AmericanConscience.Org
A voice in the wilderness
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A man should look for what is, and not what he thinks should be. Albert Einstein
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Environment / Global Warming
Why the incredible public indifference to such an incredible global threat?
So far the U.S. has done exactly nothing even to try to slow the progress of climate change: We're emitting far more carbon than we were in 1988, when scientists issued their first prescient global-warming warnings.
Global Warming / Resources
Common Dreams News Center / Ross Gelbspan
New Scientist / Jeff Hecht
National Academy of Sciences (USA) plus 10 other nations' Academies Climate Change is Real -- Prepare for the Consequences
Washington Post / Juliet Eilperin
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Washington Post
2005.01.19
Putting Some Heat on Bush : James E. Hansen
Scientist Inspires Anger, Awe for Challenges on Global Warming
Author: Juliet Eilperin
In his worn navy windbreaker, 63-year-old climatologist James E. Hansen looks more like
the Iowa farm native that he is than a rebel -- but he's both.
Hansen, a lifelong government employee who heads NASA's Goddard Institute for
Space Studies in New York, has inspired both anger and awe in the nation's
scientific and political communities since publicly denouncing the Bush
administration's policy on climate change last year.
Speaking in the swing state of Iowa days before the presidential election, Hansen accused
a senior administration official of trying to block him from discussing the dangerous effects
of global warming.
In the University of Iowa speech, Hansen recounted how NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe
told him in a 2003 meeting that he shouldn't talk "about dangerous anthropogenic
interference" -- humans' influence on the atmosphere -- "because we do not know enough
or have enough evidence for what would constitute dangerous anthropogenic interference."
But Hansen said that scientists know enough to conclude we have reached this
danger point and that their efforts to get the word out are being blocked by the
administration. "In my more than three decades in government, I have never
seen anything approaching the degree to which information flow from scientists
to the public has been screened and controlled as it has now," Hansen said. He
added that although the administration wants to wait 10 years to evaluate climate
change, "delay of another decade, I argue, is a colossal risk."
Senior administration officials deny Hansen's charges: O'Keefe spokesman Glenn Mahone
said the administrator doesn't "recall ever having the conversation" on climate change that
Hansen described, adding that O'Keefe "has encouraged open dialogue and open
conversation about those issues."
But Hansen, who has worked for NASA since he was 25, has continued to chide the
administration for not moving swiftly enough to address global warming. In a recent
interview, he called Bush officials "reasonable people" who need to be convinced that
climate change is an urgent matter.
"As the evidence gathers, you would hope they would be flexible," Hansen said in the slow,
measured tones he has retained from his years growing up on an Iowa farm. "We have to
deal with this. You can't ignore it."
The ongoing sparring match between Hansen and his superiors underscores a
broader tension between President Bush's top policy advisers and many senior
U.S. scientists, who have loudly blasted the administration's approach to
environmental questions in recent months. Nearly 50 Nobel laureates endorsed
Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) for president; this year the Union of Concerned
Scientists has collected more than 6,000 scientists' signatures on a letter
questioning how the president applies research to policymaking.
After the barrage of criticism, John H. Marburger III, Bush's top science adviser,
told Science magazine that if the researchers continue their protests, they might
alienate influential lawmakers who set federal science budgets.
Hansen, who also took on Bush's father, President George H.W. Bush, on the question of
climate change in the late 1980s, is undeterred. An advocate for caps on carbon dioxide
emissions and stricter fuel standards for automobiles -- two policies that Bush advisers say
would hurt the U.S. economy -- Hansen said he has to oppose what he said is the
government's choice to delay action on new regulations to limit emissions under the guise
of seeking more scientific research.
"We have got to be an independent voice. We should not be influenced in any way by
funding," Hansen said.
Hansen is no stranger to controversy. In 1989, he accused the Office of
Management and Budget of watering down his congressional testimony on
climate change to make the situation appear less dire.
"I'm strictly trying to understand the Earth as a planet," said Hansen, who started his career
studying the clouds around Venus but switched in 1978 to climate modeling.
The administration has done nothing to punish Hansen since he made his public comments
last fall, and Marburger said in an interview that he considers Hansen "a very good climate
scientist" who should stick to scientific analysis instead of policy prescriptions.
"I take his work seriously. His work has had a big impact on this administration's
climate-change policy," Marburger said. "But he's not an economist. The fact that he's a
good scientist does not necessarily make him the best person to formulate policy that
would affect the economy."
Former vice president Al Gore, who backs limits on emissions of carbon dioxide, said the
administration's strained relationship with Hansen shows the "contempt for the rule of
reason" of Bush and his deputies.
"When science conflicts with the exercise of power, they attempt to demean the messenger
attempting to deliver the truth, and they seek out self-interested advocates of alternative
views of reality," said Gore, who as a senator defended Hansen during the controversy
over his 1989 testimony.
Within the scientific community, Hansen remains respected for much of his research,
though some have questioned his recent studies on the effect of aerosols on global
warming. He is popular at the space institute -- housed at Columbia University above the
famed diner from the comedy series "Seinfield" -- where he has played Frisbee in the halls.
Gavin A. Schmidt, a climatologist who has worked with Hansen at Goddard for nearly a
decade, said Hansen gets his leverage from the fact that he a senior scholar who is still
breaking scientific ground.
"Very few people have that kind of longevity and credibility and are still doing new things,"
Schmidt said. "Any time he says something, it's news. He still sets the agenda."
Kevin E. Trenberth, who heads the climate analysis section of the nonprofit,
federally funded National Center for Atmospheric Research, said Hansen's
willingness to espouse the dominant scientific view on climate change "is a
responsible thing to do, even if it puts at potential jeopardy his own position."
Trenberth added: "This is an important issue, a long-term issue that affects
humanity in the future."
Some, however, have questioned Hansen's approach. Patrick J. Michaels, a climatologist
and a senior fellow in environmental studies at the libertarian Cato Institute, said it was
inappropriate for Hansen as a federal employee to attack the administration in a
battleground state less than two weeks before the election.
"The problem with Jim is he does climate and then he makes policy decisions that I don't
think are very thoughtful," said Michaels, who receives funding from public and industry
sources, and opposes mandatory carbon controls.
Hansen has found some common ground with administration officials, who like his recent
findings that curbing methane emissions from landfills, mining operations and gas-drilling
ventures can help counter warming. The administration recently persuaded more than a
dozen countries to sign a pact to capture methane before it is released into the
atmosphere, a program Hansen praised.
But it remains unclear whether Bush officials can reach some sort of detente with Hansen,
who said in a recent e-mail that he is not interested in "making the administration mad" but
in persuading it to cut carbon dioxide emissions from power plants and elsewhere. But in
the meantime, Hansen said he will continue to press ahead with both research and
advocacy.
"You can't just give up," he said. "I remain optimistic, even in this administration,
that the evidence is going to become strong enough so there's a chance there
will be a change in policy."
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Zen is concerned only with direct experience,
either of the intuition, by way of the
experience of Satori, or by the other end of
the spectrum, as it were, on the physical
plane.
Christmas Humphries
Hui-ch'ao asked Fa-yen, "What is Buddha?"
"You are, Hui-ch'ao," Fa-yen replied.
Zen Mondo