Select your preferred color scheme | |
Stark | Isle |
Shore | Field |
Twilight | Coral |
Brought to you by DemandDebate.com
Because no one should dictate what you see.
By Steven Milloy
March 27, 2008
By any standard, atmospheric physicist Dr. S. Fred Singer is a remarkably accomplished scientist. But his
outspoken questioning of global warming alarmism has just earned him one of the most outrageous mainstream media
smear pieces I’ve ever seen.
ABC News reporter Dan Harris interviewed Dr. Singer for more than an hour at the recent International
Climate Conference. From that interview, Harris produced a 3-minute TV broadcast and website article
that was about as fair and objective towards Dr. Singer as I might expect Greenpeace to be. In fact, considering the
activist group’s dominant role in Harris’ “report,” it seems that ABC News was merely the production company
for a Greenpeace propaganda hit.
Harris’ piece starts out, “His fellow scientists call him a fraud, a charlatan, and a showman, but Fred Singer
calls himself ‘a realist.’”
And just who are these “fellow scientists”? Harris didn’t identify them. But I doubt anyone who knows anything
about Dr. Singer could slander him like that in good conscience.
Armed with a doctorate from Princeton University, Dr. Singer played a key role in the U.S. Navy’s development of
countermeasures for mine warfare during World War II. From there, Dr. Singer went on to achieve fame in space
science.
Some of his major accomplishments include:
using rockets to make the first measurements of cosmic radiation in space along with James A. Van Allen (1947-50);
design of the first instrument for measuring stratospheric ozone (1956); developing the capture theory for the
origin of the Moon and Martian satellites (1966); calculating the increase in methane emissions due to population
growth which is not key to global warming and ozone depletion theories (1971); and discovering orbital debris clouds
with satellite instruments (1990).
Dr. Singer is exceedingly modest about his career. Although I have personally known him for more than decade, I
only inadvertently learned of his earlier achievements last year while reading “Sputnik: The Shock of the
Century” (Walker & Company, 2007) which chronicles the development of the U.S. Space Program.
The book described Dr. Singer, along with Van Allen, as a “pioneer of space science.” The author also wrote,
“America’s journey into space can arguably be traced to a gathering at James Van Allen’s house in Silver
Spring, Maryland on April 5, 1950. The guest of honor was the eminent British geophysicist Sydney Chapman… The
other guests were S. Fred Singer…”
Among his many prominent positions, Dr. Singer was the first director of the National Weather Satellite Center and
the first dean of the University of Miami’s School of Environmental and Planetary Sciences. He’s also held many
senior administrative positions at federal agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency, Department of
Transportation and Department of Interior.
Despite this illustrious bio, ABC News’ Harris was apparently too busy swallowing the Greenpeace caricature of Dr.
Singer to do any research on the actual man.
In a letter to ABC News, Dr. Singer complained that “Dan Harris also referred to unnamed scientists from NASA,
Princeton and Stanford, who pronounced what I do as ‘fraudulent nonsense’… They are easily identified as
the well-known global warming zealots Jim Hansen, Michael Oppenheimer and Steve Schneider. They should be asked by
ABC to put their money where their mouth is and have a scientific debate with me. I suspect they’ll chicken out.
They surely know that the facts support my position -- so they resort to anonymous slurs.”
Perhaps the most comical part of Harris’ hit piece is the Greenpeace contribution.
In the eco-activist tradition of willful ignorance and ad hominem attack, Greenpeace’s Kert Davies said of Dr.
Singer, “He’s kind of a career skeptic. He believes that environmental problems are all overblown and he’s
made a career on being that voice.”
Right, Kert. Dr. Singer is just now making his career.
And just who is Kert Davies, described by Harris as a “global warming specialist,” and what exactly qualifies
him to pass any sort of judgment on Dr. Singer?
I e-mailed Kert a request for his resume in order to learn precisely what a “global warming specialist” is. I
received no response as of the writing of this column.
Dr. Singer’s eminent qualifications and lifetime of accomplishment are readily available on the Internet for all
to see. What about Davies’ qualifications and accomplishments? I couldn’t find them on the Greenpeace web site.
I couldn’t find them through a Nexis search. Is it possible that their Internet absence is indicative of their
general nature?
All that I could find out about Davies is that the media has often used quotes from him in the role of a spokesman
for various eco-activist groups since the mid-1990s.
Worse than Davies is ABC News’ Harris. Although he didn’t need any particular qualifications or expertise to
fairly report the interview with Dr. Singer other than perhaps some basic journalistic objectivity, he couldn’t
even manage that as he allowed the distinguished Dr. Singer to be smeared by a rather undistinguished blowhard.
This column recently reported on another recent mainstream media effort to marginalize those who question global
warming alarmism. It’s a fascinating phenomenon given that available scientific evidence
on the all-important relationship between atmospheric carbon dioxide and global climate indisputably supports Dr.
Singer’s point-of-view rather than the alarmists.
Apparently the activists have decided that since they can’t destroy the facts, they’ll instead try to destroy
anyone who dares mention them.
Steven Milloy publishes JunkScience.com and DemandDebate.com. He is a junk science expert, and advocate of free enterprise and an adjunct scholar at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.