Saturday, March 20, 2010
Still Climate Doubt
When a hacker broke into the  private emails of  the U.K.'s  University of East Anglia's Climate  Research Unit, emails were made public on the internet that were never  meant to be so.  The controversy behind the emails caused the director  of the unit, Phil Jones, to stand down.  This may have been unimportant  to American politics had Congress not been debating climate change  issues on Wednesday.  The emails made some skeptics of climate change  resort to their founded beliefs.  Republican representative James  Sensenbrenner of Wisconsin stated an argument along the lines that the  email invalidated the recently concreted thought that humans are a cause  of climate change.  Others, however, such as Democratic representative  Ed Markey of Massachusetts, say that climate change is a threat to our  planet, and all of this is a diversion from the real problem at hand.   For the most part, I agree with this view from Markey.  A couple of  private emails that were not supposed to be released to the public  should not make legislators change their mind about the issues.  The  scientific reports are what should be concentrated on.  However, because  scandal is God in America, the issue of the contradicting emails will  be blown out of proportions.  The link to the article is HERE.   
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