Dr. Hansen & The Bush Administration
One blogger has connected this testimony by Dr. Hansen as Bush being the worse President the Bill of Rights has had. Obviously I have asked this person – repeatedly – over time to tell me which rights have been taken from me and him. I have yet (over the months of asking this question periodically) to get an answer.
In my son’s school he is shown Al Gores movie, but there is no counter-point offered. This is more “naziesque” (as Kimba alluded to.") than a scientist campaigning for the Democrats, which is really what Dr. Hansen is doing.
In fact, Dr. Hansen made the same complaint during the 2004 election year in the same speech in which he endorsed Sen. John Kerry for president against his boss, George W. Bush. Using the logic that Dr. Hansen has more weight on this issue than say Dr. Fred Singer, and that Dr. Hansen should have his views taught even more (even though the evidence shows otherwise), just because he is the director of the Goddard Institute…then I shall proffer that because Dr. Robert Jastrow was the founding “father” of the Goddard Institute, we should have every high school teach from his book “God and the Astronomers.” Dr. Jastrow was the founding director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies and is the director of the Mount Wilson Institute.
I would argue that Dr. Jastrow’s well-founded, middle of the road questions are kept out of the public arena more than that of the Anthropogenic Global Warming Hoax!
Some great audio to listen to:
Dr. Avery talks with Michael Medved about Global Warming
Chris Horner talks to Michael Medved about Global Warming
I will now post Robert Novak’s column on this matter.
The Unmuzzled Scientist
By Robert D. Novak
Monday, April 3, 2006
James E. Hansen, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, has been telling the world that story for many years. Nor was his charge that the science is being covered up by the Bush administration anything new. He made that complaint during the 2004 election year in the same speech in which he endorsed Sen. John Kerry for president against his boss, George W. Bush.
If that suggests Dr. Hansen is more political than a scientist ought to be, the dispute over whether the
In his "60 Minutes" interview, Hansen gave the impression of a faithful government scientist who, frustrated by politicians, at long last dared to speak out. Asserting the need to reduce CO2 emissions, Hansen warned: "If that doesn't start within 10 years, I don't think we can keep additional global warning under 1 degree Celsius. And that means there's a great danger of passing some of these tipping points. If the ice sheets once begin to disintegrate, what can you do about it?"
Hansen sounded much the same alarm in 1988, when he energized the global warming movement by predicting a temperature rise of 0.8 degrees Fahrenheit over the next 10 years. When the actual rise in surface temperatures over the decade was only 0.2 degrees, Hansen stepped back from his earlier predictions.
"The forcings that drive long-term climate change are not known with an accuracy sufficient to define future climate change," Hansen wrote in 1998. He later admitted devising "extreme scenarios" about global warming to get the attention of "decision-makers."
As the fiercely contested presidential election of 2004 neared its end, an obviously unmuzzled Hansen declared publicly he was muzzled. Speaking at the University of Iowa on Oct. 26 that year, he declared: "In my more than three decades in government, I have never seen anything approaching the degree to which information flow from scientists to the public has been screened and controlled as it is now." At that same event, Hansen said he was voting for Kerry. In short, if you want the truth about environmental peril, you better get rid of Bush.
Hansen stepped up his rhetoric last December with a lecture calling for an immediate reduction in emissions. In a January New York Times interview, he said the Bush administration was trying to silence him. In February, he told an enthusiastic audience at the
Roy Spencer, a research scientist for the
In concluding the Hansen segment on "60 Minutes," CBS correspondent Scott Pelley said: "For months, we've been trying to talk to the president's science adviser, but we were finally told he would never be available." White House communications director Nicolle Wallace told me: "'60 Minutes' never contacted the press office." Assuming both statements are accurate, they resulted in a one-sided political presentation that ignored the real scientific debate.
Robert Novak is a syndicated columnist and editor of the Evans-Novak Political Report