The Joe Rogan Experience - #2397 - Richard Lindzen & William Happer
Episode Date: October 21, 2025Richard Lindzen, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. William Happer, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of Physics at Princet...on University. Doctors Lindzen and Happer are recognized for questioning prevailing assumptions about climate change and energy policy.www.co2coalition.org Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Buy 1 Get 1 Free Trucker Hat with code ROGAN at https://happydad.com Try ZipRecruiter FOR FREE at https://ziprecruiter.com/rogan Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Joe Rogan podcast, check it out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Gentlemen, first of all, thank you very much for being here.
I really appreciate it.
A pleasure.
My pleasure.
And if you don't mind, would you please just tell everybody who you are and state your resume, like, what you do?
I mean, just a brief version of your credentials.
I'm Dick Linson, and my whole life has been in academia.
Basically, I finished my doctorate at Harvard.
And I did spend a couple of years at the University of Washington and in Norway and in Boulder, Colorado.
Then part of that was because at Harvard, I was working in atmospheric sciences.
but they had no one who dealt with observations.
So I went to Seattle for someone who did.
And then I got my first academic position at Chicago
and stayed there about three, four years,
moved on to Harvard, spent about 10 years there,
and then to MIT for about the last 35 years
until I retired in 2013.
I've always enjoyed it.
I mean, the field of atmospheric sciences, when I entered it, I mean, the joy of it was a lot of problems that were solvable.
So you could look at phenomena.
One of them that I worked on was the so-called quasi-bionial cycle.
Turns out the wind above the equator, about 16 kilometers, 20 kilometers.
goes from east to west for a year, turns around, goes the other way for the next year, and so on.
And, you know, we worked out why that happened, and there were other things like that.
So it was a very enjoyable period until global warming.
And, sir, would you tell everybody what your credentials are, what you do, where you're from?
I'm Will Happer, and I'm a retired professor of physics at Princeton.
and like Dick, I'm a science nerd, but I was actually born in India under the British Raj.
My father was a army officer, the Indian Army, Scottish, and my mother was American.
And that was before World War II.
So when I came to America, as a small child, my mother was working in Oak Ridge for the Manhattan Project.
So I remember, you know, the war days at Oak Ridge.
and that's probably why I went into physics.
I thought this looks like an interesting way to make a living,
and if I can do it, I'll do it, and I have.
And I've done a number of things.
I spent a lot of time at universities at Columbia, at Princeton.
I also served for a couple of years in Washington
as Director of Energy Research under President Bush, Sr.
And I've learned a lot about climate from Dick.
colleague here. I first became suspicious when I was Director of Energy Research. I would invite
people in to explain how they were spending the taxpayers' money, and most people were delighted
to come to Washington and have some bureaucrat be interested in what they were doing.
And there was one exception. That was the people working on climate, and they would always
be very resentful. You know, we work for Senator Gore. We don't work for you. And so I would tell
Well, okay, let him pay for your next year's research.
I can find other people who will come and talk to me who would be glad to take my money.
That's interesting.
So Senator Gore has been involved in this whole climate thing for quite a long time then.
Oh, yes, very long time.
When he was a senator, before he was vice president.
That's right.
And when he made that movie an inconvenient truth, what year was that again?
Jamie was like 98 or something?
Yeah.
Something like 99?
That, what is it?
Oh, really?
Were that off?
Wow.
Okay, so 2006.
So when he made that film, there was always, when I was a child, I do remember Leonard Nimoy
had a television show called In Search of.
Remember that show?
Sure.
And on that show, he warned of an oncoming ice age.
Right.
Do you remember that?
And I remember being a kid and freaking out like, oh my God, Spock is telling us the world's
going to freeze.
This is terrifying.
And then somewhere along the line, it became global warming.
And initially in the 80s, it was kind of funny.
People were saying, well, hairspray, if more you use it, you could play golf deep in November.
That was the ozone scared.
Yes, but it was also part of global warming.
A little bit, yeah.
They were worried about global warming, but they were worried about the ozone hole.
It wasn't CO2 as much back then.
CO2 seems to have really significantly become a part of the zeitgeist after this Al Gore film.
No.
No?
No.
It was before...
No, it was a study, in terms of academic study, for sure, but in terms of people panicking, when did CO2?
Look, panicking, I have no idea.
But, no, what happened was there was, I would say, with the first Earth Day in 1970, there was a real change in the environmental movement.
it began to focus much more strongly on the energy sector and much less on saving the whales.
And there was a big difference.
I mean, the energy sector involved trillions of dollars.
The whales, not so much.
And at that time, it was cooling this global mean temperature, which doesn't change much.
But, you know, you focus on one degree, a half degrees.
it looks like something.
And it was cooling from the 1930s.
1930s were very warm, and it was getting cooler until the 70s.
And that's why they were saying, well, you know, this is going to lead to an ice age.
And they focused on that for a while.
And then in the 70s, and at that time, well, what do you say?
If you're worried about an ice age, they said, well, it will be the sulfur.
emitted by coal burning, because that reflects light, and the less light that we get,
the colder will get.
But then the temperature stopped cooling in the 70s and started warming.
And that's when they said, well, you have to now scare people with warming,
and you can't use the sulfates anymore.
But the scientist called Sukhi Manabi showed that even though,
CO2 doesn't do much in the way of warming, doubling it will only give you a half degree or so.
But if you assumed that relative humidity stayed constant so that every time you warmed a little,
you added water vapor, which is a much more important greenhouse gas, you would double the impact
of CO2, which now gives you a degree, which still isn't a heck of a lot, but still it was saying
you could increase it.
And that's when people started saying, well, now we better find CO2.
It's increased because of industrialization and so on.
That began the demonization of CO2.
Do you think there's just always people that are going to point to anything like this
that's difficult to define and use it to their advantage?
Oh yeah, and this was a particular case.
wanted to deal, you know, the energy sector is trillions of dollars. Anything you can do to overturn it,
change it, replace fossil fuels, it's big bucks. Right. And one of the odd things I think in politics,
I don't see it studied much, Congress can actually give away trillions of dollars. If you look
at the McKinsey report on, you know, eliminating CO2, net,
zero. They're saying it'll cost hundreds of trillions of dollars. Well, if you're giving out
that much, you don't need that much of your politician. All you need is millions for
your campaigning. And all you're asking are the recipients of people who are getting the money
that you are giving them, a half percent, a quarter percent, you're golden. So that's much
better than giving out 100,000 and having all of it back.
Well, the key, though, is also making it a subject that you cannot challenge.
There's no room for any rational debate, and if you discuss it at all, you are now a
climate change denier, which is like being an anti-vaxxer or, you know, fill in the blank
with whatever other horrible thing you could be called.
Now, that's a very interesting phenomenon.
I mean, I was looking at it.
On the one hand, you're told the science is settled.
Thousands of the world's leading climate scientists all agree, which often makes you wonder.
You went to college.
How many climate scientists did you know?
But on the other hand, if you read the IPCC reports, they're pointing out, for instance,
that water vapor and clouds are much bigger than CO2, and we don't understand them at all.
So we have the biggest phenomena, we don't understand it all, but the science is settled.
Who knows what that means?
Well, it's also this is very bizarre dynamic of the Earth's temperature itself, which has never been static.
No.
How would it remain static?
That would involve a hugely reactive system.
It doesn't make any sense.
Yeah.
But everyone seems to be buying this narrative that the science is settled and the Earth is warming.
We have to act now.
You say everyone.
I don't say everyone.
A lot of politicians in particular.
Politicians are very attractive to this because it gives them power.
Right.
And it's hard to define.
And if you argue against it, you're a bad person.
Well, you do all that, but you know, we spend part of a year in France.
My wife is French.
You know, ordinary people, once you get to the countryside, don't take this all that seriously.
Two, I suspect ordinary people have more skepticism than many people who are more educated.
Yes, but unfortunately, these ordinary people sometimes are impacted by these politicians' decisions where they have to like, in the U.K., they were getting rid of cows, they were forcing people to kill cows.
They're paying three times more for their heating and their electric bills.
Right.
Right.
I mean, it makes people poorer.
It's making it almost impossible to electrify parts of the world that need it.
And that involves billions of people.
No, I mean, it's doing phenomenal damage and pain.
But, you know, I think for politicians and for many people who are well off,
they need something that gives meaning to their life.
And saving the planet seems sufficiently grandiose.
Yes.
How would these net zero policies stopping people from getting electricity?
Well, by making it expensive, by eliminating fossil fuels.
Fossil fuels are cheaper.
The experience in the UK is when you switch to, quote, renewables.
It tripled the price of electricity.
Right, but what I'm talking about is like third world countries, parts of the world that are undeveloped.
They can't afford it.
And that's all it is.
They can't afford it.
Yeah.
But they also, if they didn't follow these net zero policies, what kind of plants are we talking about?
We're talking about coal plants.
Coal, anything, whatever is valuable.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, essentially.
So you think even though coal does pollute the environment and releases particulates, right?
It's not.
How shall I put it?
you know, it's always a matter of cost.
We have a plant, I think, in Alabama that has basically as clean as any other plant that
burns coal.
You can clean it.
You can scrub it.
You can get rid of almost everything except CO2.
Okay.
So the particulates aren't as big of an issue as they used to be in the past.
I agree.
They're more efficient.
Okay.
Yeah.
So stopping, so this net zero thing is stopping them from installing modernized coal plants.
and parts of the world that do not have electricity.
And the overall net negative weighs much heavier in not bringing these coal plants in.
I think so.
And not bringing these people into the first world.
And there are, of course, the alternative natural gas and so on, which are available in places.
You know, there are places where you're lucky, like in Norway or, you know, Quebec where you have hydro, which is intrinsically clean.
but there's a problem with politicians.
I remember once being in D.C.
and some Republican politicians came and said,
you know what we just did.
We banned incandescent light bulbs.
They said, wasn't that a great thing?
I said, that's the stupidest thing I've heard today.
What's the point?
Because at the time, what was replacing it?
Compact fluorescence, which were awful.
All they had to do was weigh.
and do nothing, and LEDs would come along,
and people would say, okay, I prefer that.
Instead, they feel they have to do something.
And they would switch the fluorescence,
which turned out to be terrible for people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So incandescents aren't bad for you?
They were simply less efficient than, you know,
in terms of the number of watts of heat they generate versus light.
I mean, LEDs are phenomenal that way.
Right.
They're the best.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it's interesting when they have these decisions that they make like that,
they do turn out to be negative ultimately, and that yet people still allow them to make silly
decisions that don't seem to be making sense.
Yeah, I think there's an old cliche, money is the root of all evil.
Yeah, that's what I was going to get to.
This is the disturbing thing that I think a lot of people have a hard time accepting, especially
a lot of very polite, educated people that have followed the narrative that you follow
if you're a good person, and if you're a person who trust science, and that is that,
like, we have a serious problem, we have to address it now, or there will be no America
for our grandchildren.
This is the thing that we keep hearing.
You mentioned a tough thing there, the business trust science.
Yes.
It's not a great idea because that isn't, science is not a source of authority.
It's a methodology.
It's based on challenge.
Right.
Where this narrative come from then?
Trust the science.
The success of science.
In other words, this is a relatively new way to approach the world.
I mean, a few hundred years.
And the notion is, and I think it's been stated many times,
you test things.
And if they fail to predict correctly, they're wrong.
find out what's wrong with them. You don't fudge them. You don't change the rules.
It's led to immense improvements in life, development of all sorts of things, and so it has
a good reputation. Politicians have less of a reputation, so they wish to co-opt the reputation
of science.
Yes, that's a very good point because try finding a good politician that everybody agrees
is rock solid.
You can find plenty of science that everybody thinks is amazing.
Cell phone technology, nuclear power, so many things that people go, that's incredible
that they did that.
Well, that's also confusing technology with science.
Right.
The result of science.
Yeah.
Which is also an issue, right?
And when you can get politicians to attach themselves to narratives that are supposedly connected
Science.
You mentioned Gore at the beginning.
Yes.
You know, with that thing, he was showing this cycle of ice ages and CO2 and temperature
going together.
And it never bothered him that the temperature changed first and then the CO2.
Yeah.
Greg Braden was on the podcast recently.
He was explaining there have been times where the CO2 was much higher in the atmosphere,
but the temperature was colder.
Oh, yeah.
So it's not like we can point to.
Like, look at the dinosaurs.
We don't want to live the way the dinosaurs live.
Look how much CO2 they had.
And then the other really inconvenient thing with CO2 is that the earth is actually greener than it has been in a long time.
I mean, I think we'll speak to that.
But, I mean, essentially the increased amount of CO2 in the industrial era has added greatly to the arable land.
and in fact there's a funny story
do you know the name E.O. Wilson, have you ever heard that name?
I do. I have heard it, but I don't know where.
He was a biologist at Harvard.
He wrote about sociobiology.
His specialty were ants and bees and things, social insects.
And he was giving a talk
and
it came up for reasons that
were not obvious to me. He was talking about the population of humanoids. And he was mentioning
that you go back, you know, a few hundred thousand years, and you began the first humanoids,
and they got to about a few million. But then during the last glacial maximum, the numbers
went down to tens of thousands.
There was a complete wipeout of humans.
So I asked him afterwards, I said,
do you think this could have anything to do with the fact that CO2 is so low that there was no food?
And his response was to turn around and walk away.
That's an inconvenient truth, sir.
It's just, to me, it's very strange to see an almost.
unanimous acceptance of that we have settled this. The science is settled from so many people
and both the left and in academia and even on the right. There's a lot of people on the right
that believe that. Yeah, I know. And it should be the first thing that makes you suspicious.
Yeah. Right. There's a consensus. Yeah. I mean, this is not how science is done.
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You know, the weirdest thing is when you look at the charts of the overall temperature of Earth that have been, you know, from core samples over a long period of time, it's this crazy wave.
And like, no one was controlling it back then.
And we're supposed to believe that we can control it now, that we can do something about it now.
But there's something else about it, which I find funny.
And you might have some insight into it.
People pay no attention to the actual numbers.
Yeah.
We're not talking about big changes.
In other words, for the temperature of the globe as a whole, between now and the last glacial maximum, the difference was five degrees, but that was because most of the Earth was not affected.
much of the earth anyway, very much.
But, you know, somebody says one degree, a half degree, what's his name, Gutierrez, at the U.N., says,
the next half degree and we're done for.
Doesn't anyone ask a half degree?
I mean, I deal with that between, you know, 9 a.m. and 10 a.m.
It does seem crazy.
It's just that kind of fear of minute change that they try to put into people.
And what I think people need to understand that are casual observers of this is what you discussed earlier.
How much money is involved in getting people to buy into this narrative so you can pass some bill that's called Save the World Climate, some crazy like that.
They call it the Inflation Reduction Act.
Oh, even better.
Who doesn't want to reduce inflation?
And then next thing you know, there's windmills killing whales and all kinds of nonsense.
But the point being, it's, it is a fascinating science.
Like, the science itself is fascinating.
Oh, yeah.
You get rid of the ideology and you stop attaching this thing versus, you know, you're either
pro-science or anti-science.
Just look at the actual data of it.
It's absolutely fascinating.
And these minute changes, the fact that the procession of the equinoxes or the world
earth wobbles, like the whole thing is nuts.
Like, the whole temperature.
And it has to stay relatively.
stable in order to keep us alive in terms of like, can't go too low, can't go too high.
We're in this Goldilog zone.
The interesting thing is during the ice ages, we almost get wiped out.
Got really close, right?
And what's interesting about that is as far as temperature goes.
Okay, yeah, the poles have gotten much colder.
You have ice covering Illinois, two kilometers of ice.
That's uninhabitable.
But you get south of 30 degrees latitude.
dude. Not very different from today in terms of temperature. And so you would think you had a hundred
thousand years, people would sort of migrate to an area where it was now pleasant.
Trouble was without CO2, which went down to about 180, there wasn't enough food for the people.
Oh, so there wasn't enough plant life. Yeah. Yeah.
Get down to 160, 150, all life would die.
There would be not enough food for anything.
What's it out now?
Like 240?
No, we're now 400 something.
400?
Yeah.
400.
430 maybe today, yeah.
Okay.
When you first started discussing this and when you first started getting interested in this,
how much pushback did you get?
Interesting question.
Actually, quite a lot, but I mean it took very funny forms.
So for instance, in 1989, for instance, I sent a paper to Science magazine questioning whether this is something to worry about.
And they sent it back immediately saying there was no interest.
So I sent it to the bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, and they reviewed
it and published it, and the editor was immediately fired.
Wow.
About ten years later, working with some colleagues at NASA, we found something called
the iris effect that clouds, which were greenhouse.
affected the upper levels contracted when it got warm, letting more heat out, so cooling as a
negative feedback. And we got the paper, put it, got reviewed, was published. Again,
the editor was fired immediately. But the new editor came on immediately and said he's inviting
papers to criticize it. And suddenly there were tons of papers.
criticizing it, looking for anything that differed from what we did, including one that found a
difference that actually made the CO2 even less important, but it was different, so he thought
he could have passed it through. No, it's insane. And even now, there's something called
gatekeepers. I don't know. Are you familiar with the release of e-mail?
from East Anglia?
No, I'm not.
Okay.
This is 20 years ago or something almost.
Somebody anonymous released the emails from a place in England, the University of East Anglia,
which has a lot of people pushing climate alarm, and they were communicating with other people
like Michael Mann and so on.
And they were talking about blocking publication.
publication and getting rid of editors and doing this and doing that and so on.
And that was all public.
And it had no impact at all.
That sounds like that should be illegal.
Yeah.
Well, you know, the whole business with, how should I put it, peer review, it is not ancient.
Before World War II, very few journals had.
peer review.
And in fact, when I have students look at old journals from the 19th century, one of the big
surprises is they are less formal than today's papers.
They are literally discussions among scientists about their results, their questions, their
uncertainties, and so on.
There's real communication.
Today, I mean, there's much more formality.
in the papers. There's also, in my field, the Meteorological Society actually did a poll
or a study. How often are papers referred to? It turns out the average paper is referred
to once. Wow. I mean, so you have these things. Papers are written to satisfy the funding
agency. Nobody seems to pay attention to them. How did you get involved in this?
Well, I mentioned my stay at the Department of Energy, and that's what really sucked me into it.
I had never paid much attention to climate science before, but I was spending a lot of money, the taxpayer's money on it, and so I thought I'd have to learn a little bit about it, and I already mentioned that most of the climate scientists did not appreciate my questioning.
They were very strange because almost any other science when they got a call.
from Washington, come in and tell us what you're doing, they were just delighted to come
and make a case about how important their work was, but the climate sciences were completely
different. Did anybody engage with you?
Yeah, they had to because I threatened to cut off their funding if they didn't come,
and so they would come, you know, and be very sullen, and they wouldn't answer questions,
and, you know, you can't have a seminar without asking questions. That's how you learn.
So they would come to try to get funding from you, and they wouldn't answer questions.
That's right.
That sounds crazy.
That sounds like people that don't think they have to convince you that what they're doing is important.
So they're entitled to that money.
Well, that's right.
Well, you know, I was working for President Bush Sr.
And when Carter and Gore won the election, you know, Gore couldn't wait to fire me, you know, at the behest of all of his.
Clinton, Clinton and Gore.
Clinton and Gore, yeah. That's right.
So he, you know, Washington, fortunately, it's very hard to make anything happen, including firing someone.
You want to fire because you can't find them in the org chart.
So it took them two or three months to find me.
But they finally did fire me.
I was glad to be fired.
I wanted to go back to do research.
I was tired of being a bureaucrat.
So I'm, you know, grateful in some sense for that.
Your colleagues that weren't working with you, like other scientists, were they reluctant to discuss this kind of information with you guys when you first started questioning whether or not this narrative is correct?
Well, you know, my field is actually hard physics.
You know, I'm a nuclear physics trained and I've done a lot of work with lasers.
And these are things you can measure.
They don't have much political influence.
A lot of them have a military significance.
And, in fact, the reason I was brought to Washington is because I invented an important part of the Star Wars Defense initiative, which I can say about later.
But I had never really paid any close attention to science until then.
Climate science.
Climate science, I should say, yes.
So once I had this experience in Washington, I started looking to it a little bit, but I didn't have time.
time to look a lot because my own research was going still at Princeton and we had discovered
some things that we were able to form a little startup company and so, you know, forming the
company and getting it going and funded, used up most of my time. I didn't have time to look at
climate. But eventually that was behind me and I invited Dick to come give a seminar at a colloquium
at Princeton and that's really when I began to get very interested in it.
And I realized that it's just completely different from normal science.
You know, it completely politicized if you can't ask a question, you know, that's a bad, bad sign.
Yeah.
And if you have 100% consensus determining the truth, that's an even worse sign because, you know, the truth in science is whether what you predict agrees with observation.
And that wasn't true of the climate science community.
you know, they would predict all these things, and none of them ever happened, and there was no consequence, you know, one failure after another, and nothing ever happened. The funding kept pouring in.
Now, is this behind the scenes, is this disgust amongst physicists and other hard scientists? Did they talk about how climate science has been politicized in the issue that that causes, or do they just accept it?
Well, I think speaking as a physicist, I don't know how it is in other fields.
And from Princeton, I think most of my colleagues recognize that there's a lot of nonsense there,
but they're afraid to speak up because it's bringing in enormous amounts of money.
Dick mentioned that the love of money is the root of all evil in universities.
For example, at Princeton, we have enormous new building program.
It's funded to a large extent from overhead from climate grant.
And you're talking about, you know, not small change, you know, you're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars, you know, for construction.
So it's like, you know, this famous drama of this Norwegian playwright, Enemy of the People, Ibsen.
And the point of the drama was there was this resort town in Norway where you would come and you would be treated at the spa.
you drink the water and go home healthy.
Well, people would come and drink the water
and they would die of typhoid.
A local doctor said, you know, we're killing
people. We're not curing them. And he
was declared an enemy of the people
because he was cutting off the source of funding
for the city. So it's
that syndrome. It's an ancient
human problem. Right.
So it's always been there.
And it's there in spades with climate.
It's part of it.
And another part of it is the politicization has made it a partisan issue.
I mean, in the U.S., and I think that's in a way fortunate, it's almost a right versus left issue.
And as a result, you have people, universities are almost entirely on the left, and so it's something they support.
You know, the money end of it is sort of funny.
I mean, I have the feeling at MIT that our president, Sally Kornbluth, you know, probably spends her time worrying about how she can use climate money to support the music department.
I don't know.
So when they get funding for climate, they can allocate it as they wish?
You know, it is fungible.
Okay.
You'll get this huge overhead, you know, 50%, 60% of your grant goes to the administration and not to your research.
Yeah, they can do what they like with the overhead.
Interesting.
Yeah.
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slash Rogan. ZipRecruiter, the smartest way to hire. And if they take a step outside of the
narrative and say, I think we need to re-examine what's going on with CO2 in the atmosphere,
and it seems there's a politicalization of this subject. And that's bad for science. That's
bad for education. It's bad for everything. Let's take a step back. They would immediately
lose so much further. Well, the main thing it's bad for is for overhead income to the university.
Exactly. Exactly. From an administrator's point of view. By the way, I mean, this is something that
the press didn't deal with very much. Trump was cutting the overhead.
He was saying that he didn't want to have that included in grants.
I don't think the public realized how significant that was for better or for worse.
Yeah.
I think most people have no idea where grants go.
They don't even think about it.
No, I mean.
And the amount of money that's involved.
Yeah.
When I was active, if I got a grant, I'm a theoretician, so I didn't need laboratory work.
mainly was for supportive students.
And so, but then 50% of it went to the administration.
Yeah, it's like a lot of charities, almost.
Yeah.
A lot of money goes to overhead.
A lot of money goes to executives.
A lot of money goes to the administration on grants.
And some of it is reasonable.
Sure.
But it's also you're kind of attached to keeping that money flowing in.
And there's a gigantic incentive to not rock the boat and not discuss it the same way you would discuss nuclear science.
Right.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And the attraction, I mean, if you're an administrator, if you're a president of a university, that often overrides everything else, you know, that you're raising money.
I remember years ago, I started college at Rensler, and I made the mistake of mentioning someone that I ever.
appreciated the fact they never bothered me. I transferred out after my sophomore year. So it began
bothering me. And I realized the president of Rensler was making over a million and a half
dollars. This is years ago, probably making much more now. And the fundraiser came back to me and said,
do you know how much money she raises? And I said, oh, so she's on commission.
Right. Yeah. That is kind of what's going on. It gets real weird when you bring that kind of stuff up and people get very reluctant to have these discussions. They don't want to rock the boat. I've talked to a lot of friends in academia and they say people pull you aside like in quiet corners to discuss how this is kind of bullshit.
But there's also the alumni. I find this with Harvard especially. A lot of the people.
who graduate from Harvard
really love the place
for better or for worse
and they will do anything
to protect it
does that make sense
especially since
to stick your neck out there's not a whole lot of
benefit unless you're writing a book
about how ridiculous current
climate change models are
a lot of people did at first
in half a lot of politicians
wrote books saying this is a hoax
and they managed to ride that out.
I mean, by just keeping on demanding that it be accepted.
It's interesting.
It is interesting.
It's because it's universally accepted on the left.
Any discussion at all about, I've had conversations with people and I say, why do you think that?
Like, what do you know about climate change?
And almost none of them have any idea what the actual predictions are, how wrong they've
been what Al Gore predicted in this stupid movie, which is so far off.
He thought we were all going to be dead today.
There's very little change between 2006 and today.
I mean, as I mentioned before, I think for some people, its importance is it gives, quote,
meaning to their life.
Yes.
It becomes a part of an ideology, and it's a very cult-like ideology that encompasses a lot
of different things, unfortunately. What do you think are the major factors? You talked
about water vapor, CO2, there's methane. There's a lot of different factors that would
lead to the temperature of the earth moving in any direction. Correct. Yeah. Let me back off
that a little because one of the things that is sort of strange is the narrative itself deals
with global temperature.
Not clear what that is.
I mean, some average over the whole globe,
how do you take it?
What do you do with it?
But more than that, what is climate?
And, you know, there is a definition.
It's an arbitrary definition.
And it's that it's time variation on time
scales longer than 30 years.
It's pretty arbitrary, but it distinguishes it from weather, which is changes from day to day
to week to week.
Right.
So if they can see a rise in temperature over 30 years, they start getting concerned.
They start calling it climate.
Okay, now you can take data from every station and filter it to get rid of everything
shorter than 30 years.
That's called a low-pass filter.
You can look at that and each station and see how does it correlate with the globe?
It turns out very poorly because most climate change by that definition is regional.
So, for instance, in this area, let's say the states like Louisiana, Albao, Gulf states,
they had a period of cooling when the rest of the country was warming.
Nobody paid much attention to it because that's normal.
Different areas do different things.
You have reasons why it's local.
I mean, if you're near a coast, near a body of water, the circulations in the ocean are bringing heat to the surface and away from the surface all the time, on time scales ranging from a few years for El Nino and so to a thousand years.
And so this has nothing to do with the global average.
The whole business that the global average is at issue was something that was something that was.
created for people studying different planets.
And so you'd look at the average for each planet, and that varied quite a lot, so that it was
useful.
But for looking at the Earth's climate, I'm not sure a global mean is a particularly useful
device.
That makes sense.
How much of a factor does the sun play?
Obviously, a lot.
It heats us up, but like the changing.
You know, that's something there's argument about.
I think, you know, for instance, a man called Milankovic in around 1940 made a convincing
argument, and I think now it's correct, that orbital variations created a change
in insulation, incoming sunlight, in the Arctic in summer, and that controlled the ice ages.
And the thinking was pretty simple.
He was saying that every winter is cold.
Every winter has snow.
But what the temperature or the insulation or the sunlight in the summer is determines whether
that snow melts or not before the next cycle.
And if you're at a point where it doesn't melt, you build a glacier.
It takes thousands of years, but eventually it's big.
And in recent years, for instance, there have been young people who have shown that that
works.
It's interesting, there was even a national program called Climap to study this.
It's around 1990 or so.
And they found something peculiar.
They found that there were peaks in the orbital variables.
that were found in the data for ice volume,
but that the time series were not lining upright.
The young people looking at this said,
you're looking at the wrong thing.
If you're looking at the insulation,
you want to look at the time rate of change of ice volume,
not just the ice volume.
And then the correlations were excellent.
So this was a theory, Milankovic, that I think has been reasonably sustained.
But the people doing this got no credit, nothing, because, you know, early in my career,
these people would have been rewarded.
Now it didn't contribute to global warming.
Nobody pays attention to it.
Joe, let me add to what Dick has said, which I agree with.
But you asked about the sun, and as Dick says, that is a controversial issue.
The establishment narrative is that the sun has very little to do with it.
It's all CO2.
CO2 is the control knob.
Don't confuse me with other possibilities.
But nobody is quite sure about the sun.
we have not got good records of the sun for a long time, so we're stuck with proxies of
how bright was the sun 500 years ago or 5,000 years ago.
And one of the proxies is when the sun activity changes, it changes the amount of radioactive
isotopes that it makes in the atmosphere, things like carbon 14 or beryllium 10.
These stick around for long, you know, thousands of years or longer.
You can, from that, infer how many of them were made, 500 years ago or 5,000 years ago.
And they don't give any support to the idea that the sun has been constant.
It's very clear, for example, that the amount of carbon-14, you know, this radioactivity that's produced changes from year to year.
If you don't take that into account, you get all the dates wrong from carbon-14 dating, you know, where you take an Egyptian mummy in.
you burn up the cloth and you measure the carbon 14 in it and you get the wrong answer
unless you assume that the rate of production then was different from what it is today
because you know what the right answer is from the Egyptian mummies.
There's a pretty good historical record of that.
So it's clear the sun is always changing.
And over the last 10,000 years since the last glacial maximum, there have been many
warmings and coolings, very large warmings and coolings, and that's particularly noticeable near the
Arctic, you know, in high latitudes in the north. For example, my father's home in Scotland,
I was a kid, I would walk up into the hill south of Edinburgh, and you could see these farms
from the year 1,000 where people were able to make a crop at altitudes where you can't farm
today. It's too cold today, but it was clearly warming up in the year 1,000, which was the time
when the Norse farmed Greenland.
So what caused those, it was not people burning oil and coal, you know.
And so I think the best guess as to what it was,
it's some slight difference in the way the sun was shining in those days
because they do correlate with the carbon 14.
That's absolutely fascinating.
Now, when we have estimates, like, say, of the Jurassic or any,
any dinosaur age, was there, is there enough of an understanding of the differences and temperatures
back then that we know whether or not they ever experienced ice ages? Oh, yeah. So we can go back
65, 100 million years. You can go up 500 million years and see evidence of ice ages. Absolutely.
They've come it on. There's always been. There's always been an ice age and a warming.
And they don't, they don't correlate very well with CO2. You can also estimate the past CO2 levels
and they don't correlate with ice ages.
What's special about the recent ice ages is they're pretty periodic.
So for 700,000 years, almost every 100,000 years you have a cycle.
Wow.
If you go back further than that, you begin seeing that fall apart.
And for about 3 million years, 40,000 years is the dominant period.
And then you go back further than that and you don't have ice ages for a long.
time.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's very poorly understood, as I would say.
And so there's also no way to track it, like there's no way to tell what's going
to happen to the sun.
They have some sort of an understanding.
Well, with these, it's not clear that solar activity was the issue.
Could have been many factors.
Well, you know, how should I put it?
With the ice ages, as I say, orbital theory was.
the main thing. The fact that you have, you know, various factors determining the orbit of
the Earth versus the Sun and so on, give you periodic changes in the incoming radiation
as a function of geography in the Earth. Joe, let me add again to what Dick has said that
he correctly said that the current ice ages, which are quasi-periodic, really only began three
million years or so ago, and at first they were oscillating a lot faster than today.
And that was approximately the time that the isthmus of Panama closed.
So one of the suspicions is that when the Panama isthmus closed and stopped the circulation
of water from the Atlantic to the Pacific, that made a huge difference in the transport of heat
in things like the Gulf Stream.
For example, the Gulf Stream would have been completely different if water could have flown
into the Pacific instead of to North Europe.
And that was about the time
that these fluctuating
ice ages began. Wow.
But, you know, we've set back
the serious study of climate,
I think, by 50 years, by this manic
focus on CO2.
If your theory doesn't have CO2
in it, forget it. You know, you won't get funding.
And so the true
answer, I mean, to me,
you know, there was a period
200 years ago when everyone thought
that heat was phlogiston.
There was this magic subject, you know, nonexistent.
But everyone had to believe in phlogiston.
And it turned out it was nonsense.
It wasn't there at all.
But you couldn't get anyone to support you unless you believed in phlogiston.
So I call this phlogiston era of climate science where phlogiston is CO2.
Well, this is what confused me.
You gentlemen are academics.
You're obviously very intelligent people.
There's other very intelligent people that are involved.
in academia, how does this problem get solved? Like, how do they start treating this as what it is
instead of attaching it to a political stance? Well, I think stopping the funding for this massive
funding for climate would help because it's certainly been driven within academia by the
availability of funds. If you're willing to support the narrative, you'll be handsomely rewarded
and you'll be elected to societies, you'll win prices.
And you'll be shunned again if you don't.
That's right.
So I think, for example, if some administration in Washington wants to slow this down and get some sanity,
they should cut the funding or they should at least open up the funding to alternate theories of what is controlling climate.
Because the theory that the control knob is CO2 doesn't work.
It's completely clear it doesn't work.
And it just seems so insane that if we move in the same direction, and we, as you say, if it really is holding back climate science by 50 years, like that's a travesty.
Well, you know, Dick would have made a lot more progress and his colleagues would have made a lot more progress if they hadn't been forced to deal with this CO2 cult.
And we might understand climate today without that.
There are a lot of things that are peculiar about science in general.
One of them is numbers.
I mean, it isn't having more people work on something.
You want to have an environment where there's freedom.
I often think, I mean, Will is familiar with this.
There's a photograph from 1929 of all the world's physicists.
at a salve conference.
This is a golden age of physics.
If you quintupled the number of people working on physics,
would you have improved the situation?
I doubt it.
And so, you know, I think freedom is much more important
than just piling on.
Here's the photo.
Yeah.
You have that.
Great.
There they are.
Not quite.
Not the same.
But that's a Solway conference, absolutely.
Now, the 1929 had the Curies.
Well, Pierre might be there.
It's okay.
Either way we, I guess we got it.
Yeah, but I mean, I wondered at times, you know,
when you had the, the.
Soviet competition with the U.S., and they were the first ones into space.
And we suddenly began a program to get more and more kids to get into STEM.
That has its downside.
First of all, you're going to dilute the field if you increase it too much.
And the second thing is with peer review.
I mean, peer review is new.
I mean, it wasn't that common before World War II.
But people have pointed out, it has its virtues.
But, you know, you can see the Royal Meteological Society, for instance, used to give you instructions.
And the instructions were you can only reject a paper if there is a mathematical error
that you can identify, or if it's plagiarized.
It's repeating something that already exists.
And that was pretty fair because how is a reviewer supposed to decide if a new theory is right or not or so on?
That's asking too much of that.
But today, peer review is almost a process to enforce conformity.
If you're not going with the flow, you can get rejected.
And that's a lot of things structurally need to be, I think, rethought a little bit.
The physicists have done pretty well with Archive, where they have a publication vehicle
using the internet that bypasses, reviews, and lets people read it and see what's up on it.
But all sorts of things like that need to happen.
I mean, what Will is saying is true, I'm sure.
Science of climate has been set back at least two generations by this.
Well, it just seems like it's bad for any kind of science
and that open, free discussion and debating ideas based on their merit and what data you have.
That's what it's supposed to be about.
It's not supposed to be attached to an ideology.
And I just don't understand how it got this far and how it can be separated.
So when did it really become a problem where ideology started invading into certain segments of science?
Well, it's happened many times in the past, Joe, climate was only the most recent.
So it's just a natural thing that happens?
Well, for example, there was the eugenics movement in America and Britain and Western Europe where
the claim was that the great gene pool, you know, of the Anglo-Saxon race was being diluted by all these low-kew Italians and Eastern European Jews and Johnaman.
It was all completely nonsense, but they had learned journals where you could publish an article that proved that, and you had the presidents of Harvard and Stanford and Princeton, Alexander Graham Beah Bell being great eugenicists, you know, protecting the,
American genome, and it was all nonsense.
It was just complete bullshit.
And yet,
and the only thing that stopped it really
was the Nazis
because they took it over with a vengeance,
you know. They were big
fans of the eugenics movement
in America and Britain,
and they took it to its, you know,
absurd extreme.
They also gave an honorary degree
to the leading eugenicist
in America, a man called Loughlin.
But, I mean, what Will is saying, I mean, it had a practical consequence, by the way, it actually led to the Immigration Restriction Act of 1924, which held that America was going to restrict immigrants to percentages based on the population in the 19th century.
So there would be a quota for England and Scotland, which was fine, a little bit less for Germany, almost nothing for Eastern Europe, almost nothing for Italy, and so on.
And that was used in the run-up to World War II to allow Roosevelt to prevent Jews from escaping Europe.
Wow.
And it was only changed in 1960.
So essentially, you were keeping out Jews, Eastern Europeans, Chinese until then, because of eugenics in 1924.
We, you know, the average person that's not involved in science always wants to think of science as being this incredibly pure thing amongst intellectuals or they're trying to figure out how the world works.
When you hear stories like that, you hear that kind of stuff, and you're just like, oh, this has always been a problem.
You're dealing with people.
Human beings.
That's the problem, right?
That's getting to the problem.
Joe says this famous quote by Emmanuel Kant, you know, from the crooked timber of mankind, no straight thing was ever made.
That goes for science as well as every other aspect of human society.
What could have been done to protect the scientific purpose?
process from this sort of an ideological invasion or at least shelter it somewhat to make sure
that something like eugenics doesn't ever get pushed or climates or anything that's just
not logical and doesn't fit with the data.
Well, the trouble is, you know, when something like eugenics comes around, the population
is told that this is science.
Right.
And how are they going to say no?
I mean, you had various famous laboratories devoted to this.
It wasn't a fringe thing.
Right.
And so I don't know how you distinguish it at that time from science.
Today, there are books on it.
You know, you have the correspondence of biologists who is.
saying, well, it's a little bit dicey, but they're saying it's bringing it to the fore of
public attention, so maybe that's a good thing.
Well, it just makes you shudder to think, like, what happens if the Nazis didn't take
over Germany and eugenics continued to progress in America?
That's terrifying to think of where we would be today.
Right, right.
It would have been a much poorer country because so many leading Americans, you know, creative, productive people have immigrated, you know, fairly recently.
They also probably would have led to some horrific actions in order to enact this.
Yeah, I mean, when you put things in the hands of politicians, there is a disconnect.
I mean, the business with light bulbs, I mentioned.
It wasn't malice.
It was ignorance.
And you combine ignorance with power, and you often get nonsense.
And the narrative that you're doing something good for everybody.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Dick has often made the point, which I agree with, that politicians and sort of society leaders are the worst in situations like this.
The ordinary person is often a little bit more skeptical and more reasonable.
Yeah.
So, for example, I'd like to tease Dick because he's a Harvard grad about the Salem witch trials,
but they were orchestrated by people from Harvard, you know.
It was not the common people.
Have you ever written to that at all?
Yeah, I've looked into it carefully.
What do you think about the ergot poisoning theory?
Well, does it make sense?
I don't know.
most of the testimony was from young women about the same age as Greta Toonberg, by the way.
And, you know, they had these visions of the person they were accused,
consorting with the devil and doing all sorts of obscene things.
And that was accepted as testimony.
It was called spectral evidence.
And so when finally the trials were stopped, it wasn't for the right reason,
which is that there's no such thing.
witches. You know, they were stopped because spectral evidence, you know, was shaky. It was being
used against the Harvard judges themselves at that point, so it was getting very dangerous.
You know, but one of them was selling a book on how to detect witches, cotton master, you know.
I've read that as well about the printing press. When the printing press was first devised, a lot of
people like, oh, we're going to get so much knowledge. No, a lot of the early books were like how to
detect witches. Right. That's right. Malius.
Maleficorum, you know, the hammer of the evil doers. That was the first book on witches.
What I'd read about Salem, though, was that they had core samples that detected a late frost
and that they believed this late frost might have contributed to ergot growth. Because apparently
that does happen a lot when the plants grow and then they freeze and then they get mold
on them and that mold could contain ergot and that has LSD-like properties, which totally
make sense. If they're eating LSD-laced bread and they thought everybody was a witch. But either way.
Yeah. Yeah. I think that's a kinder explanation of what happened. I'm less generous.
Well, you know more about the behind the scenes. Yeah. No, but I mean, people, I think what Will is
saying is there are people who always want to have a chance to do in their neighbor.
Yes. Sure. And if you could say your neighbor's a witch, what a better way? We can't have witches
in our neighborhood, let's burn them or drown them at the time, right? That's what they did
for people. Yeah. Yeah, that's one of the parts of Orwell's 1984 that many people forget,
but a big part of that was every day there was two minutes of hate. And so people seem to
have this need for hatred, you know. You have to have a part of the day where you can hate
something or somebody. And so if you're hating CO2, at least that's better than hating
your neighbor. Well, if you're on Twitter, you're using up a lot more.
than two minutes of hate.
Well, you know, but even with political figures, I'm always surprised.
I mean, it seems obvious that any political figure who is exploiting hate and fear probably
does not mean well.
Yeah.
And yet we continually fall for it.
Over and over again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All of them.
And, you know, other countries do the same pattern.
Oh, yeah.
That's what's dark.
It just seems like we're terrified of being terrified.
And we want safety, and we want someone comes along and scares a shit out of us and vows to protect us.
Yep.
Yeah.
Well, children do this all the time.
Go into a dark closet and frighten yourself.
Well, there is also terrible things in the world and terrible people in the world.
But when you have a – just everything scares a shit out of everybody.
Everything is the end of the world.
And climate being one of the key ones that I hear all.
the time with young people. In fact, there were some recent surveys that were done. You know about
these, like the things that give young people the most anxiety? And climate is at the very top of that list.
Yeah. I mean, it's really strange to think that this is causing young people not to want to have
children, not to want to continue, to have no hope for the future. This is bizarre. And just to live in
constant fear of one day. But meanwhile, is anybody paying attention to all these rich people
buying shoreline property? Do you think they're stupid? Do you think Jeff Bezos is a dumbass
because he's buying these giant mansions like right on the ocean? Like, you really think the water
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I was going to raise that much.
How should I put it?
I mean, you know, even the people who are pushing it at MIT, I mean, buy houses on the shore.
Obama did.
You got that beautiful house and Martha's Vineyard.
It's like if you've looked at the timelines, I'm sure you have like a time lapse video of the shoreline from like 1980 all the way up to 2020.
25, it doesn't move.
I mean, it goes a little bit in Malibu, and there's a lot of...
They go back much further than that.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think, Joe, it's true.
Sue level is rising.
It's different at different shores because the land is also rising and sinking.
But it's not very much, and it hasn't accelerated the...
There's no evidence that CO2 has made any difference.
It started rising roughly 1,800 at the end of the Little Ice Age, and it's not changing very much.
And wasn't there really an unprecedented amount of Arctic ice that's increased recently?
That's right.
Yeah.
I mean, that's always variable.
Right, but when that happens, how come that doesn't hit the news?
If the ice goes away, then it's going to hit the news.
Oh, my God, look at this.
We lost a chunk the size of Manhattan and everybody freaks out.
Well, we were supposed to be ice-free 20 years ago.
Yes.
Yeah.
No, you know.
Alboro was just off by a little bit.
Give him some decades.
Well, that is the point that I think people have made.
A test usually means if you fail it, you've done something wrong.
Yes.
Only in theology does it mean that you change the goals.
Right.
Right.
Especially when you invented the theology.
Because climate is very much like a religion.
Or at least the adherence to it is very religious-like or I should say cult-like.
Right.
Because it's not like there's a higher power.
It's, it's, everyone's just terrified and you have to change everything you do now.
Because you're guilty.
And it used to be that like the sign of virtue was to have an electric car.
And then every, my favorite thing is going up behind Tesla's now and they have bumper stickers to say, I bought this before Elon went crazy.
So now they don't, I mean, it's just everyone is trying to figure out what they're supposed to do in order to still be accepted by their group.
And the climate one is one.
that if you bring it up with people, it's almost like you're talking about witches.
Like, they want to get out of there.
Like, if you actually looked at...
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
It's a religious thing or a cult-like thing.
Absolutely, yeah.
And they don't really...
It's not like they've studied it a lot.
And, yeah, it's really interesting.
And this is why I think that we've got to reduce CO2.
And you have, like, this informed discussion with someone.
You go, oh, okay.
So when did you start reading about this?
What book was that?
And where, you know, did you see this?
And you see that?
And okay.
And now you have an informed discussion, but that's not what it's like.
It's like, you bring it up and they're like, oh, God, climate change is settled.
Climate change is settled.
Okay, you don't believe it.
Even Bernie, when I had him on, while he was talking about climate change is a real, it's a giant problem.
And we started showing the Washington Post thing that says that we're in a global cooling period.
And that's raised up sometime over the last hundred.
But if you look at like the peaks and valleys, the main thing is like, this has never been static.
And I said to Bernie, I'm like, there's a lot of money in this, Bernie.
Like, you've got to admit this.
Like, this isn't something that we have to act on now to save each other.
It might be something that we're being fucked with.
And that's what it seems like to me.
It's like...
Well, the question is, why does he find it so enthused?
Why is he so enthusiastic?
It's wonderful for funding.
Yeah.
I think he's overall a very good person.
I really do.
And I think he would have been a fascinating president.
But I think there are too many things to concentrate on in the world.
And if you really want to do a deep dive into...
the actual science of climate and CO2's impact on climate and what actually causes us to
get warmer or colder.
That's a lot of work.
It's a lot of work.
And I don't know if the Senator of Vermont has enough time to do that work and to really
do it objectively or to talk to someone like you, to have an informed conversation with someone
who studied it for decades and go, okay, there's a lot more of this than I thought.
Why does it fit in the same damn pattern where people get attached to an idea because that idea
is attached to their ideology?
You're hitting on a problem, and I think Will knows this as well.
A lot of this stuff is actually tough material.
Yes.
I mean, for instance, you know, the question of what determines the temperature difference between the tropics and the pole,
that's actually handled in a third-year graduate course.
It deals with hydrodynamic instability, which is a complicated subject.
And it's a real problem in a field.
It's true throughout science where you're trusting people to behave, I think, decently.
But the material itself is not going to be entirely accepted.
accessible to everyone.
And how you deal with it, how you approximate.
The same is true with nuclear power, with other things.
These are technical issues, they're not trivial, and you're asking in a democratic society
for people to make decisions.
That's a tough issue.
It involves a certain amount of trust, and what we're describing is a situation where the trust
is being violated.
Yeah, there's this nice, rough and proverb that Ronald Reagan love so much, trust but verify.
Yes.
And it's hard to verify, you know, if you're an average citizen, something about climate.
Right.
That's what's so frustrating about this conversation when you have it with people that are
indoctrinated.
When they're like climate change is a giant issue
Like there's so many times I've seen
They're very fun YouTube videos where they catch people at these protests
And some joker just starts interviewing them
And they clearly don't know what the hell they're protesting for
It's fascinating that you left the house
Like you had nothing better to do
You don't know why you're protesting
But you're there and you got a sign
And you still don't even understand it
That's how powerful this thing has become in our society
And the fact that they've been so that the powers it be or whoever is involved has been so successful at pushing this narrative that it's one of the number one anxieties that young people have about the future in a place where we may very well be involved in wars.
But the war doesn't freak them out as much as being involved in a climate emergency.
How dare you?
Right.
There you call.
But you notice how quickly she changed.
She flipped up.
Now it's Palestine.
You got to mix it up.
People get bored with the climate.
You listen, you want to be someone that's in the news?
You got to keep moving.
You got to keep it moving.
You know, you stop doing rap music, start acting.
You got to keep it moving.
And that's, you know, she's an entertainer.
Well, she had a very unfortunate experience with that blockade in Israel.
So maybe she's out of the business now, but I doubt it.
But when you're taking a 16-year-old kid and having her as a face of climate change.
And as you said, this is something insanely difficult to digest for the average.
person. You know she doesn't have this data
at her fingertips. It's not
just digest. I mean, it's
how many people can solve
partial differential equations?
I mean, this is one of the
complaints I have
which is sort of odd.
People blame this on
models.
And what the models
are doing is they're taking
the equations of fluid mechanics,
something called the Navier-Stokes
equation, and they're
doing it by dividing it into discrete intervals and seeing how things change with distance
and time and so on.
And one of the things that we know is no one has ever proven that this actually leads
to the solution, but it's used for weather forecasting and all sorts of things and
so on.
At any rate, they do this, and I think many of the people doing it are doing it carefully
or as carefully as they can.
And they get answers that will often be wrong, but as best I can tell, none of these models
predict catastrophe.
made the point, and I think correctly, that even with the UN's models, you're talking
about a 3% reduction in national product or gross statistic product by 2100.
That's not a great deal.
It's not the end of the earth.
You're already much richer than you are today.
So what's the panic?
And it's true.
The models don't give you anything to be that panicked over.
So the politicians and the environmentalists invent extreme descriptions that actually don't
have much to do with the models, but they blame the models.
So, you know, it's a confusing situation.
The models have a use.
they just shouldn't be used to predict exactly what the future is.
You can use them to see what interacts with what, then study it further.
Joe, let me just say a little more about what Dick commented on the Navier-Stokes equation,
which describes fluid motion, the atmosphere, the oceans,
and it really is a very hard mathematical problem to solve because they're not only
partial differential equations. They're what are called nonlinear partial differential equations.
And so there's a joke about Werner Heisenberg, who was the inventor of quantum mechanics,
a very bright guy, and he was the head of the Nazi atomic bomb program during World War II.
And so he was captured by the Americans and the British, and because of this activity,
he was forbidden to work on nuclear physics later, you know, after the victory.
And so he decided to work on fluid mechanics on solving the Navier-Stokes equation.
And he was, as I said, a tremendously talented physicist.
But he found it very hard.
He didn't make very much progress because it's much harder than quantum mechanics
or much harder than relativity to solve those equations.
And so one of his students supposedly said to him, well, you know, Professor Heisenberg, they say that if you've been a good physicist when you die and you go to heaven, that the Almighty allows you to ask two questions, and he will answer any question you ask, and what will you ask him?
And Hezemberg supposedly said, well, I will ask him why general relativity.
and why turbulence, turbulence is the Navier-Stox equation.
He says, and I think he will be able to answer the first one.
That's funny.
That's funny.
And this is what's the best assumption of the best measurements of what's controlling the temperature on Earth.
Well, you know, they're asking you to have great.
confidence in a calculation involving this miserable equation that is so hard to solve,
at least very far into the future.
You can solve it for a short time, but it's very hard to go much further.
One of Dick's colleagues at MIT, a man named Lorenz, why don't you tell him about
Lawrence?
Well, no.
Lorenz is credited with chaos theory, but basically it's a statement that these are not
predictable.
Whether that's true or not is still an open question, but it has a lot of those characteristics
in detail.
I mean, for instance, it wouldn't be a surprise if you're looking at a bubbling brook
and you have all those little eddies and so on.
Are you actually able to track the whole thing accurately?
Probably not.
how accurately would you have to do it if you scaled it up to climate?
Who knows?
Yeah, the typical description of this theory was that it's as though a butterfly flapping its wings in the Gulf of Alaska
causes hurricanes two years later in Florida.
Yeah, that one's funny.
Yeah.
People repeat that and they're like, no.
That's not how it works at all.
I don't think it works out of it.
Of course it's funny what people like to bring that up.
What I think he meant was rather simpler than that.
You know, the hurricane is likely to occur.
The flipping of a butterfly's wings might have actually changed it from one day to another.
It would have an influence downstream.
Everything has an influence.
Everything is tied in together.
Now, when we make models based on incorrect data about, like, CO2 levels and what the temperature in the future is going to look like, at what point in time, do you think another country needs to screw up the same way Nazi Germany ran with eugenics and it ruined eugenics in the United States where they're like, oh, my God, this is a horrific idea?
Do you think something like that has to happen in another country where they have to take this climate change green energy thing to its full end?
You think so?
I think that's how it will end, yes.
I think Britain or Germany may be the sacrificial country.
Because Germany has shut off a couple of their nuclear power plants, correct?
Right.
All of their nuclear power plants.
Oh, God.
And they did it all for green energy?
That makes no sense.
Well, I think they did it because of the Fukushima thing.
And because the Green Party is so powerful in Germany, and they not only turned off their plants, not nuclear and coal as well, but they blew a lot of them up.
You know, you see these pictures of the plants being blown up by dynamite just to make sure that nobody restarts them.
So they're fanatics.
Oh, my God.
They're real fanatics, yeah.
That's so crazy.
Yeah, yeah.
And so at some point, some country like Germany, they'll lose all their jobs, all the industry will move.
there'll be no jobs. People will all be on welfare. There's no money to pay them. And at that point, someone will realize, you know, we've taken a wrong turn here.
I can't believe they blew their plants up. That's nuts. And what are they replacing it with right now? You have Russian gas. Windmills. Windmills?
Yeah. But you're right. They're importing fossil fuels.
And importing electricity from France, which still has a large.
nuclear power base.
But how was Germany so smart and so dumb at the same time?
Because they have tremendous engineers.
They make some of the best automobiles ever.
They're looking them in Hungary.
Oh.
But that's a profound question is how is it this country of poets and philosophers?
Had the Nazis.
Had the Nazis, exactly.
Dietrich Bonhofer was one of the few German theologians.
who had the courage to remain in Nazi Germany.
He was invited to come to the U.S.,
but he said, I'm going to stay with my people.
And he was eventually hung by the Nazis.
He didn't survive.
But he had this theory that it was stupidity.
And it's a very interesting theory.
If you look on the Internet,
you can read about Bonhofer's theory of stupidity.
But his view was that
all of these Nazi supporters, they didn't really believe in it all.
They were just dumb.
You know, it's hard for me.
When I first read about this, I couldn't believe it.
But the more I look at it, I think that every nation has the problem that most of us are pretty stupid.
There's a large percentage of us that will believe almost anything.
Right.
And we could point to a lot of things that are subjects in the zeitgeist right now that people wholeheartedly believe in.
It makes zero sense.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
They could go with that and you would go, okay, there's some part of this has to be attributed
to low intelligence.
So like what percentage of people in this country are incapable of thinking for themselves?
It's not a small number.
Maybe it's 10.
Maybe it's 20.
Whatever percentage, it's enough where it's a giant problem.
That's one thing, but also intelligence itself is a complex issue.
There are people who, like us, may be idiot, savants.
are things that we can do very well and other things we don't.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, you know, meth departments are famous though.
Well, I think it's a sign of almost any great person at anything.
There's usually areas in their life where they're just completely lacking, whether it's
hygiene or relationships or what they're obsessed by what they do, and that's why they're
great at what they do.
You know, look, there are great writers who can't do arithmetic.
I don't know where you put them in that category.
Right.
Well, and there's great physical athletes that they have an intelligence of moving their
body in a way that they understand things at a much higher level than anybody else that
does whatever their athletic pursuit is.
They probably wouldn't do that well on an ACT test.
It doesn't mean that they're not intelligent.
It's just a different kind of intelligence.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's a bunch.
That makes the world a more interesting place by and large.
It really does.
But what scary is when you count on the people that are supposed to be the people that are
obsessed in studying this one thing, like this climate change emergency that we're supposed
to be under, and then you find out, oh, wait a minute, this is not, this isn't like an exact
science.
Oh, we started with Gore.
Right.
And Gore, you know, flunked out of Harvard.
Did he?
Yeah.
And his father, who was a senator, got him back.
in. I was teaching there at the time. Oh, really? Interesting. And the person he attributes his
awareness of CO2 to Roger Ravelle was teaching a sort of science for poets course, and he got a
D-minus in it. Is he made the most money off of this? Because he's made a lot of money
off of climate. He's made a few hundred million, I don't know, these days. Small change.
Still, there's a very clear motivation to keep that graph going.
You know, especially now with social media, there's so many people that, like we were talking
about Greta Thurneberg, I mean, I don't know what her motivations are, but I do know that
there's a lot of people out there that have large social media platforms, that all they want
to do is connect themselves to something that people are talking about all the time, and
there's a lot of money in that, and there's a lot of power in wielding that influence.
And to do so, then just hop on any bandwagon that comes along and not really know what you're talking about is it's a real problem that we have in society today.
And it's in a way a new problem given social media.
Yeah, yeah.
The social media aspect of it is a new problem.
Another new problem is AI and fakes.
Like you see fake videos and fake news stories and fake articles and it's like it's very – it takes time to pay attention to what's –
real and what's not real today.
And so if somebody wanted to push any kind of a narrative about anything, especially
climate change, you could scare the shit out of somebody very quickly with a nice video
and it doesn't even have to be real.
Well, that was the reason for extreme weather being chosen.
I mean, it's interesting for quite a few years the climate issue was temperature.
And you'll have noticed the last 15, 20 years, it's extreme weather.
Right.
And that shows that, you know, it was fake because it's trivial.
I mean, if we looked it up, the average month, there are four or five extreme events
someplace in that month that are once in a hundred year events.
So each of them makes for a good video.
And you have four or five a month, and they each only oneness in a hundred years.
And people aren't putting it together that, you know, once in a hundred year events occurring
four or five times a month.
But, you know, you always have a picture of a flood someplace or a rise or this or that.
And those are used to scare people.
It's got harder and harder to scare people with numbers.
Right. It's extreme weather events. That's what I keep hearing. The hurricanes are getting stronger.
They're getting more frequent. And they repeat that, and I don't think that's necessarily true.
No, no. For years, the IPCC, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change of the UN, was honestly saying they could find no evidence that these were related. The last one, they had to say something because the politicians
control what's in the IPCC.
But even with that, they were saying no,
and that had nothing to do with the public relations.
Said to hell with it, even if there's no relation, we'll say there is,
because that gives us visuals.
God.
Now, when people like Bill Gates start talking about putting reflective particles in the atmosphere
to cool off the earth and protect us
from the sun's rays, like, where is all that coming from?
Especially if, like, you would imagine, even...
I think Will said it comes from dumbness.
Well, I'm sure, but I'm even proposing something like that should have the whole world up in arms.
Like, hey, a few people can't make a decision that will literally impact the entire world
and possibly trigger a catastrophic drop in temperature that kills us all.
Yeah.
Why?
Because you were made Microsoft?
Like, why do you get to do this?
That seems like something you would have to have the whole world vote on.
And they would have to be, like, really well informed about what the consequences of this going wrong could be.
Well, I'd have to hope that most of the world agrees with you and me and that Bill Gates will never be permitted to do something like that.
The fear is that someone would let them, though.
The fear is that a country would let them.
You get the right politicians in place and the right fear mongering in place.
and you let them try.
Or you let somebody try, and these people that do try get large grants, and they're making
a lot of money to do this, and that's what scares the shit out of me, that this could
be a way that people could try something out on the whole world that could be catastrophic.
Well, just technically, it would be extremely difficult because the amount of material
you have to get up to the stratosphere to mimic a large stratosphere.
volcano.
Yeah.
You know, even Bill Gates probably can't afford that, and I'm not sure the U.S. treasurer
could either.
So it's just theoretical at this point?
Yeah.
I think, you know, it's an interesting thing.
You're pointing that someone like Gates has delusions of grandeur based on the fact that he's
fabulously wealthy.
Yeah.
But as a practical matter, that particular approach probably is not going to be as dangerous
as you think.
It won't work.
It won't work.
Yeah.
Well, it's just the idea that someone would even propose something like that based on what you gentlemen
have discussed so far today.
No.
Your point is right.
I mean, you have people who have the means to try things.
And they're getting a free ride on this.
Yes, that's the thing.
They're getting a lot of money to implement these changes.
That's why these green new deals and these green energy initiatives and all these green things.
People have to understand, why are you hearing about this all the time?
Because it's a PR campaign.
It's a PR campaign for a group of people that are trying to make a lot of money.
That's what this is all about.
And the more you get on board, the more money they can get politicians to spend on this stuff.
and the more money these companies make.
And the whole thing is about money.
Much of it is money.
They're not really worried about you.
That's what you have to understand.
If they ever say that they're worried about your future,
for the betterment of our people,
we have to make sure that everybody's okay.
We've got to protect the climate.
They don't care.
That's not real.
What they really want to do is make sure a lot of money comes in.
And if a lot of money coming in
is dependent upon them scaring the shit out of you,
that's what they lean towards.
And, you know, money and it's transferability and fungibility, its influence, its feedbacks, it's this.
Yeah, but that's always been true.
Yes.
Yeah, Joel, let me bring up another targeted group, and that is farmers and ranchers, you know, because of their supposed contribution to greenhouse warming.
Just a couple years ago, I was invited to come down to Paraguay by some farmers there who were worried about the upcoming climate talks in the Persian Gulf, and the European bankers were demanding that Paraguay turned most of its ranch land back into forest, you know, to save the planet, and otherwise they wouldn't give loans to Paraguay.
And so the ranchers were worried that they're going to be put out of business and their families put out of business.
And so I was there for a week and I talked to the president.
And luckily it turned out they had a very sensible president and he didn't need me to recognize that it was nonsense.
But he was, I think, grateful to have someone with a science background confirm his suspicion that it was all nonsense.
So he went to the conference and basically told the bankers to go to hell and they didn't pull the funding out of Paraguay.
So there were no consequences and the ranchers did not suffer.
But, you know, everybody's under the gun.
But there were consequences in Ireland.
Yeah.
Yes.
They had to kill half their cattle.
Yeah, which is nonsense.
Total nonsense and insane.
And if you pay attention to what regenerative farmers will take.
tell you, is like, if you do it correctly, there's the, it's actually carbon neutral.
At least carbon neutral.
At least carbon neutral and possibly contribute.
It's like the whole thing is nature.
This is how, this is how it's all set up.
Animals eat grass.
They poop manure.
Maneur fertilizes the plants.
It's all real simple.
It's been around forever.
And this idea that all sudden, cow farts and burps are a giant issue and they're going to kill us all.
We need to kill all the cows.
Like, who are you?
Like, who's saying this?
How'd you get to talk?
Like, this is, how'd you get to kill half their cows?
Like, you should go to jail.
They should go to jail.
You're so stupid.
You're criminally stupid.
You killed their cows.
But when it comes to attractive drugs, power is one of the worst.
It might be the worst.
Yeah, it might be the worst.
And it's, if people can get people to do their bidding, they often love to do it.
Even if it's preposterous, like getting you to kill half your cows.
so that you have a less high methane count you're releasing from your organization.
I mean, you know, Will has worked on this and others.
But, you know, the methane thing is an example of innumeracy.
In other words, what they argue is that a molecule of methane has more greenhouse potential than a molecule of CO2.
And so cutting back methane will have a big effect.
But there's so little methane in the atmosphere that you got rid of all of it it would
have almost no effect compared to CO2.
You know, somehow that step in the arithmetic gets lost.
Yeah, simple arithmetic.
They just can't do simple arithmetic, yeah.
It's just weird how these narratives become so prominent in social media.
It's really weird how things like CO2 become this mantra that everybody chants.
It seems very coordinated and actually kind of impressive that they've managed to silence questioning scientists and really put the fear of God into people that read things and don't agree with it.
It began right at the beginning of the issue.
As I was mentioning, I mean, already by 1989, Science Magazine was, let me, in fact, one of the ironies with Science Magazine, which is, you know, important magazine, it had an editor who was Marsha McNutt, who actually had an op-ed appear in Science Magazine saying she would not accept any article that questioned this.
Wow
And you know what her reward was
She became president of the National Academy of Science
She was a good girl
Yeah
Follow the rules
But you know
Dick's point about
Forbidding questioning
It's just unbelievable
When I was a young man
My first job was at Columbia
And the grand old man there was
Robbie
Robbie, I, Robbie, and Robbie came from an Eastern European Jewish family, and his mother had a very poor education, but she was determined that he would get a good education.
And so he would always tell me, you know, when I would go home from school every day, my mother wouldn't ask me, what did you learn today in school?
Izzy, she called him, Isidore?
and he would tell her
and then she would say
and did you ask a good question today
so I said she was really more interested
in whether he had asked a good question
which would meant that the wheels were turning in his head
than whether he had memorized something
and I always took that to heart
I think that was a very wise mother
and he turned out very well as a result
do you think there's more uniformity in thinking
in academia now with the pressure of social media and the pressure of these echo chambers
that people find themselves?
Of course.
Yeah.
That's terrible because, you know, you'd have thought with the Internet, one of the things
that the Internet's going to be a balanced resource or resource of information, you're going to
have the answers to any questions you want, and we'll be able to sort out what's true and what's
not true.
Nobody took into account echo chambers and then ideology being attached to science.
That's right.
Now, I mean, the Internet, not surprisingly, was an unpredictable phenomenon.
Yes.
Completely.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, you saw it, but, well, you're seeing it yourself.
I mean, you have media.
They were looking for 100,000 subscribers.
With the Internet, you're dealing with millions, and that's considered small in some cases.
Yeah, there's people like Mr. Beast, some fun guy on YouTube that I think he has, what does he have, how many million subscribers is he have?
Something insane.
Way bigger than any television show that's ever existed before.
Yeah, nobody saw it coming.
Did it on his own.
Yeah, it's a weird time.
And then there's a lack of trust in mainstream media, which is also disturbing.
Which is also deserved.
Right.
also deserved. That's a problem as well. And when you see mainstream media also going along
with all these climate change ideologies and all these different things that are attached to the
narrative that you're not allowed to deviate from, it's just, it gets very frustrating.
Yeah, I mean, I'm not sure about this, but my recollection was as a kid in New York that you had
newspapers like the New York Times that were always sort of center right left but
you had others the Journal American and so on and they differed in their
coverage but on the whole they covered the same news if something happened it would
appear in both I realize in retrospect that wasn't always true but today
Today, I have the feeling that if I look at the Post in New York or the New York Times,
I'm looking at two different worlds.
Right.
And there's something wrong with that.
Very.
Yeah, something very wrong with it.
And I don't know what the answer is, how to solve it,
or if those things need to just go away, and independent media needs to replace them.
But you're seeing a massive dissolving of true.
trust in these main like when I was a kid I used to deliver the New York Times and I delivered the Boston Globe but I delivered the New York Times as well because it was prestigious I thought it was cool to deliver the New York Times and it was a long route I had it was a lot longer than my Boston Globe did you have to deliver it on Sunday as well yes I did but fortunately the ads didn't work so they didn't get a big thick ad chunk like you do with the Boston Globe because it's like local ads but the point being is it like it was it it was it
the paper of record. And now today it's just another blog. It's just like it's an ideologically
captured online blog that's very left-leaning. I think people have pointed out the correct
reason for that. The end of the classified ads. Yeah. They used to have to satisfy the people's
paying for ads. Now they have to satisfy their readers. And so,
the readers only want to hear one thing.
Yeah, it's a real problem.
It's a real problem.
But I guess just like all things that happen, there'll be some sort of a course correction
or some new players or enter in.
It would be fine if the newspapers took different positions but covered the same items.
Right, right, right.
And here, I will say, and maybe there's a bias in this.
If I listen to MSNBC, there are whole areas of what's going on that I will hear nothing about.
Fox may cover things differently, but they are less guilty of leaving stuff out.
They may take a different view of it, but you'll hear about it.
that certain media now are not even mentioning things that they don't want you to know about is a little bit disturbing.
It is. It is. But again, it gives rise to independent media, gives rise to the very good independent journalists that exist today.
But the thing is, like, the average person is not going to find them. They don't know where to look.
Well, this is an opportunity to put in a good word for Al Gore since he was an inventor of the Internet.
Yeah, he did kind of take credit for part of that, right?
Right, yeah.
What did he say exactly?
I think he said, I had a hand in that or something like that.
I did, too.
I bought a computer once.
I had a hand in that.
I played a part of the economy of the Internet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, it's, I think it's these kind of conversations with people like yourself that will help.
because the more people listen to this
and the more people start reading
other articles written by different people
that also question it
where you get a kind of understanding of this pattern
that does go back to like we were talking about before
with eugenics and with many other things in history
you go there's times where you're on the wrong side of things
you don't realize it because you've been lied to
and you've been you know these politicians
are kind of captured.
But it's also the abuse of science
is too much of a temptation for politicians.
I mean, science, it's hard to say,
but if there are a way of making people understand
that science really is not a source of authority,
it's a methodology,
and that if you are using it as a source of authority
and destroying it as a methodology,
you're anti-science.
Whether that helps or not,
maybe people don't care.
I think people do,
but they're scared to deviate again from the narrative.
Like, how do you think it's possible
to get in people's heads,
hey, we have to, at the academic level especially,
separate ideology from truth?
And you can't attach believing
in something that is like so firmly a part of being a progressive person or being a conservative
person that you're unwilling to look at the data and look at facts.
That has to be shunned, right?
So how does that go about?
I think you're hitting on something important.
You can't do it every place.
Can't.
But with the funding agencies, the government is in a position to say funding agencies
must take an open view of certain subjects,
or all subjects, for that matter,
and not lay down rules that you cannot question.
Yeah, let me add to that.
I think one of the great strengths of American science and technology
over the last 50 years was that there was not a single funding agency in Washington,
but, you know, you could get funding from,
the National Science Foundation, or you could get funding from the Office of Naval Research
or from some other organization. And they all competed with each other, and they didn't like
each other very much. And so if you couldn't get a grant from NSF, someone would help you from
the Army or some other place. So I think multiple sources of funding has an enormously positive
effect on the vitality of science and technology in a country. And people used to talk, we need an
Office of Science, so I thought that was a terrible idea, you know, to, that means one point
failure, you know, there was someone in a position to throttles, you know, some important thing.
Department of Energy tried to do both sides for a long time. And they held out longer than
other departments. But eventually, for some reason, they were all forced into the same box.
Money starts talking, baby. Yeah, there's a lot of money. Department of Energy, wasn't that the
the department where from the time Trump won the election to Biden leading office, they gave
out something like $93 billion in loans?
I think it was EPA, or maybe it was.
No, loans could have, must have been energy.
Yeah.
It must have been energy.
Like it more than had been given out in the last 15 years.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm sure all was smart, well-spent money that we definitely couldn't get by without
spending. It's kind of funny. It's like, do you, pathetic. It is kind of pathetic, but it's also
kind of funny, like how in this day of transparency, you know, there's so much information
that's available today. It's so easy to find things out that they would try to pull something
like that off and then do it successfully, right in front of everybody's face.
Well, having spent time in, you know, Department of Energy headquarters, it doesn't surprise me.
I believe you.
How difficult has this been for you gentlemen to debate this stuff and to bring it up with people and have conversations?
Have you experienced a lot of resistance?
Yeah.
I mean, it's interesting how it evolved.
I think in the 90s, there was still a certain openness about it.
And, you know, if there were a conference, people on both sides would be invited and so on.
Somehow, by the 21st century, it came down hard, there was absolutely nothing open anymore.
But I have to say, when I invited Dick to give his colloquium on climate in Princeton, which is a good university, and he gave a good colloquium the next day, a Nobel Prize winner from my department walked in and said, what son of a bitch invited?
Linson to give this talk.
I said, well, I'm the son of a bitch.
Get out of my office.
Oh, wow.
And what did you have to, do you try to engage with him at all about why you were upset,
why he was upset, rather?
No.
Just it wasn't worth it.
It wasn't worth it.
Yeah.
It's just hard to believe, as someone who's outside of academia, it's hard to believe
there's closed-minded people at universities.
The point was he didn't know the first thing about the issue, not a thing.
Yeah.
But he was very left-wing.
Yeah, that's the point.
That's why it's weird.
Yeah, no, this was the political polarization.
Yeah.
But it's also, there's no deviation.
There's no people like, eh, you know, everybody's either one side or the other, all in or not.
And if you're not, you get cast out of the kingdom.
It's very weird.
It's just disturbing to someone like me that it goes on like that in universities.
If someone come up to you and say.
I think it's worse than universities.
Wow.
How did that get started?
Like, when did, so it was it the same thing as like the climate was it with everything, like somewhere around the 21st century?
Like when...
Yeah.
I mean, you know, I'll take something that was much less publicized.
The, what was the program with your device?
Oh, the Star Wars.
Yeah, sodium guide star?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, universities treated that as something you could not discuss the notion that you wanted to have a defense against nuclear.
Yeah, what Dick is talking about is that I got called Washington because early in the Star Wars era, we were asked to look at every possible way to
defend against incoming Russian missiles. And so that meant trying to shoot them down with rockets
and also trying to shoot them down with high-power lasers. And so during a classified
summer study in 1982, there were some people from the Air Force, some generals and technical
people. And talked about the problem as if you even have a beautiful blue, clear sky and you
try to shoot a Russian missile that's coming toward Austin, by the time the laser
reaches the incoming warhead, it breaks up into hundreds of little speckles, not one of which
has enough power to cause any damage to the target. And so that was a problem that was well known
to astronomers, but the inverse problem with star does the same thing. When you focus it on
a photographic plate, you don't get a point, you get lots of speckles. And so astronomers knew how to
solve that. You know, the problem is the incoming wave gets wrinkled by the atmosphere. They're
little warm patches and cool patches.
And so what you can do is you reflect the incoming star light from an anti-wrinkled mirror.
So it comes in wrinkled, it bounces, it's nice and flat, then it focuses, and you get a point.
And you can do the same thing when you're trying to shoot an incoming missile.
You pre-wrinkle the beam so that when it reaches the missile, it actually focuses all the power onto the missile.
So it's called adaptive optics.
and the mirror is called a rubber mirror.
It's a mirror that you can adjust.
But to do that, you need to know how to adjust the mirror,
so you have to have some information to how do I wrinkle it,
push here, pull there, et cetera.
And the way the astronomers did it was they used a very bright star in the sky.
And then for nearby stars,
you could use the bright star to correct your mirror
for all the neighboring stars.
But it only worked for a degree or two.
off the direction of the correcting stars.
And so unless the Russians attacked us during the night
from the direction of the brightest stars in the skies,
we couldn't do anything with our lasers.
Oh, wow.
So I said, well, I know how to fix this.
All you need to do is make an artificial star wherever you like
because there's a layer of sodium at 100 kilometers,
and we now have lasers that will excite that.
And so you can make a yellow star that's plenty bright enough
to use that light,
to adjust the mirror, wherever you like.
And nobody had ever heard of the sodium layer during that.
This was top secret meeting.
When you say make a star, do you mean like a satellite star?
Like a small...
A bright source of light shining down through the atmosphere.
Most of the problem is fairly close to the ground, the first kilometer or two up.
And what would this be made out of?
Sodium.
So if you go to 100 kilometers, the earth is plowing through the dust of the...
solar system and so we're constantly burning up little micro meteorites and they're all loaded
with sodium atoms and so they get released into the upper atmosphere and they stay there and make
a layer that's about 10 kilometers thick and not many people know about that I happen to know about
it and I knew you could use it you know for this method that's why I got called of Washington was making
it was a highly secret invention for 10 years wow that's fascinating when the Soviet Union
collapsed, then this was declassified thanks to the effort of a Livermore friend and colleague
Claire Max, a woman physicist astronomer, but she finally persuaded the Department of Defense
to declassified it. So if you go to any big telescope now around the world, it has one of these
sodium lasers you're pointing up at the sky at night. You'll see this bright yellow beam going
up. Oh, wow. Look at that. Right there? Oh, there it is. Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, and so the point where they're coming, this is actually green light, and so for the sodium, most of them are yellow for sodium, but that's the basic idea.
And so this was a difficult thing to discuss in academia?
Well, I couldn't discuss it was highly classified, so I couldn't even mention it until about 1995, I think, 1994 or 95 when it was declassified.
But I'd invented it, you know, 12 years.
earlier.
You know.
But, you know, the point was, in academia, you could not discuss defensive issues.
You couldn't discuss working for defense of the country.
That was, you know, somehow immoral, you know, defending the country.
I wasn't trying to attack Russia.
I was trying to defend ourselves.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a ridiculous position to take.
We don't need defense against missiles.
They're hard to defend against, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't try.
Exactly.
I mean, at MIT, you had all sorts of people saying, you know, you shouldn't try.
It's silly.
It's impossible and so on.
What was the point of that?
I mean, you have a problem.
You try and solve it.
Yeah.
It seems like that's what science is supposed to be for.
Now, it's, you know, if you probe, I think, into these issues, you realize that climate is an extreme case, but politics interfacing science is not new.
Well, it just seems like human behavior, human behavior, and anything else.
It's like the same patterns. You'll find them in big businesses.
you find them in a lot of different,
you find them in almost all communities
and groups of human beings.
There's people that get into control
and they force certain narratives
and the fact that that happens
with the highest levels of academia
and with science, though,
is really confusing to people like myself
that are counting on everybody like you
to get it right.
Don't.
Where is much part of the crooked timber
of mankind as anyone else?
It's such a great quote.
You know, I've often mentioned, I mean, my family, you know, emigrated here from Germany, 38.
But when Hitler came to power in 33, every university in Germany got rid of everyone who had Jewish blood before Hitler even asked.
So universities are not.
bastions of independent thinking.
What could be done to make them more so?
You know, the Canadians did something that I thought had potential.
Every faculty member, especially junior faculty,
immediately got grants that they didn't have to apply for.
And so in that system, every one of their faculty could function as a research scientist,
you know, students were paid for otherwise.
And there at least one link in the chain of influence was broken.
You had an open system there.
Even there though, other pressures came to bear.
But, you know, it seemed like a good idea.
Or at least a better idea.
Yeah.
But, again, unfortunately, it just seems like that just pattern of human behavior
just pops its ugly head up over and over and over again.
Yep.
Well, you know, Joe, Dick just came up.
You know, it's worth going back to the founding of this country
because if you read the things like the Federalist Papers,
which was the theory of our government,
what comes through loud and clear
was that our founders believe
that humans were extremely corrupt
and not very reliable.
And given that,
how do you make a system that will function,
even with that?
And that's what they tried to do.
That was the whole reason
for the balance of power
and all the things that are in there.
And so, you know,
it was partially successful.
certainly work better than other systems for a long time.
Better than all the other ones, yeah.
But it's amazingly astute.
Yeah, yeah.
Federalist papers, I mean, they've held up well.
Yeah.
Anything else to add before we wrap this up, gentlemen?
Does anything else you think people should know?
Well, trust but verify.
Yeah, I mean, how shall I put it?
Destroying the world is not an easy thing to do.
shouldn't be the top of your list of worries.
Yeah.
You mean destroying the world with climate change?
Yeah.
It's not really what it is.
It's very over-magnified.
Absolutely.
I mean, how should I put it?
Its origins were almost entirely political.
I often find it strange that one talks about the science at all.
I you know we're discussing you know can it happen is this is it warming is it cooling is
extreme weather increasing it's amazing to me that politicians can put forward a concept that
is purely imaginary and have the science community discuss it seriously I wonder what it
how it would have worked if it wasn't for an inconvenient truth?
If that movie hadn't been made.
I wonder because sometimes people need something like that in that sort of a form for it to really take hold as an idea.
You may be right.
I mean, something was needed to make it catch on.
It had been around for quite a few years without catching on quite that way.
Yeah.
But it was also the conflict.
You know, the UN really got interested in it.
You had the World Meteorological Organization.
All of them saw something they could gain in it.
And so it began to seem almost overwhelming.
But it did, you know, it reached the right people.
I mean, the funding agencies, the NSF got taken over almost immediately.
NASA took about 10 years.
Department of Energy took 10 years.
but they worked on it.
It's kind of stunning.
At least from the outside, you know, from my perspective, it's kind of stunning.
It's stunning how successful it is.
And again, like I said, if you're in polite company and you have a conversation and someone brings up,
well, we've got to do something about climate change.
Yeah, yeah.
You just go, like the record skips.
Like, how much do you know?
Right.
It turns out very little, most people.
And then it turns out, according to you, it's almost impossible to figure out anyway,
No, no. I mean, the notion that there's a crisis has taken hold, even though nobody sees evidence of a crisis.
And the main movie that started off that crisis from 2006 is entirely wrong. All of its predictions.
And what's supporting it now is the extreme weather, which is a fake. But it provides visuals.
Yeah. It's very hard for people to swallow, but I encourage them to look at the data.
of hurricanes historically.
And you realize like, oh, pretty stable.
It's up and down and all over the place,
but it's not any worse now than it has been before.
Oh, I mean, growing up in the Bronx,
in the 40s, every autumn, there were hurricanes.
You could wake up in the morning.
The streets were lined with the trees
that had been blown down.
Interestingly enough, that has not recurred in New York for about 30 years, 40, 50 years.
I think the last one I remember when I lived in Boston was Gloria.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They don't get hit by hurricanes anymore.
If they did, they'd freak out.
Climate change.
But then 38 was a gigantic hurricane.
And I was born in a town on a lake in New Massachusetts called.
Lake Shagagagag magma, Shagagagabunagg, Shabunaggukum.
That's a real name?
Yes, that's a real name.
Whoa.
But in any rate, in that lake, we're a couple of islands that were created by the hurricane of 1930 ages.
Wow.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
But that also killed a lot of people because we didn't have the information of it coming.
Right.
And I'm sure buildings weren't really designed to withstand those either.
No, I mean, how shall I put it?
I'm glad it came then, not now, I suppose.
It became now, it would be proof.
Right.
Actually, the worst hurricane on record on the East Coast was the last year of the American Revolution,
and it had a big impact on winning the war.
What happened was this enormous hurricane, mostly in the Caribbean,
but it wiped out the British fleet.
It wiped out the French fleet.
There was nothing left, you know.
Really?
It was just tremendous hurricane.
And so the reason it affected the war was the British just assumed that the French were incapable of restoring their fleet.
So that when Cornwallis decided to try and escape from the Carolinas up into Virginia to the British fleet to be rescued, you know, with all of the partisan.
and coming after him, he didn't worry about the French.
And so, but the French had managed to rebuild their fleet after the hurricane.
They had had 12 months, and they had enough ships that they were able to barricade the mouth of the Chesapeake.
And when Cornwallis got there, he was trapped because the British couldn't come in to rescue him, you know, from Rhode Island or where they were.
And so he had no choice.
He had to surrender.
Wow.
That was the end of the war, and we can thank the hurricane for making that happen so neatly.
As well as the French.
The French and the French.
God bless the French, yeah.
What are the warmest years on historical record in terms of, like, recent years?
34, 35.
What was it like then?
It was the peak of the dust bowl, and it was, I don't know, several degrees warmer than, I don't know, the exact figure, but you can look at the records there pretty clear.
Yeah.
You know, you're not going to see gigantic numbers, but again, that global metric is a little
bit confusing.
Locally, it was a huge effect.
But globally, yeah, what you're saying completely makes sense.
It doesn't make sense to try to have a global temperature unless you're studying other planets.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What matters is where people live.
where people live, what's the temperature there.
Yeah.
Right, right.
Well, listen, gentlemen, I really appreciate your bravery
and talking about this stuff
and sharing all this information.
It's very enlightening.
It helps.
These kind of conversations, they move the needle.
They really do, so I really appreciate you guys.
Thanks for being here.
I really enjoyed it.
Thank you.
All right.
Bye, everybody.
I don't know.
