It’s encouraging that scientists are once again able to actually question things, rather than just accept the dictated view (or else). You know, what science is meant to be about. No doubt the leftist media is already pulling its hair out.
This is HUGE. It is the first comprehensive government scientific report to challenge the conventional narrative surrounding the climate change issue in a very long time, perhaps ever. I cannot und…
www.climatedepot.com
The modern scientist looks into a topic, form a hypothesis (prediction) and testing methodology (to test quantitatively eg. using sensor measurements). Tests are performed, results are collected, post-processing / analysis conducted. Then they discuss the results with respect to the hypothesis, noting what was right and wrong about their initial beliefs. A conclusion is written, mentioning next steps and possible value.
Eventually (if important) other scientists read it, assess any conflict of interests for the original author/s (eg. political, economic factors). They then try validate/disprove the report findings and/or build off of it (eg. 'oh cool this paper says x, if i can validate its claims then i can apply this to my study on y').
In other words, credible researchers/scientists don't pull stuff out of their arse. Science involves constantly evolving understanding - but mostly by validating a small idea then building off of it. Very rarely are there big scientific breakthroughs that completely shift global understanding. This report is far from being one of those... It may get a few chuckles, but also a fair bit of disgust.
It's something you'd expect out of North Korea - a government leader selecting a small crew of sympathetic right-wing scientists to further their agenda. Like sports and politics, or science and religion, science and politics should never, ever mix.
Warning: the reality is that you are not a scientist. Neither am I (although at least have experience writing a handful of scientific reports in engineering). Neither of us really have the credibility to lecture people on what is 'good science' and 'bad science'. But the average person can see through political acts such as firing an economic statistician to install your own (and suddenly having 'fantastic numbers'...ffs). Same goes for Trump hiring a small group of sympathetic climate change deniers to write a govt climate change report. Anyways, since you posted it here, the following
article gives important context on that report. If you're not interested in reading further (/testing your understanding) then I don't see the point in copy and pasting wacky stuff here from your Twitter feed.
Contents of the article addressing the climate report by Trump's DoE
Dozens of scientists are scrambling to respond to
a report released last week by the US Department of Energy (DoE), which concluded that global warming is “less damaging economically than commonly believed”. The researchers say that the report, written by a small group of scholars who question the scientific consensus on climate change, misrepresents decades of climate science in a bid to repeal a 2009 government ruling that greenhouse gases endanger public welfare. They are now trying to coordinate a unified response, knowing that their arguments could influence a legal battle that is likely to go to the US Supreme Court.
“This little report is basically designed to suppress science, not to enhance it or encourage it,” says Joellen Russell, an oceanographer at the University of Arizona. “It’s awful.”
“I’m gobsmacked,” says Benjamin Santer, a climate scientist at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, UK,
who spent three decades working at the DoE’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. “It’s a revision of science and a revision of history. We have to respond.”
Some climate researchers are now writing short rebuttals to the scientific arguments made in the DoE report. “The alternative is to do nothing,” says Andrew Dessler, an atmospheric scientist at Texas A&M University in College Station, who is helping to coordinate one effort. “I just don’t think I can do that.”
The DoE declined to address criticisms of the science laid out in the report, but a spokesperson said that the document’s five authors were recruited by the US energy secretary Chris Wright — a former oil and gas executive — and that they “represent diverse viewpoints and political backgrounds and are all well-respected and highly credentialled individuals”. The report, the spokesperson adds, was reviewed internally at the agency, and the DoE is now opening it up to “wider peer review from the scientific community and the general public”, with the comment period ending on 2 September....
article continues
Resource that can be used to compare the report author's claims against accepted scientific understanding - they also identify any potential conflicts of interest
Examines the science and arguments of global warming skepticism. Common objections like 'global warming is caused by the sun', 'temperature has changed naturally in the past' or 'other planets are warming too' are examined to see what the science really says.
skepticalscience.com
For if you wanted to compare what the authors claims actually are vs what the established scientific understanding is