Showing posts with label resistant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resistant. Show all posts

Republicans Censor Climate Information in Schools

Climate denial is alive and well in the GOP. Republican legislators are conspiring to deprive kids of a science based climate education. In at least one state they have already succeeded. Earlier this year Republican lawmakers in Idaho voted to remove all fact-based references to climate from the state's science curriculum.

The state's House Education Committee voted for the new K-12 statewide science standards in February.  Republican legislator Rep. Scott Syme said he wanted the standard to include what he called "both sides of the debate". However, rather than invoke the baseless claims that constitute the other side of the argument lawmakers opted to excise all mention of climate change.

The level of ignorance among Idaho's Republican lawmakers is staggering. The state's political elite appear to be utterly unaware of even the most rudimentary climate science. They are equally oblivious of the climate connection in the spate of increasingly intense forest fires in the state. Their confusion may be explained by the fact that they get what little information they have from highly dubious sources.

House Resources Committee Chairman Dell Raybould, told Idaho Falls Post Register reporter Bryan Clark that his source for climate change science was conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh. In an email Sen. Dan Foreman, R-Moscow, said, "global warming ranks right up there with Al Gore’s phony ozone scare. I hope the Legislature enacts legislation to eliminate this ridiculous nonsense from all our textbooks."

This is not the first crack at climate censorship from Republicans in Idaho. In 2016 Idaho lawmakers rejected proposed science standards because they attributed climate change to human activity.

Schemes to censor climate information were also hatched by GOP lawmakers in Kentucky and Oklahoma but they were ultimately abandoned. While Idaho may be the only state to censor climate information in schools, there are many states with science curricula that contain very little climate information. This includes Alabama, Montana, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming. It is no coincidence that all of these states have Republican majorities.

Support for climate censorship in the Idaho legislature followed party lines. With 88 Republicans and only 17 Democrats the outcome was preordained. Almost all Democrats voted against the measure including the House Assistant Minority Leader Ilana Rubel.

"School should be a place where facts are shared, not suppressed," Rubel said. "Not only do we owe it to our children to teach them 21st Century science, but we owe it to the farmers, foresters, and citizens of Idaho to take this issue seriously and not bury our heads in the sand."

Organizations that respect science-based climate information indicated they were apauled by the decision in the Gem state. In April the Weather Channel called out Republicans in the Idaho state legislature for censoring fact-based climate information.

Some public school educators vowed to keep teaching the facts despite changes to the standard. Some district leaders have publically stated that teachers in their juridictions will continue providing their students with science-based information.

"In the Boise School District we will continue to teach climate change and investigate human impacts on biodiversity even though they are not mentioned in the standards," said Chris Taylor, Boise School District’s science curriculum director.

While Idaho legislators are burying their kids heads in the sand other states are adopting the Next Generation Science Standards, which include accurate climate science information. These standards were crafted by 26 states and a number of science and education organizations. So far, almost two dozen states and the District of Columbia have adopted the standards.

Related
Heartland's Climate Denial Campaign in Public Schools
The Right Wants to Crush Climate Science in Our Schools
Kids are Being Denied a Science Based Climate Education
US Hurricanes and the GOP's Climate Denial
Trump's Climate Denial the GOP and Fossil Fuel
In the Face of Record Setting Heat & Rain the GOP Doubles Down on Fossil Fuels
The Fossil Fuel Industry and Republican Denial
The Politics of Conservative Anti-Science Climate Denial
Proof of Disinformation from Fossil Fuel Companies (Video)
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
What Resistance to Evolution Teaches Us About Climate DenialWhy White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
GOP Denial and President Obama's Climate Legacy
What is Wrong with the Right
Infographic - Funding of Climate Denial
________________________________________

Make sure to see the article titled, "Comprehensive Green School Information and Resources." It contains links to over 350 posts covering everything you need to know about sustainable academics, green school buildings, student eco-initiatives, and college rankings as well as a wide range of related information and resources.

Proof of Disinformation from Fossil Fuel Companies (Video)

The fossil fuel industry is widely known to be the driving force behind climate denying front groups and disreputable scientists. Their aim is to make the public question the veracity of climate scientists and by all accounts they have been successful. In the US they managed to increase public skepticism and gain control of the Republican party.

As revealed by a series of internal company and trade association documents the fossil fuel industry has funded climate denial. This summary of evidence from the Union of Concerned Scientists shows how the fossil fuel industry funds a campaign of deception. 

Here is an assemblage of some of the most compelling evidence to date:



For thirty years they have been working to confuse the clear scientific evidence that fossil fuels are responsible for climate change. They not only work to misinform the public, they influence politicians in devious ways.

If left unchecked the fossil fuel industry will push us past dangerous climate tipping points and create a world ravaged by climate change.

Click here to read more about the fossil fuel industry's coordinated campaign of deception in this report from the Union of Concerned Scientists. Click here to do something about it.

Related
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate DenialVideo - An Introduction to Climate Denial
Infographic - Climate Denial is Anti-Science
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
The Business of Climate Change Deception
The Kochs' Climate Science Denial
Koch Industries Financing Climate Denial
Protecting the Planet from Corporate Misrepresentation

Infographic - Funding of Climate Denial

Video - Science Based Reason vs. Climate Denial in the US House of Representatives

Video - Fear is at the Heart of the Psychology of Climate Change Denial


At first glance climate change deniers are simply ignorant. However, when seen through the lens of climate psychology we realize that it is a far more complex issue. Denial is motivated by pain and fear. The harrowing reality of climate change augers despair and causes people to shut down. People are overwhelmed so in this context denial can be understood as a psychological coping mechanism. For more information on how the negative emotions associated with climate change are impeding action click here. For information explaining why we need a new climate narrative click here.

Related
What Resistance to Evolution Teaches Us About Climate Denial
The US is the World's Leading Climate Denying Nation
Video - An Introduction to Climate Denial
Video - Science Based Reason vs. Climate Denial in the US House of Representatives
Rubio's Opportunistic Denial of Climate Change is both Ignorant and Shameful
Infographic - Climate Denial is Anti-Science
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception

Video - An Introduction to Climate Denial

The US is the World's Leading Climate Denying Nation

The United States is the world's leading bastion of climate change denial. According to an international poll, the US is the nation with the largest percentage of people who refute the veracity of anthropogenic climate change.

A total of 52 percent of American agreed with the statement, “the climate change we are currently seeing is a natural phenomenon that happens from time to time.” India was tied with the US followed by China. In contrast, only 34 percent of Swedes, 26 percent of South Koreans, and 22 percent of Japanese agreed with the statement.

When asked if we are headed for environmental disaster unless we change our habits quickly, only 57 percent of Americans said yes compared to 91 percent of Chinese.

The United States also had the ignominious distinction of having the largest percentage of people who disagreed with the statement, “the climate change we are currently seeing is largely the result of human activity.” A total of 32 percent of Americans disagreed with this followed by 25 percent of Australians.

In France, Italy, Turkey, Spain and Argentina, 80 percent or more of the population believe that human activity is the cause of climate change.

To see the complete Ipsos Mori Global Trends Survey click here.

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related
What Resistance to Evolution Teaches Us About Climate Denial
Rubio's Opportunistic Denial of Climate Change is both Ignorant and Shameful
Infographic - Climate Denial is Anti-Science
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception

What Resistance to Evolution Teaches us about US Climate Denial

In this article a comparison is made between resistance to evolution and climate change denial. With roughly one third of Americans rejecting evolution and climate change, those engaged in raising awareness may be able to learn something from the comparison. Despite the pernicious ignorance of deniers, there are reasons that some of them may be forced to change their tune. While a cogent case could be made for the need to reach climate deniers, we may have to accept that there will always be some people who are beyond the reach of reason.

Those engaged in efforts to enlighten climate deniers can learn a great deal from the long history of the anti-evolution movement.

Almost one hundred years ago this month, a young high school teacher by the name of John Thomas Scopes went on trial for teaching Darwinian evolution. From its inception to this day, the science of evolution has been under siege.

Climate denial is like resistance to evolution in that it is an irrational position rooted in faith rather than facts. Although those who resist evolution and those who deny climate change are often intellectually vacuous, the web of lies they weave is surprisingly pernicious.

It took 44 years to get the highest U.S. court to rule in favor of evolution (in 1968 the U.S. Supreme Court overturned an Arkansas statute outlawing the teaching of evolution). Despite this ruling and the wealth of scientific evidence, resistance to evolution persists.

The U.S. holds the ignominious distinction of being a world leader for both its resistance to evolution and rejection of climate change. According to a Reuters poll, 33 percent of U.S. citizens reject evolution and an Ipsos poll found that 32 percent of Americans do not believe in anthropogenic climate change.

Incognizance endures in the face of an overwhelming body of evidence. We should not underestimate the obstinacy and determination of those who belligerently ignore the facts. These people are steeped in an aggressive form of ignorance that forms a world view which is not easily undone. Some climate deniers revel in their opposition to science and spitefully go out of their way to be environmentally destructive.

Coal rollers

The reflexive and irrational opposition to climate science is illustrated by a small fringe group known as “coal rollers.” As a means of protesting U.S. clean air regulations, these people are modifying their diesel trucks so that they spew thick plumes of black smoke.

Owners of these trucks not only despise President Obama and the Environmental Protection Agency, they also hate people who drive fuel efficient vehicles. As one of the coal rollers explained, “that’s my way of giving them the finger.” Adding angrily, “you want clean air and a tiny carbon footprint? Well, screw you.”

Republican denial

While coal rollers may be a fringe element, there are a number of elected officials in the U.S. that are also passionate supporters of climate denial. It is no secret that the legislative deadlock on climate change and clean energy is largely attributable to the denial of Congressional Republicans.

As revealed in a Think Progress article, almost 60 percent of Republicans in Congress are climate deniers. Over 56 percent (133 members) of the Republican caucus in the House of Representatives deny the basic tenets of climate science and 65 percent (30 members) of the Senate Republican caucus deny man-made climate change.

Even more alarming is the fact that 90 percent of the leading Republican decision makers in both the House and the Senate are climate deniers. The majority of Republicans on the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology are climate deniers, as are most of those on the House Energy and Commerce Committee. All of the Republicans on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee have said climate change is not happening or that humans are not the cause.

Economy and jobs

While most Republicans are reflexively obstructionist, others acknowledge that combating climate change is an engine for growth that enhances the nation’s global competitiveness and provides jobs. The tremendous economic and employment opportunities associated with climate change mitigation and adaptation are evident in the growing levels of investment. Annual investments in the global clean energy market alone could reach $230 billion a year in 2020 and as much as $424 billion in 2030.

Dollar for dollar, studies show that cleantech investments provide four times the jobs of fossil fuels. Currently, cleantech is seeing job growth which is two and a half times that of traditional jobs. With people clamoring for economic growth and hungry for jobs, deniers who seek public office risk alienating voters.

Conservatives want solar too

Many conservatives support greener energy and in red states across America, the demand for renewable energy is growing. To illustrate the point, Republicans in the Peach state recently voted in favor of an ambitious solar energy plan. The new law requires that Atlanta-based Georgia Power Co. increase its solar power capacity by 525 megawatts within two and a half years. What makes this decision noteworthy is the fact that it was supported by an unprecedented coalition of conservative lawmakers and the Tea Party. Support for rooftop solar is another green initiative that is getting support from red states like Arizona and Idaho.

Failure to find fault

Climate deniers are quick to point to even the smallest errors in climate science. Deniers are not moved by scientific consensus, they prefer to side with outliers. However, it is getting harder to find sane scientists capable of any sort of cogent rebuttal. Even scientists who were previously deniers are being forced to recant under the weight of the evidence.

Let them fester

If only the weight of the evidence were enough to break the back of climate denial. In the Scopes trial, the prosecuting attorney William Jennings Bryan was humiliated and ridiculed for his foolish beliefs. Five days after the judge ruled, Bryan lay down and died. While climate deniers are highly susceptible to ridicule, they are unlikely to die as quickly or as conveniently as Bryan.

Eighty nine years after the Scopes trial there are still more than a hundred million Americans who oppose evolution. There are also a similar number of Americans who dismiss climate science. Many are unreachable as their attitudes are articles of faith that are not easily uprooted.

While there are many parallels that can be drawn between those who are opposed to evolution and those who deny the existence of climate change, there are also some salient differences. The chief difference is that questioning the validity of evolution does not threaten life on a planetary scale. With atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide surpassing 400 ppm, we are on track for a 9 degree temperature increase by the end of the century.

We will never be able to convert the majority of climate deniers. The long history of the anti-evolution movement forces us to concede that there will always be Luddites who support profoundly irrational positions. Rather than waste energy trying to enlighten deniers, we should relegate them to their rightful place on the lunatic fringe.

Source: Global Warming is Real

Related
Rubio's Opportunistic Denial of Climate Change is both Ignorant and Shameful
Infographic - Climate Denial is Anti-Science
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception

Rubio's Opportunistic Denial of Climate Change is both Ignorant and Shameful

On Sunday May 11, Marco Rubio the Republican senator from Florida said that he does not believe that humans are causing climate change, nor does he believe that lawmakers can do anything about it.

Given the state he represents, it is hard to understand how Rubio can deny the veracity of climate change. Climate change is destined to hit Florida harder than most states in the future and its effects are already being felt in that state today. This is what makes Rubio's climate denial so utterly ignorant. It is not only anti-science, Rubio's statements defy common sense.

The National Climate Assessment has named Miami as the city which is the most vulnerable to damage from rising sea levels. While a Southeast Florida Regional Climate Compact paper warned that water in the area could rise by as much as two feet by the year 2060.

Despite the scientific evidence Rubio said, "I do not believe that human activity is causing these dramatic changes to our climate the way these scientists are portraying it," Rubio said, according to ABC This Week, "and I do not believe that the laws that they propose we pass will do anything about it, except it will destroy our economy."

While Rubio gives the impression of being concerned about the economy he ignores the far greater costs associated with doing nothing to manage climate change. The cost of sea level rises alone is thought to be around two trillion dollars and the cost of biodiversity loss is estimated to be more than two trillion.

One of the most costly elements of climate change takes the form of extreme weather. According to a study released by the UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) and UNEP Finance Initiative, global environmental damage caused by human activity in 2008 represented a monetary value of $ 6.6 trillion, equivalent to 11 percent of global GDP.  To put these numbers into perspective, these costs are 20 percent larger than the $ 5.4 trillion decline in the value of pension funds in developed countries caused by the global financial crisis in 2007/8.

While the cost of climate change is already staggering it is destined to get far worse. Some have estimated that in the last two years alone, delays in engaging climate change have cost us $8 trillion. The longer we wait the higher the price tag. The IEA says that climate change will cost $115 trillion by 2050. 

Rubio was not always a climate Luddite, when he was leader of the Florida House in 2008 he helped to craft a law capping carbon emissions. The inference that can be drawn from his change of direction is that he is now using the issue of climate change for partisan political purposes.

When you consider what is at stake, Rubio's political opportunism is unconscionable both for the state and the nation.

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related
Infographic - Climate Denial is Anti-Science
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception

Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change



This video clip features the pontifications of a climate denying duo from Fox News, the American headquarters of scientific obfuscation. Both the anchor and his guest laugh at the United Nation's discussions about global warming. They ignore the conclusions in the IPCC's latest report that suggest we are racing towards a catastrophe and choose instead to deride the United Nations inaction on Russia's invasion of Ukraine. (even though both the general assembly and the security council have already addressed the issue). In Claudia Rosett's words the reason the United Nations is focused on global warming is because: "UN does very well under the climate train gravy train." The fact remains that of the 13,950 peer reviewed scientific papers on climate change only 24 question the veracity of anthropogenic global warming.

Related Articles
The Sole Scientist who Disagrees with the Conclusions of the AR5 WGll
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
Why We are Not Seeing More Action on Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Climate Scientist Cleared: Deniers Deprived of Misinformation Strategy
How to get Through to Climate Change Deniers
New York Times Inadvertently Supports Climate Denial
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception
Video: Climate Deniers Debate Global Warming
Building Support for Action on Climate Change
Green Dissent (Part 2)
The Kochs' Climate Science Denial
A Reintroduction to the Climate Denying Duo Known as the Koch Brothers
The Koch Brother's Ties to GOP
The Kochs' War Against Obama and the Democrats
Koch Industries Financing Climate Denial
The Kochs' Cato Institute's Climate
Protecting the Planet from Corporate Misrepresentation
The Foxes in the Henhouse: Republicans in Charge of Climate and Energy Committees
What is Wrong with the Right
Right Wing War Against Sustainability
The Politics of Intransigence

A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?

Six-term Republican congressman Bob Inglis’ went from towing the climate denying party line to being an advocate of action. He says that his belief in anthropogenic climate change caused him to lose his seat in Congress to a Tea Party backed candidate. Inglis favors a carbon tax and disagrees with energy subsidies including those for fossil fuels. In this Yale Environment 360 interview, Inglis explains why conservatives deny climate change and why he is now trying to persuade them that their principles can help save the planet.  In essence his argument hinges on the belief that free enterprise is better than a regulatory regime set by government. 

After losing his seat Inglis established the Energy and Enterprise Initiative at George Mason University. The organization is trying to convince American conservatives that climate change is real and that free enterprise principles hold the keys for dealing with it.
_____________________________

Yale Environment 360: What is the goal of the Energy and Enterprise Initiative?

Bob Inglis: The goal is to see a true cost competition between all fuels, and the result of that, we believe, is that free enterprise will solve our energy and climate challenge. It’s just a matter of getting a true cost comparison between the fuels, and that will only happen if we eliminate all subsidies for all fuels, because subsidies distort the marketplace. And we need to attach all costs to all fuels, which is the other distortion of the marketplace. The first one is something that conservatives are familiar with – that tune is playing on conservative radio right now, of eliminating all subsidies for all fuels. Now it’s been focused on Solyndra [the bankrupt solar company] and the excesses of the Obama administration, but we believe that conservatives will recognize pretty quickly that this should include other fuels. That means eliminating fossil fuel subsidies as well. That part isn’t playing on the radio now, but that’s a tune we have to introduce to conservative ears and see if we can make people recognize that that it’s bedrock conservatism: I shouldn’t be able to do on my property something that harms you and your property.

e360: And are producers of fossil fuels doing that?

Inglis: Yes. Coal-fired electricity causes 23,600 premature deaths each year in the United States. There are over 3 million lost workdays. Those are real and quantifiable costs that aren’t attributed to the cost of electricity at my meter. And so I’m blissfully unaware of the true cost of my electricity. And since it appears so cheap, I don’t innovate because there’s no reason to innovate. I live in South Carolina – I could have a solar hot water heater for example, but I don’t have one. Anyone altruistic would put one on their roof. I would like to be altruistic, but I’ve got two kids in college, and I can’t afford to be altruistic. But if the meter started reflecting the real cost of electricity, I would look at things differently.

e360: So the true cost would be put in through a carbon tax?

Inglis: Yes, it’s a way of approximating that cost. I was at Harvard recently and Bill Hogan, an economist there, pointed out to me that the best way to do this is by attaching the actual cost to each emitter. Then you have the truest of true cost comparisons. I think that’s exactly the right answer.

e360: The work of the Energy and Enterprise Initiative is aimed at convincing conservatives to come on board with this?

Inglis: Right. What we’re trying to do is convince conservatives that they are more important to this discussion than they ever imagined because they have the answer, which is free enterprise, and it’s a better answer than a regulatory regime. And better than what some Republicans in the past might have gone along with, which is sort of fickle tax incentives that expire and have qualifications to them… We believe that conservatives will ultimately come to embrace the power of their own ideas, which is, ‘Gee, a price signal works, and it’s powerful.’

e360: Why do you think it’s been so difficult for most of your fellow conservatives to accept the science and the idea of human-caused climate change and that it’s happening?

Inglis: Well, there are lots of reasons, but one is that conservatives see the worldview of people concerned about climate change as antithetical to their own worldview. It’s a cultural clash, because scientists are seen as godless deniers of the truth, particularly faith truths, and they seem to be in league with big-government types that want to regulate your life.

e360: You yourself were skeptical of climate change when you were in Congress in the 90s, as you’ve said. Can you describe your own evolution from being a denier of climate change to someone who is deeply concerned about it?

Inglis: My first time in Congress [1993-1999], I was very dismissive of climate change and said, “Oh, well, this is imagination.” I had a very successful press conference pillorying the vice president [Al Gore]. A question comes to me, ‘Congressman Inglis, do you believe, yes or no, in human causation of climate change’?” And I was in Congress for six years, and then I was out for six years and in those six years, my children started to grow up. My son, my oldest of five kids, was voting for the first time in 2004 when I was running again, and he said, “You know, dad, I’ll vote for you, but you have to clean up your act on the environment.” I had this new constituency, an important constituency, because they could change the locks on the doors. My son and his four sisters all felt the same, and his mother did too.

So, that was one cause. The other cause was, I got on the science committee [House Committee on Science and Technology] soon after my second period in Congress started. And I got to go to Antarctica to visit there – you know, the U.S. spends about $300 million per year on the polar programs.

e360: When was this?

Inglis: It was in 2006. Amazingly, I got to go to Antarctica twice. I went to Antarctica and saw the evidence. And one thing that was compelling to me was, you know, the South Pole is a desert and gets a quarter of an inch of precipitation a year, and it’s 10,000 feet above sea level. It’s 5,000 feet of dirt, and then 5,000 feet of ice on top of that, and just a little teeny bit of powder on top. So we’ve drilled down through the ice, and we have a record of the earth’s atmosphere and its CO2 levels. And this gives a pretty clear indication of stability followed by an uptick that coincides with the Industrial Revolution.

e360: You’ve talked about a key moment in your [2010] campaign that occurred, I think, in Spartanburg at a big tent meeting. Can you describe that?

Inglis: Yes, at the Landrum airport. It’s a small landing strip, which is a great place to have events. There’s a big tent out there… So a question comes to me from the Christian talk radio host who is moderating the forum, and he says, “This question starts with Bob Inglis. Congressman Inglis, do you believe, yes or no, in human causation of climate change?” And you know, I have a terrible habit of answering questions, so I said, “Yes.” And boo, hiss, comes the crowd. It’s audible hissing and booing…

The same question was then asked of the guy who ultimately beat me. He’s a trial lawyer, a prosecutor guy, and so he had what I thought – I had to give it to him – was a fabulous answer. He said, “Inasmuch as it hasn’t been proven to the satisfaction of the people that I represent, the answer is no, there is no human causation in climate change.”

e360: A very lawyerly answer.

Inglis: Do you think that’s how we should handle all scientific questions – put them up for people to decide? “What do you think? Gravity, yes or no?” Well, let’s let the people decide! It was a particularly good answer at the moment, for him. It won him the applause of the crowd.

e360: What do you believe the U.S. can do to really address climate change?

Inglis: I think we should send a price signal. That means fixing the economics so all costs are in on all the fuels and there are no subsidies. A bill I had in Congress is one way to do it. You've got to give me a corresponding tax cut if you're going to price carbon. There are other ways, but the bill that I had was a $15 a ton tax on carbon rising to $100 a ton over 30 years. And I was always open to whether that trajectory should be changed. The reason I had such flexibility is because of what I would say next: You then offset that [carbon tax] with a reduction in payroll taxes, dollar for dollar. And that’s why I was so flexible. It’s a tax swap, that’s what I was talking about. It wouldn’t grow the government, and it would approximate the attachment of these negative externalities to combustion fossil fuels.

Another key element, I think, of what needs to be part of the package is that it should be a border-adjustable tax, so it would be removed on export and imposed on import – unless the trading partner has a similar pricing mechanism, in which case their goods would come in without an adjustment. But it’s very important, I think, that we not decimate American manufacturing by simply pricing carbon in our own economy with the effect of exporting productive capacity to countries that have greater energy intensity and therefore larger CO2 emissions.

e360: This was something that you offered in Congress as an alternative to the cap-and-trade bill that was out there at the time?

Inglis: Right. I voted against cap-and-trade.

e360: Why?

Inglis: It was hopelessly complicated, and it was embarrassing in the free allocation [of allowances to specific pollution sources or industries] that undermined the whole schema. It was dangerous to American manufacturing. I know they had a border-adjustable element, but I was never convinced that it worked. And it was a significant tax increase without any corresponding tax reduction. And I’m not into growing government. I’m a conservative. So I’m into getting the economics right, but not growing government in the process. And so you’ve got to give me a corresponding tax cut if you’re going to price carbon.

What I introduced is called the Raise Wages, Cut Carbon bill, and if you Google that, I think you can find it. It’s fifteen pages as opposed to the 1,200-page cap-and-trade.

e360: You’re taking your message now to conservative audiences and business audiences? Who are you aiming your initiative at, and how are you going about reaching them?

Inglis: We’re spending a lot of time on college campuses speaking to college Republicans, Federalist societies, and young evangelicals. The reason is that they’re open to it, because they’re taking economics and chemistry and physics. When the left is talking to the right about these issues, it comes across as, ‘We know better than you do.’” They’re really a little bit embarrassed by what’s on the [conservative] radio, because they know it doesn’t match up with what they are learning in economics, physics, and chemistry. And so we want to help them to see there’s a way that you can be conservative, not want to grow government, and actually be for social-issue accountability, which is a key component of what social-issue conservatives believe. You’ve got to be accountable. Behavior has consequences, so attach the cost to something so that the market can judge it.

These students are open to that message, and we hope these students will be ambassadors to their parents and grandparents. Those are the harder demographics for us. Their parents and grandparents are harder – especially the grandparents, who feel an attack on their way of life.

e360: Do you think environmentalists are in some ways to blame for this because the approach has sometimes been to hector people about their lifestyle and their responsibility for these things?

Inglis: I think so, because it’s like my ad guy on my campaign says to me. He says, “We all like change, just we don’t like to be changed.” We want to be the change agent, but we surely don’t want to be the one who gets changed by somebody else. We want to be in the driver’s seat on that.

And so what happens often when the left is talking to the right about these issues, it seems like it’s coming across as, “We know better than you do. You’re a bunch of hicks from the sticks. We’re so much smarter than you are. We’ve got scientists who tell us this and that. We’ll design a regulatory system that will fix things, because we can’t trust you to make good decisions.” That’s one way it comes across – and it’s offensive to conservatives.

Source: Environment 360

Related
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception

Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial

Despite a spate of solid peer reviewed science indicating that our current trajectory is "catastrophic," Americans are not worried about climate change. There are at least two primary reasons, the first has to do with the nature of climate change itself and the second has to do with the influence of powerful forces in the old energy economy.

At the end of 2013 a Gallup survey found that only 24 percent of Americans worry a great deal about climate change. Fifty-one percent of them worry about it very little or not at all.

Part of the problem is the fact that the leading cause of climate change (CO2) is invisible and its most devastating impacts will take place in the future. People are not exposed to the suffering it will cause and to make matters worse, we feel powerless to anything about it.

The other half of the denial equation concerns the devious efforts of powerful interests who stand to benefit from delaying political action as long as possible. They have used their limitless wealth to muddy the waters of climate science.

Perhaps the most salient single factor forestalling action on climate change concerns the involvement of pseudo-scientific front groups that have managed to interject an element of doubt about the veracity of climate science. For years we have been debating the veracity of climate change rather than doing something about it. This is a victory for denial.

Powerful elites have also deployed subtle misinformation campaigns that have co-opted our narratives and succeeded in framing the issue in ways that preclude collective agreement on the need for action.

Conservative politicians around the world are now the minions of these powerful interests. Climate denial is now a conservative policy position right there beside small government and reigning in spending.

Nowhere are these denialist views more pronounced than in the US House of Representatives where Republicans have religiously prevented Congress from even considering the most modest climate and energy legislation.

"Most of the world does not have a problem with denial of climate change," says Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication. "It's only an issue in Australia, Canada and, most significantly, the United States."

Americans used to believe that global warming was real, then Republicans became the party of climate denial and the country was slowly weaned away from a science based world view towards what can only be described as an Orwellian nightmare that serves the interests of a select few.

We will never be able to address climate change in the US as long as a substantial number of people in Congress continue to take bribes from the fossil fuel industry. According to one analysis, 161 reps have taken more than $54 million in political contributions from the fossil-fuel industry.

Using a number of arguments, ranging from questioning the science to the need for "energy independence" the fossil fuel industry has succeeded in drilling their subterfuge deep into the heads of voters.

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
The Sole Scientist who Disagrees with the Conclusions of the AR5 WGll
Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change
Why We are Not Seeing More Action on Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Climate Scientist Cleared: Deniers Deprived of Misinformation Strategy
How to get Through to Climate Change Deniers
New York Times Inadvertently Supports Climate Denial
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception
Video: Climate Deniers Debate Global Warming
Building Support for Action on Climate Change
Video - Debate on the Science of Climate Change
The Kochs' Climate Science Denial
A Reintroduction to the Climate Denying Duo Known as the Koch Brothers
The Koch Brother's Ties to GOP
The Kochs' War Against Obama and the Democrats
Koch Industries Financing Climate Denial
The Kochs' Cato Institute's Climate
Protecting the Planet from Corporate Misrepresentation
The Foxes in the Henhouse: Republicans in Charge of Climate and Energy Committees
What is Wrong with the Right
Right Wing War Against Sustainability
The Politics of Intransigence

Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial

Conservatives are more likely to be climate deniers because as a whole they tend to revert to their core belief systems when they are confronted with novel information. They have a tendency to discount information that refutes their deeply held convictions and they are also less likely to confront their prior beliefs with new empirical evidence.

Here is a summary of the experimental evidence that breaks down the climate denying demographic.

As reviewed in a Seeking Alpha article, a study called "The Psychology of Climate Change Communication", published by the Center for Research on Environmental Decisions at Columbia University shows that a subset of white males, are especially dismissive of risks. This finding has come to be known as the "White Male Effect" and it has been experimentally demonstrated numerous times (e.g., Flynn et al. 1994, Finucane et al. 2000, Palmer 2003, Kahan et al. 2007, McCright and Dunlap 2011a).

Kahan et al. 2007 attribute most of the White Male Effect to cultural attitudes. Specifically, they find that climate change skeptics tend to have hierarchical and individualistic worldviews. This means that they believe the existing social order is just, and see individual success and status as being earned through competitive selection. Conservative-hierarchical-individualistic white males are motivated to deny climate change because it challenges the legitimacy and sustainability of the existing social order.

Research by McCright and Dunlap 2011a shows a linkage to ideology and political affiliation: skeptics tend to hold conservative values and, in the U.S., to be affiliated with the Republican party, especially the Tea Party wing (Pew Center 2010).

Over the past couple of decades, the group identity of conservative white males has been reinforced by an orchestrated campaign to sow doubts about climate change, bankrolled by a (white male) conservative elite (the Koch brothers, Rupert Murdoch), disseminated through talk radio (Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck), conservative news media (Fox, the WSJ), think tanks (Cato Institute, Heritage Foundation, American Enterprise Institute), lobby groups (Chamber of Commerce, ALEC) and political leaders (George Bush, Dick Cheney, James Inhofe).

McCright and Dunlap 2011a asked climate change skeptics how familiar they were with the issues and found that those who reported to being very familiar were far more likely to be skeptical. Kahan et al. 2011 and Feinberg and Willer 2011 conducted experiments which showed that when skeptics were provided with new evidence of climate change they challenged the authority of the new information and became even more strongly skeptical than before.

Despite these findings, conservative-hierarchical-individualistic individuals can change and go from what Daniel Kahneman calls "fast" to "slow" thinking (Kahneman 2011).

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
The Sole Scientist who Disagrees with the Conclusions of the AR5 WGll
Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change
Why We are Not Seeing More Action on Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
How to get Through to Climate Change Deniers
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception

Video - Debate on the Science of Climate Change


Bill Nye takes on fast talking climate denier Marc Morano on CNN's Pierce Morgan. Few popular news sources have provided more of a platform for climate deniers than Pierce Morgan, however Nye does a good job taking on the ignorant views of Morano who says that rising levels of CO2 are "not a problem."

Related Articles
Fossil Fuel Powered Anti-Science Climate Denial
A Republican Fighting Conservative Climate Denial?
Why White Conservatives are Purveyors of Climate Denial
The Sole Scientist who Disagrees with the Conclusions of the AR5 WGll
Video - Fox News Climate Deniers Laugh-Off the Seriousness of Climate Change
Why We are Not Seeing More Action on Climate Change
Video - Keep Climate Denial Out of Our Schools
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronical of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
Climate Scientist Cleared: Deniers Deprived of Misinformation Strategy
How to get Through to Climate Change Deniers
New York Times Inadvertently Supports Climate Denial
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception
Video: Climate Deniers Debate Global Warming
Building Support for Action on Climate Change
Green Dissent (Part 2)
The Kochs' Climate Science Denial
A Reintroduction to the Climate Denying Duo Known as the Koch Brothers
The Koch Brother's Ties to GOP
The Kochs' War Against Obama and the Democrats
Koch Industries Financing Climate Denial
The Kochs' Cato Institute's Climate
Protecting the Planet from Corporate Misrepresentation
The Foxes in the Henhouse: Republicans in Charge of Climate and Energy Committees
What is Wrong with the Right
Right Wing War Against Sustainability
The Politics of Intransigence

Why We are Not Seeing More Action on Climate Change

The unbridled pursuit of profit by powerful interests is actively delaying action on climate change. Climate denying corporate interests and their political counterparts, along with the press and cynical investments, are making progress on climate change mitigation very difficult.

Republicans are the political minions of climate denial


Republicans continue to oppose action on climate change. Rather than lead, Republicans in the House are catering to the most conservative elements of their own constituencies and putting partisan interests ahead of national interests. However, this is only part of the story.

While it is true that American politics are polarized, this is a symptom of the problem not the cause. One of the reasons partisan fires are burning so bright is due in part to the influence of a powerful cabal of climate deniers. These interests, through their front groups and political minions in the GOP, have succeeded in hijacking the discussion by interjecting an element of doubt into the scientific consensus on climate change.

The insane game of political chicken over the government shutdown and debt ceiling illustrates the dynamics behind the politics of impasse. Although Republicans in the House were finally forced to put an end to the hostage drama and pass an eleventh hour deal that reopens government in the short term and temporarily increases the debt ceiling, many are asking how we got into this situation in the first place and what is the likelihood of it recurring in early in 2014.

The issue of a government shutdown will be revisited before January 15, 2014 and the debt ceiling will come up again before February 7, 2014. As Senator Lindsay Graham said on Wednesday, “we will be back here again.”

Republicans claim they are concerned with reigning in federal government spending and opposing Obamacare. However, the cost of another credit downgrade from a debt default would have significantly increased the costs associated with servicing U.S. debt. The 16-day delay that once again brought the nation to the brink, rattled markets and cost at least 24 billion dollars. As far as Obamacare is concerned, America has voted twice and the Affordable Care Act legislation was upheld by the supreme court.

Polls showing that Republicans are bearing the brunt of criticism over the shutdown and debt ceiling obstructionism suggest that something more pernicious than politics is at play. Why else would they be so eager to tarnish their brand?

Tea party Republicans in the House are at the heart of this effort to undermine the federal government. They may genuinely believe they are engaged in an ideological war against “big government spending” and “socialism.” Although they may be oblivious to the ways they are being used by their climate denying puppet masters, they are serving the agenda of a powerful collection of old energy interests and those who stand to profit from a world ravaged by climate change.

The collection of oil and other powerful corporate concerns have a vested interest in undermining government. We call them climate deniers, but those who are pulling the Republican’s strings know full well that the science behind climate change is sound. However, they also know that there are massive profit opportunities to be gained by making it difficult for President Obama and the democrats to deliver on their climate change mitigation promises.

They know that significantly reducing the burning of fossil fuels is the cornerstone of efforts to reduce the impacts of climate change. The longer they can continue to foster doubt and stoke demand for petrochemicals, the longer they can continue to reap astronomical profits.

The press promulgates corporate subterfuge


How can American voters be so woefully misinformed that they can countenance Republican denial? The mainstream press plays an important role buoying the lies of deniers. As Sarah van Gelder reviews in an article, which is also the forward to her book Project Censored 2014: Fearless Speech in Fateful Times, corporate interests have managed to push coverage of climate change science off of most media outlets.

When it is covered, it is commonly followed-up with the views of anti-science climate deniers in a misguided attempt to be “objective.” The reason for this is that most media channels are owned by big corporations that rely on billions of dollars from corporate advertising.

To illustrate the point, earlier this year The Wall Street Journal published a ridiculous article titled “In Defense of Carbon Dioxide,” in which rising levels of CO2 were heralded as a boon to plant life.

As van Gelder points out, although 97 percent of peer-reviewed scientific studies confirm the existence of anthropogenic global warming, only 42 percent of Americans believe the planet is warming because of human activity. Mainstream media is largely to blame for this collective state of delusion.

Journalists have been afraid to draw the connection between extreme weather events and climate change, even though there is a convincing body of scientific evidence that clearly points to a relationship. The fourth estate will not even report the fact that if we continue with business as usual, scientists predict the world will warm by 6 degrees Celsius by the end of the century. Nor will they report that this will have cataclysmic impacts on human life including coastal flooding, food and water scarcity.

As stated by van Gelder,  “The climate crisis highlights a systemic flaw in human society today: the power of large corporations over our economy, governance, and way of life overwhelms other forces.”

She singles out the fossil fuel industry and other large corporations which have successfully undermined efforts to build a consensus on efforts to mitigate climate change. She cites the Supreme Court as “friendly to the power of big corporations.” She goes on to refer to a January 2013 Media Matters report, which shows how Republican climate change deniers are given overwhelmingly disproportionate coverage in the press.

The fossil fuel industry and other powerful corporations do not want us to consider solutions like renewable energy to displace carbon-based fuels. They do not want to see green buildings, organic fertilizers, and highly efficient transportation. They certainly do not want to see carbon taxes, (which would be an effective way of putting the market to work to lower carbon emissions). Nor do they want to see President Obama succeed in implementing his climate change mitigation policy, or repeal fossil fuel subsidies.

Certain corporate interests benefit from the fact that people who are informed about climate change have cause for despair. They welcome hopelessness which will give people cause to give-up under the weight of their awareness. They do not want to acknowledge the important work of responsible businesses that show that you can be an environmentally responsible corporate citizen while turning a profit.

Profiting from global warming


A far more cynical effort is unfolding that is creating financial incentives for inaction on climate change. Rather than put market forces to work to combat global warming, investors are now lining up to invest in companies that will profit from climate change. We are increasingly seeing investments that have a vested interest in a hot planet. These types of investments will actually increase in value if we are unsuccessful in our efforts to stave off the worst impacts of climate change. Pro global warming strategies include investments in things like water-treatment and farmland.

As explained in a Bloomberg article, “Wall Street firms are investing in businesses that will profit as the planet gets hotter.”

A growing area of investment involves derivatives that help companies hedge against climate change induced extreme weather. Some of the world’s biggest investors are getting onboard. To illustrate the point, the Bloomberg article cites KKR & Co’s 2013 purchase of a 25 percent stake in Nephila Capital Ltd., an $8 billion Bermuda hedge fund that trades in weather derivatives.

Drought is one form of extreme weather that is helping to drive a pro global warming investment strategy at Water Asset Management LLC. The New York hedge fund has about $400 million under management. This fund buys water rights and makes private equity and stock-market investments in water- treatment companies.

As explained by Michael Richardson, head of business development at Land Commodities, “there is an overemphasis of its negative impacts [of global warming].” Not surprisingly, his firm stands to benefit from a warmer world, scarce arable land, and rising populations.

Others are eagerly anticipating the melting of ice sheets in the Arctic either for northern sea navigation or access to oil and mineral deposits. One example is NunaMinerals, a mining startup based in Nuuk, Greenland. They are counting on global warming to melt the glaciers and expose mineral deposits including gold, rare earths, and base metal deposits.

Mining operations in the Danish Arctic are huge as evidenced by the 524 million kroner ($91.5 million) invested in 2010. This represents a 75 percent increase from the previous year and the amount of capital invested is expected to increase as more land is exposed by retreating glaciers.

There are a range of investments that are banking on climate change, but one of the most bizarre involves $30 million investment in mosquitoes by Oxitec Ltd., an Abingdon, U.K.-based startup. Mosquitoes are known to transmit disease like malaria and dengue fever and they will be a growing problem in a warmer world. To help minimize the mosquito population, Oxitec has developed a mosquito whose offspring are sterile, when mated with a wild female, their progeny do not survive to adulthood. Already the company is exporting a growing number of these mosquitoes to countries around the world.

Others are investing in the “positive impacts” associated with global warming. For example, temperature increases of 3 degrees C. will result in higher crop yields in temperate latitudes, and a decreased requirement for space heating.

There is a lot of money to be made in adaptation. Potential areas of investment include efforts to protect against flooding, combat malnutrition, address heat stress and manage extreme weather events.

Arcadis, a Dutch engineering firm has been capitalizing on what it sees as a growing opportunity in flood management. They recently acquired ETEP Consultoria, Gerenciamento, e Servicos Ltda., a Brazilian water engineering and consulting firm. Due in part to superstorm Sandy, Arcadis’s revenue was up 26 percent last year, to 2.5 billion euros ($3.2 billion).
“The climate is changing. Sea level is rising. That’s quite obvious,” said Piet Dircke, who oversees water management at Arcadis. “At the same time, the cities that are close to the waterline continue to grow and have more money and need for protection. It’s almost a natural growth market.”
Climate denying corporate interests undermine government, control the press and stand to profit from delaying action on climate. While others greedily welcome a warmer world in which derivative schemes or adaptation investments pay lucrative dividends. This agenda is at best a pyrrhic victory, as they will get rich by damning all of humanity to a climate change hell.

Despite the depressing array of forces allied against a science based approach to combat climate change, we have reason to hope. Destructive corporate interests and their Republican puppets have reason to fear the millions of ordinary people who are at the forefront of efforts to expose the conspiracy of lies and push their political leaders to act on climate change.

Source: Global Warming is Real

Related Articles


environment, defense, protection, defenders, journalists, journalism, report, reporting, news, information, free, freedom, environmental, defending, protecting, defenders,

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Popular Media is to Blame for Inaction on Climate Change
Anti-Science Journalism Helped to End Progressive Climate Governance in Australia
Popular Media is Distorting the Facts about Climate
Greenpeace Report - Dealing in Doubt: A Chronicle of Climate Denial
List of Climate Deniers in the US Congress
Climate Deniers Could Learn from Pascal's Wager
Science and Pernicious Ignorance of Climate Change Denial
Why We Need to Reach American Climate Change Deniers
Video - Evolution and Global Warming Denialism: How the Public is Misled
New York Times Inadvertently Supports Climate Denial
Republicans' Anti-Science Stance on Climate Change
Republicans Deny Facts on Climate Change
The Business of Climate Change Deception
Video: Climate Deniers Debate Global Warming
A Reintroduction to the Climate Denying Duo Known as the Koch Brothers
Protecting the Planet from Corporate Misrepresentation
What is Wrong with the Right
Right Wing War Against Sustainability
The Politics of Intransigence