Robert McKay <[email protected]> wrote:

I don't doubt that.. the climatologists themselves aren't going to benefit
> much either way (although I'm sure many of them make a modest livings out
> of it - and that's not nothing these days). They're merely needed to
> produce those tedious reports.. they just need to keep churning out talking
> points to keep the issue alive.


Look, that is ridiculous. People do not act that way! A person does not
spend 5 or 10 years slaving away to get a PhD without being in love with
the subject. You don't do that just to get some meaningless, dead-end job
churning out fake data for corporations for 60 hours a week.

Scientists are not paid well. They do not have high status jobs. They do
not have any prospect of sudden wealth, the way programmers sometimes do.
The only reason most of them do what they do is out of curiosity, and for
love of learning. They will NOT spend the 50 years of their
working career promoting what they know to be a lie. If they saw problems
with global warming data, they would say so. There is no unity among them,
in my experience. Cold fusion scientists love attacking one another as much
as the skeptics love doing that.

Furthermore, they are engaged in rigorous, evidence-based, hard
science. You cannot fake results in physics for long. If anyone bothers to
look at the results at all, someone will soon catch you. Unimportant
results may lie around untested and unreplicated, but global warming data
is important. There are a zillion well paid skeptical opponents itching to
prove it is wrong. If they could have, they would have by now.

There are also many well-paid skeptical opponents of cold fusion. If they
could have found an error in the data presented by McKubre, Miles or
Fleischmann, they would have, long LONG ago. Not a single paper has been
published showing a real error. By now we must assume the skeptics have
nothing. The same goes for the climate skeptics. They have published
nonsensical accusations that the data was fudged in the UK. I can read. I
can see that is not the case. With this "16 year claim" it is clear
they tried the same trick that the NHE project used to hide the excess heat
in Miles' data: picking an unusually high moment close to the start. Look
here; you can see at a glance that is what they did:

http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2012/12/03/climate_change_deniers_write_another_fact_free_op_ed.html

They used the red portion, an absurdly biased sample.

That's a joke, is what that is. These are stupid, cheap tricks. No one
should fall for them. If they had a valid case, they would have made it by
now. The fact that they use stupid tricks like this shows they have nothing
real to present.

- Jed

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