Wednesday, June 02, 2010

The Times Versus the Truth

"Paper of record" reporter Elisabeth Rosenthal wonders where have all the flowers gone?:
Climate Fears Turn to Doubts Among Britons
Last month hundreds of environmental activists crammed into an auditorium here to ponder an anguished question: If the scientific consensus on climate change has not changed, why have so many people turned away from the idea that human activity is warming the planet?
This one's easy. Public concern about global warming has declined because the supposed consensus is evaporating in the face of contrary data and economic realism. Pop psychology won't suffice--unless debate is squelched.

Apparently, however, the Times is the last holdout, as Best of the Web's James Taranto says:
Imagine popular children's fables retold by Times reporter Elisabeth Rosenthal: Anguished weavers gathered to ponder the sudden shift in fashion by subjects who only recently thought the emperor was wearing a splendid suit of clothes. If the boy still says there is a wolf, why have so many farmers turned away from the idea that the sheep are in danger?
Put differently, the Times isn't confused. It's simply not objective--and remains reluctant to abandon carbon cuts that were the once-sure path to global socialism.

Which turns news stories into fairy tales.

2 comments:

Geoffrey Britain said...

Ah. The disappointment is literally palpable.

How could the lie based meme have failed? How could, what they so desperately want to believe, fail to materialize?

Reality is such a bitch!

See, that proves there's no God!

OK, time for bed children...

OBloodyHell said...

> remains reluctant to abandon carbon cuts that were the once-sure path to global socialism.

What's this "once-sure" shit, kemosabe.

They are, and have always been a sure path to global socialism.

;-)