I would not be much of a scientist if I accepted conjecture based solely on 
authority. My reason for not accepting the view that CO2 causes current global 
warming is based on my acceptance of conjecture related to the effect of water 
vapour on the energy of the atmosphere, and it's variation, relative to the 
effect of CO2, conjectures for which there are actual data. I have done my own 
analysis for my own sake and come to my own conclusions, but saying CO2 causes 
global warming to me is like saying someone throwing a bucket of water into the 
Pacific Ocean in Hawaii caused the tragic Tsunami in Japan last year.

As for attacking me personally, even if I worked for the coal industry itself, 
so what? If CO2 is not causing global warming it is not, what I do has no 
effect on that. I am somewhat fortunate that I don't have to sell myself out to 
some political establishment though (I don't have to get grants from 
politically biased granting agencies). If I did research the issue I would 
probably look at things like "development" and the way we manipulate watersheds 
as a human cause of global warming over CO2, and thus would fail, so I am lucky!

Nice thing about where I work is that while we have a tiny endowment, our 
students graduate with the least debt of any school in the US. No Greek 
columns, no art galleries, no mahogany garbage cans, but then we don't force 
students into massive debt to support such things either. As for the coal, IMHO 
the coal is worth more in the ground than it is to mine it presently, IMHO. 
Maybe after generations of being ruthlessly exploited by commercial and 
consumer interests for the sake of cheap electricity to run air conditioners 
and computers, people around here might get a good return on their labour once 
it starts costing a person like you the equivalent of @2000.00 per month to 
heat your home to 68 degrees in the winter, something that is just around the 
corner IMHO.

The thing that bothers me about this sort of issue is the effect it has on 
Ecology a a science though. I have seen go from being required in every school 
I have known to not being so required (it is here though), and I blame that 
decline on the emphasis on political hackery that has developed in Ecology over 
the past generation. I applaud your desire to stand up for your political view, 
but it they are not science and they are not Ecology, and when any science 
exists to serve politics, it ceases to be real science, IMHO.

Rob Hamilton


-----Original Message-----
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news on behalf of David L. 
McNeely
Sent: Mon 12/5/2011 1:49 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] What Can I DO?? Re: [ECOLOG-L] Message from Paul Ehrlich
 
Well, I don't know exactly how to respond to such a claim from a professional 
biologist.  Could the importance of the coal industry to the endowment of Alice 
Lloyd and other economic entities in Kentucky have anything to do with this 
outrageous claim?  How much credible science is needed to convince you?  Does 
the fact that the world's leading climatologists and the National Academies of 
Science all disagree with you matter?  Does the fact that the "conflict" you 
claim comes from fewer than 1% of all reports on the question, while those few 
reports lack credible analysis matter?

Sincerely, David McNeely

---- Robert Hamilton <[email protected]> wrote: 
> Science works to persuade when it provides real data, not weak
> hypotheticals. Consider the issue of ozone vs CO2. Lots of real data on
> ozone, nothing but political hackery on CO2, so we get some action on
> ozone and nothing but conflict on CO2. However, we are only as strong as
> our weakest link, so the CO2 argument defines us.
> 
> Robert Hamilton, PhD
> Professor of Biology
> Alice Lloyd College
> Pippa Passes, KY 41844
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Bowles, Elizabeth Davis
> Sent: Monday, December 05, 2011 12:07 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] What Can I DO?? Re: [ECOLOG-L] Message from Paul
> Ehrlich
> 
> Social and environmental psychologists have known for some time now that
> knowledge does not change *behavior* and that information-only campaigns
> rarely are effective.  This is because, as opposed to commercial
> marketing campaigns, usually you are asking the public to give something
> up, step out of social norms, or do something that does not reap
> immediate benefits to them.  This requires a completely different
> approach, including removing perceived or structural barriers to
> sustainable behavior.  Ecologists should strongly consider collaborating
> with psychologists on any outreach program in which a behavior change in
> the public is the goal. 
> 
> See this paper in conservation biology:
> http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2011.01766.x/full
> 
> and this website:
> http://www.cbsm.com/pages/guide/fostering-sustainable-behavior/
> 
> and this report from the APA:
> http://www.apa.org/science/about/publications/climate-change.aspx
>  
> Beth Davis Bowles, Ph.D.
> Research Specialist
> Bull Shoals Field Station
> Missouri State University
> 901 S. National
> Springfield, MO  65897
> phone (417) 836-3731
> fax (417) 836-8886
> ________________________________________
> From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
> [[email protected]] On Behalf Of David L. McNeely
> [[email protected]]
> Sent: Monday, December 05, 2011 9:55 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] What Can I DO?? Re: [ECOLOG-L] Message from Paul
> Ehrlich
> 
> ---- Steve Young <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Lawren et al.,
> > Unfortunately, I think you may be preaching to the choir. I'm not 
> > trying to be pessimistic, but if every ESA member were to follow 
> > through and commit to the 'doing something', instead of just 'talking 
> > more', what would that accomplish? Just going by the numbers, 
> > conservatively speaking, ESA membership is around 10,000 and according
> 
> > to the Census Bureau, the current population in the US is 312,718,825 
> > (
> > http://www.census.gov/population/www/popclockus.html) So, what do we 
> > do about the other 312,708,000?
> > I'm in the education arena and it is a question that I've been trying 
> > to figure out how to answer for a long time. I know advocacy is one 
> > way and something I work on all the time. Maybe this should be part of
> 
> > the focus of the 'doing something' approach.
> > Steve
> 
> I believe when we help to educate others we are doing something.  I'm
> funny that way, I guess.
> 
> The difficulty comes when our educational efforts fail, as they seem to
> be doing on this matter.  So, I need help in knowing what to do that
> will actually work.  So far as individual effort, I already try to buy
> only what I need and to use old stuff.  I minimize my fuel use by
> driving a Toyota Prius, walking for local transportation when I can, not
> using air conditioning though I live in a very hot climate, wearing warm
> clothing and keeping the house cool in winter ................ .  But I
> have not been able to persuade many others to engage in the same
> actions.  Reading and understanding the data that come in seems
> unconvincing to so many.  Science is only trusted when it reinforces
> already held beliefs, even if less than 1% of those claiming to be
> scientists provide the claims that reinforce.
> 
> So, what can I do?
> 
> David McNeely
> 
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--
David McNeely




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