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US Senate Set To Vote On Whether Climate Change Is a Hoax 667

sciencehabit writes The U.S. Senate's simmering debate over climate science has come to a full boil today, as lawmakers prepare to vote on measures offered by Democrats that affirm that climate change is real—with one also noting that global warming is not "a hoax." In an effort to highlight their differences with some Republicans on climate policy, several Democrats have filed largely symbolic amendments to a bill that would approve the Keystone XL pipeline. They are designed to put senators on the record on whether climate change is real and human-caused.
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US Senate Set To Vote On Whether Climate Change Is a Hoax

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    It is just there to steal money.

    • by Penguinisto ( 415985 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:20PM (#48869241) Journal

      Congress may be out to do that...

      I tend to be a strong skeptic on the subject, but that said, Congress has no business declaring jack shit when it comes to anything scientific. They are more than free to debate, create, and modify *laws* based on it, but they have zero authority to declare anything a hoax.

      • Re:Yep it is a scam (Score:5, Informative)

        by Coren22 ( 1625475 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:34PM (#48869451) Journal

        Funny thing is that the summary directly contradicts the title. The democrats are attaching riders to the Keystone XL bill that declare climate change caused by man a fact. This is just as bad, but done by the other side of the aisle.

        • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @07:11PM (#48870883) Homepage Journal

          Reminds me of the Indiana Pi Bill. It's not even that the Indiana Rep. felt strongly that Pi equals 3.2, but he was unqualified to understand the subject, but had no problem passing a law based on 'expert' testimony.

          Classic Dunning-Kruger all over town.

        • by quenda ( 644621 )

          attaching riders to the Keystone XL bill that declare climate change caused by man a fact.

          Isn't that effectively the same thing as the title? I saw no implication about which side was initiating the vote.
          Its all politics of course, but makes about as much sense as Indiana legislating the value of pi in 1897. (Fortunately, their senate struck it down.)

          They want to identify the climate change deniers, but that seems like an abuse of the legislative process.

      • by Grishnakh ( 216268 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @06:18PM (#48870491)

        No, they have complete authority to declare things hoaxes, even if they aren't. This is what we get with democracy (or at least, a democratic republic): people who are actual experts in their fields are overruled by yahoos who were popularly elected by the People. It doesn't matter what's true or not, all that matters is what the People think and want, and they vote for it, based on promises made by political candidates running for office.

        If the politicians campaign that they will pass a law that forces the circumference of a circle to be exactly 3 times its diameter, and the People vote for it, that's what we get: a law that directly contradicts mathematical reality. If they promise to pass a law which sets the speed of light to be infinity and the People vote for it, that's what we get: a law that directly contradicts observed fact.

        You may think Congress has no business declaring jack shit when it comes to anything scientific, but you've been overruled by your countrymen at the polls, who think it does.

      • by tnk1 ( 899206 )

        They actually have all the authority they want to declare it a hoax or not. The question is, what effect does that declaration have?

        Congress as the legislative branch cannot make unconstitutional laws, but as long as they are not unconstitutional, they can create any law they want. And they can enforce it to the extent that they can get the Executive branch to do so. Which is usually where the silliness stops, unless the Executive branch is in collusion on the ridiculousness.

        The legislative branches of s

  • More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anon-Admin ( 443764 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:06PM (#48869037) Journal

    More proof that this debate is political and not scientific.

    Passing a law that says it is real is like voting on the sex of a chicken. No matter the outcome of the vote, only testing can provide the answer.

    How about we get politics out of science and rely on the scientific method to determine if "Global Warming" is real or not.

    • Re:More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:11PM (#48869109)

      The need for separation of science and state becomes more and more obvious every year since 1947.

      • Re:More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

        by tysonedwards ( 969693 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:34PM (#48869449)
        You don't need people’s opinion on a fact. You might as well have a poll asking: ‘Which number is bigger, 15 or 5?’ or ‘Do owls exist?’ or ‘Are there hats?'
        • Re:More proof (Score:4, Insightful)

          by MrTester ( 860336 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @05:44PM (#48870179)
          And if you had a large body of lawmakers who were responsible for our budget and they were writing budgets that assumed that 5 was bigger than 15, getting them to say that on the record is exactly what you would want to do.
          • by MillionthMonkey ( 240664 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @08:03PM (#48871267)
            Now look, I know many Americans have been hearing from elite liberal leftist Harvard professors in their ivory towers who keep saying that 15 is greater than 5. And, I have heard from many other experts in this field who are frankly quite skeptical that this is the case, that we're simply overlooking 5 and what a tremendously big number it is. So I don't think it's time to just cut off debate before the data is in, as if 15 is just greater than 5 so we should just get used to it whether we think it's right or just. It doesn't comport with the experiences of average hardworking Americans who deal with these numbers every day, who depend on them for their livelihood. So at the end of the day, I think it's obvious that the data is just not in yet. Now I'm not a mathematician. But one thing I do know, is that on the other side of the aisle, we have people who also are not mathematicians, but they see this as an opportunity for their agenda to shove a draconian arithmetic inequality down the throats of the American people!
      • Re:More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

        by NoKaOi ( 1415755 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @06:17PM (#48870485)

        The need for separation of science and state becomes more and more obvious every year since 1947.

        NO. There already is too much separation of science and state, as evidenced by this very issue. There needs to be less separation of science and state, but we need to make sure that it's science defining policy, and not policy defining science. Try reading that again but replacing the word "science" with the word "reality" and you'll see what I mean.

        • That's exactly what the "public service" are supposed to do "speak truth to power" and I think NASA, NOAA, EPA, and many other government institutions have done an outstanding job over the last 20yrs on this issue. The politician's aren't stupid, they just can't find the courage to "speak truth to their sponsors" who don't give a shit what happens after they die.
        • That's nonsense. Science operates outside of policy, whereas policy takes into account science, politics, economy, "state of the union" and so on.

          For science to define policy would mean that politics, economy, "state of the union" and so on would be input to science and output would be policy. That doesn't make sense because that is not what science is concerned about, nor can measure, or has credible theories about it. (I do not count economy, political science etc. as sciences.)

    • There's this story about Canut and the tide that the US Senate might want to ponder.

      Reality owes no debt to anyone's political ideology.

    • Well then I guess circles aren't geometry or math, they're actually political. [wikipedia.org] Or maybe political discussions can cover scientific issues without making them non-science.

      That said, you're right. It's not a question anymore. It's a scientific answer at this point.
      • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:36PM (#48869471)

        The article linked says the bill implied Pi should be 3.2...

        So you really want to bring that up in the context of a bill that claims humans cause substantial warming? Or that the warming we see is anything to be concerned about?

        Observable reality is what it is, no matter how much a law rounds or chastises.

        • My point was that politics sometimes sometimes follow facts, often they don't, but that doesn't change the nature of the facts themselves. Concluding "any facts politicians agree on must be wrong" is as stupid as suggesting the reverse. Anon-admin was suggesting that since climate change is being discussed by politicians, it's not science. That's backwards.
      • This is a really old and mostly wrong story. There was a person who wanted to be paid for his invention, which happened to be a wrong-headed attempt to square the circle. He wanted government money for having done that work. That is what the bill was for. To give him money. He didn't get the money.

    • Re:More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AchilleTalon ( 540925 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:19PM (#48869235) Homepage
      I agree. This is becoming really insane. Perhaps they could try to vote ISIS is not real and doesn't exist.
    • Re:More proof (Score:5, Informative)

      by bondsbw ( 888959 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:20PM (#48869255)

      Voting whether something is fact is indeed stupid.

      Now if it were a vote on whether to implement a policy based on the assumption that climate change is real, or a vote whether to direct courts to make future rulings based on the assumption of climate change, I can understand that.

      • Re:More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @05:05PM (#48869785) Homepage

        Voting whether something is fact is indeed stupid.

        While I agree that these amendments are political gamesmanship, they are not "voting whether something is fact".

        You'll notice in TFA that the amendments are voting on the "sense of the Senate" -- i.e. their purpose is to get Senators' opinions/positions on record, not to determine reality.

        Specifically, the Democrats want the Republicans to either publicly acknowledge that climate change is a real problem (thus undercutting their own arguments against doing anything about it), or publicly deny it (and, presumably, thereby look increasingly silly in the future as its effects become more pronounced).

    • Re:More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

      by rsmith-mac ( 639075 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:30PM (#48869395)

      More proof that this debate is political and not scientific.

      It has been political all along. Regardless of the scientific basis, the consensus view of the American public is that they do not want to sacrifice their lifestyles for the environment, especially in this case since the benefits are non-tangible. All of the political debate is simply an extension of that.

    • Re:More proof (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jandrese ( 485 ) <kensama@vt.edu> on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:31PM (#48869405) Homepage Journal

      How about we get politics out of science and rely on the scientific method to determine if "Global Warming" is real or not.

      It's fundamentally impossible to remove the politics from the science if your solution to the problem is political. It's hard to imagine any solutions to a global problem like Global Warming that aren't political short of some miracle technology coming out of nowhere that magically solves the problem.

    • They already have (Score:5, Informative)

      by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:38PM (#48869501) Homepage Journal

      The scientific method is for experiments. If you wanted to use it to see if global warming was real, you would make a forecast like "The world will get hotter than it's ever been.", and see if it comes true or not. It did come true. Last year was hotter than it has ever been, globally. Scientists were telling us that would happen for years.

      It's time to stop denying. It's time to stop saying "they should use the scientific method" when you know full well they have. You know, that is, unless your head is in the ground or your preferred news network is putting it there.

      • Re:They already have (Score:5, Interesting)

        by DiamondGeezer ( 872237 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @05:02PM (#48869753) Homepage

        Sadly not true. The fashion for some scientists to make names for themselves by producing misleading headlines for their supposed evidence has yet to fizzle.

        Was 2014 the warmest it has ever been globally? No.

        The satellite records (either one) show no special warmth for 2014 and the BEST record shows no statistical significance to the claim that 2014 was the hottest. Why? Because the tiny increase was well within the error bars of the mean temperature statistic [theregister.co.uk]

        Has the global warming hiatus ended? No. Do the climate models reflect this? No.

        That said, should Congress be making such a determination? No it shouldn't. But what this Congress is certain to do is cut the funding of climate change to the bone. Then we'll see how much was real and how much was money-powered hype.

        • Re:They already have (Score:5, Informative)

          by buchner.johannes ( 1139593 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @06:08PM (#48870419) Homepage Journal

          Sadly not true. The fashion for some scientists to make names for themselves by producing misleading headlines for their supposed evidence has yet to fizzle.

          Was 2014 the warmest it has ever been globally? No.

          The satellite records (either one) show no special warmth for 2014 and the BEST record shows no statistical significance to the claim that 2014 was the hottest. Why? Because the tiny increase was well within the error bars of the mean temperature statistic [theregister.co.uk]

          (The report can be found at http://static.berkeleyearth.or... [berkeleyearth.org])

          Your argument is misleading. It is true that the question "which was the hottest year since recording in 1860?" Has three possible answers within the uncertainties, 2014, 2010 and 2005. But to the question "which was the hottest decade since recording in 1860?" has a clear answer: the last one. Of course there will be year-to-year fluctuations. But to look at the plot on page 3 and say "oh global warming has stopped just now" is wishful thinking. Also look at the "Ocean Surface Averages", page 5.

        • Re:They already have (Score:4, Informative)

          by riverat1 ( 1048260 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @10:33PM (#48872225)

          Whether 2014 is the warmest in the instrument record or not is beside the point. The continued warming is unequivocal. The only reason that a "hiatus" can be claimed by some is because 1998 was such an extreme outlier year.

          Tamino over at Open Mind did a graph of the linear temperature trend since 1970 against the year to year variability. 2014 is right on the linear temperature trend line [wordpress.com] which shows temperatures are increasing without evidence of the increases slowing down. It's just year to year variability that gives you an excuse to think it isn't.

          Another way to look at it is to take 10 year slices rather than year to year. That's more of a climate centric view than a year to year weather centric view. Here is a bar graph of warming anomalies in decadal slices since the start of the instrument record. [blogspot.com] Below is a text table of the results for those who don't want to click the link:

          GISTemp Decadal Global Surface Temperature
          (Anomaly from 1950-1981 mean)

          Decade_______Anomaly
          1884-1893_____-0.26
          1894-1903_____-0.25
          1904-1913_____-0.40
          1914-1923_____-0.28
          1924-1933_____-0.17
          1934-1943_____+0.00
          1944-1953_____-0.03
          1954-1963_____-0.02
          1964-1973_____-0.02
          1974-1983_____+0.10
          1984-1993_____+0.24
          1994-2003_____+0.46
          2004-2014_____+0.59

          It's easy to take a short period and make arguments about it but when you look at it in a way that filters out the short term noise like year to year variability the picture becomes much clearer.

  • by tchdab1 ( 164848 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:09PM (#48869069) Homepage

    I wish the vote were worded "Is the denial of climate change a hoax?"

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:40PM (#48869523) Journal
      In Hawaii back in 97 or 98 there was an election to legalize gay marriage, but the proposition was worded in the negative. Campaigners were worried that it would confuse everyone, so you would see advertisements like, "A no vote means yes. A yes vote means no." Which only further confused people. By the end of the election gay marriage was still illegal, but it is not clear what the population actually wanted. Eventually Hawaii legalized gay marriage.
  • by HalAtWork ( 926717 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:13PM (#48869141)
    This is the type of thing you actually have to research and prove one way or the other.
  • by lazarus ( 2879 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:17PM (#48869191) Journal

    NASA seems to think that climate change is being caused by human activities [nasa.gov] and they back it up with a lot of references to studies on the matter. IMHO, we're never going to convince people to change their behaviors or give up their luxuries. If we want to make a difference we need to develop the technologies that make it more advantageous to adopt the renewable solution (like kick-ass cars and cheaper home energy).

  • by eepok ( 545733 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:23PM (#48869305) Homepage

    If we can simply use the vote to determine reality, why are we bothering to vote on climate change. I say we treat the senate gavel like a genie's lamp and vote on the realities of cancer, aliens, death, and god.

  • by davidwr ( 791652 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:28PM (#48869359) Homepage Journal

    Saying whether or not climate change is real, is not real, or is unknown is not a statement for non-subject-matter experts to make until/unless there is enough evidence that it is clearly real or clearly not real to the layman. If either one were the case, we wouldn't even be having this discussion.

    In other words, every Senator who isn't either a subject-matter expert or an arrogant person and who doesn't want people to think he is in one of those two groups must abstain if this comes to a vote.

  • by bulled ( 956533 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:35PM (#48869461)
    The next time you get to vote on if your senator is a hoax...
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @04:59PM (#48869721)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Ambassador Kosh ( 18352 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @05:33PM (#48870075)

      Every country does deeply stupid things.

      Look at the EU and their policy on GMO. It is ENTIRELY fear based. They just label something as GMO which is completely useless and people are taught that GMO is bad period. Even research into GMO has almost entirely ended in Europe. It doesn't matter that their own studies show the ones they have tested are safe they continue to be against it not just in the EU but world wide. The EU is a pretty major factor in stopping the usage of golden rice.

      This kind of thing can go both ways.

      I am currently in Germany working on a Masters degree and PhD but some of my professors have already told me that to do my work once I am done I will have to go back to the USA since DNA editing on humans is pretty much defacto illegal in the EU and they don't allow the research into it either. However in the USA we have companies using technology like CRISPR/CAS9 to silence genes that causes diseases like Huntington's disease. Imagine a one time injection and you are completely cured of a horrible genetic disease? Imagine being able to replace faulty tumor suppressor genes and virtually wipe out cancer.

      However none of that matters. People in different areas of the world have a world viewpoint and then they pick and choose the science that supports it and try to claim superiority over others based on that. With liberals in the USA we have the anti-vaccine movement and that is something that conservatives are almost universal in support of and the anti-vaccine movement is massively anti science and should be stopped before they cause the deaths of tens of millions of people. We have the conservatives not accepting human damage to the environment. We have Europeans against genetic engineering. We have countries where their religious beliefs means that women are second class citizens.

      The human race is a bunch of barely evolved thugs and barbarians and they like to claim they are civilized by choosing bits and pieces of science to support their worldview and make fun of anyone else that does not accept that science also while ignoring the stuff they refuse to accept.

      • by kenj123 ( 658721 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @05:42PM (#48870149)
        I think the euro-centric view is 'first do no harm' and the American view is 'show me the money'.
      • With liberals in the USA we have the anti-vaccine movement and that is something that conservatives are almost universal in support of and the anti-vaccine movement is massively anti science and should be stopped before they cause the deaths of tens of millions of people.

        FYI recently the anti-vaccine movement has been picked up by the religious right, preaching it from the pulpit (literally), so while it is still primarily a liberal cause, I now get anti-vaccine propaganda in my Facebook feed from both sides of the aisle.

  • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @05:31PM (#48870059)

    Similar to a state legislature deciding on an official value for pi. I wonder how many Senators took more than a few terms of basic science in pursuit of their law/business degrees?

    Further imagine how much lobbyist money is going to be wasted if the vote goes the wrong way and an alternative result is needed? There are much bigger issues to be bought, talk about not seeing the forest for the trees.

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday January 21, 2015 @06:32PM (#48870585)

    Well, it should not be. I know, I know, unfortunately it is more often than not, but at least it's not as blatantly stupid as this one. Usually there is at least a bit of relevant data to it.

    In other words, it's not something you can wish to be or not to be. Whether global warming exists cannot be determined by wanting it to be one way or the other. You can of course vote on whether you want to do act like there is global warming or whether you want to act like there is none. Ok. That's possible.

    But whether it exists certainly is beyond your jurisdiction.

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