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| Deliberate Misrepresentation Letter of formal complaint to Clark Hoyt, Esq. Public Editor of NYTimes |
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| Written by Christopher Monckton |
| Wednesday, 29 April 2009 14:25 |
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[Illustrations, footnotes and references available in PDF version]
Clark Hoyt, Esq., Public Editor and Readers’ Representative, The New York Times. Dear Mr. Hoyt, Deliberate misrepresentation in a front-page article by Andrew Revkin on Friday, 24 April, 2009 The New York Times guidelines for staff writers on “Journalistic Ethics” begin by stating the principles that all journalists should respect: impartiality and neutrality; integrity; and avoidance of conflicts of interest. Andrew Revkin’s front-page article on Friday, 24 April, 2009, falsely alleging that a coalition of energy corporations had for many years acted like tobacco corporations, misrepresenting advice from its own scientists about the supposed threat of “global warming,” offends grievously against all of these principles. The article says – “For more than a decade the Global Climate Coalition, a group representing industries with profits tied to fossil fuels, led an aggressive lobbying and public relations campaign against the idea that emissions of heat-trapping gases could lead to global warming. “The coalition was financed by fees from large corporations and trade groups representing the oil, coal and auto industries, among others. In 1997, the year an international climate agreement that came to be known as the Kyoto Protocol was negotiated, its budget totaled $1.68 million, according to tax records obtained by environmental groups. “Environmentalists have long maintained that industry knew early on that the scientific evidence supported a human influence on rising temperatures, but that the evidence was ignored for the sake of companies’ fight against curbs on greenhouse gas emissions.”
Revkin compares two statements by the coalition of industrial interests, which are also illustrated by a pair of ragouts accompanying his article –
Public statement by the coalition, made in the early 1990s: “‘The role of greenhouse gases in climate change is not well understood,’ the coalition said in a scientific ‘backgrounder’ provided to lawmakers and journalists through the early 1990s, adding that ‘scientists differ’ on the issue.
Private advice from the coalition’s own scientists, 1995 (after the coalition had made the public statement that Revkin said conflicted with the scientists’ advice): “‘The scientific basis for the Greenhouse Effect and the potential impact of human emissions of greenhouse gases such as CO2 on climate is well established and cannot be denied,’ the experts wrote in an internal report compiled for the coalition in 1995.” The New York Times immediately and imprudently rushed to publish the following comment about Revkin’s story –
However, Revkin’s quotation from the coalition’s scientists’ document of 1995 is incomplete. By removing the majority of the paragraph quoted, Revkin fundamentally alters the purport of what the coalition’s scientists were saying. Had Revkin quoted the entire paragraph, he would have had no story. The full paragraph, with the substantial passage omitted by Revkin in bold face, reads –
In short, the uncertainty is not about whether CO2 can cause “global warming,” but about how much warming it can cause – a distinction that Revkin seldom draws as clearly as he should, though I have done my best to explain it to him.
Indeed, it is not clear to me that Revkin has ever reported the significance of the fact that for almost seven and a half years, since late in 2001, there has been rapid global cooling, rather undermining the notion that anthropogenic emissions of CO2 are the dominant driver of the climate and powerfully suggesting that official estimates of its effect on temperature are exaggerated –
Standing the foregoing, I should be grateful if you would initiate a disciplinary enquiry into Revkin’s conduct, to address the following serious questions –
1. Was Revkin aware of the full quotation from the scientists’ advice that I have set out above? If so, why did he write the story? Or did he lift the incomplete quotation, from another prejudiced campaigner on the imagined threat from “global warming”? If he did lift the quotation, why did he fail to check it by obtaining the full text of the advice given to the coalition by its scientists?
2. Did Revkin fail to comply with the iron rule about “exactness of quotations” that is mentioned in the New York Times’ “Ethical journalism” document? If so, did his truncation of the quotation have the effect of misrepresenting, or even negating, what the scientists said? And was that misrepresentation so serious as to nullify the central point of his front-page story that fossil-fuel interests had made public statements contrary to the scientific advice that they had not yet privately received?
3. Should not the sub-editors of the New York Times have noticed that Revkin’s front-page story was stating that the coalition’s public statement contradicted scientific advice that the coalition had not yet received at the time when it made the statement?
4. Given that Al Gore spent a considerable proportion of his Congressional testimony excoriating with characteristically insouciant disregard for truth or accuracy the fossil-fuel industry for its alleged distortion of its own scientists’ advice, had Revkin – acting in league with Gore rather than independently of any conflict of interest – planted the story precisely so that Gore could refer to it repeatedly during his Congressional testimony on the very morning that the article was published?
VISCOUNT MONCKTON OF BRENCHLEY Source: http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/04/deliberate_misrepresentation.html .
Cover photo of the New York Times building, as designed by Renzo Piano, posted by WallyG on Flickr.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 29 April 2009 14:32 |
























