Global Sarming Despotism (Jay Ambrose)

Page 1

Link: http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/jay-ambrose-global-warmingdespotism/ar-BBmhH46

Global warming despotism - Jay Ambrose Science works through status quo challenges, through checking and rechecking, through producing evidence to counter other evidence and constantly arriving at reconsidered conclusions. Societies, in similar fashion, work best by being open and free, getting it that, in a contest between discourse and dictate, it's time and again discourse that provides the needed wisdom. All of this and more is why it is so astonishing and dismaying — but also revealing — to see a group of 20 alarmed climatologists wanting to curtail debate on global warming by shutting up the opposition, and hardly by gentle means. They want to employ tactics fashioned to go after gangsters. The tool would be the Racketeer Influence and Corrupt Organizations Act, or RICO, allowing trials of those only indirectly involved in crimes. It was meant to heap massive damage on such groups as the Mafia, and it did. The climatologists want to use it against those connected to fossil fuel corporations who are arguing that global warming is not the terror it is often portrayed as being. These climatologists say there's self-serving deception going on here and that the consequences could be inadequate action curtailing a wide variety of horrors. They have sent a letter asking President Barack Obama and others in his administration for an investigation, and what we will get if it comes is massive damage to free speech and something you would think an alarmist would fear: less discernment in coping with climate change. Free speech, after all, has beneficial consequences. As the great English philosopher John Stuart Mill said in his 1859 book, "On Liberty," silencing an opinion robs everybody. It just may be true or at least partially true, and, if we do not hear it, we may never profit from the multiple dividends this truth provides. If it is false, he said, its collision with truth can lead to a "clearer perception" of what the true statement has going for it as defenders more closely examine their reasoning. "Both teachers and learners go to sleep at their post as soon as there is no enemy in the field," Mill explains. To argue that authority can squash opinion without fear of squashing truth is to assume human infallibility of a kind that Mill has never noticed, he says. He tells us, too, that discounting an argument because it's intemperate can be risky, seeing as how all sides in page 1


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.