Posted on 12/08/2009 10:06:01 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
So what, in Public Editor Clark Hoyts judgment, would make a three-alarm story? In his evaluation of the New York Times coverage of the Climategate scandal, he offers this example (via Jazz Shaw):
Why didnt The Times put the e-mail on its Web site? And, most important, is The Times being cavalier about a story that could change our understanding of global warming? Or, as The Timess John Broder, who covers environmental issues in Washington, put it, When does a story rise to three-alarm coverage?
The biggest question is what the messages amount to an embarrassing revelation that scientists can be petty and defensive and even cheat around the edges, or a major scandal that undercuts the scientific premise for global warming. The former is a story. The latter is a huge story. And the answer is tied up in complex science that is difficult even for experts to understand, and in politics in which passionate sides have been taken, sometimes regardless of the facts.
Hmmm. Hoyt argues that this qualified as a normal story, not the three-alarm variety. He reached that conclusion even though (a) the University of East Anglia CRU destroyed its raw data, discuss at length how to destroy evidence for a Freedom of Information request, and dishonestly hid numbers that contradicted their insistence that temperatures were constantly rising. Even Hoyt acknowledges the latter in his missive, even though the New York Times didnt bother to report on the first two aspects of the story. Hoyt seems to argue here that these do not undercut the scientific premise for anthropogenic global warming (AGW), a term which he doesnt even clearly specify.
Do scientists routinely get petty and defensive? Probably. Do they routinely cheat around the edges and still maintain credibility? I would consider that a strange argument. If science cheats, it ceases being science. And in this case, it was hardly cheating around the edges. It was a full-bore effort to professionally ruin anyone who challenged their imposed orthodoxy while conspiring to hide contradictory data and flat-out make up numbers to artificially support their case. And the CRU destroyed their raw data, which for any scientific endeavor isnt at the edges of their work, but is the central core to their work.
Even by Hoyts standards, thats a three-alarm story.
Hoyt doesnt fare much better when it comes to the question of publishing the e-mails. Reporter Andrew Rivkin hilariously asserted last week that the Times refused to publish them because they were never intended for public scrutiny:
The documents appear to have been acquired illegally and contain all manner of private information and statements that were never intended for the public eye, so they wont be posted here.
Hoyt tries rescuing that statement:
As for not posting the e-mail, Revkin said he should have used better language in his blog, Dot Earth, to explain the decision, which was driven by advice from a Times attorney. The lawyer, George Freeman, told me that there is a large legal distinction between government documents like the Pentagon Papers, which The Times published over the objections of the Nixon administration, and e-mail between private individuals, even if they may receive some government money for their work. He said the Constitution protects the publication of leaked government information, as long as it is newsworthy and the media did not obtain it illegally. But the purloined e-mail, he said, was covered by copyright law in the United States and Britain.
Thats a rationalization on two fronts. First, the University of East Anglia is a public university, not a private university. Next, copyright law has a fair-use exception which newspapers and other media have used for decades. No one questioned why the Times didnt print every last e-mail in the set. But they could have published the more substantial e-mails that showed the fraud and deception in order to better inform its readers, especially since other outlets showed more courage than the Times and had already exposed the internal messages.
The entire Hoyt article is nothing more than a series of rationalizations in this vein. Rather than assign the story to a more objective reporter who hadnt marinated himself in AGW hysteria, Hoyt defended the assignment of Revkin to the Climategate story even though Revkin had at least a tangential connection to the story (which, in Revkins defense, he disclosed). Rather than report that the UEA-CRU had destroyed its own data sets and conspired to blok FoI requests, the Times chose to run stories about how the AGW debate was mainly settled. As far as I know, the Times still has not reported on those aspects of the story, nor about how the UKs Met Office has decided that they will have to rebuild the data the CRU destroyed before they continue to support the conclusions based on the CRU and the IPCC, to which the CRU was a major contributor.
There were a lot more than three alarm bells ringing over this story for the last two weeks. The NYT chose not to listen, and Hoyt does nothing more than provide some weak rationalizations for those decisions.
The growing irrelevance of the complicit, dying Mainstream Media: Now there’s a 3-alarm story!
Related thread:
The Green Mask Is Being Peeled Away From The CO²mmunists All Eyes Now On Copenhagen
The time-honored leftist tactic of dismissing any damming evidence or facts as the rantings of unenlightened, truculent roundheads.
Also a related thread:
Copenhagen climate summit in disarray after 'Danish text' leak
Science advances one funeral at a time.
Odd. I don't recall that reason ever being used whenever the New York Times "obtained" copies of classified documents and printed them.
Oh,...that is different...those were Government documents...see the article...that excuse gets discussed.
So there where lawyers as usual involved. Doesn’t look like their argument is going to hold up if the CRU is a unit within a public operated university. Which it is of course.
Posted by: Gene Man
Dec 07, 09:54 PM
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http://comments.americanthinker.com/read/42323/494229.html
You just need to trust in Smith & Wesson and God of course :)
Bull. That's the crap liberals use for everything - too "complex" for mere mortals. Yeah, right. Maybe it's not too "complex" for most people, just too complex for "can't do math" journalists.
Actually the climate skeptics have made the fake science of global warming very understandable. I know a fake hockey stick graph when I see one...
By the way Mann’s fake graph welded together proxie temperature reading to actual temperature readings. IOW tree ring data up until 1980 is welded onto real world temperature readings.
Why?
To hide the decline and very ineptly.
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Mann has recently claimed that the available proxy data ended in 1980, but even his co-conspirators at RealClimate admit thats nonsense. The truth is that the proxy data was scrapped because unlike those measured, reconstructed temperatures showed a marked decline after 1980. And as the chart plotted temperature anomalies against what the plotters selected as the normal period and temperatures of 1961 to 1990, the reconstruction would have been quite unremarkable otherwise. So at the 1980 mark, the actual post-1980 measurements were attached to the truncated proxy series to create the illusion that they were one.
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/12/understanding_climategates_hid.html
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