lumigan tramadol tadalafil

Alistair Woodward: High Priest of the Climate Bible

2010-08-27
By
IPCC AR 5

IPCC Assessment Report 5

The past three editions of the United Nations’ climate bible have each included a chapter on the effect global warming is expected to have on human health. A new edition (known as Assessment Report 5 or AR5) is currently underway, with the health chapter being led by two people.

Rita Colwell, a prominent American microbiologist, is a newcomer to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) process. Alistair Woodward, on the other hand, is a veteran of all three previous versions of the health chapter. It seems fair to infer, therefore, that he will set the tone.

Woodward is a New Zealand professor who began his professional life as a medical doctor with training in public health. He holds a PhD in epidemiology (the study of disease in populations as a whole) and currently heads the University of Auckland’s School of Population Health.

For the 1995 version of the climate bible, Woodward was a contributing author. For the 2001 edition, he served as a review editor. By the 2007 edition he’d become a lead author.

Although the climate bible is supposed to provide the world with a dispassionate account of what the scientific literature contains, its authors often seem to be activists first and scholars second.

Woodward is a prime example. His online academic bio page lists ten 2009 publications of which he is the author or co-author. Fully half of these deal with climate change, and the three published in The New Zealand Medical Journal are especially revealing.

The first, about carbon pricing, appeared in February 2009. Its final three paragraphs amount to a political rallying cry. Health professionals, it says, should advocate “action on climate change.” They should share their views with a committee examining New Zealand’s proposed emissions trading scheme. And they should “join in action with other health professionals globally in preparation for the next United Nations climate change conference in Copenhagen.” (Regarding this last point, readers are advised to contact the authors for further information.)

Eight months later Woodward’s name was second on a paper written by 26 individuals – most of whom work in the field of public health (aka the activist wing of the medical establishment). That paper says New Zealand “should at least halve its greenhouse gas emissions by 2020? and warns that this target “may be too lenient” since “reducing the risk of catastrophic climate change may require deeper cuts” [bold added].

Here it’s worth mentioning the views of a prominent UK climate scientist published by the BBC back in 2006. As director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, Mike Hulme had become concerned about the way activists were framing these issues. In his words:

The language of catastrophe is not the language of science…To state that climate change will be “catastrophic” hides a cascade of value-laden assumptions which do not emerge from empirical or theoretical science.

Hulme says the tendency to resort to “the language of fear, terror and disaster” has “been seen in other areas of public health risk.” He says such language is inaccurate, counter-productive, and “a political and rhetorical device.”

When people talk about catastrophic climate change they’ve abandoned the firm ground of science and have stepped into the quicksand of politics. Yet Woodward’s paper contains no shortage of this kind of language. It talks about “runaway climate collapse,” “tipping points,” and “potentially unstoppable” climate change. It says there is a need for “concerted action…before it is too late” and that the situation is “extremely urgent.” It cites four Greenpeace reports and two World Wildlife Fund documents.

Doctors are told they must “mobilise society” and that they “cannot be inactive observers” because they have a “responsibility to lead.” Inaction, they are advised, would amount to “negligence and malpractice on a global scale.” This is followed by a list of 13 things they should do – sorted into three categories.

The majority of these suggestions (seven) fall into the political category, two more are in the personal category, while another four are categorized as professional. The evidence could not be clearer. This is not a paper about medicine. By the authors’ own admission, nine of their 13 suggested measures are unrelated to doctors’ professional lives.

(One of those suggestions is that they “educate and encourage” their patients “in climate change action.” The day my doctor starts talking about climate change is the day I find myself a professional who understands that the purpose of a medical consultation is to discuss my issues – not theirs.)

So what does the third article authored by Woodward (and eight others) say? Its overtly political tenor is revealed by its title: “Climate science, denial and the Declaration of Delhi.” As “a profession and as global citizens, we need to move beyond dissent and denial,” it declares [italics added].

In the world inhabited by these authors there is “true” or “appropriate” skepticism – and then there is “counterproductive ‘denialism’”. In their world, there is “legitimate argument” – and then there are ideas that are “dangerous.”

During 2009, therefore, The New Zealand Medical Journal published three papers by Alistair Woodward. Each of these demonstrates a propensity for full-blown climate change activism. This is a man who derides dissent and who thinks doctors should be discussing politics with their patients. Nevertheless, in June of this year, the IPCC put him in charge of its health chapter.

If the IPCC had sincerely looked for an above-the-fray individual to oversee an impartial literature review, would it really have chosen someone like Woodward? This organization says it provides “rigorous and balanced scientific information to decision makers.” But when it makes selections such as this one, everyone can see it isn’t serious.

Donna Laframboise publishes nofrakkingconsensus.wordpress.com

Tags: , , , , ,

266 views
Didn't make Oprah's Book Club. And Ronnie doesn't care. Man up. Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.


  • mememine69

    Anyone who supported the Climate Change mistake after 24 years of needless panic was an unconscionable fear mongering liar. Climate Change was the very measure and litmus test of honesty and virtue. To have wished for the CO2 mistake to have been true was sick and inhuman. History has a special place for you intellectual fossils and witch burners of climate change.
    You tried like cowards to scare our kids and it is they who are now leading the wave of denier rage and payback.

  • Roger F. Gay

    I recall the original descriptions of MND content, which was rather broad (although with a special focus). It looks like the original description posted at Alexa.com has been changed; but here are two old reviews.

    Men’s News Daily is a tabloid-style news page that shines light on men’s issues from an international perspective. It’s daily news unfiltered by political correctness and pampered journalism. Topics include divorce, marriage, child support, sex, religion, health, national and international politics, science, and technology.

    MensNewsDaily combines the convenience of a news link site with commentary from some of the best thinkers of our age. Their mission is truth; a rather high aspiration, but realistic when finally bringing much of the PC nonsense into the debate arena instead of blindly adapting to it. As the name implies, men will like the site, but also women who don’t appreciate being mindless drones in the extremist left feminist army. You will in fact find articles by enlightened women at the site. The editors choices for headline links are right on target for getting the biggest national and international stories of the day, and there are categorized links for additional national and international articles as well as articles related to the ongoing political war against fathers. This is a site to visit regularly for those who feel brain-washed by the old media and want to think like real people for a change.

  • Roger F. Gay

    I’d like to comment on the relevancy issue, particularly regarding global warming. I’ve written a ton of fathers’ rights related articles, particularly related to my expertise on the child support issue (as well as some broader coverage and related political news and commentary). I experienced a natural progression from the specific to the general. The child support problem, along with many men’s issues that are directly related to government policy, are the product of corruption. In Are Americans Paying Taxes to Organized Crime Syndicates?, I discussed the general formula of corruption; illustrating with child support, global warming, and health reform.

    Not only are all these issues men’s issues (i.e. we’re all effected by them), they are all related. And I also think that the more the general public understands the nature of the corruption, the easier it is for them to understand the corruption more specifically related to the narrower concept of “men’s issues.” Discussing the general issue and related issues does provide benefit to the specific focuse issues in my opinion.

  • Mr.K

    While off “iceberg” topic, will the returning soldiers be treated with money like VAWA?
    http://behavioralhealthcentral.com/index.php/20100808234246/Inside-Scoop/many-working-to-ease-vet-burdens-groups-adjust-treatments-to-address-ptsd-and-substance-abuse-detroit-free-press.html
    Or will they be treated like the “Bonus Army”
    http://millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident/events/07_28
    Congress had passed a bill in 1924 to pay a bonus to World War I veterans, the bonus was not due to be paid out until 1945. In 1931, Congress passed a Bonus Loan bill, which allowed veterans to receive an advance on their bonus. Hoover vetoed the bill but Congress passed it over his veto. In 1932, as the Great Depression deepened, veterans’ organizations began to lobby for an additional loan on the bonus

  • http://avoiceformen.com/ Paul Elam

    At pj1, and all.

    I have to say in defense of what might appear to be fair criticism that MR. K is quite correct. If anyone wants to contribute and can provide relevant, high quality and original content for this site, then there is a link to the submission guidelines that I wrote as one of my first orders of business in coming here a year ago now.

    I have myself written about 80 articles in that year, enough for a decent length book. Almost all of it on men’s issues. I have not received nor have I expected a dime for any of it.

    Mike LaSalle has managed every technical aspect of this site since its inception, and has done more than he will ever be acknowledged for in getting information on men in western culture out to the world at large.

    So, if you, pj1, or those who have registered their approval for your comment could “fill this website up with RELEVANT information with little to no effort at all,” by all means, roll up your sleeves and start DOING it.

    You may find, though, that what you think is effortless is actually a lot of hard work, with very few people actually doing anything to help. You may find it is an absolute set up for burn out for those who do it.

    And while you may not see the relevance in the war on drugs and climate, there are, at the very least, dedicated people actually contributing their passion and hard work to that as well.

    I do not mean to come off as rude, but if you want something to change, please consider that it happens in the trenches, not in the comment section.

    If you want to volunteer to help this website, I can put you to WORK right now.

  • http://www.cyclotronmajesty.net CM

    Yes I agree – there seems to be a loss of relevancy going on. Forget Pot and climate change please. There are plenty of people fighting that battle. Nobody is fighting for us.

  • Mr.K

    pj1,
    Your quote,
    “I could fill this website up with RELEVANT information with little to no effort at all. ”
    Not long ago Paul Elam pleaded readers to volunteer to be contributor. My recollection is that three agreed, but I’m not sure where they are posting.
    I am grateful to Mike LaSalle and Paul Elam for their efforts, but I tend to agree with you that MRA relevancy has faded. Someone posted that this is Men’s News Daily not MRA, but initially I had the impression that MRA was the focus.
    pj1. If you could “I could fill this website up with RELEVANT information with little to no effort at all. ” . I and others would appreciate. The Editor in Chief and Publisher would hopefully also.

  • pj1

    This website has diluted the focus of the current and severe violation of men’s rights into a site that has little REAL relevance to the larger issues at hand for men in this country. I am not anti-marijuana, nor do I consider an Occasional “climate gate” topic relevant, but I think that the many pro-marijuana advocacy groups are already much more organized than any group advocating for men. And a MRA issues are remotely tied to climate debates except in regard to the partisan lines. So, why dilute men’s right issues even one bit as there isn’t enough advocacy in the first place. You could easily turn this into a pro-gun blog or a anti-tax blog or anything else that smacks of libertarian causes, but these should be tertiary to the current mess of gender affairs. Men’s rights deserve to get more relevant attention here, and hopefully better advocacy in general. Instead the MRA movement is a bunch or weirdos… who are not effective at anything.

    The radical feminist’s are on verge of giving anyone with a XY choromosonal makeup legalized second class status mandated by our local, state and federal government. A complete and thorough takeover of the school systems and courts in this country has occured. The complexity of this issue is so alrge, and the relevancy of this website is becoming so small that mensnewsdaily is becoming a bit pathetic.

    How about advocating promising new books like “How Obama’s Gender Policies Undermine America” instead of the usual “lets toke up mon and whine about the right to get high or not…”

    Here is a description of the book, for those of you still interested in Men’s rights, or what is left of them anyway.

    Women are riding out the recession more easily than men, with a lower unemployment rate and a higher percentage attaining high school diplomas and Bachelor and Master degrees. Yet President Obama and Congress, responding to fierce feminist lobbying, propose to expand preferences for women in both education and hiring. Whereas original feminists portrayed women as equal to men, the 21st century feminist message is that women cannot succeed without affirmative action

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1594035393/ref=pe_5050_16649410_snp_dp

    Or Look at this:

    http://boston.com/community/blogs/culture_club/2010/08/why_are_boys_falling_behind.html?p1=Features_link5

    I could fill this website up with RELEVANT information with little to no effort at all. The dominant paradigm of our times is radical feminism. We live in target rich environment for scrutiny of this institutionalized hate movement, and MSD offers info about pot and climate? C’mon.. Relevancy, only a little bit.







Right.

Man up.

Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.

Search