2012 at 9:12 PM | Unregistered CommenterSkiphil

This is a reprise of the editors of the Lancet and BMJ letters to the Graundian recently demanding that the Global Warming Policy Foundation (another minnow in terms of funding) disclose its donors.

It was discussed recently on a thread here. Perhaps the Bish could dig it up.

Seems to be a recurring theme. Hmm.

Feb 18, 2012 at 9:20 PM | Unregistered Commenterjohanna

I forgot to mention in my post above that in their previous letter, part of the reason they demanded that the privately funded GWPF should disclose their donors is that 'denying' CAGW was like denying the link between HIV and AIDS, or smoking and lung cancer. Perhaps they got a bit of blowback on that, as I notice their language is more temperate on this occasion.

Feb 18, 2012 at 9:32 PM | Unregistered Commenterjohanna

This is in response to the "Doctor's letter. I plagiarized unashamedly to make a point.

Statement from climate skeptics

Call to reveal ALL data behind climate science. (We know where the funding comes from.)
What motivates climate Scientists? As skeptics, we view the systematic sowing of unjustified panic about climate science as confusing at best, and inhumane at worst. The Hippocratic Oath, the values of which generations of health professionals have adhered to, declares ‘first, do no harm’. We declare, "climate change over-statement is the biggest global health threat of the twenty-first century". We have a duty to protect people from disease, starvation, exposure, and want. Biomedical treatment is just one form of healthcare. Public health professionals study relationships between climate change, sustainability, human health, and physiology. Scientific evidence demonstrates that sustainable development can bring with it health benefits, making it a win-win scenario. If we drastically reduce our greenhouse gas emissions in just a few years to avert a supposed dangerous climate change we will throw the world into a new economic Dark Age. Given the disproportionate influence given to climate scientists by the media, it is in the public, national, and global interest for all communication behind their activities to be revealed, as well as all data and computer codes on which their conclusions are based. This will help people to make up their own minds about the truth of the climate change threat, so that action can be planned on the basis of evidence rather than confusion. This is all we ask.

Signed:
Ed Caryl

Care to sign on?

Feb 18, 2012 at 9:35 PM | Unregistered CommenterEd Caryl

sHx,

This is very much in line with the idea of postnormal science which had some discussion on WUWT a couple of years back, and which in my opinion amounts to the notion that the trappings of science should be used to lend authority to political agendas by "illustrating scenarios".

Firstly this is likely to impede an honest search for reliable knowledge, especially when the results don't fit in with the scenarios that are required to be illustrated and the political agenda.

Secondly, if you accept that it's OK to use the trappings of science in this way to advance a cause of which you happen to approve, you can't very well object when the same is done to bamboozle people into support for an agenda which you don't approve of, say a programme of racial eugenics.

Feb 18, 2012 at 9:39 PM | Unregistered Commentercosmic

Patient: Doctor, I've got a temperature.
Doctor: I already know that. It's caused by Global Warming
Patient: Aren't you going to measure my temperature?
Doctor: No - I use the weather station at the airport - it measures global temperatures to 5 decimal places.
Patient: What is the cure?
Doctor: You need to scrap your family car and get a brand-new Toyota Prius.
Patient: Will that work?
Doctor: I have no idea but we've all got to do something. Now if you'll excuse me I haven't got any more time for patients today because I'm going to an important conference on global everything.

Feb 19, 2012 at 12:23 AM | Unregistered CommenterJack Hughes

As climate scientists and health professionals, we view the systematic sowing of unjustified doubt about climate science as confusing at best, and inhumane at worst.

But of course there's nothing confusing or inhumane about systematic sowing of unjustified certainty.


Given the disproportionate influence given to climate sceptics by the media

Ah, right, since close to 100% of the tax money in climate science goes to promoting CAGW theory, the media should follow suit, or the government's ideological objectives may fail.

Feb 19, 2012 at 8:35 AM | Unregistered CommenterPunksta

I am not a scientist, although I have a Bachelor of Economics and Commerce degree. What stuns me is the statement by the so-called medics. Here are the reasons that I am so stunned:

1. the promotion of abortion on demand by doctors is a direct contravention of the Hippocratic Oath, especially that bit about "do no harm". There are very rare cases where such a procedure is necessary, where a woman's health is endangered. Once such rare occasion is an ectopic pregnancy, where the woman is in real danger.

2. the real job for medics is to diagnose patients with their medical conditions. Passing off a patient because she might have had a drug addiction is no excuse. In this particular case the patient died within 6 weeks of when the bone cancer was finally diagnosed. Being told to go home and drink water was not helpful.... (yes this is a real case, and it was my sister).

3. sending pregnant women home when the baby is due, not premature, and when the waters have broken, will lead to the death of the baby, especially when the umbilical cord is wrapped around the baby's neck. Telling the mother when she presents again that the baby's heartbeat is weak and then allowed to die in the womb is not acceptable. (yes it happened to one of my nieces and she lost her first son because he was allowed to die in the womb - an emergency caesarian operation should have been performed). Also, this nearly happened to me but the professor interfered in the proceedings and I gave birth.

4. They need to start listening to their patients describing symptoms instead of dismissing what they are saying.... there is a difference between RA and Fibromyalgia.....

5. The administration of RU486 to women who are pregnant has caused unnecessary deaths, but the medical profession that advocates abortion is silent about those deaths.

6. Some of the diseases that have turned up in reports are not in epidemic proportions, neither is it likely to be in those proportions again unless people begin to travel more often to exotic places such as Bali.... and even then they have to live in an area where the type of mosquito would become a carrier thrives. Example: Dengue Fever and Malaria. The mosquito must first bite a victim that is a carrier for either disease. These diseases are contained via medications such as Plaquenil and others that are very effective, and they are controlled by ensuring that the mosquitoes are not breeding in stagnant water. Perhaps these medics could give up their time and go to Africa where malaria is still rife, and provide the people with the necessary medications that will help to bring the disease under control. It is a far better solution than the hand wringing from this mob.

7. These medics need to be honest about the possible links between miscarriage and breast cancer. There have been studies that have shown the link but these are being stifled.

8. These medics might want to stop using such poor indicators as the BMI. This useless scale needs to be scrapped since it does not take into account the bone structure of a person. These medics should return to other forms of knowledge to determine if someone could end up with diabetes, as an example - family history is actually more important than BMI, and yes thin people have attacks, get diabetes and suffer from high blood pressure, high cholesterol, etc. etc.

These days there are many useless reports being churned that seem to indicate that people are drawing conclusions not based upon the evidence but upon their own belief system, or convictions and of course to meet the funding demands of some institution that enabled the attainment of a higher degree.

Feb 19, 2012 at 8:58 AM | Unregistered CommenterMargaretO

When are these antipodean doctors and other gullible fools going to realise that they have been had?

Feb 19, 2012 at 10:20 AM | Unregistered Commenterlapogus

Dear Bish

I've only just noticed this thread but shortly before I posted the following comment to Leo Hickman's thread on CiF.

"Very interesting.

The Guardian reports a letter from "more than 30 leading health professionals and scientists from the US, Britain, Australia and New Zealand" which it quotes as saying

"What motivates the Heartland Institute? As climate scientists and health professionals, we view the systematic manipulation and suppression of climate science for private benefit as confusing at best, and inhumane at worst,"

This was posted at

http://www.climateandhealth.org/magazine/read/climate-scientists-and-health-professionals-call-to-reveal-all-funding-behing-climate-sceptics_178.html

However, it appears to have been reposted at

http://www.climateandhealth.org/members/profile/14/blog-view/blog_179.htm

but with very different wording

What motivates the Heartland Institute? As climate scientists and health professionals, we view the systematic sowing of unjustified doubt about climate science as confusing at best, and inhumane at worst. The Hippocratic Oath, the values of which generations of health professionals have adhered to, declares ‘first, do no harm’. In 2009, The Lancet declared, "climate change is the biggest global health threat of the twenty-first century". Healthcare professionals have a duty to protect patients from disease and environmental harm. Biomedical treatment is just one form of healthcare. Public health professionals study relationships between climate change, sustainability, human health, carbon, physiology, and weather events. Scientific evidence demonstrates that sustainable development can bring with it health benefits, making it a win-win scenario (Lancet, November 2009). We only have a few years to drastically reduce our greenhouse gas emissions to avert dangerous climate change. Given the disproportionate influence given to climate sceptics by the media, it is in the public, national, and global interest for all funding behind their activities to be revealed. This will help people to make up their own minds about the truth of the climate change threat, so that action can be planned on the basis of evidence rather than confusion.

However, there is no acknowledgement that the letter was previously withdrawn or that changes have been made. I think that it is worth asking, too, if each of the signataries has agreed that the changes can be made, that they are willing for their signature to be appended to the amended version, and that the change should be unacknowledged.

This means that the Guardian is now claiming that these people are making a particular claim, without the paper noting that a substantial part of this claim has been withdrawn. Does this lay the Guardian open to an action for libel? That would be for judge and jury to decide but I would say that there is at least a possibility.

The second part of the letter as quoted by the Guardian reads:

It is in the public, national, and global interest for all funding behind their activities to be revealed. This allows people to make up their own minds about the truth of the climate change threat, so that action can be planned in the light of reality rather than the murky shadows of secretly funded disinformation.

whilst the amended version states

Given the disproportionate influence given to climate sceptics by the media, it is in the public, national, and global interest for all funding behind their activities to be revealed. This will help people to make up their own minds about the truth of the climate change threat, so that action can be planned on the basis of evidence rather than confusion.

You've been hung out to dry."

Feb 19, 2012 at 11:31 AM | Unregistered CommenterWestRuntonWeasel

There may be some value in regarding climate alarm as spreading like a virus in vulnerable populations. The CO2-Scare virus perhaps?

Can we innoculate the young against it, for example. Rough thoughts on this here: http://climatelessons.blogspot.com/2012/02/innoculation-against-co2-scare-virus-in.html

Feb 19, 2012 at 1:31 PM | Unregistered CommenterJohn Shade

Few Doctors take the Hippocratic oath. I know I did not.

Doctors are like every other group of people, some will be politically motivated, some will be thick.

These nods all appear to be either from Oz or NZ and from the public health side of things. That tells you it's a put up job.


The authority of medicine is one step from tyranny.

Feb 19, 2012 at 5:20 PM | Unregistered CommenterAndy

They are completly correct. Climate Skeptics do get a disproproate amount of Media attention. Since 99% of the Media is warmist, it doesn't even fit their bogus 97% claim. Skepticism needs to be around 60% for it be a proporsionate amount.

Feb 19, 2012 at 10:00 PM | Unregistered CommenterRoh234

I've got a bit of sore throat at the moment, and I'm worried that it might be caused by breathing out too much carbon dioxide. I wonder if one of those climate scientists would be kind enough to give me some medical advice.

Feb 20, 2012 at 1:47 AM | Unregistered Commentermichael hart

As usual, the funding of sceptics is seen as an issue, but never that of alarmists. That government-funded scientists produce work that supports a massive boosting of the role of government, and that they spend orders of magnitude more money than anyone else, just doesn't merit comment.

Feb 20, 2012 at 5:30 AM | Unregistered CommenterPunksta

Chris Rapley has "previous". When he became Director of British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in 1998, he totally reorganised the research to concentrate on "Climate Change".
Those who didn't toe the line were removed (most scientists there were on short term contracts).
I worked with BAS (fortunately not for, with) and watched it all happening, the complete destruction of established research groups.
Of course, this reorganisation was "sucessful" as more money flowed in to "prove" climate change.

Feb 20, 2012 at 7:24 PM | Unregistered CommenterDon Keiller

Don...was that how blinkered folk such as Connolley got in?

Feb 20, 2012 at 7:47 PM | Unregistered Commenterdiogenes

Having read all the replies so far, isn't they one sceptic who thinks transparent funding, regardless of position taken, is a good idea?

Feb 20, 2012 at 8:41 PM | Unregistered CommenterLazarus

Diogenes, quite possible.

Feb 20, 2012 at 10:40 PM | Unregistered CommenterDon Keiller

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