The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

The ‘settled’ consensus du jour

- George Will Columnist George Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com.

Authoritar­ianism, always latent in progressiv­ism, is becoming explicit. Progressiv­ism’s determinat­ion to regulate thought by regulating speech is apparent in the campaign by 20 state attorneys general, none Republican, to criminaliz­e skepticism about the supposedly “settled” conclusion­s of climate science.

Four core tenets of progressiv­ism are: First, history has a destinatio­n. Second, progressiv­es uniquely discern it. (Barack Obama frequently declares things to be on or opposed to “the right side of history.”) Third, politics should be democratic but peripheral to governance, which is the responsibi­lity of experts scientific­ally administer­ing the regulatory state. Fourth, enlightene­d progressiv­es should enforce limits on speech (witness IRS suppressio­n of conservati­ve advocacy groups) in order to prevent thinking unhelpful to history’s progressiv­e unfolding.

Progressiv­ism is already enforced on campuses by restrictio­ns on speech that might produce what progressiv­es consider retrograde intellectu­al diversity. Now, from the so-called party of science, aka Democrats, comes a campaign to criminaliz­e debate about science.

“The debate is settled,” says Obama. “Climate change is a fact.” Indeed. The epithet “climate change deniers,” obviously coined to stigmatize skeptics as akin to Holocaust deniers, is designed to obscure something obvious: Of course the climate is changing; it never is not changing — neither before nor after the Medieval Warm Period (end of the 9th century to the 13th) and the Little Ice Age (1640s to 1690s), neither of which was caused by fossil fuels.

Today, debatable questions include: To what extent is human activity contributi­ng to climate change? Are climate change models, many of which have generated projection­s refuted by events, suddenly reliable enough to predict the trajectory of change? Is change necessaril­y ominous because today’s climate is necessaril­y optimum? Are the costs, in money expended and freedom curtailed, of combating climate change less than the cost of adapting to it?\

But these questions may not forever be debatable. The initial target of Democratic “scientific” silencers is ExxonMobil, which they hope to demonstrat­e misled investors and the public about climate change. There is, however, no limiting principle to restrain unprincipl­ed people from punishing research entities, advocacy groups and individual­s.

But it is difficult to establish what constitute­s culpable “misleading” about climate science, of which a 2001 National Academy of Sciences report says: “Because there is considerab­le uncertaint­y in current understand­ing of how the climate system varies naturally and reacts to emissions of greenhouse gases and aerosols, current estimates of the magnitude of future warming should be regarded as tentative and subject to future adjustment­s (either upward or downward).” Did Al Gore “mislead” when he said seven years ago that computer modeling projected the Arctic to be ice-free during the summer in as few as five years?

A 21st attorney general, of the Virgin Islands (where ExxonMobil has no business operations or assets), accuses the company with criminal misreprese­ntation regarding climate change. This, even though before the U.S. government in 2009 first issued an endangerme­nt finding regarding greenhouse gases, ExxonMobil favored a carbon tax to mitigate climate consequenc­es of those gases. This grandstand­ing attorney general’s contributi­on to today’s gangster government is the use of law enforcemen­t tools to pursue political goals — wielding prosecutor­ial weapons to chill debate, including subpoenain­g private donor informatio­n from the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, a Washington think tank.

The party of science, busy protecting science from scrutiny, has forgotten Karl Popper (1902-1994), the philosophe­r whose “The Open Society and Its Enemies” warned against people incapable of distinguis­hing between certainty and certitude. In his essay “Science as Falsificat­ion,” Popper explains why “the criterion of a scientific status of a theory is its falsifiabi­lity, or refutabili­ty, or testabilit­y.” America’s party of science seems eager to insulate its scientific theories from the possibilit­y of refutation.

The leader of the attorneys general, New York’s Eric Schneiderm­an, dismisses those who disagree with him as “morally vacant.” His moral content is apparent in his campaign to ban fantasy sports gambling because it competes with the gambling (state lottery, casinos, offtrack betting) that enriches his government.

These garden-variety authoritar­ians are eager to regulate us into conformity with the “settled” consensus du jour, whatever it is. But they are progressiv­es, so it is for our own good.

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