@Chronic
Sciencing Be Hard
By Richard Whittaker, Fri., Oct. 5, 2007

During his talk at the Frank Erwin Center last night, former Vice President Al Gore noted that while there is an almost unprecedented scientific consensus on the facts and causes of global warming, the same can't be said of the media coverage. Too many journalists, confused by the science or misguidedly providing balance by highlighting an unbalanced opposition, give the anti-regulation lobby a platform they do not deserve. Dryly pointing at the polluters' mouthpieces, he noted that if there were money in it, there would be people decrying the "theory" of gravity to confuse the media.
On a related note, we turn to Monday's op-ed from those mavens of science and defenders of the environment, the Statesman editorial board. In an editorial entitled "Gore's footprint in Austin," Editor Rich Oppel et al. laud Gore for keeping climate change an issue and bringing "the message to masses of people unlikely to pick up a scientific journal." A mass that, seemingly, includes them.
"Though there is dispute over the causes of climate change," they wrote, "there can be little denying that people and their machines contribute to the deterioration of the Earth's ozone layer. That deterioration, in turn, is changing the world's climate." Erm ... except, that's not really the point. While the destruction of the ozone layer is a bad thing, and caused by human activity, it's not the driver of global warming. That comes from CO2 and methane, those nasty greenhouse gases, trapping the energy from the sun in the atmosphere. In fact, in his presentation, Gore specifically cites the successful international response to saving the ozone layer as proof it isn't too late to fix global warming.
It must be noted that this was written before Gore's presentation. Presumably the daily's muckety-mucks have a stronger grasp on the issues now.
Posted Oct. 2 to austinchronicle.com/chronic.
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