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Global
Warming Censored
How the Major Networks Silence the Debate on Climate Change
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Correction Appended
A study from the Business & Media Institute
By Julia A. Seymour and Dan Gainor
Full Report |
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Sidebars
Global warming crusader Al Gore repeatedly claims the
climate change “debate’s over.” It isn’t, but the news media clearly
agree with him. Global warming skeptics rarely get any say on the
networks, and when their opinions are mentioned it is often with
barbs like “cynics” or “deniers” thrown in to undermine them.
Consistently viewers are being sent only one message
from ABC, CBS and NBC: global warming is an environmental
catastrophe and it’s mankind’s fault. Skepticism is all but shut out
of reports through several tactics – omission, name-calling, the
hype of frightening images like polar bears scavenging for food near
towns and a barrage of terrifying predictions.
The Business & Media Institute analyzed 205 network
news stories about “global warming” or “climate change” between July
1, 2007, and Dec. 31, 2007. BMI found a meager 20 percent of stories
even mentioned there were any alternative opinions to the so-called
“consensus” on the issue.
• Disagreement Squashed:
Global warming proponents overwhelmingly outnumbered those with
dissenting opinions. On average for every skeptic there were
nearly 13 proponents featured. ABC did a slightly better job
with a 7-to-1 ratio, while CBS’s ratio was abysmal at nearly
38-to-1.
• Can I See Some ID?: Scientists made up only 15 percent
of the global warming proponents shown. The remaining 85 percent
included politicians, celebrities, other journalists and even
ordinary men and women. There were more unidentified interview
subjects used to support climate change hype than actual
scientists (101 unidentified to just 71 scientists)
•
What’s It Going to Cost?: All “solutions” have a price, but
the cost of fighting global warming was something you rarely
heard on the network news. Only 22 stories (11 percent)
mentioned any cost of “fixing” global warming. On the rare
occasion cost came up, it came from the lips of a skeptic like
Kentucky state Rep. Jim Gooch (D), who said one climate change
bill in Congress “would cost $6 trillion.”
• CBS the Worst: Journalist/global warming advocate Scott
Pelley helped CBS be, by far, the worst network. Pelley argued
in 2006 that he shouldn’t have to include skeptics in such
stories because “If I do an interview with [Holocaust survivor]
Elie Wiesel, am I required as a journalist to find a Holocaust
denier?” In 2007, he helped ensure only four skeptics were
included by CBS – and not a single one was a scientist. Compare
that to the 151 people used by the network to promote global
warming hysteria. The wildly one-sided outcome was not
surprising given remarks by some of its other journalists. Harry
Smith declared that “There is, in fact, global climate change”
on the Aug. 7, 2007, “Early Show.”
• ABC the “Best”: Despite its over-the-top climate
hypocrisy of jet-setting journalists around the world to cover
climate change, ABC included more skepticism (36 percent) in its
broadcasts than either NBC or CBS. Still, the network has plenty
of work to do. Bill Weir made the outrageous claim during the
Nov. 18, 2007, “Good Morning America” that “all these
scientists” urge immediate action to stop global warming.
Weather personality Sam Champion even referred to the most
recent U.N. climate report as “unequivocal” and “definitive.
To improve coverage, BMI
recommends:
• Report the issue objectively: Reporters have a
professional responsibility to remain objective and avoid
inserting their own opinions into their reports. Many in the
media have sorely missed that mark when it comes to reporting on
global warming and climate change.
• Include skeptics: The Society of Professional
Journalists Code of Ethics states journalists should
“Support
the open exchange of views, even views they find repugnant.” It
is the media’s job to inform the public, not persuade them by
leaving out alternative viewpoints. Particularly, networks
should give skeptical scientists the opportunity to share their
findings – just like they include scientists who say manmade
global warming is negatively impacting the planet.
• Show Me the Money: If the U.S. government passes
legislation to address global warming, it will carry a cost and
American taxpayers have a right to know what it would be. The
media need to do a much better job by asking about or including
cost estimates of climate change “solutions.”
Read the Full Report
Correction:
State
Representative Jim Gooch (D-Ky.) was incorrectly identified within
the report as Bill Gooch. BMI regrets the error.
Want more? Check out BMI's previous report on the on the great
Global Warming hoax here:
Fire & Ice: Journalists have warned of climate change for
100 years, but can’t decide weather we face an ice age or warming
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