|
Global
Warming Censored
Networks Stifle Debate, Rely on Politicians, Rock Stars and
Men-on-the-Street for Science
FULL REPORT
A study from the Business & Media Institute
By Julia A. Seymour amd Dan Gainor
Executive
Summary |
PDF Version
Sidebars:
The Great Solar Energy Exchange
The Champion of Climate Change
A Costly Compromise…
INDEX
-
Voices of Dissent: Missing
-
‘Deniers,’ ‘Hired Guns’ and Hostile Interviews
-
You
Call Them Experts
-
No Need for
Debate, Warming is ‘Fact’
-
It Don’t Cost a Thing if It’s Got That Climate Swing
-
Methodology
-
Resources
So much
for that job requirement of balance and objectivity. When it came to
global warming the media clearly left out dissent in favor of hype,
cute penguins and disastrous predictions.
"They
[penguins] are charismatic, endearing and in serious trouble,"
warned NBC's Anne Thompson on the Dec. 12, 2007, "Nightly News."
Thompson didn’t include any disagreement.
While the
networks had plenty of time to worry about the future of birds, most
network news shows didn’t take much time to include any other point
of view even though hundreds of scientists have expressed skepticism
of manmade climate change theory.
Another
NBC reporter, Kerry Sanders, hyped the threat of warming to polar
bears and walruses on Dec. 9, 2007, "a world scientists say may melt
away by 2050." Sanders didn’t include any scientists who disagreed
with that claim.
The lack
of balance on the issue prompted one network journalist, John
Stossel of ABC, to do a story on the media’s one-sidedness on
“20/20” Oct. 19, 2007.
“You’ve
heard the reports. The globe is warming. And it’s our fault. And the
consequences will be terrible. But you should know there is another
side to this story,” teased Stossel as he began his “Give me a
Break” segment.
There is
another side to the issue. In one story, Stossel interviewed four
scientists critical of the so-called “consensus” on global warming.
That’s four more dissenting scientists than CBS put on its network
in six entire months.
To better
assess network behavior on this key topic, the Business & Media
Institute examined 205 stories from ABC, CBS and NBC that mentioned
"global warming" or "climate change" between July 1, 2007, and Dec.
31, 2007.
BMI found
skepticism was shut out of a vast majority of reports. Overall, a
measly 20 percent had any dissent at all referenced by a journalist
or guest.
Skeptical
voices were suppressed by the networks, outnumbered by nearly a
7-to-1 ratio by those promoting fear of climate change or being used
by the network for the same purpose. CBS had an even worse record:
nearly 38 proponents to one skeptic.
Lengthy
segments like Scott Pelley's Oct. 21, 2007, "60 Minutes" story on
"The Age of Megafires" certainly had time to include an alternative
point of view to the notion that global warming is largely
responsible for bigger, hotter fires in the American West. But
Pelley skipped those voices – voices like a University of California
Merced professor published on the Washington Spokesman-Review Web
site about the California wildfires.
According
to Alan Zarembo’s Oct. 24, 2007, story,
“Scientists said it would be difficult to make that case, given the
combustible mix of drought and wind that has plagued the region for
centuries or more.”
Anthony
Westerling, a UC-Merced professor and climate scientist, told
Zarembo that the wildfires were the result of two “staples of the
region's climatic history,” meaning “strong Santa Ana winds” and “a
drought that turned much of the hillsides to bone-dry kindling.”
"Neither
can be attributed to climate change," said Westerling.
The near
blackout of skepticism on the networks didn't come as much of a
surprise, since reporters like Pelley have been much more than
onlookers in the story of global warming. In many cases they have
become advocates – even going “to the ends of the earth” “to find
evidence of climate change.”
Ann Curry
of NBC’s “Today” made that clear on Oct. 29, 2007: “[O]ur mission,
of course, is to find evidence of climate change.”
When
people with other views were mentioned, it sometimes came with a
denigrating label like “deniers” or “cynics.” Such critics were also
portrayed as flat-earthers by journalists and guests. One person
skeptical of manmade climate change, a Kentucky state
representative, managed to get on the air but was treated to an
exceptionally hostile interview by ABC’s Bill Weir.
There were
many other flaws in the reporting that created a very one-sided
perspective. Journalists repeatedly phrased questions or made
statements indicating human-caused warming was a fact, and they
included opinions of politicians, movie stars, musicians and
ordinary people like bankers instead of relying on scientists.
But
according to Dr. Pat Michaels viewers would be better served by
hearing both sides. “They would benefit from appreciating the true
scientific diversity on the topic. The arguments against these gloom
and doom global warming scenarios are much stronger than the
arguments for them,” Michaels told BMI.
Voices of Dissent: Missing
According
to NBC’s Brian Williams, “There’s no shortage of folks out there
saying it’s [global warming is] not all that bad.” Williams was
teasing a “Nightly News” story on August 15 that included two other
voices: Dr. Pat Michaels,
a research professor of environmental sciences, and Marlo Lewis,
senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
Williams
was certainly right – there are
hundreds of scientists from around the world who question the
global warming “consensus” – but in the news the latter half of 2007
you had to look hard to find them.
On the
three networks, 80 percent of stories (167 out of 205) didn’t
mention skepticism or anyone at all who dissented from global
warming alarmism. CBS did the absolute worst job. Ninety-seven
percent of its stories (34 out of 35) ignored other opinions.
Williams’ own network, NBC, came in a close second with 85 percent
(76 out of 89) excluding skepticism. ABC was the most balanced
network, but still censored dissent from 64 percent of its stories
(34 out of 53).
But
dissent flourishes. The U.S. Senate Environment and Public Works (EPW)
Committee released a
list on Dec. 20, 2007, of more than 400 skeptical scientists
from different fields – astrophysics, geology, climatology,
meteorology and others. The release didn’t even earn a news brief
from one of the three networks as of Dec. 31, 2007.
Even when
one show claimed it would represent a range of opinions on the
issue, it didn’t. On Oct. 30, 2007, NBC “Today” co-host Matt Lauer
teased the upcoming “Ends of the Earth” broadcasts saying to
Meredith Vieira, “And you’re going to be interviewing all the
experts talking about the issues of climate change.” (emphasis
added)
Vieira
replied, “Absolutely. Getting into a whole debate, too, because some
people believe there’s an effect of climate change, others say not
really. So we’re going to discuss all of it and give viewers at home
real tips on what you can do.”
But on
Nov. 5 and 6, 2007 as “Today” went to the “Ends of the Earth,” the
only “experts” Vieira spoke to were former vice president Al Gore,
Chip Giller of Grist.org – a left-wing environmental Web site – and
Katherine Wroth, co-author of “Wake Up and Smell the Planet.”
Grist is
an extreme publication. David Roberts of the environmentalist
magazine called for
"war crimes trials for these bastards – some sort of climate
Nuremberg," referring to the climate change "denial
industry." (Roberts later
retracted his comment, but not until it received a strongly
negative response.)
The only
skepticism of global warming “consensus” that came up was a brief
mention by Vieira as she interviewed Gore. She asked Gore about John
Christy, one scientist formerly with the United Nations’
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), who criticized
Gore’s predictions in an op-ed printed in The Wall Street Journal.
Gore shot back calling Christy an “outlier.”
Vieira
didn't question Gore's remark or give Christy an opportunity to
respond to the attack. Perhaps if she had, Christy would have echoed
his remarks from the Nov. 1, 2007,
Wall Street Journal:
“I see
neither the developing catastrophe nor the smoking gun proving that
human activity is to blame for most of the warming we see. Rather, I
see a reliance on climate models (useful but never ‘proof’) and the
coincidence that change in carbon dioxide and global temperatures
have loose similarity over time,” said Christy.
He
continued, “We [dissenting scientists] discount the possibility that
everything is caused by human actions, because everything
we’ve seen the climate do has happened before. Sea levels rise and
fall continually. The Arctic ice cap has shrunk before. One
millennium there are hippos swimming in the Thames, and a geological
blink later there is an ice bridge linking Asia and North America.
‘Deniers,’
‘Hired Guns’ and Hostile Interviews
Journalists practically drooled
over Al Gore during Live Earth interviews and after he won the Nobel
Peace Prize. In contrast, people with alternative views barely got
face time on the networks. Instead, they received insults and
hostile questions.
The
ugliest treatment of a skeptic was by Bill Weir on Nov. 18, 2007,
“Good Morning America.” He was interviewing Democratic state
representative Bill Gooch from Kentucky.
Weir
peppered Gooch with hardball questions and even attacked Gooch’s
motives:
- “So what
do you suspect these 4,000 or so scientists from 130 countries
are up to? Do you accuse them [IPCC scientists] of lying? Do you
think they’re just all wrong?”
- “I should
point out that your family is in business with the coal
industry. You opposed a bill that would’ve stopped coal mines
from exploding the tops of mountains and dumping waste into
rivers there. So shouldn’t you temper on your opinion on the
environment?”
Gooch made
it clear that he supported an open debate, saying, “[T]here is
another side of the story. I think what we have is we have the
problem of global warming about to become a political problem when
lawmakers in Congress, when governors in states, when even the
courts start to act in ways that are gonna affect the American
people in severe ways.” Gooch then mentioned the possible
$6-trillion cost of one bill to deal with global warming.
“And what
I wanna make sure that we do is that if we act, we have the science
right,” explained Gooch.
Weir
wasn’t satisfied: “But, but according to all these scientists, the
more handwringing we do, the more we dither on this, the worse it’s
going to get. And what if you’re wrong? What if this is, in fact, a
global catastrophe? Isn’t it a moral imperative as a public servant
to err on the side of planetary survival and get something done?”
Instead of
letting Gooch debate with someone who disagreed, Weir filled that
role himself. He came across as a passionate advocate for
“something” that would supposedly aid “survival,” ignoring the cost,
accuracy, and his supposed objectivity.
Journalists also called skeptics “deniers,” conjuring images of
Holocaust deniers, and cast them as flat-earthers – ironically
forgetting that there was once a scientific consensus that the earth
was flat.
When Gore
attacked
Dr. Christy [who was mentioned by Meredith Vieira] on “Today”
Nov. 5, 2007, Gore specifically compared people critical of
anthropogenic (human-caused) global warming to people who think the
Earth is flat.
“Well,
he’s an outlier, he no longer belongs to the IPCC. And he is way
outside the scientific consensus … There are still people who
believe that the Earth is flat,” said Gore.
Republican governor Arnold Schwarzenegger made the same disparaging
comparison on July 16, 2007 “Early Show” on CBS. After co-host Harry
Smith said, “[I] asked why some people still don’t believe we have a
problem.”
“Well, I
think that there is [sic] still a lot of people that still think
that the world is flat,” said Schwarzenegger.
NBC's
chief environmental affairs correspondent Anne Thompson said, "He is
proudly a denier," of research professor and CATO senior fellow Dr.
Pat Michaels.
Michaels
told BMI, “She has no idea what she’s talking about. I have written
and spoken repeatedly in the last 15 years that human beings are
responsible for most of the warming in the past century.” What
Michaels disagrees on is whether such warming will result in
environmental catastrophe.
Recalling
that NBC interview, Michaels continued, “The interview was great,
but she pulled out one little piece and took it completely out of
context. It was really, really disappointing. The interview was
conducted in a very professional fashion, it was the editing that
clearly did not reflect the tone and content of the overall
interview.”
Thompson
actually included two dissenting views in that Aug. 15, 2007,
“Nightly News” but undermined both their opinions by implying they
were not experts and were only making trouble: “Climate experts say
whether hired guns or honest dissenters, deniers are confusing the
issue and delaying solutions.”
A paltry
37 people expressing skepticism were included in six months of TV
news coverage on the issue across three networks. That included all
kinds of people like politicians or government employees, business
representatives, celebrities, ordinary people and unidentified
people. Only seven of them were scientists like Michaels.
CBS
practically banned skeptics from its network, including only four
and not a single scientist. The network seemed to adopt the
mentality of CBS journalist Scott Pelley, who referred to global
warming skeptics as “deniers” in March 2006 when he said,
“If I do an interview with [Holocaust survivor] Elie Wiesel, am I
required as a journalist to find a Holocaust denier?” Recent “60
Minutes” segments from Pelley indicated he hasn’t changed his mind
about balanced journalism.
Those
skeptical of the environmental impact of Gore’s Live Earth concerts
on July 7, 2007 also earned scorn from the media – even those like
Bob Geldof who weren’t questioning the science.
“[T]here
have been cynics out there who question whether the artists are
practicing what they preach,” said NBC’s Lester Holt on July 7, 2007
“Today.”
You Call Them Experts?
ABC’s Bill Weir claimed that
“all the scientists” urge immediate action to stop global warming,
but it wasn’t just scientists the three networks relied on to make
that case. Far from it.
There were
politicians and government workers. Musicians like Madonna and Dave
Matthews. Movie star Leonardo DiCaprio. And quite possibly, your
next-door neighbor.
What those
celebrities said had little to do with science and everything to do
with advocacy. Singer KT Tunstall, a Live Earth performer, was
quoted by ABC on July 7, 2007.
“I think I
am an environmentalist. I mean, I don’t have a car. I live in a
small apartment,” said Tunstall.
Madonna
urged Live Earth attendees, "If you wanna save the planet, let me
see you jumping up and down."
But it
wasn’t just globe-trotting stars telling people the planet was in
danger and crowding out any other perspective.
Politicians
offered perhaps more substance, but certainly not much more science
than the Hollywood types. In addition to fawning over Gore, networks
interviewed Florida Gov. Charlie Crist (R), California Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger (R) and New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg
(Independent), among others.
Reporters
also relied on ordinary voices to reinforce the idea that global
warming was already a major threat impacting our daily lives.
Only 15
percent of the people used to support global warming positions were
scientists – identified as a "scientist" or with a specialty like
genetics, ecology, biology or oceanography. A total of 71 scientists
were included in six months of coverage. But networks turned to
ordinary, unidentified people nearly a third more often than the
scientists (101 to 71.)
Networks
turned to ordinary people like two Live Earth concertgoers and the
unidentified female “consumer” quoted by ABC “World News with
Charles Gibson” on Sept. 14, 2007.
“You know,
I think everybody’s got to think about it. We’ve got to change,”
said a woman in a story about carbon labeling of food products.
Those
quotes were used to underline the points that reporters made. One
story on “Today” Nov. 6, 2007, warned that melting ice could kill
off polar bears. Reporter Kerry Sanders included three unidentified
people talking about polar bears – supporting his remark that
“Worst-case scenario: If the Arctic ice continues to melt, in the
next 100 years, the U.S. Wildlife Service says the only place you’ll
find a polar bear will be at the zoo.”
Worries
over Arctic melt flooded global warming coverage in the latter half
of 2007, but as columnist John Tierney wrote in the Jan. 1, 2008 New
York Times: “When the Arctic sea ice last year [2007] hit the lowest
level ever recorded by satellites, it was big news and heralded as a
sign that the whole planet was warming. When the Antarctic sea ice
last year reached the highest level ever recorded by satellites, it
was pretty much ignored.”
No Need for Debate,
Warming is ‘Fact’
To many in the news media,
global warming and its reported cause were already established fact.
It was clear by the way some journalists talked about warming that
they had accepted Gore’s insistence that “the debate’s over.”
Just
listen to CBS’s Harry Smith: “Before we do anything else, there is,
in fact, global climate change. It really affects some climates much
more than others and it’s really caused some real serious problems.”
Those serious problems Smith was talking about were allergies during
a segment on the Aug. 7, 2007 “Early Show.”
ABC’s Sam
Champion seemed to agree. Champion called the fourth U.N. IPCC
report “definitive” on Sept. 5, 2007 and said he had been
“investigating the alarming numbers of animals that are disappearing
due to global warming” in July.
But Dan
Harris went the farthest on Dec. 2, 2007 in a story about security
risk and global warming. The “World News Sunday” host told viewers
to “Think about this scenario: global warming contributes to a
severe drought and food shortage in a third-world country. The
government collapses. Warlords take over. America is forced to
intervene.”
Shockingly, Harris then claimed: “It’s already happened, Somalia,
1993, with disastrous consequences.”
Harris
excluded expertise on the Somali situation or any context. Human
Rights Watch, a liberal international organization, gave a very
different perspective at the time of the crisis back in 1992:
“Somalia
has historically been subject to famines, especially in the pastoral
areas of the center and north …
The current famine that threatens Mogadishu and south-central
Somalia is radically different in origin and impact. Drought has
played only a minor role, and the main victims are poor
townspeople, farmers and rural laborers.”
The ABC
correspondent didn’t include any statements about the
way the war was thought to have contributed to the famine.
Journalists
weren’t the only ones claiming that global warming was a fact,
though. But the people journalists chose to interview also included
Gore saying the “debate’s over” and didn’t dispute Robert F.
Kennedy, Jr.’s incorrect statement that there was “zero dissent” on
the issue, or Leonardo DiCaprio’s assertion of a “90-percent
consensus.”
“Consensus” was rarely questioned by reporters at all, and ABC’s
Bill Weir even used the concept of “these 4,000 or so scientists” to
hammer at one person expressing a different view.
The media
did a terrible job of actually explaining what the IPCC was.
Atmospheric scientist Dr. John Christy told
Earth & Sky Web site that the “IPCC would do well to define what
each participant truly contributes to each product (i.e. Summary for
Policy Makers vs. Full Text) so that the world would know that
thousands of scientists never reached a ‘consensus’ on anything.”
“When the
Full Text is developed, ‘consensus’ is a concept held by the
chapters’ Lead Authors who often ignore or contradict positions
offered by the Contributing Authors and Reviewers,” explained
Christy.
David
Henderson, a former chief economist of the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD), wrote a detailed criticism of
the IPCC in the Oct. 11, 2007 Wall Street Journal. He called the
process “flawed” and biased because “the Panel members and those who
appoint them are of course identified with the policies of their
governments And virtually all governments are formally committed …
to the ‘stabilization of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere’.”
“[T]his puts in doubt the accepted basis of official climate
policies,” concluded Henderson.
It
Don’t Cost a Thing if It’s Got That Climate Swing
Not only did the networks censor
skepticism from stories, but the cost of proposed solutions, small
or large, was routinely omitted.
BMI found
that 90 percent of the stories didn’t mention cost at all, even
though the networks urged immediate action to stop the “climate
crisis.”
“NBC
Nightly News” ignored cost in a Dec. 18, 2007 report about the
recent energy bill passed by Congress.
“What
America drives could change dramatically under the energy bill,”
said Anne Thompson before quoting David Hamilton of the left-wing
environmentalist group Sierra Club.
Hamilton
lauded parts of the bill during the “Fueling Change” segment: “This
bill means that we will get all the same safety, all the same
performance that we’ve ever gotten from our cars, but we’ll get it
with more miles to the gallon.”
Thompson
and Hamilton both ignored the obvious cost to auto manufacturers of
designing vehicles that will be able to meet the new fuel efficiency
requirements. Likely, those costs will be passed on to the consumer
in the form of higher vehicles prices.
Other
plans to curb greenhouse-gas emissions could cost trillions of
dollars. One estimate by business consulting firm CRA International
put a
$4-trillion to $6-trillion price tag on the Lieberman-Warner
bill, which would mandate scaling back emissions levels to 1990s
levels by 2020. That would cost each American man, woman and child
$494 a year.
Network
reporters also didn’t focus on how much is already being spent. As
the Business & Media Institute reported in its “Fire and Ice” study,
more than 99.5 percent of American climate change funding comes from
the government – taxpayers – and we spend $4 billion per year on
climate change research.
The Kyoto
treaty that was never ratified by the U.S. carried an estimated cost
of $440 billion per year for America. The Senate voted 95 to 0 to
reject it.
Methodology
BMI
examined all ABC, CBS and NBC news transcripts that included the
terms “global warming” or “climate change” during the most recent
six month period – from July 1, 2007, to Dec. 31, 2007. Only stories
mentioning those terms were included in the study.
The
stories were split into two categories: stories and casual mentions.
Casual mentions encompassed anchor briefs shorter than 50 words and
longer stories that only mentioned global warming or climate change
incidentally (the story was not about that issue).
“Dissent,” for the purpose of this study, included any uncertainty
["I don't know"], alternative opinions about warming, and caution
against making climate change policy decisions without more
information. It also included criticism of “solutions” to global
warming and “awareness” campaigns like Live Earth – even when the
critic wasn't disagreeing with manmade climate change, but just the
usefulness of worldwide rock concerts.
People
quoted in a story that supported climate change claims were placed
in the proponent category because their comments were used by the
network to support the manmade global warming viewpoint. There was
one exception. In one story, scientist Bill Nye presented both
positions on the issue in a balanced manner. He was counted as
neutral in that story.
Resources
Fire and Ice: Journalists have warned of climate change for 100
years, but can’t decide ‘weather’we face an ice age or warming.
Climate of Bias: BMI’s section dedicated to issues of climate
change in the media
Skeptical
Scientists: A list of hundreds of scientists who question
the science surrounding
global warming alarmism
Back to Top
PDF Version
|
Sidebars
|
|
|