Lies and distortions about Al Gore remain an easy political
commodity to sell, as we have seen in the renewed assault on Gore in
the wake of his winning the Nobel Peace Prize.
As the news
spread about the Nobel Committees recognition of Gores work
publicizing the threat from global warming, both the right-wing media
and major news outlets geared up to hype criticism of Gores An
Inconvenient Truth in a ruling by an obscure English judge.
Hours
before the Nobel Prize announcement, the Washington Post ran a news
story quoting High Court Judge Michael Burton as detecting nine
errors in the documentary and asserting that the alleged mistakes
arise in the context of alarmism and exaggeration in support of his
political thesis.
Burton ruled that English schools could show the film but only with a cautionary advisory for students.
Burtons
ruling became a cause celebre for the American Rights powerful media,
which used it to discredit both Gore and the movement seeking to stop
global warming. Mainstream news outlets, such as CNN, quickly fell into
line, citing Burtons ruling almost every time Gores Nobel Peace Prize
was mentioned on Oct. 12.
Right-wing Internet postings soon
added the word significant between the words nine and errors,
albeit without quotes around those three words together.
Lo and
behold, on Oct. 13, the
Washington Post ran a snarky editorial about
Gores Nobel Peace Prize claiming that Burtons ruling had found nine
significant errors now put together in quotes. The editorial faulted
Gore for factual misstatements and exaggerations.
For his
part, Gore has sought to play down the significance of Burtons ruling,
much as he tried to finesse press misstatements about him during
Campaign 2000. Rather than confronting false quotes then about him
claiming to have invented the Internet and to be the one who
started the Love Canal clean-up, Gore tried to make light of the
misunderstandings so he wouldnt be further bashed as defensive.
Similarly
now, Gores spokesman Kalee Kreider cited the positive side of Burtons
ruling, saying Gore was gratified that the courts verified that the
central argument of An Inconvenient Truth is supported by the
scientific community. [
Washington Post, Oct. 12, 2007]
However,
like the invented the Internet canard and the press misquotes about
Love Canal, Burtons ruling quickly became the supposedly definitive
judgment in dismissing the Gore documentary as the Inconvenient
Untruth.
Who Is Judge Burton?
Yet, regardless of where
the Post editorial writers lifted the phrase nine significant errors
clearly not from their own news story the more significant question
should be: Why is Judge Burton suddenly the arbiter of truth on the
complicated subject of global warming and on Gores lectures about the
topic.
Burton, in his early 60s, is best known as an employment
appeal tribunal judge. Though his career has attracted little public
notice, he earned praise from the far-right, anti-immigrant British
National Party for issuing a ruling in 2005 that applied the nations
Race Relations Act to cover the racial rights of White people.
Hailing
what it called Burtons history-making ruling, the BNP said, This now
means that any organisations or companies that discriminate against a
member of the British National Party are guilty of anti-white racism.
[
BNP statement on Aug. 10, 2005]
Burtons criticisms of Gores power-point presentation also read more like quibbles than anything significant.
At
one point, for instance, Gore shows a photo of flooding on a Pacific
island and in reference to rising sea levels states, Thats why the
citizens of these Pacific nations have all had to evacuate to New
Zealand.
Gores brief remark doesnt spell out exactly which
islands he was referring to or whether the evacuations were permanent
or temporary.
But Burton took Gore to task over the sentence. As
recounted by the Telegraph (U.K.), Burtons ruling states that An
Inconvenient Truth claims that low-lying Pacific atolls are being
inundated because of anthropogenic global warming but that there is no
evidence of any evacuation having yet happened.
While Gores single sentence could be criticized as imprecise or confusing, Burton is not entirely correct either.
The
leaders of Tuvalu, a string of islands between Hawaii and Australia,
announced in 2001 that they had no choice but to abandon their
island-country because of rising sea levels and asked permission to
relocate all 11,000 inhabitants to New Zealand. [See article by the
Earth Policy Institute, Nov. 15, 2001.]
Since then, New Zealand
has agreed to a plan for the gradual evacuation of Tuvalu and other
Pacific islands facing environmental catastrophe. [See report from
Friends of the Earth International.]
Evacuation Begun
Contrary
to Burtons ruling, the evacuation of Tuvalu already has begun,
according to travel reporter Janine Israel in a 2004 story about the
expected loss of these picturesque islands to potential tourists.
Over
recent decades, the remote Pacific nation [of Tuvalu] has been beset by
frequent floods, cyclones, and rising sea levels. Israel wrote.
Tuvalus 10,500 inhabitants have already begun the dreaded process of
evacuating to New Zealand, which has agreed to accept 75 Tuvaluans per
year as environmental refugees.
Tuvalu has been given 50
years before it sinks beneath the waves. Although the melting of
glaciers and icecaps is partly responsible for the rise in sea level,
it is also due to the warming of the seawater, which expands when
heated.
And it isnt alone. Other low-lying island nations are
at the frontline of climate change. Kiribati, the Cook Islands, Palau,
Vanuatu, Tonga, French Polynesia, the Republic of the Marshall Island,
Tokelau, and the Republic of Maldives are all gearing up for a Noahs
Flood. For intrepid travelers, these are the countries to visit before
they slip off the map for good.
Given this unfolding tragedy, Burtons querulous point would seem to be finicky at best.
Judge
Burton also blasts Gore for supposedly suggesting that in the near
future a sea-level rise of up to 20 feet would be caused by the
melting of either West Antarctica or Greenland.
This is
distinctly alarmist, the judge wrote, arguing that sea levels may
indeed rise that much but only after, and over, millenia and the
idea that the melting would occur in the immediate future, is not in
line with the scientific consensus, the Telegraph reported.
But in An Inconvenient Truth, Gore never said the 20-foot rise in sea level would occur quickly or even at all.
Referring
to Antarcticas giant ice cap, Gore said, If this were to go, sea
levels world wide would go up 20 feet. A similar rise could result
from the complete thawing of Greenlands ice cover, Gore said.
If
Greenland broke up and melted, or if half of Greenland and half of west
Antarctica broke up and melted, this is what would happen to the sea
level in Florida, Gore said as slides showed what a 20-foot rise in
sea levels would do to coastlines around the world.
While
Burtons ruling fits with the characterization of Gores comments as
popularized in the right-wing news media, it doesnt match up with what
Gore actually said.
Gulf Stream
Judge Burton also puts
words in Gores mouth in other alleged errors. For instance, he notes
that Gores documentary refers to the danger of global warming
shutting down the Ocean Conveyor, which powers the Gulf Stream that
moderates temperatures in Western Europe.
Citing the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the U.N. agency which shared
the Nobel Prize with Gore, Burton said its very unlikely that the
Ocean Conveyor would shut down, though it might slow down.
Again,
however, Burton is adopting a contentious interpretation of Gores
comments. Gore refers to the shutting down of the Ocean Conveyor in a
historical context, when a vast reservoir of North American ice melted
and flooded into the North Atlantic, causing a disruption of the Gulf
Stream and an ice age in Europe.
Gores description of this
historic event suggests that something similar could occur if the
Greenland ice cap melted, but again Burton is exaggerating Gores
comments before attacking them.
Similarly, Burton asserts that
Gore claimed that two graphs one representing CO2 levels and the
other global temperatures showed an exact fit. The judge ruled that
while there is general scientific agreement that there is a connection,
the two graphs do not establish what Mr. Gore asserts.
But what did Gore actually assert and where did the judge get the words an exact fit?
In
that segment of the film, Gore doesnt use the phrase exact fit,
although he does joke that a sixth-grade classmate who once asked a
teacher if the continents of Africa and South America ever fit
together might have a similar comment about the two graphs.
Gore
then states, The relation is actually very complicated but there is
one relationship that is far more powerful than all the others and it
is this, when there is more carbon dioxide the temperature gets warmer
because it traps more heat from the sun.
While there are
legitimate questions about the precise correlation between past changes
in CO2 and earth temperatures, Burton ignores Gores admission that
the relation is actually very complicated and instead puts the words
exact fit into Gores mouth.
Judge Burton plays a similar
trick regarding Gores references to the destruction from Hurricane
Katrina and other powerful storms. Burton claims that there is
insufficient evidence to support Gores supposed claim that global
warming caused Katrina and the devastation of New Orleans.
But
Gore never makes that direct connection. He does show footage of
extreme weather from around the globe, which many scientists believe
has been made worse by rising temperatures, but Gore never specifically
attributes Katrina or the other examples of flooding to global warming.
Again, Burton has set up a straw man and knocked it down.
Disappearing Snow
Burton
faults Gore, too, for attributing the disappearance of snow caps on Mt.
Kilimanjaro and the drying up of Lake Chad to global warming. The judge
ruled that scientists havent established that the receding of ice and
the worsening of droughts are primarily attributable to human-caused
climate change.
Regarding Lake Chad, Burton said it is
apparently considered to be far more likely to result from other
factors, such as population increase and over-grazing, and regional
climate variability, the Telegraph reported.
While Burton is
entitled to his scientific opinions, Gores concern that warming
temperatures have reduced snow cover and contributed to faster
evaporation of water is not a particularly controversial point of view.
Burtons
other cited errors are even more trivial. Gore is taken to task for
saying that polar bears have been drowning because they face swims of
up to 60 miles through open ice. Burton asserts that the confirmed
cases show four bears drowning during storms, though he acknowledges
that it makes sense to expect future drowning-related deaths of bears
if ice caps continue to melt.
Gores last error supposedly was
to warn that coral reefs were being bleached because of global warming
and other factors. While agreeing with Gore that rising temperatures
could increase coral bleaching and fatality, Burton ruled that it was
difficult to separate the impact of climate change from other problems,
such as pollution.
[For the full list of Burtons alleged errors, see
Telegraph (U,K.), Oct. 11, 2007.]
In
other words, Burton appears to be a quirky judge who is prone to
quibbling over minor nuances. But the larger significance of Burtons
ruling as it is now championed by right-wing and mainstream U.S. news
outlets is that the vilification of Al Gore is not likely to cease,
even with the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize.
That also
should be a cautionary lesson to Democrats seeking the White House. The
political/media dynamic of Washington has changed little since Campaign
2000. The powerful right-wing news outlets still can make little
controversies big and big controversies little.
Plus, major news outlets, like CNN and the Washington Post, continue to fall into line.
The
Washington insider community also shows no serious readiness to
reexamine its failures in the wake of George W. Bushs disastrous
presidency and the devastating Iraq War, which now even retired Lt.
Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the former top commander of coalition forces,
calls a nightmare with no end in sight.
Its all so much easier to continue making fun of Al Gore.