Suppose I told you that Santa Claus lived in Santa Barbara. Now suppose you reported in an article that I told you Santa Claus lived in Santa Barbara. Now suppose some “fact checker” slammed you for falsely saying Santa Claus lived in Santa Barbara.
Would the “fact checker” be right?
Obviously not. Because you accurately reported what I told you.
Now, if instead you had simply said, “Santa Claus lives in Santa Barbara,” you’d have been factually wrong (since, as everyone knows, he lives at the North Pole). Then it would have been appropriate for a fact checker to nail you.
Alternatively, since you only reported that I said Santa Claus lived in Santa Barbara, the fact checker could nail me as your source.
But he couldn’t nail you as stating something contrary to fact when you factually reported what I’d said.
Seems like a pretty simple and obvious difference. But maybe not if you’re a “fact checker” named Scott Johnson working with “Climate Feedback” and dedicated to stamping out every challenge to the “overwhelming scientific consensus” that human activity has brought global temperature to unprecedented heights and threatens catastrophe for humanity and the world.
Then, if you read an article in which the author describes a graph published in a scientific source as showing that the Medieval Warm Period and Roman Warm Period were as warm as the present or warmer, you go into attack mode.
You charge the article and its author with factual error, and put Facebook’s strong-arm tactics to work to get the publisher, fearful of economic loss, to retract the article.
Because … global warming, of course. Because it’s going to kill us all, of course. Because we absolutely must abandon fossil fuels and adopt wind and solar come what may, even if it means trapping billions of people in poverty that will shorten more lives by more years than anything having to do with climate change. Because we absolutely must abandon capitalism as the dominant global economic order and adopt socialism since nothing else will stop greedy people from using those evil fuels and frying us all.
I say all the above because of what happened recently when Gregory J. Rummo, who teaches chemistry at Palm Beach Atlantic University and is a Contributing Writer for the Cornwall Alliance, published an article in which he wrote that “a graph” in (meteorologist/climatologist) Dr. Roy W. Spencer’s book An Inconvenient Deception: How Al Gore Distorts Climate Science and Energy Policy “shows two previous periods when temperatures were warmer than they are now; from 1–200 A.D., an epoch called the Roman Warm Period, and more recently the Medieval Warm Period from 900–1100 A.D.”
All that’s necessary for what Greg said to be true is that there have been such a graph in Spencer’s book. And indeed there was. Here it is:
Spencer adapted that graph from its original, published in 2010 in the article “A New Reconstruction of Temperature Variability in the Extra-Tropical Northern Hemisphere During the Last Two Millennia,” by Fedrik Charpentier Ljungqvist, the peer-reviewed journal Geografiska Annaler. Ljungqvist’s graph has been republished many times all over the web, and Geografiska Annaler has never retracted the article in which it first appeared—which entails that it has survived whatever “fact checker” challenges have come its way.
Nonetheless, although Greg accurately described what the graph showed (as in “depicted,” which is distinct from “proved”—no graph proves anything, only the hard data behind it, if reliable and relevant and accurately understood, prove), “fact checker” Johnson swung into action.
And quite a swing he made. Here it is:
Now, as you read the words under “CLAIM,” you think they tell you what Greg wrote, right? And if that’s what Greg wrote, then it’s fair game to contest whether it’s factual. But here’s what Greg really wrote:
A graph of the Earth’s mean temperature over the last 2,000 years shows two previous periods when temperatures were warmer than they are now; from 1–200 A.D., an epoch called the Roman Warm Period, and more recently the Medieval Warm Period from 900–1100 A.D. [Emphasis added.]
Johnson left out the underlined words. And they are absolutely critical to his claim that Greg’s claim was “inaccurate.” Restore them and, since indeed the graph in Spencer’s book did “show two previous periods when temperatures were warmer than they are now,” Greg’s claim is accurate.
In short, the “fact checker” got his “fact” wrong—and in a way that any decent (as in even moderately capable and basically honest) reporter or editor should have noticed.
Indeed, the evidence that Johnson’s “inaccurate” charge was false was right in Johnson’s own article—though he didn’t notice it. Just inches below what’s shown in the screenshot above is this:
So Johnson knew that what Greg wrote was only that “A graph of the Earth’s mean temperature … shows two previous periods ….”
But apparently Johnson couldn’t abide the thought that anyone would question the notion that the Earth is warmer today than at any time in the past 2,000 years. But he couldn’t challenge the scientific credibility of the graph as originally published in Geografiska Annaler, so he resorted to misrepresenting an author in a non-refereed publication instead.
You can read some of the backstory on this in Hannah Harris’s “The fake news police: Who checks Facebook’s fact checkers?” in World Magazine. And when you do, don’t miss Marvin Olasky’s followup, “What are the facts?”, in which he cites a major new scholarly history that credits, in part, the Roman Warm Period, aka Roman Climate Optimum, covering the two centuries before and after the birth of Christ, for Rome’s great growth—and blames the reversion to cooling afterward, in part, for Rome’s collapse.
So either Johnson lied or he wasn’t bright enough, or careful enough, to notice the difference chopping out those first four words made.
Fact checker, heal thyself.
David Hawks says
Great truthful articles!
In addition to there not being any global cooling or global warming (Climate Change) caused by man, there is NO SUCH THING as “Fossil Fuel(s)”. It seems that everyone has been taught that ridiculous non-Biblical nonsense for many years. Why is it non-Biblical? For many reasons but the two main ones fly directly in the face of God’s Word. We have been taught the lie that “Fossil Fuel” is created from dead dinosaurs (and other animals) being under pressure below the surface of the earth for millions of years.
According to God, the earth is only around 6,000 years old, NOT millions of years old. There would have had to have been millions of dinosaurs (a very congested earth even if that theory included other animals and plants) to produce the amount of oil that has been pumped out even in the past 100 years. Nothing died until after Adam and Eve sinned, so that theory is and has been totally fabricated and propagandized to make people think we’re running out of petroleum and that it’s creating environmental conditions and climate change which will destroy the planet. According to God NO ONE will destroy the earth except God himself.
God also tells us that when people die their bodies returns to dirt (dust) NOT OIL. When animals, regardless of their size, die, they also rot and turn into dirt., NOT OIL, no matter how deep, regardless of how much pressure they have been under, and regardless of how long. If they die in a cataclysmic event such as The Flood of Noah’s day, they may be quickly buried under tons of pressure, but that only leaves a fossil, NOT Fossil Fuel.
In summary, there will be petroleum as long as it’s needed as it is produced from the hot gasses in the center of the earth working through their way through cracks and fissures to the earth’s surface and cooling through that journey which results in petroleum oil and natural gas. Rest assured that God is always in control and He alone is the ultimate source of Truth.