Posted on 03/25/2015 11:15:43 AM PDT by Impala64ssa
A New York Times environmental reporter told Columbia University journalism students that presenting balance in an article about global warming is tantamount to perpetuating a lie.
It is a lie to say that global warming poses no danger, New York Times reporter Justin Gillis told students after a screening of the movie Merchants of Doubt, reports The Federalist.
Journalists care about the truththats my only care in life, to find the truth, Gillis said. To act as if the evidence is half and half is to tell a lie. I refuse to perpetuate that lie.
This is much like the abortion wars: what term you use signals what side you are on, Gillis said, adding that its necessary for reporters to maintain a facade of impartiality.
Gillis told students he liked to use the word deniers for people who oppose climate science, and that these people should never be called skeptics.
Gillis recently made headlines for a report on funding Harvard-Smithsonian scientist Willie Soon got from fossil fuel interests. Gillis wrote that Soon did not disclose that the funding came from an energy company that used coal, arguing the failure to disclose constituted a conflict of interest.
The New York Times report sparked a congressional investigation into the finances of scientists who have challenged the Obama administrations views on global warming. Lawmakers also inquired after industry groups and free market think tanks about their funding of science. Gillis reporting also included quotes from Harvard historian Naomi Oreskes, the co-author of the book that became the documentary Merchants of Doubt.
The documentary by Food Inc. director Robert Kenner attempts to paint global warming skeptics as old Cold Warriors who are paranoid that climate issues are another proxy for socialism. The film also attempts to argue that the fossil fuel industry has taken a page out of the tobacco industry playbook by funding slick PR-types and shady scientists to cast doubt on global warming.
Interestingly enough, Gillis New York Times report, which featured Oreskes, came out just three weeks before Merchants of Doubt was released. Gillis also quoted former Greenpeace activist Kert Davies who has been giving information out to the press about Soon since 2009.
After the NY Times story came out, Davies wrote in his blog that we have an idea for coming clean, a remedy the illustrious Smithsonian Institution should sponsor free screenings nationwide of the upcoming theatrical film Merchants of Doubt, pay for school kids everywhere to go see it.
Maybe half a million dollars worth of screenings, added Davies, who now heads up the Climate Investigations Center.
In the days that followed Gilliss report, other news outlets began poking holes in accusations that Soon violated conflict of interest standards. Bloggers even pointed out that other scientists who similarly got money from institutions with ties to fossil fuels companies that were not disclosed.
“Stop quoting Galileo! He is wrong! The Earth is the center of the universe!”
SOP for the liberal agenda; deny the validity of any POV that differs from yours w/o regard to facts or logic.
Gillis should explain to the students how buying Carbon Credits from billionaires like Al Gore helps stop Global Warming and holds back the rise of the seas.
They probably aren’t educated enough to understand such a nuanced concept without an explanation from someone with an in depth understanding of the issue - someone like Gillis.
It's sort've like Neil deGrasse Tyson who popped off yesterday abut the stupidity of AGW "deniers." I have the same question for him: what gives an astrophysicist/cosmologist the specific background to comment authoritatively on Earth's climate? He's got his elitist head up his Black Hole (I am speaking astronomically, not racially). If I want to know what's happened to Earth's climate in the past I go to historical geologists -- who, by the way, blow the AGW nonsense to smithereens. But that's real science, not Gorebull/U.N. propaganda.
Duh. UN employees themselves have admitted climate change is a proxy for socialism.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.