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Sunday
Nov292009

Bad Scientists doesn't mean Bad Science

David Frum, formerly a key advisor to George W. Bush, writes in the National Post about the scandal plaguing climate scientists from the University of East Anglia, where emails obtained by outsiders seem to suggest that scientists fudged their climate numbers.

Frum's point:  just because some scientists did bad does not make the entire science of climate change bogus.

He uses the example of James Watson and Francis Crick, who gained in enormous insight from the work of Rosalind Franklin in their discovery of the structure of DNA and subsequently denigrated her with a attitudes of misogyny and sexism.  Nobody would use Watson and Crick's bad behaviour to discredit the structure of DNA.

Yet, here we are, our media using the behaviour of a small number of scientists to discredit the work on climate change done by thousands upon thousands of scientific minds.

See his article here.

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