Silence the messenger, not defeat the problem — Bush appointees try to stifle top NASA scientists from speaking out about global warming

January 29th, 2006

I am reminded yet again that we are living in Orwellian America by an article in today’s New York TImes . Instead of alerting Americans to the very real consequences our actions have on future generations, the administration is working to silence the warnings. Don’t worry about solutions they seem to say. Just don’t talk about them and no one will know.

Here’s the article in total:

Climate Expert Says NASA Tried to Silence Him
By ANDREW C. REVKIN

The top climate scientist at NASA says the Bush administration has tried to stop him from speaking out since he gave a lecture last month calling for prompt reductions in emissions of greenhouse gases linked to global warming.

The scientist, James E. Hansen, longtime director of the agency’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, said in an interview that officials at NASA headquarters had ordered the public affairs staff to review his coming lectures, papers, postings on the Goddard Web site and requests for interviews from journalists.

Dr. Hansen said he would ignore the restrictions. “They feel their job is to be this censor of information going out to the public,” he said.

Dean Acosta, deputy assistant administrator for public affairs at the space agency, said there was no effort to silence Dr. Hansen. “That’s not the way we operate here at NASA,” Mr. Acosta said. “We promote openness and we speak with the facts.”
He said the restrictions on Dr. Hansen applied to all National Aeronautics and Space Administration personnel. He added that government scientists were free to discuss scientific findings, but that policy statements should be left to policy makers and appointed spokesmen.
Mr. Acosta said other reasons for requiring press officers to review interview requests were to have an orderly flow of information out of a sprawling agency and to avoid surprises. “This is not about any individual or any issue like global warming,” he said. “It’s about coordination.”
Dr. Hansen strongly disagreed with this characterization, saying such procedures had already prevented the public from fully grasping recent findings about climate change that point to risks ahead.

“Communicating with the public seems to be essential,” he said, “because public concern is probably the only thing capable of overcoming the special interests that have obfuscated the topic.”

Dr. Hansen, 63, a physicist who joined the space agency in 1967, directs efforts to simulate the global climate on computers at the Goddard Institute in Morningside Heights in Manhattan.
Since 1988, he has been issuing public warnings about the long-term threat from heat-trapping emissions, dominated by carbon dioxide, that are an unavoidable byproduct of burning coal, oil and other fossil fuels. He has had run-ins with politicians or their appointees in various administrations, including budget watchers in the first Bush administration and Vice President Al Gore.

In 2001, Dr. Hansen was invited twice to brief Vice President Dick Cheney and other cabinet members on climate change. White House officials were interested in his findings showing that cleaning up soot, which also warms the atmosphere, was an effective and far easier first step than curbing carbon dioxide.

He fell out of favor with the White House in 2004 after giving a speech at the University of Iowa before the presidential election, in which he complained that government climate scientists were being muzzled and said he planned to vote for Senator John Kerry.
But Dr. Hansen said that nothing in 30 years equaled the push made since early December to keep him from publicly discussing what he says are clear-cut dangers from further delay in curbing carbon dioxide.

In several interviews with The New York Times in recent days, Dr. Hansen said it would be irresponsible not to speak out, particularly because NASA’s mission statement includes the phrase “to understand and protect our home planet.”

He said he was particularly incensed that the directives had come through telephone conversations and not through formal channels, leaving no significant trails of documents.
Dr. Hansen’s supervisor, Franco Einaudi, said there had been no official “order or pressure to say shut Jim up.” But Dr. Einaudi added, “That doesn’t mean I like this kind of pressure being applied.”
The fresh efforts to quiet him, Dr. Hansen said, began in a series of calls after a lecture he gave on Dec. 6 at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco. In the talk, he said that significant emission cuts could be achieved with existing technologies, particularly in the case of motor vehicles, and that without leadership by the United States, climate change would eventually leave the earth “a different planet.”
The administration’s policy is to use voluntary measures to slow, but not reverse, the growth of emissions.

After that speech and the release of data by Dr. Hansen on Dec. 15 showing that 2005 was probably the warmest year in at least a century, officials at the headquarters of the space agency repeatedly phoned public affairs officers, who relayed the warning to Dr. Hansen that there would be “dire consequences” if such statements continued, those officers and Dr. Hansen said in interviews.

Among the restrictions, according to Dr. Hansen and an internal draft memorandum he provided to The Times, was that his supervisors could stand in for him in any news media interviews.

Mr. Acosta said the calls and meetings with Goddard press officers were not to introduce restrictions, but to review existing rules. He said Dr. Hansen had continued to speak frequently with the news media.

But Dr. Hansen and some of his colleagues said interviews were canceled as a result.
In one call, George Deutsch, a recently appointed public affairs officer at NASA headquarters, rejected a request from a producer at National Public Radio to interview Dr. Hansen, said Leslie McCarthy, a public affairs officer responsible for the Goddard Institute.
Citing handwritten notes taken during the conversation, Ms. McCarthy said Mr. Deutsch called N.P.R. “the most liberal” media outlet in the country. She said that in that call and others, Mr. Deutsch said his job was “to make the president look good” and that as a White House appointee that might be Mr. Deutsch’s priority.

But she added: “I’m a career civil servant and Jim Hansen is a scientist. That’s not our job. That’s not our mission. The inference was that Hansen was disloyal.”
Normally, Ms. McCarthy would not be free to describe such conversations to the news media, but she agreed to an interview after Mr. Acosta, at NASA headquarters, told The Times that she would not face any retribution for doing so.

Mr. Acosta, Mr. Deutsch’s supervisor, said that when Mr. Deutsch was asked about the conversations, he flatly denied saying anything of the sort. Mr. Deutsch referred all interview requests to Mr. Acosta.

Ms. McCarthy, when told of the response, said: “Why am I going to go out of my way to make this up and back up Jim Hansen? I don’t have a dog in this race. And what does Hansen have to gain?”

Mr. Acosta said that for the moment he had no way of judging who was telling the truth. Several colleagues of both Ms. McCarthy and Dr. Hansen said Ms. McCarthy’s statements were consistent with what she told them when the conversations occurred.

“He’s not trying to create a war over this,” said Larry D. Travis, an astronomer who is Dr. Hansen’s deputy at Goddard, “but really feels very strongly that this is an obligation we have as federal scientists, to inform the public.”

Dr. Travis said he walked into Ms. McCarthy’s office in mid-December at the end of one of the calls from Mr. Deutsch demanding that Dr. Hansen be better controlled.

In an interview on Friday, Ralph J. Cicerone, an atmospheric chemist and the president of the National Academy of Sciences, the nation’s leading independent scientific body, praised Dr. Hansen’s scientific contributions and said he had always seemed to describe his public statements clearly as his personal views.

“He really is one of the most productive and creative scientists in the world,” Dr. Cicerone said. “I’ve heard Hansen speak many times and I’ve read many of his papers, starting in the late 70’s. Every single time, in writing or when I’ve heard him speak, he’s always clear that he’s speaking for himself, not for NASA or the administration, whichever administration it’s been.”
The fight between Dr. Hansen and administration officials echoes other recent disputes. At climate laboratories of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, for example, many scientists who routinely took calls from reporters five years ago can now do so only if the interview is approved by administration officials in Washington, and then only if a public affairs officer is present or on the phone.

Where scientists’ points of view on climate policy align with those of the administration, however, there are few signs of restrictions on extracurricular lectures or writing.
One example is Indur M. Goklany, assistant director of science and technology policy in the policy office of the Interior Department. For years, Dr. Goklany, an electrical engineer by training, has written in papers and books that it may be better not to force cuts in greenhouse gases because the added prosperity from unfettered economic activity would allow countries to exploit benefits of warming and adapt to problems.

In an e-mail exchange on Friday, Dr. Goklany said that in the Clinton administration he was shifted to nonclimate-related work, but added that he had never had to stop his outside writing, as long as he identified the views as his own.

“One reason why I still continue to do the extracurricular stuff,” he wrote, “is because one doesn’t have to get clearance for what I plan on saying or writing.”
Copyright 2006The New York Times Company

Am I writing science fiction or a snapshot of our actual future? Most of teh time I think its the former, until I read things like this article. Then I have to wonder.

EPA wants to test pesticides on children and pregnant women

January 28th, 2006

I write science fiction but THIS stuff scares me!

This just out in an article from our noble journalists at TruthOut, the same government which is pushing legislative tort reform (read that cutting liabilities to large corporations) now wants to allow some of those large corporations (large pharma and chemical in particular) to, ahem, test their bug killers on pregnant women and children.

Where’s the Queen of Hearts? Which way out of THIS looking glass?

That’s right, the companies who already make a lot of money want to use unborn babies as test subjects! Where’s the Pro-Life movement when you need them? Seems that dosing the next generation with bug spray just to find out the deleterious effects seems rather odd at best. I mean, haven’t there been decades of evidence that bug sprays designed to take out smaller creatures by stopping their nervous systems isn’t too good for developing humans? No big discoveries here.

What is very interesting that the same people who want to “loosen up” those controls on human testing also want to “tighten up” the reins on average people who get harmed by large corporations like, oh well, the drug and chemical companies. Might be something there but I couldn’t say for sure. All the same, you might want to connect the dots.

We give trophy hunters tax breaks

January 27th, 2006

Did you know that we actually help trophy hunters kill animals by giving them tax breaks? I didn’t but the Care2 and The Humane Society of America folks did. Seems that our brave but bloated hunters (you know, the same ones who think its fun to shoot live animals via webcams in Texas) just can’t seem to afford their little vice so a whole cottage industry has grown up advising them on how to make their hunting less expensive or even free by calling it “charity” and getting tax breaks. Amazing!

It seems that if these “hunters” claim they are shooting a couple of extra animals for museums they canw rite off their expenses. Needless to say someone HAD to write a book. SO those guys are not only making money off dead animals, they’ve encouraging others to kill MORE animals to enable them to kill the ones they wanted to kill in the first place.

Now don’t get me wrong. I am NOT a vegetarian and I am NOT absolutely positively anti-hunting in all cases. What I am is outraged that some sick souls would have taken the video game to the next level — killing live beings. Its one thing to hunt pheasant in person, a completely different thing to shoot a water buffalo via a camera attached to a rifle a thousand miles away from where you sit ensconced in your comfy recliner with your Cheetos! Talk about dehumanization! talk about disconnection from the real event! How do these guys get blooded? Via FedEx?!?!!?

But back to the issue at hand. I’m even more outraged that our tax dollars would support this lazy, inhumane treatment of animals. Here’s what Care2 had to say in a recent email:

“The blatent corruption is evident even in canned hunt ads; many operators use slogans like “Hunt For Free,” “Hunting in a Tight Money Economy,” and “7 Secrets of Tax Deductible Hunting.” Can you believe they are actually advertising the taxpayer-financed killing of helplessly enclosed animals? “

Amen!!!!

If you want to find out more check out ThePetitionSite, HSUS or Care2. All have ways to protest this stupendously stupid way to add to the national deficit via theft of tax funds.

ASPCA’s 10 most poisonous plants

January 26th, 2006

If you’re an avid gardener (or even a not-so-avid gardener) this is a list you may want to read. There are some plants on it that many of us have in our homes or yards. Most of us know that things like mistletoe are dangerous to pets but did you know kalanchoe is too? I didn’t.

Thanks to the ASPCA for yet another service for our home companions!

Cross species love

January 24th, 2006

Once again Mazlov’s supposed hierarchy gets kicked to the curb! (Don’t worry about Dr. Mazlov’s feelings. He didn’t like it either and as I understand was somewhat dismayed that everybody made such a fuss over it.) A story out of Japan just goes to show that the need for love and connection overrules the need to feed. An article in the Boston Globe shows how a lonely snake can make friends with his dinner, a master.

It seems the zookeepers thought the hungry snake, who wouldn’t eat frozen mice, would eat a live hamster they named “meal” in Japanese. Well heart overcame belly and the snake didn’t eat the hamster. Instead, he decided a nice furry cuddle was much more important than a warm meal.

This may be even better than the lion and the lamb lying down together. At least both of those have fur. I’m not even sure how far apart taxonomically-speaking we are witha snake and a hamster.

And don’t worry about the snake. He nows eats frozen mice.

This could be the start of a great short story. Lovers reincarnate as prey and predator but eternal love overcomes momentary hunger. Hmmm. Or maybe a prequel to Haint…

Thanks to Lynn Hartke for sending me this article!

New York Times editorial on accepting dogs’ amazing abilities and one Wonderful Scottish Pixie

January 21st, 2006

If you’ve ever seen a diagnostic dog in action, this editorial is no surprize nor revelation. The New York Times has a lovely and short editorial on how we forget how amazing are the animals around us in everyday life.

The writer discusses cancer-sniffing dogs but the piece reminds me of one outstanding little Scottish dog named Pixie. If I had not misplaced my new digital camera shortly after returning from Scotland I would be proud to post Pixie’s picture on this or any site. Pixie was a black and tan mix of perhaps border collie and doberman or some other breed with the distinctive blanc body and caramel colored eyebrows. A delight to be around at any time but if one needed to learn just how disadvantaged we are as a species when it comes to natural abilities, spend some time with Pixie, her human companion Adrian Glynn and their friend David Mackie.

All three are absolutely delightful Scots but Pixie was the one who was always at work. You see, Pixie is a diagnostic dog. She watches over Adrian (who is diabetic) and David (who is epileptic). She constantly monitors both and makes sure both are cared for and about. When Pixie is on duty both Adrian and David are safer for it. And the world is a better place for all of us who believe in natural “magic.”

No one ever mnetioned in Grimm’s Fairy Tales that Pixies could be angels too.

Loving a dog transforms the human spirit

January 19th, 2006

Over breakfast the other day my mother and I were talking about babies and dogs (she had two babies and I have none). It seems that people want to believe that having babies is an unselfish act yet so many of these same people can’t understand why you or I would prefer having dogs. Perhaps because loving dogs is the real unselfish act.

When someone has a child so much of loving the child has nothing to do with the child him or herself. Heck, they don’t even know that little person. Sure, the kid was riding around with mom for 9 or so months but I doubt there was a lot of communication other than warm fuzzy feelings brought on by hormones. Nothing against kids but over the years of interviewing parents about their kids the one really big fact that keeps coming out is that having kids is for the parent, not the kid. Babies are the original Mini Mes. So when parents say they love their babies, what they are saying is I love me and that little part of me I’m holding in this blue or pink blanket. That’s fine and we won’t get into adoptive parents who love the idea of being parents (not a bad idea, not just a particularly unselfish one).

So back to dogs. When someone loves a dog they have the chance to experience really unselfish love, love that carries the spirit higher and transforms it into something better.

Loving a dog:

Allows one to love unselfishly. For most people there is no objective in loving a dog. The dog can’t get you a better home (yours might look worse for wear or you might even have trouble finding new digs with a dog); he can’t be your sexual partner (don’t go there); he can’t get you a better job or a better social class. In fact, all he can do is love you in whatever his own fashion.

Allows one to love openly without fear of rejection or abuse of trust. The dog will not stay out all night and come in, only to tell you he’s found someone else to share his bed. The dog will not reject you because you gain or lose pounds, hair, teeth, uterus or some other body part. When the dog loves, he loves without concern for anything other than you are the object of that love. A Weimaraner may show love differently than a Beagle or a Border Collie or even a Newfoundland, but they all love without reserve.

Allows one to love honestly. There are no games with dogs when it comes to love. They do not know how to play those games so you cannot play them either. No coy, “how much do you love me’s” with dogs. They love and you love. Period.

Allows one to live honestly. Having this much honest love in one’s life gives one the chance to live honestly as well. Having to eat hamburger rather than steak for dinner or living in a small house rather than a mansion? Dogs don’t care and they won’t love you any differently. Dogs inspire internal honesty (if we let them) because they are so honestly themselves and accept the world honestly. We can live a more honest life knowing someone loves us in that honesty.

Allows one to transcend our meager human spirits. Loving another creature without the expectation of getting something back other than that purest of loves allows us to grow past out human pettiness and selfish and self-absorbed lives. We can learn how to be more than human. We can embrace the greater spirit which embraces all life. We can learn to love like dogs love.

George Monbiot’s recent article, "The Scam of Global Warming…"

January 18th, 2006

Have you ever wondered how some people could blithely deny the reality of global warming that we see around us every day? Then check out the new article by George Monbiot in the Guardian and passed on to us by the sterling folks at Common Dreams. In “The Scam of Global Warming is That We Pay Others for Our Complacency” Monbiot pulls away the veil from the carbon offset trade. But he also does something even more interesting; he not so subtly raises the larger question of the monied interests’ shell game with something that affects us all –global warming and the lack of true action in addressing the very thing that will pull our own earth out from under us as surely as the ice is falling away from the polar bears.

Shaking my head in wonder over Kurzweil’s The Singularity is Near

January 17th, 2006

For those of you who haven’t read it, futurist Ray Kurzweil’s The Singularity is Near is a valentine to all those scifi writers who believed that the future and humans could only get better through technology. According to Kurzweil, in the near future humans will become technologically joined with superhuman intelligence to become superhuman. I won’t dispute his ideas but I will put forward the one question that must be answered — Why? Why do we want to supercede our biology? Yes, I know that is a hard question for humans, especially westerners, to ask themselves and others. But if we are going to make this drastic a change in our bodies, minds and civilizations, I for one want some good answers.

Perhaps the question that really needs asking is not whether Kurzweil is correct in his future projections but do we really want to allow technology to change our lives, relationships and civilizations so completely. More importantly, why do we wholeheartedly welcome such extensive changes?We have evolved over millenia to be a species that must work together, build connections with others, if we are to survive as a species. Yet the technology Kurzweil so welcomes is the antithesis of connection. He may talk about how we will all be connected through technology yet it is only the illusion of connection. We learn as a species through shared experiences. We learn as individuals through empathy, much of which is gained through shared events. I understand your hurt because I have felt pain. Virtual reality is NOT reality. In fact it is the offer of fake connection for the real connections of real people and events. Moreover, why should we want to embrace a reality for which we are not biologically or psychologically suited? Our brains are wonderfully evolved to process and manage information, and perhaps most importantly if you follow the work of certain neuroscientists (i.e., Damasio) emotional input. Where does emotion live in this new world of Kurzweil’s?Lastly, are we to expect that everyone will have access to this nanobot-enhanced world? What about the poor? What about the middle-class? I suspect that Kurzweil’s brave new medical and technical breakthroughs would only be available to those who could afford them. Just like medical care in America today, many people would simply be cut out and left behind.

The upshot of technology such as this at the beck and call of the wealthy is that they (who are already often extremely out of touch with the real world of everyday people) would become even more out of touch. What does this say for the decisions that they will make that influence us all? I suspect those decisions will do even less to draw us together. Why should the wealthy and powerful make decisions that help everyday people? Through virtual reality they can become even more insulated from the results of their acts. Those left on the outside (probably the mass of humanity) are not as “human” or advanced are we? So, like the 21st century version of Puritanism with this form of technology as God, everyone without it will be found wanting and cast off into the technological and civil underworld.

Note, I am not a Luddite. I would not question all new technology but something as fundamentally important as how humans interact with the world and others is something to be closely considered and examined before letting it loose to do untold damage. A device that beeps me to my keys is not likely to affect the way I interact with others and the way I think. A virtual reality womb that feeds my the sensory input and thereby chooses what I see and therefore how I feel about that input is something else all together.

So I ask again — Why do we so easily welcome this technology without closely examining potential results from every angle?

The great and greatly missed Theodore Sturgeon in his classic, More Than Human, envisioned a superhuman formed by the connections and relationships of a number of humans. It was their interdependence that made them the next step in human evolution. I wonder if Kurzweil’s world would usher in the less-than-truly-human rather than superhuman?

Global Warming Accelerating

January 16th, 2006

From the fine folks at Common Dreams yet another compelling article on Global Warming. The Independent is reporting that we are about to see an acceleration of Global Warming. Seems that the readings of carbon dioxide parts per million have jumped from 1.6 in the 1990’s to recent unpublished findings of 2.2 ppm.

I guess I’d better write the sequels faster so we can see what happens. It would be nice to know if there is much of a future. Sardonic of me I know…