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Echoes of Climategate and climate alarmism permeate new paper on a collapsing AMOC...
That said, when peer review gets weaponized to push a narrative, it crosses into dangerous territory.
We've seen this before in the climate science community, as I detailed in my piece "Manufacturing Consensus" and as exposed in the infamous Climategate emails from 2009.
In those leaked messages, Dr. Michael Mann (of hockey-stick graph fame) explicitly discussed using the peer-review system to block dissenting papers, stating they would "redefine what the peer-review literature is" to keep out views that challenged the alarmist consensus.
Fast forward to today, and it feels like history is repeating itself.
A brand-new paper in Environmental Research Letters (ERL), titled "Shutdown of Northern Atlantic Overturning after 2100 following deep Mixing Collapse in CMIP6 projections" by Sybren Drijfhout and colleagues claims,
The paper relies heavily on computer model projections (CMIP6) and paints a dire picture of collapsing deep ocean mixing, leading to extreme cooling in Europe and global disruptions.
This isn't just sloppy science… It's hard to imagine experienced authors, reviewers, and editors overlooking such recent, high-profile work by accident...
But here's the red flag:
This isn't just sloppy science...
It's hard to imagine "experienced" authors, reviewers, and editors overlooking such recent, high-profile work by accident.
As someone who's navigated peer review countless times, I can tell you:
It smacks of deliberate cherry-picking, ignoring any data that doesn't fit the alarmist narrative.
Why...?
Because this narrative fuels billions in taxpayer-funded grants for,
...while justifying more control over everyday life, from energy policies to, yes, even restrictions on things like owning a dog under "sustainable" living mandates...
This isn't new...
Peer review is like a quality check where experts vet a paper before publication. But when it's rigged to exclude inconvenient truths, it becomes... propaganda...
Recall Dr. Richard Lindzen (MIT emeritus), whose peer-reviewed critiques of climate alarmism led to editors being fired or pressured to retract papers.
Or the Orwellian experience at the American Journal of Economics and Sociology, where a paper challenging the consensus was yanked under dubious circumstances.
Editors seem complicit, allowing this academic fraud to persist because it aligns with the "climate crisis" storyline.
The ERL paper's authors clearly rely on the notion that the AMOC is in "desperate need of saving," which conveniently calls for,
For non-scientists:
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