Russell Cook: Smearing Global Warming Skeptics

Posted: September 22, 2012 by tallbloke in flames, media, Politics

Here’s another repost of an American Thinker article by Russell Cook. I think it’s important we keep reminding the media of the unsubstantiated nature of the ‘In the pay of big oil’ meme that the propagandists in the man-made global warming camp keep pushing.

Meteorologist blogger Anthony Watts normally talks about the crumbling science of man-caused global warming, but recently he described an uninvited office guest demanding to know about his alleged “big oil funding.” The charge that only the lure of big money causes people to question warmist gospel is old but, as it turns out, of highly questionable origin.

Al Gore typifies the central accusation in An Inconvenient Truthpg 263:
The misconception that there is a serious disagreement among scientists about global warming is actually an illusion that has been deliberately fostered by a relatively small but extremely well-funded cadre of special interests, including Exxon Mobil and a few other oil, coal, and utilities companies. These companies want to prevent any new policies that would interfere with their current business plans…
One of the internal memos prepared by this group to guide the employees they hired to run their disinformation campaign was discovered by the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Ross Gelbspan. Here was the group’s stated objective: to “reposition global warming as theory, rather than fact.”
Internet searches of the “reposition global warming” phrase show how viral it is. However, more searching reveals former Boston Globe reporter Gelbspan not only has never won a Pulitzer, despite uncountable times he’s described as such, but he is also not the discoverer of the “campaign.” Intensive investigation reveals only myriad ties to the phrase, but the actual 1991 internal PR campaign memo containing the phrase is never seen.
Gore’s 2004 NY Times review of Gelbspan’s then-current second book offered this praise:

Gelbspan’s first book, “The Heat Is On” (1997), remains the best, and virtually only, study of how the coal and oil industry has provided financing to a small group of contrarian scientists…In this new book, Gelbspan focuses his toughest language by far on the coal and oil industries. After documenting the largely successful efforts of companies like ExxonMobil to paralyze the policy process, confuse the American people and cynically “reposition global warming as theory rather than fact.”

Greenpeace director Phil Radford offers more praise in an article describing two people he worked with who most impressed him:

John Passacantando, the former director of Greenpeace, whose strategic instinct and track record of changing the political landscape on global warming has made it possible to imagine that solving the problem could be a reality. And Ross Gelbspan … who … uncover[ed] the scandalous cover up of global warming by polluting companies. Ross has been the lone voice … that has inspired countless people, me included, to demand our country and our future back from the coal and oil interests behind global warming.

The article also says Radford worked for Ozone Action. Prior to 1996, their focus was ozone depletion. Ozone Action had just over/under $1 million worth of contributions per year in 1998, 1999, and 2000 under John Passacantando’s leadership, who then merged his group into Greenpeace in 2000. Greenpeace archive records of a 1996 Ozone Action report (page 5, paragraphs 3 & 4) reveal:
…the Information Council for the Environment (ICE) stated their goal was to “reposition global warming as theory (not fact)[.]”
According to documents obtained by Ozone Action and by Ross Gelbspan, several ICE strategies were laid out: the repositioning of global warming as theory, not fact.
The word “obtained” prompts questions about assertions that Gelbspan was the discoverer. Worse, Greenpeace/WWF activist Andrew Rowell cites the “reposition” phrase in his 1996 Green Backlash (second paragraph) while not saying where the “ICE internal packet” came from. NY Times reporter Matthew Wald’s July 8, 1991 article reported:
The goal of the campaign, according to one planning document, is to “reposition global warming as theory” and not fact.
A packet of internal correspondence and other information relating to the campaign was provided to The New York Times by the Sierra Club, the San Francisco-based environmental group that favors taking steps to reduce the risk of global warming.
Curtis Moore, who cites Wald’s article about the “reposition” phrase in his 1994 Green Gold, also refers to an interview of Simmons Advertising’s Tom Helland. That appears to be the same Simmons contact “T. Helland” seen on page 13 of another set of Greenpeace scans, a fair indication that Moore saw the documents. And on page 14, there is a Simmons letter describing “what you’ll find in this packet,” the same descriptive word in Rowell’s book note and Wald’s article. Gelbspan refers to other 1991 articles breaking this story near the bottom of the page at his website. An obvious question is: Who discovered these documents?
That second set of Greenpeace scans contains something vastly more important on page 10: the document with the “reposition” phrase in its complete context. Of all the internet searches for the phrase, I found no others showing it in its entirety, or any linking to this Greenpeace scan. In Gelbspan’s own hugely acclaimed 1997 book, no scan is shown. He simply says, “ICE documents in author’s possession.” Why is that? And what is the significance of yet another Greenpeace scan of an October 1996 Kalee Kreider e-mail to “D Becker” at the Sierra Club? That’s probably Dan Becker, director of the Sierra Club’s Global Warming Program from 1989 to 2006. Kreider worked at Ozone Action just three months earlier, repeating the “reposition” phrase in a media release. Many now know Kreider as Al Gore’s spokesperson.
It turns out that the attempted slander of global warming skeptics as tools of big oil is as poorly grounded as the theory itself. 

Comments
  1. omnologos says:

    It’s amazing how the same people keep going ’round and ’round repeating the same concepts to the unsuspecting and stupid enviromasses

  2. Entropic man says:

    Perhaps this habit of ad hominem attacks, ridicule and general abuse of one’s opponents has come from the way the climate change debate has become entangled with American politics. Their roughhouse style of political discussion has contaminated a scientific debate with personal and political overtones.
    It’s not so bad on British websites like this one, but American sites such as Greenpeace and WUWT seem to use such tactics routinely.

  3. tallbloke says:

    Entropic: I agree with your comment so far as it goes, and we make an effort here to keep the piss taking to an acceptable level. However, there is a world of difference between banter on partisan blogs and smearing accomplished scientists such as Lindzen, Spencer and Christy with accusations of bias due to funding sources they don’t have anyway.

    Looking at who is funding the proAGW side and the sums involved, it’s a pot-kettle David/Goliath situation anyway. And lets not forget the CRU at UEA was set up with money from Royal Dutch Shell Petroleum.

  4. Entropic man says:

    And around we go again. Whee!
    Would’nt it be nice to get off this roundabout!

  5. Michael Hart says:

    Directing comments at institutions, rather than individuals, is more acceptable in my opinion. Use of the term “they” is slightly better than pejorative terms such as “deniers”, but not as good as a more careful choice of words to describe either the people, or the opinions held by the people who are the subject of the discussion.

    Terms such as “climate-change deniers” appear wilfully disingenuous to me. More often than not the targets of such epithets take the view that climate has changed in the past, will change in the future, and may, or may not, be changing now for reasons that have little to do with anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions.

    I certainly don’t have a favoured descriptor or insult for those who disagree with my views on this subject. But why so many carbon-based life forms should have such an apparently visceral dislike of the sixth member of the periodic table of the elements is perhaps a question that ought to be discussed before an election. But for them, this roundabout wouldn’t be turning at all.

  6. Entropic man says:

    In past discussions I’ve tried to use these terms for those involved in the climate change debate.

    Warmist/alarmist-someone whose personality, politics or financial interest leads them to exaggerate the impact of climate change, regardless of the science.

    Accepter- Someone who accepts the cAGW meme, based on their interpretation of the science.

    Sceptic-Someone who is unhappy with the cAGW meme, based on their interpretation of the science,

    Denier- Someone whose personality, politics or financial interest leads them to reject the cAGW meme, regardless of the science.

    Most of us here would classify ourselves as accepters or sceptics, though our opponents might call us alarmists or deniers. I’ve been labelled a warmist or a Greenpeace bot(!), though Greenpeace are far too alarmist for my taste.

  7. tallbloke says:

    Slightly different emphasis in my epithets.

    Propagandists – of either camp.
    Alarmists – CAGW
    Warmies – AGW
    Lukewarmers – aGW
    Sceptics: of measurement, attribution, theory

    Anthony Watts is mainly a measurement sceptic.
    I’m mainly an attribution sceptic. And a measurement sceptic. Oh, and a theory sceptic. Oh dear. 🙂

  8. Once again, my huge thanks to TallBloke. And regarding commenter “Entropic man” ‘s wondering if we can get off this roundabout …. afraid not. TallBloke asked for a suggestion at his earlier blog of which old article of mine should be reproduced here next – well, to illustrate how this roundabout is the only one the AGW’ers have, I’d suggest “The Curious History of ‘Global Climate Disruption’ ” http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/10/the_curious_history_of_global.html which features a couple of famous name figures………… and PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler, who was involved in a row that Dr S Fred Singer had with folks who didn’t place a smear of skeptics under hard scrutiny back in the late ’90s.

    Getler is the one yesterday who entertainingly said “I had never heard of Watts before this program”, while repeating the idea that the global warming issue is still not a situation which is obligated to give “fair balance” to skeptics. See: http://www.pbs.org/ombudsman/2012/09/climate_change_creates_a_storm.html

  9. Entropic man says:

    🙂

  10. Michael Hart says:

    Entropic man,
    Actually, I think I once said I was convinced that you were a human, and NOT a Greenpeace-bot on a BBC forum. I post under a pseudonym there [you can probably guess which one], and have done for several years [on many different subjects], for the usual sensible reasons of web identity-security, but have never changed that name.

    In this matter I decided to follow Anthony Watts’ example and defend my opinions under my real name because I think the subject is too important to do otherwise.

  11. Entropic man says:

    We do seem to form a community of sorts, across all these different sites. Nice to know you, Mr. Hart
    I’m afraid I must remain anonymous, though not for any nefarious reason. I’m a retired science teacher and of no importance. However, my children are both business people and have asked me to stick to a pseudonym. They are not keen that Google searches relating to them might list me and my strange hobby.

  12. […] debate as theory rather than fact’. Something Russell Cook wrote about at length in his article on Ross Gelbspan and Al Gore and their campaign to get skeptics excluded from the climate […]