Scientist:
'Global warming'
scheme to push global tax
Blames
U.N. for using scare reports,
'mob rule,' to bully through agenda
Posted:
June 19, 2008
11:15 pm Eastern
By
Bob Unruh
© 2008 WorldNetDaily
"Science
has always progressed on the basis of observations, experiments,
and thoughts published by individual scientists and sometimes
pairs or small groups of scientific coworkers," Art
Robinson, a research professor of chemistry and co-founder of
the Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, said in a recent
column in Human Events.
Except
at the U.N., he said.
Robinson's
concern over the political manipulation of science earlier led
him to launch the
Petition Project, a compilation of more than 31,000
scientists – with more names arriving daily – who have
voluntarily signed their names to the following statement:
"There
is no convincing scientific evidence that human release of
carbon dioxide, methane, or other greenhouse gases is causing or
will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of
the Earth's
atmosphere and disruption of the
Earth's climate. Moreover, there is substantial scientific
evidence that increases in atmospheric carbon
dioxide produce many beneficial effects
upon the natural plant and animal environments of the
Earth."
He
said the scientific process begins with the results of
individuals' work and their distribution of their ideas.
"A
few of these published articles are especially valuable; a
greater number, while not remarkable, provide relative mundane
studies that add to the infrastructure of science; many are not
useful at all; and some are completely wrong. As individual
scientists read these articles, they use their own wisdom,
knowledge, and judgment to separate new information that they
find valuable from information that they find of no use,"
Robinson said. Eventually, the good, accurate and valuable
information is advanced.
"Always,
scientific progress is a result of a large number of individual
decisions that trend in a specific direction," he said.
Not
so, however, at the United Nations. Especially with the
organization's Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, which has generated many of the
claims of catastrophic results of man's use of hydrocarbon
fuels, including submerged coastlines and a deadly, massive
expansion of African deserts.
The
IPCC website boasts of sharing the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with
Al Gore Jr. for "efforts to build up and disseminate
greater knowledge about man-made climate change." It also
notes its goals are to eradicate poverty and hunger, achieve
universal primary education, promote gender equality, reduce
child mortality, improve mothers' health, combat HIV/AIDS,
ensure environmental sustainability and others.
"The
IPCC provides its reports at regular intervals and they
immediately become standard works of reference, widely used by
policymakers, experts and students," the organization
itself says. .
The IPCC conferences do, in
fact, feature "a few hundred" people, including some
with formal educations in science, some actively engaged in
scientific work, some retired, holding discussions on "the
entirely unsolved problem of climate prediction for time periods
decades and even centuries in the future," said Robinson,
who also publishes the Access
to Energy newsletter. In 1973, Robinson co-founded the Linus
Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine with Linus Pauling.
"The
primary requirement for selection is a willingness to
participate in the United Nations' new 'process' and the agenda
behind it," Robinson said. "These people study and
discuss the current and past research literature concerning
climate and climate prediction. … These emanations are closely
observed by a very select small group of United Nations
operatives."
At
the end of the meetings, "this small group of observers
combines the products of the meeting into a large
important-looking report – carefully editing the report so
that it supports United Nations political objectives,"
Robinson said. "At no time is this report submitted to the
600-plus 'scientists.'"
The
results then are distributed as "settled science," he
said, "regardless of the fact that the scientists involved
do not agree upon the text. … The elite few who oversaw the
meeting and interpreted its results are special. They are the
U.N.'s anointed messengers of the truth."
A
spokeswoman for the United Nation's Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon
declined to respond to WND questions about the process,
referring those questions to the IPCC office in Geneva. There a
spokeswoman confirmed for WND the process that has a small
number of specially appointed U.N. operatives write reports
following "scientific" meetings.
But
Robinson said the U.N. operatives have fallen victim to "a
peculiar and dangerous virus" infecting American public
discourse.
Victims
of that disease, which robs words of their meaning, also believe
that "democracy" means "republic,"
"gambling" becomes "investment" and
"vice" becomes the "virtue of diversity,"
Robinson said.
Also,
"science" has become devalued.
"And
nowhere is it more abused than in the United Nations, where
institutionalized mob rule is called 'science,'" he said.
"In
its headlong drive to gain the power to tax and ration world energy
(and thereby control world technology – sharing taxation
authority with other governments in return for their support)
the United Nations has created a 'process,' which it calls
'science,'" he said.
In
real science, however, "truths are never
determined through such meetings; unsolved scientific questions
are never
resolved by such meetings; and scientific articles are never
published unless every putative or listed author has personally
approved every word of the publication," Robinson said.
"Scientific truth is never decided by meetings organized to
decide which ideas are true and which are false.
"If
the mob rule process of the United Nations worked, many great
unsolved scientific questions could be quickly solved. United
Nations observers could attend scientific meetings of cancer
scientists and determined the causes and cures of cancer. With
the 'science settled,' this scourge could be eliminated.
Likewise Alzheimer's disease, human aging, the origin of the
universe, and other great unsolved problems could be
solved," Robinson wrote.
"In
the present case in which United Nations apparatchiks have
proclaimed that human activity is catastrophically warming the
planet, the human cost of error is so great than many other
scientists have become motivated to individually examine the
evidence. Now, a total of more than 9,000 Americans with Ph.D.s
in science and therefore professional educational credentials
that, on average, equal or surpass the United Nations 600 –
and a total of more than 31,000 Americans with at least B.S.
degrees in science have signed a petition to the U.S. government
specifically rejecting the United Nations claim that human use
of hydrocarbon energy is injuring the climate," Robinson
said.
"In
fact, the 31,000 scientists state that carbon dioxide released
by energy production is actually beneficial to the
environment," he said.
"It
is time to kill this counterproductive virus that has sickened
American science and engineering, and get on with the job of
expanding the American hydrocarbon and nuclear energy
industries. To do less poses a terrible risk to America's
prosperity and to her future," he said.
WND
reported a surge of names was submitted to Robinson's
petition project following the movie "An Inconvenient
Truth" by Gore.
The
film was widely distributed and preached about the "settled
science" of U.N. global warming prognosticators, Robinson
said.
"Unfortunately,
Mr. Gore's movie contains many very serious incorrect claims
which no informed, honest scientist could endorse,"
Robinson said at the time.
The late Professor Frederick
Seitz, the past president of the U.S. National Academy of
Sciences and winner of the National Medal of Science, concluded
U.N. pronouncements notwithstanding, "Research data on
climate change do not show that human use of hydrocarbons is
harmful. To the contrary, there is good evidence that increased
atmospheric carbon dioxide is environmentally
helpful."