O modus operandi orwelliano da Nomenklatura científica contra os dissidentes: Inquisição sem fogueiras

domingo, junho 06, 2010

Sunday, June 06, 2010

More Political Climate Science
by Patrick J. Michaels

In today’s odd academic culture, including the world of climate science, academic freedom applies selectively. People use their positions and their email for politicking and electioneering and have no trouble retaining their jobs. But using your email to send out some inconvenient, apolitical weather data that says something your boss or your governor may not like can get you fired.

I can’t count the number of emails I received in my thirty years at University of Virginia where this faculty member or that administrator urged me to support some piece of legislation. But the latest email kerfluffle, involving Phil Mote, director of the Oregaon Climate Change Research Institute at Oregon State University, goes a bit further.

Mote was upset that Art Robinson, a physician from Cave Junction, Oregon, won the Republican primary for Oregon’s fourth congressional district.

That’s because Robinson was behind the “Oregon Petition Project,” in which over 31,000 people, largely science professionals (including over 9,000 with doctorates), signed on to a document stating that there was “no scientific evidence” that greenhouse gas emissions could cause “catastrophic heating” in the foreseeable future.


Robinson did not harp on this issue in the campaign. Instead he ran against the general politics of 12-term incumbent Pete deFazio, including his March vote for President Obama’s health care bill. With that one, deFazio probably voted himself out of Congress.

In response to Robinson’s Republican primary win, Mote wrote to his colleagues at Oregon State University emphasizing that Robinson was the force behind the Petition Project and that, if he were elected, OSU would be put in the “tragic ranks of our climate colleagues at University of Oklahoma…and University of Alaska,” where elected officials have the temerity to disagree with Mote about global warming. He signed his missive as “Director, Oregon Climate Change Research Institute and Oregon Climate Services.” Eventually he emailed his colleagues, calling his initial message a “mistake.”

Hardly. Consider the shady track record of climatology in the Pacific Northwest and elsewhere.


Image not related to this article/Imagem não relacionada com este artigo.

Mote’s previous position was Washington State Climatologist at the University of Washington, where he  repeatedly pointed to a 50% decline in mountain snows between 1950 and the mid-1990s. But there are data available after 1995 and before 1950, and when all the data are taken together — thanks in part to the fact that it has snowed plenty there in the last 15 years—the strong decline is erased.

Mote’s then Associate State Climatologist, Mark Albright, emailed this information to several people. When he refused to stop telling the whole truth, Mote terminated his position.
...

Read more here/Leia mais aqui: Townhall

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NOTA CAUSTICANTE DESTE BLOGGER:

Como tenho destacado neste blog - a Nomenklatura científica é antropofágica e destruidora de carreiras acadêmicas dos que ousam ser dissidentes do paradigma consensual.

Falando em consensual, procure por sua carteira acadêmica: ela está sendo tungada pelos agentes da KGB da Nomenklatura científica.

Ciência se faz discutindo ideias. Hoje, o que temos, é o discurso único -- todo mundo pensando igual e ninguém pensando em nada!

Triste ciência -- sequestrada por agendas político-ideológicas.

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