Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Science. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Rigged Results: APA "Study" on Abortion's Effects Ignores Contrary Evidence

You'll be hearing a lot about the new discovery that abortion doesn't have any adverse effects on woman who have undergone the procedure. But that certainly isn't a new claim at all; neither is it actually based upon evidence.

No, the claims come from the American Psychological Association, a group which long ago exchanged its reliance on authentic science for the politically-correct ideologies of materialism, radical feminism, abortion, and sexual perversion.

Here is a trio of corrective stories from LifeNews.com:

* American Psychological Association Ignores Abortion-Mental Health Problem Link;

* Researcher on Abortion-Depression Link Says APA Report Ignores Best Studies; and

* Women Hurting From Abortions Say APA Report Discounts Their Experiences

Thursday, August 14, 2008

New Study Says the Pill Messes Up One's Love Life By Messin' With One's Nose: I Smell a Problem

Straight from the "Who Knew?" Department comes a study suggesting that birth control pills can mess up your love life...by messing with your nose!

Now, I don't know how legitimate this study is. After all, I'm not a chemist and I've no idea even what an "evolutionary psychologist" is, which is the description this LiveScience.com story gives of the study's lead researcher.

And frankly, I find the argument's reliance on issues of "genetic compatibility," major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes, "sexy scents," and how they're all effected by the pill to be most unconvincing. It seems to rest on the presumption that man is nothing more than a chemical mix -- and that's about as silly and unlivable a philosophic presumption as you can have.

But do note this... I am very convinced that there are a lot of serious reasons to avoid the birth control pill and I've commented on that frequently. Some of the most recent examples being this, this, this, this and, most especially, this.

Those are reasons that, unlike this MHC stuff, really do pass the smell test.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Abandoning the Rule of Rescue: Some People Are Just Too Expensive to Live

Wesley J. Smith, who among several valuable services gives us the terrific bioethics blog, Secondhand Smoke, comments on the Independent (U.K.) story about England's National Health Service declaring that the noble "rule of rescue" historically observed by doctors must be abandoned because it's too expensive.

The sad fact is that hospitals and nursing homes in England (and elsewhere) have already begun to jettison the rule, exchanging it for the crasser, less humane belief that some people's lives are just not "cost productive" enough to save. This newspaper report only suggests these folks are feeling bold enough nowadays to say it out loud.

Argues Smith, "The utilitarian bioethicists that exert so much control over NHS medical ethics are tightening the noose around the throats of UK patients once again--this time urging that the lives of expensive patients not be extended...Same thing will happen here too--whether arising from government funded health care or HMOs--if we allow "the bioethicists" to decide our health care public policies and medical ethics for us."

Obama's Tire Gauge Gaffe Is Nothing To Laugh At

Jim Geraghty includes in his post over at NRO's The Campaign Spot these salient notes about Barack Obama's tire gauge gaffe.

Seemingly every Republican is walking around today with a tire gauge labeled "Obama's Energy Plan."...

I hope McCain and his surrogates remember the key point in this — not that checking your tire pressure has a marginal impact and that two-thirds of drivers already have the right tire pressure, but that Obama said it would generate as much as offshore drilling — roughly 1.6 trillion gallons in the OCS.

We went over the math this Wednesday, and Obama's just not right (and that's with me using an extremely generous assessment that tire inflation would increase mileage 12.5 percent for one-third of America's drivers). It's not merely that Obama's energy policy consists of recommending the minute and mundane, but that he does so while rejecting solutions that could have a dramatic impact on energy production, oil production, and gas prices.

He's either not familiar enough with the issue, or way too careless in asserting the benefits of his policies. That's the message voters need to come away with, not just, "Ha, ha! Look, a tire gauge!"

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Does God Care About Who You Vote For?

In an unusually bold and forthright manner (and isn't that a nice change from the timid, parsing, indecisive character which marks most modern conversation?), David Klinghoffer answers the questions of National Review's Kathryn Jean Lopez. Klinghoffer, by the way, is a Senior Fellow of the Discovery Institute and an outspoken advocate of intelligent design. Klinghoffer is the author of several books including The Lord Will Gather Me In: My Journey to Jewish Orthodoxy, Why the Jews Rejected Jesus: The Turning Point in Western History, Shattered Tablets: Why America Ignores the Ten Commandments at Its Peril, and the book he specifically speaks to Lopez about, How Would God Vote?: Why the Bible Commands You to Be a Conservative.

...Kathryn Jean Lopez: So does God get a vote? And how did you get out of him what it would be? Is there Gallup in Heaven? Perhaps a Catholic might next poll the Communion of Saints on the presidential election?

David Klinghoffer
: God gets a vote if citizen Kathryn Lopez gives him one. And I know that in November, you will. It’s like the old pre-women’s suffrage rationale for letting only men vole. The idea was, a husband would vote on behalf of the entire family. If I’m an enlightened husband, I consult my wife and take her views seriously, thereby voting for both of us. In this analogy, my wife is God. When we vote, we have the choice of either consulting God - as it were - or not. No, I don’t have in mind using an Ouija board. (V-O-T-E-F-O-R-M-C-C-A-I-N.) Instead, Christians and Jews used to agree that the Bible conveys a picture of reality, of how the world works, from which practical guidance can be drawn on private and public matters. That would naturally include the 20 hot-button issues that I deal with in my book, from poverty, taxes and health care to climate change, drug legalization and Islamic terror. It turns out that, when read sensitively and holistically, the Bible advocates views that are deeply conservative. Not on every issue but on most.


Lopez: Are you actually arguing that the Bible argues for the election of John McCain over Barack Obama? That voting for Obama is to vote against God?


Klinghoffer:
It would probably violate federal tax laws if I told you the Bible endorses a particular candidate. I work at a think tank, after all, a 501(c)(3) organization. But even if I didn’t, I wrote this book not to inflate anyone’s election chances but to give readers and voters the tools to read the Bible as a guide to thinking about a range of issues. If on that basis, you concluded that a Biblical worldview was at odds with Obama on most issues, or on certain key litmus test issues, yet you went ahead and voted for him anyway, that would be a vote against giving God a voice in our public affairs. It would be a vote to silence God’s influence in that area, as far as it’s in your power to do so. In a real sense it would be a vote against God.


Lopez: So is God a Republican? Did the country vote against God when they elected Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton? And what about JFK?


Klinghoffer: God doesn’t have a party. He has wisdom. A party can reflect that wisdom to a greater or lesser extent. In recent decades, the Republican party has been open to granting some degree of influence to Biblical wisdom, at a time when God’s role in public life has been under attack from secularists. The conflict is more severe than ever. In elections of the past, the clash of worldviews wasn’t as blatant. You could say that of Kennedy versus Nixon. In the years since Roe v. Wade, though, we’ve seen the rise of an ideological grouping that is formed pretty clearly around an opposition to giving God a voice in public affairs. The tragedy of McCain is that while his biography gives evidence of spiritual sensitivity, he’s too allergic to public religious expression to make that clear to voters who long for a leader who “gets” it. Many in Republican leadership seem deaf to this...


Here's the whole article.

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Leading Economists Suggest Putting People First, Not Global Warming. MSM Buries the Story.

Matthew Warren, "environment writer" for The Australian, finds the time to report on a major story that everyone else in the MSM is ignoring altogether. How come? After all, it involves several elements that the MSM usually loves: leading European intellectuals (including Nobel Prize winners), the impact of science on culture, and hot-button issues like women's rights and the environment.

Oh, I get it. It seems that the conclusions of the story turn out to be politically-incorrect. That's why it's been ignored. Except by The Australian-- so kudos to them for some fair and responsible reporting.

Expensive strategies to cut greenhouse emissions, such as Australia's proposed trading scheme, will do practically nothing to reduce the impact of climate change, and the money would be better used to address malnutrition, disease and the rights of women in developing countries, according to a review by leading economists.

The Copenhagen Consensus Centre co-ordinated by Danish economist Bjorn Lomborg has ranked the pursuit of deep cuts in emissions by countries such as Australia and Europe as one of the least-effective ways of advancing global welfare.


The findings contradict the analysis by Ross Garnaut and Nicholas Stern, who argue that the high cost of mitigating greenhouse gases now is much less than the risk of inaction on climate change.


In prioritising how best to spend $75billion over the next four years to deliver the greatest good to mankind, a panel of eight economists, including five Nobel laureates, did not feature any climate change spending among their 13 priority projects...

Pelosi's "No Drill" Arrogance Means Bad News for the Planet

Charles Krauthammer explains why Nancy Pelosi's obstinate (and under-handed) actions to prohibit the Congress from even getting a fair vote on changing America's disastrous energy policy is a bad deal -- for democracy, for the economy, for national security, and, yes, even for the environment. Check it out.

Friday, August 01, 2008

Another Medical Science Breakthrough -- And It Uses Adult Stem Cells

Here's news of yet another medical science breakthrough in which nobody is hurt, killed, or morally stained -- because the technique involved uses adult stem cells and not cells from a human embryo.

Roger Highfield, Science Editor for the Telegraph, reports on this significant advance that could substantially help researchers discover treatments for Parkinson’s and numerous other dreaded diseases.

...For the first time a research team has managed to take human skin cells from a patient with a genetic condition and transform them into nerve cells.
It means they will now be able to create limitless numbers of the diseased cells to help them carry out research in the hope of finding a way to treat the illness.

The research has been carried out by an American team.
They took skin cells from two elderly patients with motor neuron disease and turned them into nerve cells so they could study the cause of their nerve degeneration. The cells can now be used to test drugs to treat the condition.

But scientists also hope if they can find a way of altering the cell to make it healthy they will be able to grow a patient’s cells and tissue, free of disease, to transplant back into their body and fight the condition.
Research teams would theoretically be able to use the technique to develop treatments for a range of genetic conditions.

The advance is published in the journal Science by a team led by Prof Kevin Eggan of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Prof Eggan said. “Now we can make limitless supplies of the cells that die in this awful disease.”...

Here's the rest of the story.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

How "Green Mania" Controls Congress

Let's face it. The average individual American has little or no clout with Congress and can be safely ignored. But it's a different story with groups such as Environmental Defense Fund, Sierra Club and The Nature Conservancy. When they speak, Congress listens. Unlike the average American, they are well organized, loaded with cash and well positioned to be a disobedient congressman's worse nightmare. Their political and economic success has been a near disaster for our nation...

Read the rest of Walter William's cogent analysis (and stern warnings) in his latest Town Hall column.

Uh, Before You Get Too Excited About That New Alzheimer’s Breakthrough...

There's joyful news reports all over the place today describing great news about a new Alzheimer’s drug. But, as you'll see in this Wall Street Journal report, when carefully examined the results of the study are not very impressive after all.

...The companies had already revealed data showing the drug, called bapineuzumab, helped people who were free of a form of a gene that’s a risk factor for Alzheimer’s. But patients with that form, called ApoE4, showed only a trend toward improvement — not a statistically significant one.

Now, in another tough year for Alzheimer’s drugs, the companies presented more detailed data today at a big Alzheimer’s conference. The results showed that none of the patients — with or without the genetic issue — saw more benefit from a higher dose of the drug than they did a lower dose...


WSJ reporter Sarah Rubenstein asked Ronald Petersen, a neurologist at the Mayo Clinic who serves as the chairman of the medical and scientific advisory council of the Alzheimer’s Association, about the news. Responded Petersen, “I can’t tell if the compound’s efficacious or not at this point in time, but (Wyeth and Elan) learned some important information going forward about both the possible efficacy and safety.”

There are several interesting comments appended to the original story, one defending the enthusiasm over the new drug but several reflecting skepticism and even cynicism. For instance, an anonymous physician wrote in, "This will be JUST LIKE ARICEPT - a huge expense to taxpayers (ie. medicare part d) and patients (ie. copays etc.) for NO BENEFIT. Except this will be infinitely more expensive, because it ends in “mab” ie. monoclonal antibody. Any honest physician actually treating patients with dementia will attest to the total lack of efficacy of Aricept."

Most valuable in the comments section, however, was a note from David Hamilton with a link to a pretty compelling piece he had written for Pharma Industry hosted by BNET. Hamilton, by the way, wrote for the WSJ himself for a 14 years but now freelances. He most recently founded the LifeScience section of VentureBeat. Hamilton has covered many issues over his career but specializes in science and technology. He is a two-time winner of the Overseas Press Club award.

I suggest you take a look at Hamilton's review -- it's a quick read -- and you'll see that there are several important reasons to beware the hype about Bapineuzumab. Here are some excerpts:

In what is becoming a sadly common ritual, Wyeth and Elan are pressing forward with an expensive, large-scale “phase III” trial of a risky drug based on wishful thinking and shoddy statistical analysis...

Earlier today, Wyeth and Elan disclosed detailed results of the drug’s phase II trial, which found that bapineuzumab failed to improve cognitive function in a test of 234 Alzheimer’s patients after 18 months of treatment. You could be forgiven for not gleaning that from the companies’ joint press release, however, as Wyeth and Elan chose instead to highlight post-hoc analyses that purported to demonstrate the drug’s efficacy in a subset of patients who don’t have a gene variant called ApoE4, which increases the risk of Alzheimer’s.


To put it bluntly, this is magical thinking on a truly impressive scale...


Hamilton then gives four specific criticisms of the study, four points to remember when evaluating the news story about this "breakthrough."

* Prospective measures of success are the only accurate way to judge trial results. Honest clinical trials require researchers to specify in advance what they’re looking for — and by that measure, the bapineuzumab trial was a failure.

* Post-hoc subgroup analyses amount to lying with statistics. By contrast, a post-hoc analysis involves mining the trial data in order to identify some group of patients who appeared to benefit from the drug. It’s tantamount to moving the finish line after the race is over — or, as FDA’s Richard Pazdur memorably put it, firing an arrow into the wall and then drawing a target around it.


* Such subgroup analyses rarely hold up under further study. Or, as the old computer-science saying goes, “Garbage in, garbage out.”


* Drug companies will do and say almost anything to boost the promise of a potential blockbuster. Wyeth and Elan don’t expect data from the phase III trial in patients without the ApoE4 gene variant until 2010. A lot can happen in that time, including the possibility that the FDA will once again warm to the idea of approving drugs based on marginal evidence. It’s like the old joke in which a prisoner staves off execution by promising to teach the king’s horse to sing within a year, reasoning: “A year is a long time. The king might die. The horse might die. I might die. And maybe the horse will learn to sing.”...


Hamilton concludes his report with this warning, "Whenever companies start talking up after-the-fact subgroup results, it’s time to hold onto your wallet."

Monday, July 28, 2008

MRI Reveals Misdiagnosis; Baby's Life Saved

Here's a story from Singapore that illustrates both the increasing impact of technology in treating preborn children (a MRI scan that saved a child's life by correcting a misdiagnosis) and yet the decreasing value of human life itself (the parents' desire to abort the baby when they believed him to be handicapped).

Sadly, the marvelous advances of medical technology and scientific knowledge we have seen in recent years cannot make up for the "devolution" in bioethics that has occurred.

Indeed, if society denies the inherent dignity and value of all human lives and instead begins to discriminate due to utilitarian concerns, costs, comfortability, degrees of "wantedness," and so on, even to the point of terminating kids whose problems we refuse to bother with, then those very advances in technology and knowledge that could save lives and dramatically improve our health, fitness and quality of life become used in the service of abortion, euthanasia, lethal embryonic experimentation, genetic manipulation, and other grossly unnatural and immoral activity.

Once the heart goes bad, the hands (and all the nifty tools they use) go bad too.

Friday, July 18, 2008

FRC's Latest Review of Adult Stem Cell Successes

It takes a while to scan through -- but it's well worth your time.

I'm talking about the Family Research Council's terrific review of adult stem cell success stories. This is their third such report (boy, these guys are invaluable, aren't they?) and this review, though just covering adult stem cell success stories from this year to date, is their biggest yet.

From Northwestern University's Dr. Richard Burt's work with autoimmune disorders, to heart tissue regeneration, breast reconstruction, leukemia, Parkinson's Disease, cerebral palsy, vision restoration, sickle cell disease, and many more, the advances in medical science which utilize adult stem cells are not providing tremendous hopes for the future, they're helping people in many marvelous ways right now!

I think you'll find it very encouraging reading. Plus, it's a great resource to remember when addressing your political representatives, local hospitals and letters to the editor columns about science that, unlike embryonic stem cell research, is working wonders and doesn't kill anyone.

(H/T: A Matthew Eppinette post on Americans United for Life Blog.)

Thursday, July 17, 2008

The Carbon Emissions Folly

Electrical engineer (and rocket scientist) Dr. David Evans, writing in the Australian about global warming mania (more specifically, about the lack of evidential reasons for falling prey to that psychosis), has today's "must-read" article.

I devoted six years to carbon accounting, building models for the Australian Greenhouse Office. I am the rocket scientist who wrote the carbon accounting model (FullCAM) that measures Australia's compliance with the Kyoto Protocol, in the land use change and forestry sector.

FullCAM models carbon flows in plants, mulch, debris, soils and agricultural products, using inputs such as climate data, plant physiology and satellite data. I've been following the global warming debate closely for years.


When I started that job in 1999 the evidence that carbon emissions caused global warming seemed pretty good: CO2 is a greenhouse gas, the old ice core data, no other suspects.


The evidence was not conclusive, but why wait until we were certain when it appeared we needed to act quickly? Soon government and the scientific community were working together and lots of science research jobs were created. We scientists had political support, the ear of government, big budgets, and we felt fairly important and useful (well, I did anyway). It was great. We were working to save the planet.


But since 1999 new evidence has seriously weakened the case that carbon emissions are the main cause of global warming, and by 2007 the evidence was pretty conclusive that carbon played only a minor role and was not the main cause of the recent global warming. As Lord Keynes famously said, "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?"...

What is going to happen over the next decade as global temperatures continue not to rise? The Labor Government is about to deliberately wreck the economy in order to reduce carbon emissions. If the reasons later turn out to be bogus, the electorate is not going to re-elect a Labor government for a long time. When it comes to light that the carbon scare was known to be bogus in 2008, the ALP is going to be regarded as criminally negligent or ideologically stupid for not having seen through it. And if the Liberals support the general thrust of their actions, they will be seen likewise.

The onus should be on those who want to change things to provide evidence for why the changes are necessary. The Australian public is eventually going to have to be told the evidence anyway, so it might as well be told before wrecking the economy.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Tell Congress: End America's Dependence on Foreign Oil!

The vigilant watchdogs over at Citizens Against Government Waste are urging you to ask your Congressmen to act and act now to end America's dependence on foreign oil. Yes, President Bush recently lifted the executive ban on drilling for oil on the Outer Continental Shelf -- a long overdue move. But Congress itself has passed additional restrictions on drilling on the OCS as well as in the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve.

With gasoline priced higher than $4 a gallon and dramatically affecting the inflation on food and other essentials, we've got to utilize those rich domestic sources of energy we have. To fail to do so isn't just politics; it's sheer madness.

AS CAGW explains, "The recent hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico proved that drilling offshore can be done in an environmentally safe way. There were no significant oil spills from the battered rigs off the coasts of New Orleans and Houston. In addition, the Prudhoe Bay oil field has demonstrated that a trans-Alaska pipeline can exist in harmony with nature."

The majority of Americans support domestic offshore drilling for oil and natural gas. Yet it's the radical, irresponsible environmentalists who are getting the MSM attention...and who are constantly agitating Congress through their special interest lobbyists.

Our voice needs to get louder. And we need to communicate this simple message: drill! America is in trouble and much of it comes from our shocking overdependence on foreign energy sources.

Please write or call your Representative and Senators today and ask them to vigorously support any bill or amendment that encourages increased domestic energy exploration and production. If you'd like, you can also use this handy e-mail form provided by CAGW.

Nowadays, I'm setting records for the highest price I've ever paid for a tank of gas -- every time I fill up! The latest? $67. If you're like me, that hurts something awful. And that's not mentioning $2 for a dozen eggs or $1.69 for a single green bell pepper. Yipes.

So, c'mon -- let's let our political representatives "share our pain" and perhaps a few of them will finally begin to do something about it.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Paul Broun Gets It? Do You?

“First and foremost, I am a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ and I live to serve Him. The ‘We Get It!’ declaration is both biblically and constitutionally sound. As potential global warming is investigated, it is imperative to use proven science, to be consistent with God’s Word regarding stewardship, and to be aware of those ‘Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshiped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen.’ (Romans 1:25)

Sadly, many well-intended proposals before Congress are seriously flawed, would achieve no measurable difference in temperature, and would push millions of souls beyond poverty to starvation by dramatically increasing food and fuel prices, and exponentially increasing the cost of doing business. I look forward to working together for results-based, fiscally prudent, common-sense, environmental proposals based on biblical principles, property rights, and factual evidence. I am proud to support the ‘We Get It!’ declaration.”
(U.S. Congressman Paul Broun)

AS I've reported here before, Vital Signs Ministries pleased to support the "We Get It!" campaign and several members of the VSM team have joined Chuck Colson, James Dobson, Tony Perkins, Senator Tom Coburn and others in signing the declaration and spreading the news.

How about you?

Friday, July 11, 2008

Intellectual Freedom Law Is Bobby Jindal's Latest Conservative Success

Bobby Jindal just keeps shakin' things up down on the bayou.

Having already established himself as one of the most visionary, most effective Republican governors in the South (and he's only been in office a few months!), Jindal is proving that conservative policies (when intelligently, unapologetically explained and then vigorously pursued) are a political winner.

John West, writing in NRO, has a fascinating article about one of the latest examples; namely, Jindal signing into law an intellectual freedom act which defends teachers who dare to explore both sides of controversies like global warming and even Darwinian evolution.

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

When Animal Rights Activists Devolve Into Mere Man-Hating Hoodlums

While Jerry Vlasak, a spokesman for the Animal Liberation Front, says he isn't actually encouraging anyone to murder scientists who use animals in research, he does say contend that "if you had to hurt somebody or intimidate them or kill them, it would be morally justifiable."

Does it seem inconsistent that these folks do not oppose lethal experimentation on human embryos and that they're not in the least way bothered by the savagery that destroys human lives through surgical or chemical abortion?

Not really. For the radicals in the animal rights movement are not really activists for peace, justice or mercy. They are agents for a demonic philosophy which reduces Man to the level of beast...or, more usually, even lower.

The Washington Times has a frightening story here about these desperate and irrational goons and how they are taking their campaign against scientific researchers to despicable new levels.

Call In the Shrinks. Our Politicians Are Suffering "Climate Change Delusions."

Andrew Bolt notes the first documented case of "climate change delusion" (I'm not kidding here; the matter is described in the Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry) but suggests the much more serious threat to health and economic well being is posed by the global warming maniacs posing as statesmen. Here in this very well-argued article in the Herald Sun, Bolt aggressively takes on the plans of foolish politicians who have fallen for the Al Gore/Chicken Little fables. Great stuff here...but very scary.

...But never mind the poor boy, who became too terrified even to drink. What's scarier is that people in charge of our Government seem to suffer from this "climate change delusion", too.

Here is Prime Minister Kevin Rudd yesterday, with his own apocalyptic vision: "If we do not begin reducing the nation's levels of carbon pollution, Australia's economy will face more frequent and severe droughts, less water, reduced food production and devastation of areas such as the Great Barrier Reef and Kakadu wetlands."


And here is a senior Sydney Morning Herald journalist aghast at the horrors described in the report on global warming released on Friday by Rudd's guru, Professor Ross Garnaut: "Australians must pay more for petrol, food and energy or ultimately face a rising death toll . . ."


Wow. Pay more for food or die. Is that Rudd's next campaign slogan?
Of course, we can laugh at this -- and must -- but the price for such folly may soon be your job, or at least your cash.

Rudd and Garnaut want to scare you into backing their plan to force people who produce everything from petrol to coal-fired electricity, from steel to soft drinks, to pay for licences to emit carbon dioxide -- the gas they think is heating the world to hell. The cost of those licences, totalling in the billions, will then be passed on to you through higher bills for petrol, power, food, housing, air travel and anything else that uses lots of gassy power. In some countries they're even planning to tax [flatulent] cows, so there's no end to the ways you can be stung.

Rudd hopes this pain will make you switch to expensive but less gassy alternatives, and -- hey presto -- the world's temperature will then fall, just like it's actually done since the day Al Gore released An Inconvenient Truth.

But you'll have spotted already the big flaw in Rudd's mad plan -- one that confirms he and Garnaut really do have delusions.
The truth is Australia on its own emits less than 1.5 per cent of the world's carbon dioxide. Any savings we make will make no real difference, given that China (now the biggest emitter) and India (the fourth) are booming so fast that they alone will pump out 42 per cent of the world's greenhouse gases by 2030. Indeed, so fast are the world's emissions growing -- by 3.1 per cent a year thanks mostly to these two giants -- that the 20 per cent cuts Rudd demands of Australians by 2020 would be swallowed up in just 28 days.

That's how little our multi-billions of dollars in sacrifices will matter.
And that's why Rudd's claim that we'll be ruined if we don't cut Australia's gases is a lie. To be blunt...

Last month, India likewise issued its National Action Plan on Climate Change, and also rejected Rudd-style cuts.
The plan's authors, the Prime Minister's Council on Climate Change, said India would rather save its people from poverty than global warming, and would not cut growth to cut gases. "It is obvious that India needs to substantially increase its per capita energy consumption to provide a minimally acceptable level of wellbeing to its people."

The plan's only real promise was in fact a threat: "India is determined that its per capita greenhouse gas emissions will at no point exceed that of developed countries."
Gee, thanks. That, of course, means India won't stop its per capita emissions (now at 1.02 tonnes) from growing until they match those of countries such as the US (now 20 tonnes). Given it has one billion people, that's a promise to gas the world like it's never been gassed before.

So is this our death warrant? Should this news have you seeing apocalyptic visions, too?


Well, no.

What makes the Indian report so interesting is that unlike our Ross Garnaut, who just accepted the word of those scientists wailing we faced doom, the Indian experts went to the trouble to check what the climate was actually doing and why.
Their conclusion? They couldn't actually find anything bad in India that was caused by man-made warming: "No firm link between the documented (climate) changes described below and warming due to anthropogenic climate change has yet been established."

In fact, they couldn't find much change in the climate at all. Yes, India's surface temperature over a century had inched up by 0.4 degrees, but there had been no change in trends for large-scale droughts and floods, or rain: "The observed monsoon rainfall at the all-India level does not show any significant trend . . ."

It even dismissed the panic Al Gore helped to whip up about melting Himalayan glaciers: "While recession of some glaciers has occurred in some Himalayan regions in recent years, the trend is not consistent across the entire mountain chain. It is, accordingly, too early to establish long-term trends, or their causation, in respect of which there are several hypotheses."


Nor was that the only sign that India's Council on Climate Change had kept its cool while our Rudd and Garnaut lost theirs.
For example, the Indians rightly insisted nuclear power had to be part of any real plan to cut emissions. Rudd and Garnaut won't even discuss it. The Indians also pointed out that no feasible technology to trap and bury the gasses of coal-fired power stations had yet been developed "and there are serious questions about the cost as well (as) permanence of the CO2 storage repositories"...

Read the entire Andrew Bolt article here and then pass it on to those who are in charge of your own political future. Someone, somewhere has got to to come to their senses on this thing.

Monday, July 07, 2008

Progress in the 8th Circuit Court on Life Issue?

In the Americans United for Life blog, Mailee Smith (staff attorney for the AUL) describes some encouraging elements of last week's 8th Circuit Court decision about South Dakota’s informed consent law. Check it out.

In a decision issued last week by the Eighth Circuit (sitting en banc), the Court reversed a preliminary injunction that had blocked the enforcement of certain provisions of South Dakota’s informed consent law.

The provisions require that a woman be informed that “the abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being,” and that the woman has an existing, Constitutional relationship with her unborn child. Planned Parenthood had challenged the law, and initially obtained the now-overturned preliminary injunction from the lower court.


The effect of this ruling remains to be seen. Because the decision involved only a preliminary injunction, the actual merits of the case—and the constitutionality of the informed consent provisions—have not been decided. However, a few positive developments must be noted.


First, the Court concluded that, in a preliminary injunction proceeding involving government action, plaintiffs such as Planned Parenthood must meet a higher standard. It is not enough that Planned Parenthood show that it might succeed on the merits of the case; it must show that it is likely to succeed. This heightens the standard that district courts in the Eighth Circuit will use when considering preliminarily enjoining abortion related laws.


Second, this Court more accurately balanced expert witness testimony than it has in the past. For example, in Carhart v. Gonzales, one of the partial-birth abortion cases, the lower court and Eighth Circuit took abortionist testimony as fact, completely dismissing the accuracy and strength of the government’s expert witnesses.


Here, however, the Court emphasized that Planned Parenthood did not have enough medical and scientific evidence that the informed consent provisions were unnecessary or inaccurate. The Court did not take as fact a plaintiff abortionist’s own affidavit. Instead, it balanced the legislative history and multiple expert witnesses testimonies given by the government. In other words, the Court did not take abortionist testimony as fact, as it has done in the past.


Finally, the Court indicated that the question of when life begins is a scientific, and not necessarily ideological, fact. It demanded scientific evidence from Planned Parenthood. And because Planned Parenthood did not produce, it lost at the preliminary injunction stage.


What happens next with this case remains to be seen. The informed consent provisions are not in the clear yet—the preliminary injunction stage is just one hurdle in the battle of constitutionality. But at least as the lawsuit proceeds, the provisions will be in effect.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Global Warming as a "Sick-Souled Religion"?

Bret Stephens has an enlightened, distinctly international perspective on political and economic affairs. Born in Mexico City; educated in Britain and the U.S.; the youngest ever editor-in-chief of the Jerusalem Post; and now an editorial writer and news commentator for the Wall Street Journal based in Brussels -- Stephens' observations are always worthwhile to consider.

And among the many important things on his mind these days is the mania surrounding global warming.

Here, in this important WSJ article, Bret Stephens shares some of the most insightful, most disarming arguments against the "sick-souled religion" that is global warming that you'll find. His examination of the mania deals with its ideology, theology and psychology -- an unusual approach which makes for really excellent reading.

Bret Stephens' "Global Warming as Mass Neurosis" is certainly a "keeper article" and another good one to e-mail to friends.