Just received email from Michael Yon, who's reporting from Afghanistan. For years he's been very pessimistic about the progress of the war in Afghanistan, and very critical of the prosecution of the war there.
Today he posts some very different impressions. He's feeling downright optimistic now that Obama has committed to the surge.
In my own experience, Yon is the most competent, sober, and best-informed source of information on our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Reading his words today, I'm feeling very relieved. I sure hope he's right (again)...
Monday, December 7, 2009
ClimateGate: East Anglia University Statement...
Here's the updated statement from East Anglia University (home of the CRU). Most of it is defensive, of course. There are several explicit denials about the significance of anything revealed in the ClimateGate trove.
But most interesting to me are the two graphs at the bottom of the page. The top graph is the famous “hockey stick” graph, showing precipitous rises in measured and modeled temperatures. This is the graph that was published in the IPCC reports, and has been used very widely by AGW promoters. The bottom graph is the same data, but “uncorrected”. In other words, the raw data with no fudge factors and no tricks.
Those two graphs tell one of the essential revelations of ClimateGate, and here, for the very first time, the CRU is 'fessing up.
I suspect we'll be seeing more like this.
But most interesting to me are the two graphs at the bottom of the page. The top graph is the famous “hockey stick” graph, showing precipitous rises in measured and modeled temperatures. This is the graph that was published in the IPCC reports, and has been used very widely by AGW promoters. The bottom graph is the same data, but “uncorrected”. In other words, the raw data with no fudge factors and no tricks.
Those two graphs tell one of the essential revelations of ClimateGate, and here, for the very first time, the CRU is 'fessing up.
I suspect we'll be seeing more like this.
Labels:
ClimateGate
ClimateGate: The Role of Bloggers and the Web...
Interesting piece in the Wall Street Journal today...
Labels:
ClimateGate
A Day That Shall Live in Infamy...
Sixty-eight years ago today, Imperial Japan attacked the U.S. at Pearl Harbor. Until 9/11, this event was unrivaled as the most horrible unprovoked attack the U.S. had ever suffered. A few Pearl Harbor survivors are still alive, and some are planning to visit the site today. Here in California, we have special license plates to honor Pearl Harbor survivors – and I still see them driving around occasionally.
Just once, several years ago, I actually had the chance to meet and talk with one of these Pearl Harbor survivors, as we both climbed out of our cars in a grocery store parking lot. The fellow I met was 17 years old at the time of the attack, and was a “plane wrangler” at one of the air bases. His job was to move the fighter planes from hangers to the flight line and vice versa. He could do little on that day except to hide from the attacking Japanese planes, and to help clean up afterwards.
Today I read that historians believe they have found the missing fifth Japanese mini-sub – and that they have evidence that it actually participated in the attack (unlike the other four). If this is proven, a little re-writing of history will be required...
While 9/11 looms much larger in my mind these days, the Pearl Harbor attack still holds many lessons for us. I've read extensively on World War II in general, and the Pacific theatre in particular, and yet still every time I read a new book I run into new information. The most useful things, I think, are the illustrations about how people actually behave under extreme circumstances. Our society rests in large part on assumptions about good behavior by people all over the world – and Pearl Harbor teaches us that it ain't necessarily so. The whole period has been so thoroughly mined by historians that one can quite easily get an understanding about how and why both sides acted the way they did. This is not yet possible with 9/11.
Anyway, take a few moments today to reflect on the meaning of the Pearl Harbor attack. If you have the opportunity, by all means do your bit to honor those who served there – both those who died, and those who survived...
Just once, several years ago, I actually had the chance to meet and talk with one of these Pearl Harbor survivors, as we both climbed out of our cars in a grocery store parking lot. The fellow I met was 17 years old at the time of the attack, and was a “plane wrangler” at one of the air bases. His job was to move the fighter planes from hangers to the flight line and vice versa. He could do little on that day except to hide from the attacking Japanese planes, and to help clean up afterwards.
Today I read that historians believe they have found the missing fifth Japanese mini-sub – and that they have evidence that it actually participated in the attack (unlike the other four). If this is proven, a little re-writing of history will be required...
While 9/11 looms much larger in my mind these days, the Pearl Harbor attack still holds many lessons for us. I've read extensively on World War II in general, and the Pacific theatre in particular, and yet still every time I read a new book I run into new information. The most useful things, I think, are the illustrations about how people actually behave under extreme circumstances. Our society rests in large part on assumptions about good behavior by people all over the world – and Pearl Harbor teaches us that it ain't necessarily so. The whole period has been so thoroughly mined by historians that one can quite easily get an understanding about how and why both sides acted the way they did. This is not yet possible with 9/11.
Anyway, take a few moments today to reflect on the meaning of the Pearl Harbor attack. If you have the opportunity, by all means do your bit to honor those who served there – both those who died, and those who survived...
Labels:
History,
Pearl Harbor
ClimateGate: So Much for Ignoring It at Copenhagen...
AGW supporters have been trying very hard to pretend ClimateGate never happened, and that even if it did, it doesn't matter. The science is settled, dammit!
Oops.
Oops.
Labels:
ClimateGate
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