http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23411799-7583,00.html

---
Duffy: "The climate is actually, in one way anyway, more robust than was
assumed in the climate models?"

Marohasy: "That's right ... These findings actually aren't being disputed by
the meteorological community. They're having trouble digesting the findings,
they're acknowledging the findings, they're acknowledging that the data from
NASA's Aqua satellite is not how the models predict, and I think they're
about to recognise that the models really do need to be overhauled and that
when they are overhauled they will probably show greatly reduced future
warming projected as a consequence of carbon dioxide."

Duffy: "From what you're saying, it sounds like the implications of this
could be considerable ..."

Marohasy: "That's right, very much so. The policy implications are enormous.
The meteorological community at the moment is really just coming to terms
with the output from this NASA Aqua satellite and (climate scientist) Roy
Spencer's interpretation of them. His work is published, his work is
accepted, but I think people are still in shock at this point."

...

A great many founts of authority, from the Royal Society to the UN, most
heads of government along with countless captains of industry, learned
professors, commentators and journalists will be profoundly embarrassed. Let
us hope it is a prolonged and chastening experience.

With catastrophe off the agenda, for most people the fog of millennial gloom
will lift, at least until attention turns to the prospect of the next ice
age. Among the better educated, the sceptical cast of mind that is the basis
of empiricism will once again be back in fashion. The delusion that by
recycling and catching public transport we can help save the planet will
quickly come to be seen for the childish nonsense it was all along.

...

What The Age decided to spare its readers was the following: "Well-meaning
intellectual movements, from communism to post-structuralism, have a poor
history of absorbing inconvenient fact or challenges to fundamental
precepts. We should not ignore or suppress good indicators on the
environment, though they have become extremely rare now. It is tempting to
the layman to embrace with enthusiasm the latest bleak scenario because it
fits the darkness of our soul, the prevailing cultural pessimism. The
imagination, as Wallace Stevens once said, is always at the end of an era.
But we should be asking, or expecting others to ask, for the provenance of
the data, the assumptions fed into the computer model, the response of the
peer review community, and so on. Pessimism is intellectually delicious,
even thrilling, but the matter before us is too serious for mere
self-pleasuring. It would be self-defeating if the environmental movement
degenerated into a religion of gloomy faith. (Faith, ungrounded certainty,
is no virtue.)"

The missing sentences do not appear anywhere else in The Age's version of
the essay. The attribution reads: "Copyright Ian McEwan 2008" and there is
no acknowledgment of editing by The Age.

Why did the paper decide to offer its readers McEwan lite? Was he, I wonder,
consulted on the matter? And isn't there a nice irony that The Age chose to
delete the line about ideologues not being very good at "absorbing
inconvenient fact"?
---

The free traders have similarly bastardized Smith's famous "Invisible Hand"
passage, twisting it to say "that which was no part of [its] intention"... 

It's not what's said, but what is left out, or silently redacted, that
reveals the truth behind the lie.

- Bob



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