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Yes, it's lost its meaning. I hear it used (here in my old-school liberal area) to mean a generic "a good guy" or "honest person". I've heard people say, "her friends thinks he's this nice liberal, but I caught him acting underhandedly."
It' also has the meaning you're talking about of classical liberal. There's neo-liberal, which is what old-school liberals, aka "the traditional liberal bloc" calls me.
I use it in the sense of open to new ideas, not doing things JUST because that's the way they were done historically. Since we're always learning new things, reality has a liberal bias.
Mann is the embodiment of everything that is wrong with climate science today. He is a hardcore political activist, very thin skinned, does not take criticism well at all, and he surrounds himself within his own little world of supportive warmist activists. Even the scientists in Mann’s “own little world” resented his knee-jerk reactions to criticism from other scientists, as made clear in this Climategate email from a colleague who sent it anonymously to a list of trusted scientists:
is the author of the books Dire predictions: understanding global warming (2008) and The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars: Dispatches from the Front Lines (2012), which have been described as self-aggrandizing scare tomes. He is a member of the Council of Advisers of the Climate Accountability Institute, which held the Planning Workshop that guided the state attorneys general “AGs United for Clean Power” to prosecute climate skeptics.
Mann is also a direct collaborator with the RICO20 professors, who along with U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), have called for prosecution of all climate skeptics. Mann’s arrogant, intolerant and vengeful attitudes — as reflected in his writings and even his Twitter feed — have caused even colleagues to be wary of him, and spurred the targets of his attacks to redouble their efforts. In a June 2016 speech, Mann tried to convince the Democratic Party Platform drafting committee that Democrats must act urgently to enforce his alarmist agenda before the “right wing denial machine” distorts his message.
The conclusion is not new but the experimental evidence verifying analysis looks sound to me.
The entire AGW proposition fails on lack of evidence and theory, and bad predictive power. The support is from many examples of fraud (eg hockey stick) and loud emotional moral posturing.
Strictly speaking, reality does not even have a "reality bias." As you say, it has no bias; it just is. That said, however, we know that we achieve more when acting in accordance with reality than denying it. I took CG's statement to mean that in the context of our political theories, those people who have a liberal bias are more in accordance with reality. It is why liberal societies of the West are materially better off than than illiberal societies (dictatorships, failed states). It is why (very generally) the rich are liberal and the poor are conservative.
has been, caused by man. As to proportions, I don't
know.
I say this only half jokingly: The tests are about reality and reality has a slight liberal bias. It's only half joking because reality is understood by doing experiments, making observation, and reasoning. A key part of that is being open to answers that are undesirable or different from how our parents and other respected people from the past saw things. It means disregarding people who are overwrought and propagandists, and ignoring fallacious reasoning instead of desperately grasping it as a straw man. I'm not sure if "liberal" is the right word because that can mean almost everything. But if we had to see the test through a political lens, which we don't have to, the test has a liberal bias because it deals in reality.
Here is a corrected link to the 2nd test: http://www.chronicle.com/article/How-...
I am surprised on the second test most people got the last question about independent experiments and did not fall for the gambler's fallacy that says if you've tossed heads several times in a row the coin is more likely to land on tails next time.
See here:
http://www.pewresearch.org/quiz/scien...
However, as Wired writer Rhett Alain pointed out about a different quiz (here: http://www.chronicle.com/article/How-..., these instant investigations ask not about scientific thinking but about the memorization of isolated facts. Even though I scored perfect (of course), I realized that if I had not had specific learning, and was just trying to reason it through, I would have chosen wrong on two of the Pew Research questions. Science is not easy. (See "Science versus Common Sense" here in the Gulch and on my blog: http://necessaryfacts.blogspot.com/20... )
There is a difference between how rivers are viewed in wet climates versus dry, not surprisingly. Here in the American West, we had range wars over the fact you do not have a right to destroy your neighbor's property by cutting off his water, just because he was downstream from you. Islamic law developed the idea of a "foundation" as we understand it sometime before 1600 AD: the object in question was a water well -- no one could "own" it but the "owners" were responsible for managing it. They expanded that idea to financial foundations, family foundations, again, about 1600 AD. So, there are precedents.
Activities that accelerate global warming and Marxism are similar in that they both involve people benefiting from taking/trashing other people's property.
They're also related in that global warming is such a big a problem that people who never let a crisis go to waste try to exploit it politically. That's not peculiar to global warming, though. It's the same reason the day of 9/11 attacks people were planning wars with countries unrelated to the attack and shortly after they passed the PATRIOT Act. They didn't come up with those ideas the day of the attack. The attack was the crisis you could use to sell the new product.
It doesn't take a PhD. to understand that we can neither drink water out of rivers full of industrial waste, nor can we breathe air full of toxic particulates.
Is climate change on a global scale a result of energy production? The data is at best contradictory and unclear, but it has been demonstrated that energy production can have an impact on local, smaller scale environments.
If Marxism is defined as "The political and economic ideas of Karl Marx and Freidrich Engels; specifically, a system of thought in which the concept of class struggle plays a primary role both in analyzing Western society in general and in understanding its allegedly inevitable development from bourgeois oppression under capitalism to a socialist society and thence to Communism." [The Tormont Webster's Illustrated Encyclopedic Dictionary], then it is easy to see how manipulation of small scale environmental issues caused by industry and energy production can be used as the means to seize control of industry and energy production by government and/or anti-capitalist "authorities".
In this way, I would agree that climate change as a concept IS one whose ideological degree is directly proportional to the degree of Marxian control over economic policy.
It is therefore imperative for industrialists and energy generators to be responsible producers and follow Grandpa's rule: Clean up your mess when you are done! The selfish payoff will be the inability of anti-capitalists to manipulate small scale environmental issues into global economic regulation and control.
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