Guest guest Posted April 3, 2006 Report Share Posted April 3, 2006 Mon, 3 Apr 2006 10:54:56 -0400 (EDT) " American Progress Action Fund " <progress Progress Report: Will-ful Deception http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=102270111 & url_num=26 & url=http\ ://www.americanprogressaction.org/prarchives AMERICAN PROGRESS ACTION FUND The Progress Report by Judd Legum, Faiz Shakir, Nico Pitney Amanda Terkel and Payson Schwin www.progressreport.org 4/3/06 ENVIRONMENT Will-ful Deception On Sunday, conservative pundit George Will used prime space in the Washington Post and other major papers to suggest that not only is global warming not the result of human activity, but that global warming may not exist at all. There is no evidence to support Will's claim, so he resorted to distortion, misdirection, and outright deception. This morning, columnist Robert Novak used his regular space in the Washington Post and elsewhere to suggest that global warming, if it exists, will only have impacts " so far in the future that technological advances surely will be available to cope with the problem. " Question: Given the lack of any factual grounding, is there a point when printing mythology about global warming is incompatible with responsible journalism? WILL SUGGESTS GLOBAL WARMING MIGHT NOT EXIST: George Will notes that global temperatures have risen about one degree over the last 100 years, but that " might be the margin of error when measuring the planet's temperature. " Embarrassingly, the only support Will provides for this statement is a crude analogy. ( " To take a person's temperature, you put a thermometer in an orifice or under an arm. Taking the temperature of our churning planet, with its tectonic plates sliding around over a molten core, involves limited precision. " ) There is not a shred of scientific evidence to support Will's position that the earth is not warming. Science Magazine analyzed 928 peer-reviewed scientific papers on global warming published between 1993 and 2003. Not a single one challenged the scientific consensus that the earth's temperature is rising due to human activity. The National Academy of Sciences (which the Bush administration recently called " the gold standard of independent scientific review " ) concluded in 2001, " Greenhouse gases are accumulating in Earth's atmosphere as a result of human activities, causing surface air temperatures and subsurface ocean temperatures to rise. " In 2002, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) concluded global warming is " real and has been particularly strong within the past 20 years…due mostly to human activities. " The American Meteorological Society, the American Geophysical Union, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science have also " issued statements in recent years concluding that the evidence for human modification of climate is compelling. " LIES, DAMN LIES, AND GEORGE WILL'S CITATIONS: The highlight of Will's column is a list of citations from the 1970s of publications that purportedly warn of " global cooling. " (Nevermind that, even if it were all true, it does not function as an analytic rebuttal to scientific evidence of global warming caused by human activity.) The first such citation is from a December 1976 edition of Science Magazine which warned of " extensive Northern Hemispheric glaciation. " The use of this quote is outrageously dishonest. First, the article in question deals with variations in the earth's climate based on variations in the earth's orbit over periods of 20,000 years or longer. Second, the article explicitly excludes the effect of humans on the climate. (The article states its predictions apply " only to the natural component of future climatic trends -- and not to such anthropogenic effects as those due to the burning of fossil fuels.) George Will is clearly counting on the fact that most of his readers will not have access to a 1976 edition of Science Magazine. SCIENCE VS. NON-SCIENCE: There was, in fact, a temporary global cooling trend from the 1940s to the 1970s. A few mainstream press outlets (notably Newsweek) improperly extrpolated this temporary trend to make long term predictions. Importantly, however, no scientific publication predicted " global cooling. " In fact, scientists were warning others not to do that. So, today, there is an overwhelming scientific consensus that global warming exists and is being caused by human activity. Nevertheless, Will claims today that scientists say " they were so spectacularly wrong " in the 1970s. WILL SAYS THAT EVEN IF GLOBAL WARMING EXISTS, IT MIGHT BE A GOOD THING: Will says that even if, hypothetically, the globe is warming, it might be a good thing. Will asks: " Are we sure the consequences of climate change -- remember, a thick sheet of ice once covered the Midwest -- must be bad? " Will doesn't mention any of the purported benefits of global warming. Scientists, however, believe that global warming is likely to cause severe hurricanes, flooding of coastal population centers, and the spread of serious disease. JUSTIFYING INTRANSIGENCE: As thin as Will's argument is, it's winning out in the White House. As the world moves forward to address climate change, the United States, " which is home to less than 5% of Earth's population but produces 25% of CO2 emissions, remains intransigent. " President Bush abandoned the Kyoto protocols, broke his " campaign pledge to control carbon output to the relaxation of emission standards, " and gave " recent rhetorical nods to America's oil addiction. " And his praise of alternative fuel sources such as switchgrass have yet to be followed by real initiatives. The National Academy of Sciences debunks Novak's contention that there is time to wait. In 2005, it signed a joint statement with 10 other national academies which said, " The scientific understanding of climate change is now sufficiently clear to justify nations taking prompt action. " GOOD NEWS Americans have expressed their appreciation to reporter Helen Thomas for grilling President Bush during a recent press conference. " The roses kept coming - and coming - and coming - to the Hearst Newspapers office in downtown Washington on Thursday, until they filled a large conference room to overflowing. " STATE WATCH MASSACHUSETTS: Mercury levels in some freshwater fish have declined by 32 percent, thanks to the nation's toughest mercury emission laws for incinerators ILLINOIS: Farmworker advocates protest McDonald's, " demanding better wages for the people who pick the tomatoes used by the fast-food giant. " NEW YORK: New York City's African-American population is declining, for the first time since the draft riots during the Civil War. BLOG WATCH THINK PROGRESS: CNN reports Scott McClellan " next on the chopping block. " THINK PROGRESS: Video: Zinni calls on Rumsfeld to resign for " disastrous mistakes " in Iraq. POLITICAL ANIMAL: Media ignore the latest pre-war Iraq memo. DAILY KOS: Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA) says Western Europe has " nothing to live for. " DAILY GRILL " There's a constant sort of perception, if you will, that's created because what's newsworthy is the car bomb in Baghdad. It's not all the work that went on that day in 15 other provinces in terms of making progress towards rebuilding Iraq. " -- Vice President Dick Cheney, 2/26/06, repeating the talking point that the media doesn't report the good news from Iraq VERSUS " I think the American media is being made a scapegoat for what's going on out there. ... It's hard to dwell on the good things when the bad things are so overwhelmingly traumatic and catastrophic. " -- Gen. Anthony Zinni (Ret.), 4/2/06 UNDER THE RADAR ETHICS -- 'COINGATE' REACHES THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION: Ohioan Thomas Noe gained notoriety in his home state last year for his role in the " Coingate " scandal, charged on 53 counts, including money laundering, theft, forgery, and tampering with records. Noe oversaw Ohio's $50-million rare coin investment, eventually stealing more than $10 million from the fund. Noe raised more than $100,000 in 2003 for the Bush-Cheney campaign and was indicted separately in late 2005 for allegedly laundering $45,400 to the campaign. The Treasury Department's inspector general has now opened an investigation into Noe's " role as a member and chairman of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, a panel that advises the Treasury secretary on themes and designs for coins and congressional gold medals. " A Toledo Blade report notes that the White House played a key role in establishing Noe as the chairman of the powerful committee. In 2003, President Bush signed legislation that said the chairman of the new committee would be chosen by the treasury secretary, rather than by members of the committee. " I think it was a very directed way of moving a candidate of the administration's choice into the chairmanship by changing the way in which it had been traditionally done and mandating it legislatively, " said Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH). While on the commmittee, Noe also used his " post to influence policy and seek access to inside information that could benefit him as a rare-coin dealer. " RADICAL RIGHT -- MCCAIN SAYS JERRY FALWELL NO LONGER AN 'AGENT OF INTOLERANCE': Yesterday on NBC's Meet the Press, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) declared that right-wing Rev. Jerry Falwell is no longer an " agent of intolerance, " as McCain described him in 2000. (Watch the video.) The comments were further evidence of McCain's effort to jettison his image as a moderate. Last week, it was reported that McCain had agreed to give a graduation speech at Falwell's Liberty University and that he had expressed to Falwell his support for a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, which he previously opposed. McCain's remarks yesterday also tarnish his image as a " straight talker. " Back in 2000, when McCain was asked whether he stood by his description of Falwell as an " agent of intolerance, " he said, " I must not and will not retract anything that I said in that speech at Virginia Beach. It was carefully crafted, it was carefully thought out. " POVERTY -- AMERICA SHOULD FOLLOW BRITAIN'S LEAD ON CHILD POVERTY: Since 2000, the number of American children living in poverty has risen 12 percent -- to 13 million. By contrast, British Prime Minister Tony Blair has succeeding in reducing child poverty by 17 percent -- approximately 700,000 kids -- over the past five years. Despite the ongoing U.S. economic expansion, the poverty rate for children keeps rising, largely because the benefits of the recovery have flowed so disproportionately to families at the top of the income scale. " But in the United Kingdom, the policy-driven focus on reducing child poverty has helped to ensure that economic growth is reaching those at the bottom of the income scale. " Jared Bernstein, a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute, and Mark Greenberg, the executive director of the American Progress' Task Force on Poverty, argue that the British formula for success has been to boost the incomes of working parents, mainly through subsidies to low-wage earners. They have raised the minimum wage regularly, instituted programs to develop healthy and school-ready children, and launched a government agency that specifically tackles the conditions afflicting poor families. In calling for the institution of targeted goals here in the U.S. to reduce child poverty, the authors write, " The more you learn about [the British] initiative, the more you realize just how far off track we've gotten. " BUDGET -- BUSH STAYS THE COURSE ON DEFICITS: During his weekly radio address on Saturday, President Bush again called on Congress to permanently extend his tax cuts. " The debate in Congress over taxes ultimately comes down to this, " Bush said, " Who knows best how to use your money - the politicians in Washington or you? " Recent news reports show that Bush clearly does not know how to handle taxpayer money effectively. According to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, making Bush's tax cuts permanent and extending Alternative Minimum Tax relief would cost the Treasury $3.3 trillion over the next ten years (with interest included). Last Monday, Agence France Presse reported that the U.S. national debt was rising so quickly that " the last four digits of a giant digital signboard counting the moving total near New York's Times Square move in seemingly random increments as they struggle to keep pace. " The clock's owner is now working to add an extra digit to the clock as the debt closes in on $10 trillion. Along with decreased revenues, the debt is booming because federal spending under Bush is " outstripping economic growth at a rate unseen in more than half a century. " The spending growth represents " the most rapid growth during one administration since Franklin Roosevelt. " THINKFAST NASA administrator Michael Griffin recently said to a Houston audience: " The space program has had no better friend in its entire existence than Tom DeLay. … He's still with us and we need to keep him there. " Griffin now denies that statement was an effort to solicit votes for DeLay because, under the Hatch Act, a partisan endorsement cannot be made by a federal employee acting in an official capacity. The Office of Special Counsel is investigating. President Bush's new Medicare drug plan is so confusing " even the parents of the Michael Leavitt, secretary of the Health and Human Services (HHS) Department, ended up picking a plan that put their retiree medical coverage at risk. And this after Leavitt helped his parents in making their initial selection. " An official British " narrative " about the events leading up to last year's July 7 London bombings states that Iraq war was a " contributory factor. " The report, ordered by home secretary Charles Clarke, claims that the war radicalized the bombers and has provoked extremism among British Muslims. Civil war watch: " Nearly eight times as many Iraqis died last month in execution-style sectarian killings as in terrorist bombings carried out by insurgents, new US military statistics show. " Meanwhile, " more Iraqis than ever have been buying, carrying and stockpiling weapons, adding an unnerving level of firepower to Baghdad's streets. " After receiving a $200 million contract during the " flush, early days of reconstruction in Iraq, " U.S. construction firm Parsons Inc. has finished only 20 of the 142 primary health clinics they were hired to build over two years. The project was " expected to lay the foundation of a modern health care system for the country. " 1,000: The number of internal e-mails Rep. Tom DeLay gave to federal prosecutors as a " Christmas present " for their ongoing corruption investigation. The " prosecutors are far from finished " with the probe, and " it's unclear if the e-mails will clear or help implicate DeLay. " As many lawmakers resist the administration's plans to establish permanent bases in Iraq, the Pentagon is already spending millions of dollars to establish at least six " enduring bases " in Iraq. With hurricane season two months away, President Bush has been struggling to recruit a new federal emergency management chief after seven candidates turned the job down. Acting FEMA director David Paulison is reportedly expected to soon be named Michael Brown's official successor. And finally: Condoleezza Rice has banned Playboy and Penthouse from State Department newsstands. " Alerted by an aide that the skin magazines, partially clad in brown paper covers, were placed beside newsmagazines and close to candy, nuts, and stuffed animals, she said, 'I want them out.' " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.