Nuremberg-style trials for global warming skeptics
#1
Posted 2006-October-12, 11:39
The above link says that some people are proposing "Nuremberg-style" trials for people who are skeptical about humans being the cause of global warming. The link goes so far as to claim that human-caused GW skepticism is a "crime against humanity." As opinion is soon to be a crime, I just lobotomized myself. I am a sheep now.
#2
Posted 2006-October-12, 11:49
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#3
Posted 2006-October-12, 12:18
#4
Posted 2006-October-12, 12:27
bid_em_up, on Oct 12 2006, 09:49 AM, said:
This caused my first chuckle of the day. Good one.
#5
Posted 2006-October-12, 12:32
DrTodd13, on Oct 12 2006, 12:39 PM, said:
The above link says that some people are proposing "Nuremberg-style" trials for people who are skeptical about humans being the cause of global warming. The link goes so far as to claim that human-caused GW skepticism is a "crime against humanity." As opinion is soon to be a crime, I just lobotomized myself. I am a sheep now.
Opinions are crimes in many countries and people are put on trial all the time for them. See Italy and what they list as hate speech and who they arrest.
I am not sure are you saying they should be or that it should be a crime and they should be put on trial for putting opinions on trial? Or we do nothing and just put our heads in the sand?
#6
Posted 2006-October-12, 12:44
mike777, on Oct 12 2006, 10:32 AM, said:
DrTodd13, on Oct 12 2006, 12:39 PM, said:
The above link says that some people are proposing "Nuremberg-style" trials for people who are skeptical about humans being the cause of global warming. The link goes so far as to claim that human-caused GW skepticism is a "crime against humanity." As opinion is soon to be a crime, I just lobotomized myself. I am a sheep now.
Opinions are crimes in many countries and people are put on trial all the time for them. See Italy and what they list as hate speech and who they arrest.
I am not sure are you saying they should be or that it should be a crime and they should be put on trial for putting opinions on trial? Or we do nothing and just put our heads in the sand?
My understanding is that holocaust denial is a crime in Germany. In the article, they talk about how the people advocating this GW thing are using terminology reminiscent of holocaust deniers and thus in some way linking the two beliefs. As you might expect, this is ticking people off to in any way equate these two things.
What would I advocate? Certainly I wouldn't advocate that any opinion should be a crime. People who prosecute others for their opinions are evil and they themselves should be penalized.
#7
Posted 2006-October-12, 13:00
Maybe but the world has never done anything about this. Here is just a short list of countries where a "dangerous opinion" can get you put on trial.
North Korea
Vietnam
China
Iran
Syria
Egypt
Saudi Arabia
Singapore
Congo
Sudan
Algeria
Russia
Italy
Cuba
It does seem if Bush is going to commit crimes against humanity by not stopping GW and just trying to make his oil buddies and his family rich he should be tried? Is there a reward for this btw?
#8
Posted 2006-October-12, 14:15
"North Korea also has golf clubs in cities including Pyongyang -- where, according to the communist state's official media, leader Kim Jong-Il scored 11 holes-in-one in his first attempt at golf"
And they want us to take them seriously?? I dont think he could score 11 holes in one at Putt-Putt golf, much less a real course. LOL!!
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#9
Posted 2006-October-12, 14:45
#10
Posted 2006-October-12, 16:33
DrTodd13, on Oct 12 2006, 12:39 PM, said:
The above link says that some people are proposing "Nuremberg-style" trials for people who are skeptical about humans being the cause of global warming. The link goes so far as to claim that human-caused GW skepticism is a "crime against humanity." As opinion is soon to be a crime, I just lobotomized myself. I am a sheep now.
how about Nuremberg trials for what american politicians have done in Iraq
#11
Posted 2006-October-12, 16:39
#12
Posted 2006-October-12, 16:48
There are a lot of organizations out there with a strong vested interest in destroying unbiased debate on topics like Global Warming or the health effects of smoking. I'd argue that its fairly important to reach the right decision.
1. If Global Warming is true, and society decides to ignore it we're going to create enormous costs for people arround the world. In particular, climate change is going to have a devasating effect on any subsistence level households in the third world.
2. If Global warming is false, and society over-reacts to the perceived threat, we're going to artificially constrain ecomic growth. The effects of this aren't going to be as graphic as case one, but they are just as real.
I think that the Nuremburg analogy is a valid one. Assume for the moment that case 1 turns out to be true.
Global warming is real
Western societies ignore it
Global warming has a profound negative on million of households arround the world.
Furthermore, lets assume that someone finds a paper trail, where it becomes apparant that the leaders of major oil companies and coal concerns knew that global warming was probably real but deliberately funding think tanks and research institutes to cloud the debate. I'd be all in favour of stringing the bastard up. (For the record, I think that the CEOs of the major tobacco companies back in the 70s and 80s should be facing criminal charges) For what its worth, I'd also argue that the converse is true. If it turns out that the Sierra club is wrong of Global Warming, the leaders are knowingly propagating false information and this impact policy in a negative manner, they should face the same type of trial.
As I noted at the start of this thread, I think that there are beter ways to accomplish the same end. I think that the best way to address this issue is to create financial instruments whose value is tied to specific elements of the global warming hypothesis. Alternatively, you could create some that track the mitigation costs associated with re-settlement financial aid, and the like.
Creating these types of instruments would force people to put their money where their mouth is. Opinions expressed by individuals or companies who are unwilling invest salient quantities of cash into the market can be discounted. Companies like Exxon sould be welcome to try to play games on the market and artifically depress prices, however, they'd be exposing themselves to significant liability.
#13
Posted 2006-October-12, 17:04
I guess I am putting my faith in technology and the market. We do seem to be getting better at replacing body parts with manmade replacements.
This is very cold hearted but my guess is at worst many die from climate change so that becomes news but we ignore they may very well have died in the genocide, plagues and common illness that we all ignore now.
Heck 2 die in a plane crash and they want to stop flights but a million have died in car crashs and a million more will and we do not throw them in jail? How much death and illness is caused worldwide from booze?
#14
Posted 2006-October-12, 18:38
#15
Posted 2006-October-12, 19:46
Winstonm, on Oct 12 2006, 07:38 PM, said:
"http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/paleo/milankovitch.html"
Global warming and earth's wobble.
#16
Posted 2006-October-12, 21:51
I find this whole discussion very disconcerting. People don't seem to understand the difference between intentional misinformation and simply being mistaken. I don't know whether Bush really thought there were WMDs in Iraq but if he did and there weren't then that is a mistake and not a sin/crime/etc. If he knew there weren't and he lied to get us to go to war then that is the evil we need to destroy. If someone legitimately believes humans are not causing global warming then they may be mistaken but they shouldn't be labelled a criminal. Another article I saw today was by a pro-GW scientists who still lamented that human-caused global warming appears to be the only scientific theory for which it has become anathema to even question it. As such it has passed out of the region of science and has become a faith. If you won't even review a paper suggesting humans aren't causing GW then how can you ever falsify GW and if it couldn't conceivably be falsified then it isn't science. Anyway, basically all climatologists are paid to express their opinion. If they accept GW they get paid by people who want to believe in GW. If they don't accept GW then they get paid by oil companies or whoever. Everybody has some motivation here and there are ample funds to be had whatever your inclination so I don't believe that many people are lying about their opinion to get money.
#17
Posted 2006-October-12, 23:13
This is as bad as idea as I've heard in ages.
#18
Posted 2006-October-13, 07:17
>the coasts and they are the ones who will be inundated if sea levels rise.
The world is not made up of priviledged white boys...
If your lucky enough to live in an affluent community there's a definite connection between waterfront properties and level of income. People like ocean views and rich folks are willing to play a premium for them.
However, for most of the world living close to the water means that you get to use fish as your source of protein. You have large numbers of very poor people crowding along the edge of the ocean. Bangladesh is one of the most graphic examples, but this holds true for large parts of the world. Hell, I can head down the road to Gloucester and see the same thing at work.
#19
Posted 2006-October-13, 11:03
#20
Posted 2006-October-14, 11:16
Anyway, Todd's prediction of thought crime becoming a criminal offense is about to come true. In France, it's a crime not to consider the killings of Armenians in Turkey during WW I a genocide.