So? If someone files a lot of FOI requests, it stands to reason that he might file some duplicates, whether by accident or by double-checking.
McIntyre admitted in having this data all along unless I' m completely off the rails.
I personally do not know how FOI requests are handled, nor does it really matter.
It does, if you use the phrase
"When the FOI requests began here, the FOI person said we had to abide
by the requests. It took a couple of half hour sessions - one at a screen, to convince
them otherwise showing them what CA was all about."
as an indication of some kind of conspiracy.
You'll have to elaborate because I'm not following your train of conclusions here. It sounds more like Phil is asking Keith to send his stuff to Tom, so that Tom can have a look over it before it gets released. That is consistent with "vetting" the data (and perhaps withholding some of it) before it's released.
Wait a minute, I try to parse this again.
Tom sends Phil a message, complaining that Keith has done something. Phil sends Keith a message, proposing Keith to send information to Tom.
Ok, actually I retract my previous statement. I still don't see the discussion particularly condemning, perhaps you could rephrase the reasons to me.
No, I (and not only I, many other people on the Internet) am taking a huge number of emails and characterizing the institution based on what it revealed about itself through its emails. That's not cherrypicking; it's establishing a pattern.
Ridiculous. If the skeptics are establishing a pattern, then how come it's one email today, after it's debunked - such as the "trick" email which was apparently a huge deal - they move on to next.
There has been no evidence of falsifying evidence. No evidence of fraudulent studies. All you have a series of completely OOC and misunderstood emails - maybe 10 which are in wider internet ciruclation right now - from 15 years from
one institution and you think this is evidence of something? Right now the big deal seems to be about the "travesty" quote, before that we were dealing with the entire "can scientists withhold data" - when people realized that yes, they can, for example when the primary data is someone else's, people moved onwards.
Seriously, I could right now dig through your post history, rip some sentences out of the context and then claim this represents HLP as whole. The entire argument is just that ridiculous.
I hate to break it out to you, but this entire debate tactic is way too similar to "rip small things out of context, ignore everything else, think one people = all them, just moved on when challenged" tactic employed by a very special group that has been dimishing in power during the last decade. I do not name that one.
At present, I'm damned and publicly vilified because I refused to provide McIntyre with the data he
requested. But had I acceded to McIntyre's initial request for climate model data, I'm
convinced (based on the past experiences of Mike Mann, Phil, and Gavin) that I would
have spent years of my scientific career dealing with demands for further explanations,
additional data, Fortran code, etc. (Phil has been complying with FOIA requests from
McIntyre and his cronies for over two years). And if I ever denied a single request for
further information, McIntyre would have rubbed his hands gleefully and written: "You
see - he's guilty as charged!" on his website.
Huh? Providing McIntyre, or anyone else, with data in response to a FOIA request is the law. Doesn't matter if you want to; doesn't matter if you like the guy or not; you're obligated to provide the information.
This is like saying "If I had complied with the law here, I'm convinced I would have spent years of my scientific career complying with the law. So I had to refuse to follow the law up front so the guy wouldn't bug me anymore."[/quote]
No you aren't, if A) the requests are handled on a need-to-know basis (which you already glossed over as insignificant before!) and B) if the data isn't yours to hand out freely (sometimes the organizations, for example, sell primary data and then it's definitely not in particular scientist's bussiness to do it). If FOI actually demanded people would give out even the data they hadn't access to, then British science society's funding would collapse overnight. Somehow I think this is not the case.
Besides, is a private exchange between two people about some asshole they hate
really indicative of
what they did?
This is true; however if such systemic corruption is present in the Hadley Center, it begs the question of why it took being hacked to reveal it.
What corruption?
No, there's still the question of whether the earth is actually warming. Temperatures have been dropping for the last ten years, which belies the "inexorable warming trend" that the warmists have been promoting.
This is ridiculous. This works if your 10 year period starts in 1998 and you ignore context. And of course this is the only 10-year period that matters to skeptics: starting in 1997 or 1999 both trend warming.
Whaddaya know.
Now people will say that the recent temperature drop is only a temporary dip in the face of a long-term trend, but the problem is that if climate models keep needing to be revised every time new data arrives, then they're not reliable enough yet to make any firm prediction about the future.
i
i don't even know how to respond to this. you see this boils down to as.
"all trends show warming, all effects show warming, look at all what has happened and how well - if sometimes underestimated - our predictions have held true but these ****ING SCIENTISTS REVISE AND FINETUNE THEIR HYPOTHESISES WHEN THEY GET MORE DATA"
i have no words. Seriously, I have no words.