Posted on 07/13/2004 4:19:32 PM PDT by Taka No Kimi
What makes a horror movie so terrifying? Its not just the plotline, script and score. Its being in a dark theater, where everyone is just waiting to be scared half to death. Its the audiences willingness to suspend logic, and enter the directors make-believe world. Maybe most of all, its the special effects monsters, destruction and mayhem that practically convince us its all real.
So it is with the supposed apocalypse of global warming. Climate change catastrophe theorists have crafted a clever script, generated some good computer what-ifs, and produced a pretty convincing fright flick. The only thing missing was a score by James Horner, whose music helped make Aliens so edge-of-the-seat scary and some Hollywood-style special effects (sfx).
Now, though, The Day After Tomorrow is about to address the musical and sfx oversight in a hundred-million-dollar extravaganza that breaks new ground in combining horror, propaganda and manipulation of history and science to serve political agendas. With the Kyoto Protocol now a stiffening corpse on the global stage, producer Roland Emmerich is also gunning to bring the heroic treaty back to life, a la Han Solo rising out of his carbonite tomb.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Union of Concerned Scientists, Pew Center, Senators Lieberman and McCain, and other publicists will do everything in their power to make this film a veritable fright night of what will happen if we continue to burn fossil fuels. Global temperatures could soar ten degrees, they wail. Tropical diseases will kill millions. Polar ice caps will melt, inundating coastal cities. The US will become a vast desert. And hurricanes and tornadoes will destroy whatever communities rising seas and tidal waves dont.
Its the stuff of nightmares. Fortunately, there is little evidence that this apocalyptic future is anything other than Michael Moore and Hollywood celluloid. Here are the facts behind the classic climate change horror movie subplots.
Frankenclime! Satellites and weather balloon data show no appreciable atmospheric warming since 1979, except in Alaska and Siberia, at night, in mid-winter. Except for those who think a 1-degree rise over the past century is alarming and most of that was pre-1940 theres little to fear. Some surface temperature gauges do show more warming, but theyre near cities and airports, and thus contaminated by exhaust heat.
Climate swings are nothing new. Between 800 and 1300 AD, much of the world was several degrees warmer than today. People grew wine grapes in England, figs in Germany, assorted crops in Greenland. Then came the Little Ice Age, and temperatures considerably colder than today persisted until the climate warmed again around 1900. The likely cause? Changes in the suns energy output, or perhaps the Earths elliptical orbit, say Harvard-Smithsonian scientists Sallie Baliunas and Willie Soon.
Mosquito! Malaria, yellow and dengue fever are related to the absence of vaccines, pesticides, screens and other health care measures, not to temperatures, tropical disease expert Dr. Paul Reiter points out. Wisconsin had malaria outbreaks in the 1880s; yellow fever claimed 19,000 lives in Memphis in 1878; and 2,000 people got dengue fever in one Mexican border town in 1995, while Texas reported only seven cases.
Water World! Sea levels have been rising at seven inches or more a century since the last ice age. Unless there is another Little Ice Age, they will continue rising at roughly this rate for centuries to come. As to open water in the Arctic, it happens every year in late summer following weeks in the 40s and 50s.
Twister! The number and severity of storms, hurricanes and tornadoes is actually decreasing. Property damage may be going up, but thats because people are building more expensive homes in low-lying coastal areas.
The worst tornado ever to hit the U.S. was a mile wide, lasted 3 hours, killed 700 people and leveled entire communities along its 220-mile path across three states in 1925. Meanwhile, the frequency of droughts, heat waves and cold snaps has changed little over the past century.
Our understanding of complex weather and climate patterns is still relatively poor, and todays computer models are too primitive to predict next years climate much less the climate for 2050. Thats why the models actually generate scenarios, not predictions. Politicians, journalists and pressure groups can then select the scariest scenarios of the bunch, and trumpet them far and wide in an effort to persuade countries to adopt restrictive energy and economic policies. Thats what theyve been doing, and The Day After Tomorrow merely takes the tactic a step further.
When we come out of a horror movie, we know it was just a movie. We might have a nightmare or two, but we dont turn our lifestyles upside down to protect ourselves from special effects raptors, aliens and Freddies.
We need to take that same approach to climate change. Support continued atmospheric observations, even-handed research, better computer modeling, and new technologies that use less fuel and emit fewer pollutants. But resist policy prescriptions that are based on Halloween hobgoblins, conjured up by the special effects masters of climate alarmism.
Most of all, we mustnt let climate alarmism justify denying electrical power and economic development to our Earths poorest people -- two billion of whom still do not have electricity, and must burn cow dung or wood for cooking and heating. Four million infants, children and mothers die every year from lung infections caused by breathing the toxic smoke. Millions more succumb to diseases caused by tainted water and spoiled food because there is no electricity to purify water, refrigerate food or operate clinics.
These people need a precautionary principle that safeguards them from these very real, immediate, life-threatening dangers not one that protects them (and us) from theoretical, exaggerated or imaginary climate change cataclysms.
We must put humanity back into the environmental debate, says Niger Innis, national spokesman for the Congress of Racial Equality. We all want to protect our planet. But we must stop trying to protect it from minor or illusory threats and doing it on the backs, and the graves, of the worlds most powerless and impoverished people.
THE scariest movie I have ever seen was "The Haunting of Hill House".
I watched it on Halloween about six years ago and had to sleep with the lights on.
How did you know if the lights were on if you were asleep? If you knew then you weren't asleep. Someone could have come in and turned them off just to scare you but if you were asleep you wouldn't notice.
Oh, Man! I need to run off to the store for some No-Doze!
I hear creepy bass register organ music already!
If there isn't an organ near by, you may be in real trouble.
Well, not that kind of organ!
/rimshot
If the organ is making strange sounds, you really may be in trouble.
Just those squeals at being admired for his stature.
Don't scare it.
I don't have an organ...so I put a condom on my piano, and I've never been sick since.
Not me. He rises to the occasion whenever I am near. (Lucky me!)
LOL I love your tagline, btw.
Thanks.
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