RUSH: Here’s Mark in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Hello, sir, and welcome.
CALLER: Rush, you called it on global warming. NBC last night. (pause) Rush?
RUSH: We have the sound bite of that, too. Mike, grab audio sound bite #5. I wasn’t even going into get this, this was so ridiculous, but since you brought it up and it was a See, I Told You So, here is NBC science correspondent Robert Bazell and his report on the hurricane last night.
BAZELL (Breathlessly): Even with a slight
RUSH: Now, once something like this gets going, folks, there’s no stopping it. It’s got an inertia of its own,
“Most published scientific research papers are wrong, according to a new analysis. Assuming that the new paper is itself correct, problems with experimental and statistical methods mean that there is less than a 50% chance that the results of any randomly chosen scientific paper are true. John Ioannidis, an epidemiologist at the University of Ioannina School of Medicine in Greece, says that small sample sizes, poor study design, researcher bias, and selective reporting and other problems combine to make most research findings false. But even large, well-designed studies are not always right, meaning that scientists and the public have to be wary of reported findings. ‘We should accept that most research findings will be refuted. Some will be replicated and validated. The replication process is more important than the first discovery,’ Ioannidis says. In the paper, Ioannidis does not show that any particular findings are false. Instead, he shows statistically how the many obstacles to getting research findings right combine to make most published research wrong,” and this is not an editorial opinion. This is statistically, and it’s based on study, and then to follow that, we have this from the Guardian in the UK:
“Some of America’s leading scientists have accused Republican politicians of intimidating climate-change experts by placing them under unprecedented scrutiny. A far-reaching inquiry into the careers of three of the US’s most senior climate specialists has been launched by Joe Barton, the chairman of the House of Representatives committee on energy and commerce. He has demanded details of all their sources of funding, methods and everything they have ever published.” He damn well should! We now know — even before we knew it; we could assume, accurately so — that much of this is just opinion. Much of this is bias brought on by the nature of the political leaning of a particular group of scientists or individual scientists, and then you look at where they get their funding and of course it all makes sense to examine what the outcome of their research is. Now, the Guardian says:
“Mr. Barton, a Texan closely associated with the fossil fuel lobby, has spent his 11 years as chairman opposing every piece of legislation designed to combat climate change.” You know why? It’s not possible! It’s a waste of money. It isn’t possible. Folks, use logic — and there’s a German government minister, in an Oslo newspaper today, who said our failure to sign the Kyoto accords and reduce our pollution is why this hurricane happened and why it’s so devastating. That’s
It popped up again a week later as tropical depression 12. They said, “It’s the same tropical depression, but because there’s been some time since it dissipated we’re going to name it 12 rather than keep it ten,” and so ten then became Katrina, and then it became tropical storm, and then it became Hurricane Katrina, and we watched it all the way out in the Atlantic, approach Florida, go across Florida into the gulf. All this time, we knew that it was a hurricane, and we knew it was headed for parts of America that it could be very destructive. Could we stop it? Is there
Well, what they’re saying is, “Sea temperatures, Rush! The sea temperatures out there! They are scalding hot, and as you have said yourself, that’s like throwing gasoline on a hot fire.”
Well, what’s making the ocean temperature higher?
“Well, Rush, global warming.”
No, I don’t think so. Because global warming, if you look at any of these wackos who predict it, global warming, they talk about the polar ice caps melting. That’s where they talk about the warming take place, and what would that do? That would send cooler water south, and this is what the hurricane experts are saying. Global warming would actually
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