Gene's Footnotes

I have never been impressed by the messenger and always inspect the message, which I now understand is not the norm. People prefer to filter out discordant information. As such, I am frequently confronted with, "Where did you hear that...." Well, here you go. If you want an email version, send me an email.

October 14, 2007

Why I Do Buy the Economist


The sky isn't falling, but prophets still intrigue us. They can be dolts, no reference to Mr. Gore intended, but the mere fact something new is happening gets the attention of the helots and eloi, especially if it predicts the end of the miserable world they inhabit.

The problem with prophets, over history, is their true believers eventually turn on them. One has to careful about over-expansiveness and drinking one's own Kool Aid.

Only in the last year or so, are experts in climate, complex system analysis, and paleoclimatology putting up their professional markers distancing themselves from the IPPC view of the world. They need to distance themselves from the IPPC while not jeopardizing their grants and jobs.

Serious researchers, while in need of current money from the politically correct, are aware their good work may be dismissed as amusing by the next generation of scientists. Recall, the in-crowd today dismisses the science/NYT/Time Magazine of 1976 which stated - "Holy Crap, the Ice Age Is Coming!"

Below is a report from the Economist on the IPPC and Gore''s recent Nobel Prize. Note there is actually reporting of facts, unlike U.S. TV which forgot to mention the IPPC in their filtered view of the world. The facts are placed in a perspective that would be subjective of course, but the Economist is a magazine. Still, its editorializing is far less subjective than the NYT front page. Its "voice" is more of a bemused literary publication than a left or right propoganda machine.
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The Nobel Peace Prize

Peace man

Oct 12th 2007
From Economist.com

Al Gore and the IPPC win it


AFP

IF THE Nobel Peace Prize were awarded for making the world a more peaceful place, then this year’s winners—Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)—would be a bizarre choice. But two out of the previous three peace prizes went to people and organisations who had nothing to do with peace. The 2004 winner was Wangari Maathai, a Kenyan woman who plants trees, and the 2006 winners were Mohammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank, a Bangladeshi microcredit institution. (In 2005, in a radical departure from recent practice, the prize did actually go to a person and an organisation whose work has been designed to reduce the likelihood of global conflict—Mohamed ElBaradei and the International Atomic Energy Agency.)

Evidently the committee has decided to redefine the award as the Nobel Prize for Making the World a Better Place in Some Unspecified Way. In that case, Al Gore and the IPCC seem pretty good—though controversial—choices. The IPCC has put together scientific knowledge on the subject in a form comprehensible to policymakers; Mr Gore has pushed the policymakers to take action.

Set up under the auspices of the UN to establish a scientific consensus on climate change, the IPCC has produced vast reports on the current state of knowledge on the subject every four years or so. Its latest came out earlier this year. Unlike Mr Gore, it has not struggled to make its work palatable to the masses. Its conclusions are therefore tentative, representative of the huge uncertainty inevitable in the study of a mechanism as complex as the climate. Its estimate for temperature change, for instance, ranges from a 1.1ºC rise to a 6.4ºC rise by the end of this century.

Even so, the IPCC has come in for some stick. Some scientists claim that sceptics about global warming get frozen out of the process. Some accuse it of alarmism. A prediction that warming would lead to the spread of malaria, for instance, was widely criticised on the grounds that malaria is correlated more closely with development than with temperature (it is present, for instance, in parts of central Asia, but not in the southern states of America).

Still, it would be surprising if a body studying such a vast and complex area did not get some things wrong. And, by and large, the IPCC does what it was supposed to do: it provides a robust scientific basis for politicians to get on with policymaking.

Mr Gore has been pushing them to do just that. The “former next president of the United States”, as he calls himself, tried to get America to ratify the Kyoto protocol to control greenhouse-gas emissions while he was Bill Clinton’s vice-president. Mr Clinton signed the protocol, but the Senate opposed the idea of America agreeing to a treaty that didn’t include controls on developing-country emissions, so it was never ratified.

After an agonisingly tight finish in the 2000 election, which he lost by a few Floridian hanging chads, Mr Gore refused to disappear into the political wilderness. Instead, he prowled the country in the guise of an Old Testament prophet with audio-visual aids, warning of the dangers of climate change. His slick, entertaining presentation was eventually made into a film, “An Inconvenient Truth”. That film, bizarrely for what was in effect a slide-show with lots of charts, did well at the box office and won two Oscars (although one was for a song).

Mr Gore has his detractors. His film is propaganda rather than documentary. A British judge this week ruled that it should not be shown to schoolchildren without a health warning, because there were several claims in it that were wrong: the ice caps on Greenland and Antarctica are not, for instance, expected to melt “in the near future”, but in millennia. Nevertheless, America is now generally expected to accept in some form the controls on emissions that it rejected when it turned down Kyoto, and Mr Gore has been instrumental in getting it there.

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March 17, 2007

Want News?


I have to admit I find the Chinese Xinhua news service to be informative, balanced, and attuned to reporting news, rather than the latest regarding boobs and politicians, which are not always the same thing. I recommend the service as a good source of news, free of US, CBC, and BBC filters.

Below is a news piece offered to show you how real events pop up at Xinhua - important news on positive developments with the evil doers in N. Korea.


I do have to admit, this news has been mentioned in our media, much to my surprise as it means the current administration is doing something good. I am sure we will get back to more important news like whether Carl Rove uses boxers or briefs.

The N. Koreans seem willing to back down and shut down the Yongbyon reactor, if the U.S. will let them have their money back. It seems we blocked accounts, claiming the North Koreans, or as XINHUA refers to them - the DPRK, were engaged in criminal activity, not just state-sponsored terrorism. Maybe we can get Kim (I'm so ronry) Jung Il on tax evasion.

It is rumored, by me, that DPRK is actually afraid of Team America-World Police flying in to take out the government. [Lets put the "F" back in Freedom.] In any event, its nice to see that the communist North is using leverage, the threat of thermonuclear destruction, to get capitalist money.

Finally, they got it!

Check out the site. Click on the headline above. If you poke around, you will find pages where the events are reported as they happened, then, below, are links to the Chinese reactions, then other government reactions. What a bizarre way to report on world news.

By way of contrast, CNN's page this day had pictures of "People" protesting the US being in Sadr City (the people were curiously all males 18-30). CNN didn't seem to find a picture to use regarding the use of chlorine gas by the murderers, oh, insurgents in three attacks. Probably, because there were only a few dead and 350 with seared lungs. Or, as they put it, 350 injured.

There was one sentence on U.S. troops killing two gangsters setting up a roadside bomb. Superb balance.

FROM Xinhua:

BEIJING, March 17 (Xinhua) -- Kim Kye-Gwan, top negotiator of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), arrived here Saturday morning for the six-party talks on the Korean Peninsula nuclear issue.

Kim Kye-Gwan, top negotiator of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), arrived in Beijing Saturday morning.(Xinhua Photo)
Photo Gallery>>>

The DPRK would not shut down the Yongbyon nuclear reactor if the United States did not first lift financial bans on DPRK accounts in the Banco Delta Asia (BDA), a Macao-based bank, Kim told reporters upon his arrival in Beijing for a new round of the six-party talks scheduled to open on Monday.

Kim, DPRK's vice foreign minister, said the DPRK has not received any notification regarding the lifting of financial sanctions yet.

He said it is "unnecessary" for the DPRK and the United States to set up liaison offices. Concerning the HEU (Highly Enriched Uranium) issue, the DPRK is willing to cooperate with the United States, and the DPRK would like to explain if the U.S. side provides evidence, Kim said.

The U.S. Treasury Department announced on Wednesday a plan to resolve the financial dispute with the DPRK by formally barring U.S. financial institutions from dealing with the BDA.

The United States slapped sanctions on the BDA in 2005 and put it on a money-laundering blacklist, prompting Macao to freeze the 24 million dollars believed to belong to the DPRK. In return, the DPRK boycotted the subsequent six-party talks for more than one year.

As part of the nuclear deal reached during the six-party talks in Beijing on Feb. 13, the United States agreed to settle the financial dispute with the DPRK within 30 days. The United States has accused the DPRK of using the bank to launder illegal earnings and the DPRK has urged the United States to lift the sanctions.

Related:

DPRK reported to have started preparations for shutting down Yongbyon facilities

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