Category Archives: Media Criticism

CAGW

Why the science is not “settled”:

The sad thing about the Great Climate Debate is that so far, there hasn’t really been a debate. The result is presented, but no one ever takes questions from the podium and is capable of defending their answers against a knowledgeable and skeptical questioner.

I can do that for all of my beliefs in physics — or at least, most of them — explain particular experiments that seem to verify my beliefs (as I do above). I’m quite capable of demonstrating their consistency both theoretically (with other physical laws and beliefs) and with experiment. I’m up front about where those beliefs fail, where they break down, where we do not know how things really work. Good science admits its limits, and never claims to be “settled” even as it does lead to defensible practice and engineering where it seems to work — for now.

Good science accepts limits on experimental precision. Hell, in physics we have to accept a completely non-classical limitation on experimental precision, one so profound that it sounds like a violation of simple logic to the uninitiated when they first try to understand it. But quite aside from Heisenberg, all experimental apparatus and all measurements are of limited precision, and the most honest answer for many things we might try to measure is “damfino” (damned if I know).

The Great Climate Debate, however, is predicated from the beginning on one things. We know what the global average temperature has been like for the past N years, where N is nearly anything you like. A century. A thousand years. A hundred thousand years. A hundred million years. Four billion years.

We don’t, of course. Not even close. Thermometers have only been around in even moderately reliable form for a bit over 300 years — 250 would be a fairer number — and records of global temperatures measured with even the first, highly inaccurate devices are sparse indeed until maybe 200 years ago. Most of the records from over sixty or seventy years ago are accurate to no more than a degree or two F (a degree C), and some of them are far less accurate than that. As Anthony has explicitly demonstrated, one can confound even a digital electronic automatic recording weather station thermometer capable of at least 0.01 degree resolution by the simple act of setting it up in a stupid place, such as the southwest side of a house right above a concrete driveway where the afternoon sun turns its location into a large reflector oven. Or in the case of early sea temperatures, by virtue of measuring pails of water pulled up from over the side with crude instruments in a driving wind cooling the still wet bulb pulled out of the pail.

Hubris.

[Late-morning update]

The Virginia Supreme Court says that the University of Virginia is not a “person,” and therefore doesn’t have to respond to a FOIA.

Huh?

So that means that UVA is immune from FOIAs in general? That it can’t enter into contracts? I think this will be appealed, all the way to SCOTUS, and they’ll lose.

But it raises the question: just what is it they’re hiding that they would fight this so tenaciously? And how is such a lack of transparency “scientific”?

Breitbart

I, like many, was shocked to wake up to the news (actually I’d already been up for a few minutes, but it wasn’t long) that Andrew Breitbart died last night. I only met him once, at a party up in Hollywood, but I’m only one degree removed from him, having several good friends who were friends. So I can’t say a lot about him from personal experience, but from watching him on television and the web, he was perhaps the greatest current champion, our Achilles for the cause of liberty, in terms of his effectiveness in taking the battle directly to the enemy (and I use that word freely, because anyone who has seen his hateful retweets knows that it is exactly how the Left views anyone who values individual liberty). Except apparently, rather than his heel, his weakness was what by all accounts was his great heart. No one has been as successful at displaying the hypocrisy and venality of the Left, which is why there is such hatred for him among them. It is a great loss for that cause, but as Josh Trevino says, we must take up the sword of the fallen.

Instapundit has a roundup of links, and Ed Driscoll (who ironically, and sadly now) was celebrating, but now is merely observing his decadal bloggiversary, has more, as does Christian Adams and Richard Fernandez (in which Davy Jones makes a cameo appearance). The National Reviewers have preliminarily weighed in as well, with thoughts from Jonah Goldberg (who was also caught with his immediate reaction, when he was clearly devastated, on Fox News this morning because he happened to be there for something else), Kathryn Lopez, John O’Sullivan, and Dan Foster.

I’m sure that there will be a lot more in the days to come.

[Friday morning update]

“You can give this day back to the Indians“:

One thing that he [Breitbart] and Bill [Buckley] shared was this basic contempt for the premise that the mainstream liberal elite institutions in the United States are in a position to judge and adjudicate the worth of conservatives. That they are in a position to judge our souls. That if we disagree with liberals, that proves that we are somehow wanting or lacking in compassion; lacking in humanity. That is a fundamental thing that enraged Andrew, this idea that if you disagreed about public policy, if you disagreed about how to organize society, that proved you were a racist. That proved you were a fascist. That proved you were a homophobe. It was the fundamental bad faith of the leading liberal institutions that controlled the commanding heights of this culture that infuriated him. And he refused, at the most basic level, to give them that authority over him or his ideas, and that is what fueled his Righteous Indignation, as his book title called it.

And more from Jonah:

…what made him a public figure is what drove him to leap into battle day after day. Andrew had profound contempt for those on the left who claimed a birthright to a monopoly on virtue and tolerance.

He rejected in the marrow of his bones the idea that conservatives needed to apologize for being conservative or that liberals had any special authority to pronounce on the political decency and honesty of others.

Indeed, when liberals called him (or his heroes) racist, Andrew paid them the compliment of taking them seriously. He truly felt that to call someone a racist was as profound an insult as could be leveled. To do so without evidence or logic was a sin.

He believed, rightly, that much of establishment liberalism hurls such charges as a way to bully opponents into silence, and he would not be bullied. That was why, for instance, he offered a reward of $100,000 (payable to the United Negro College Fund) to anybody who could prove tea partiers hurled racial epithets over and over at black congressmen walking past them to vote on Obamacare, as several alleged. No one got paid because the charge — recycled over and over by the media — was a lie.

The Internet was a boon to Andrew because it exposed liberalism’s undeserved monopoly on the “narrative” — one of his favorite words.

It not only exposed it, it has started to break it. We have to pick up where he left off, and finish the job.

[Update a couple minutes later]

Think Big, America.

[Update a few minutes later]

Who he was, how he was.

[Update a few minutes later]

Breitbart’s last laugh.

[Update a while later]

A seventeen-year-old woman (not girl) pays tribute to her inspirational hero.

[Update a few minutes later]

Ace versus the increasingly diminutive David Frum.

[Update a while later]

Apologize for WHAT?

Global Warming

causes amnesia. Is there anything it can’t do?

[Update a few minutes later]

The unbearable Gleickness of being: a ClimateFake update.

[Update a while later]

Heh — from the link:

Second, it is beyond irony and parody to take in again the fixation with Heartland’s tiny $4.4 million budget last year next to the recent news that the Climate Works Foundation, one of the major climate campaign organizations, just got another $100 million fillip from the Hewlett Foundation. This brings the grand total of Hewlett grants to Climate Works to nearly $600 million. I believe this one grant history to just one organization rivals the total combined assets of all the main conservative foundations. And these folks get their knickers in a twist about Heartland and the Koch brothers? The paranoid climateers make the cliché Victorian woman standing on a chair afraid of a mouse look like a Spartan warrior by comparison. I repeat: what a bunch of losers.

Let’s hope they’re losers. So far the losers have been taxpayers and consumers.

[Update early evening]

A huge link roundup of breaking posts: the Gleick tragedy.

[Bumped]

Jeff Greason Speaks At The Reusable Suborbital Research Conference

I missed the very beginning of his luncheon talk, but here are my quick notes (somewhat paraphrased):

Early adopters have created all technological advances, not just “playboys trying to impress their friends” — he has talked to many of them, and they think they’re advancing technology and humanity, and that’s important to them. Introduces Tuskegee airman, Leroy Gillead, whom they’re giving a flight to. He is given a standing ovation by the audience twice, once when Jeff points him out in the front row, and again after Jeff explains who he is and what he did, to those who were unaware.

We are just starting to learn about space technology. These vehicles will revolutionize space research, previous efforts took too much time and effort to turn around experiments with NASA. No idea how much speed and energy will happen when people think they can make money at something. Imagine NASA budget at a trillion dollars. That’s how much goes into R&D in the semiconductor industry. Space is a low-technology area, “It is forever 1960.” Using materials, electronics practices that would have been recognizable twenty years ago. His phone puts more bits through a tiny port than all the cables in a current spacecraft, because when millions are invested in an experiment, no one wants to take a risk with unproven (in space) technology. When things get cheap, it’s no longer a risk to use a chip more modern than 1980.

Reusable affordable suborbital will finally break the logjam of why things haven’t been happening faster in space. Everyone’s known since von Braun that the key to low costs is reusable spacecraft. Everyone’s known since 1972 how not to do that (take an expendable and try to make it reusable) [referring to Shuttle]. If the time on the ground and touch labor are too great, assets are underutilized and too much money is spent on wages and salaries. Reusability isn’t adding something, it’s subtracting things. Vehicles don’t spring full-blown from the brow of Zeus. When they built the first vehicle, they weren’t ready, so they incorporated lessons into the second one, and they still aren’t ready, and they may not be ready until the sixth one or more. Won’t learn in a few flights or a few hundred flights. Will need thousands of flights to learn how to build a cost-effective reusable orbital system. Technological maturation they’re doing is learning how to get to orbit affordably in multiple generations of vehicles. Early adopters are enabling, just as they did with ocean-going luxury vessels and aircraft, allowing millions to participate, and we owe them a debt.

Question: Is it necessary to go through suborbital to orbit with a reusable vehicle, or can you go straight to orbit with enough money [presumably in reference to Elon Musk’s approach].

Hesitant to give his own opinions priority over that of his colleagues. Of course he thinks his way is best, or he’d be doing it a different way, but the great thing about what’s happening is that multiple approaches are being tried. No industry has ever been created with a single entrant. Need competition to force continuous improvement. Does believe that thousands of flights will be necessary to learn how to do it, and he has limited resources, sees suborbital as an affordable way to gain the experience.

Question: Cameron told NASA that they need not only to tell their story better but to have a better story to tell. Do we have a story to tell?

Yes, but not until recently. Events make people think differently. No one thought that one could buy their way into space until Tito did it. No one will believe that researchers can fly suborbitally until we start doing it. Once it starts happening, it will have always been obvious and everyone knew that we could have done it all the time.

Q: X-15 was useful, but some vehicles [e.g., X-33] have been barriers to actual progress. What do you think about the need for suborbital X-vehicles?

X-15 was useful suborbital vehicle, but they tend to be research vehicles that don’t tell much about operability. We don’t need X-vehicles for suborbital, most of the cutting-edge technology in hand. Orbital is a different story, but hopes and expects that operational suborbital vehicles will teach us a lot about how to get to orbit.

Q: From a media standpoint, what does it take to get the general public interested in space? One thing, or several things?

Specialty media that follows industry is not the source of the problem. It’s the general media. But doesn’t think it’s important to get the public interested in space again. When we’re doing useful things, then the public will get interested. Crucial area of ignorance is people in between those in the know and those who don’t care. Problem is that institutional investors want to know, and often think they know, but much of what they know is wrong. Not sure how to solve that problem.

Q: Speaking as a member, were you disappointed with the response to the Augustine Committee?

“Trying to jab more adrenalin into a dead horse is counterproductive.” By and large the federal government as a collective enterprise has chosen not to benefit from the advice of the Augustine Committee, just as it has with other aspects of public policy [such as the debt commission — rs]. As Keynes said, “In the long run, we’ll all be dead,” but the long run has come early. Hoped that they would provide the warning in time to make a difference, but they didn’t. Doesn’t expect NASA to be a growth industry, especially in space transportation.

My Saturday Night In Hell

I actually know the place well, having been born and raised not far from it:

…the tattooed woman was impressed by my dancing. When the song ended, I went outside to cool off in the chilly winter night air and relax with a cigarette. The tattooed woman followed me outside and started talking to me. “Where are you from?” she asked.

“Originally from Atlanta,” I said.

“Oh, I just love your accent,” she said.

My Southern accent was quite unusual to her because, you see, just like Mama always told me, Hell is full of damned Yankees.

Yes, it is. And this time of year, it is frozen over.