North Carolina meteorologist
calls out climate deniers, issuing challenge to “put up or shut up”
Blog ››› May 23, 2017 12:31 PM EDT
››› MEDIA
MATTERS STAFF
Frustrated by non-experts
taking to the internet to dispute the science behind human-made climate change,
North Carolina meteorologist Greg Fishel issued a challenge to climate deniers,
urging them to “put up or shut up” and “submit your work the way real
scientists do, and see where it takes you.”
The News & Observer highlighted
Fishel’s challenge, which he posted
on Facebook, in a May 22 article,
reporting that Fishel “went off on people who question the science behind
climate change."
The article noted that for
most of his career, Fishel, who is the chief meteorologist for NBC affiliate
WRAL in Raleigh, did not believe that humans contributed significantly to
global warming. "But several years ago, he says he decided he wasn’t being
open-minded about the issue and began to study what climate scientists were
saying about it. He now approaches the issue on the air and on social media
with the zeal of a convert.”
Indeed, Fishel is among a growing
number of
meteorologists who acknowledge that human-caused climate change is real. Some
of those meteorologists
are urging their colleagues to discuss climate change on the air.
Fishel concluded his post by
challenging climate deniers to submit their findings to one of the American
Meteorological Society’s peer-reviewed journals, adding, “So prove me wrong
bloggers and essayists. Submit your work the way real scientists do, and see
where it takes you. Uncover that bias and corruption you’re so convinced is
present. If you end up being correct, society will owe you a huge debt of
gratitude. If you’re wrong, stop muddying the scientific waters with
ideological trash.”
From The News
& Observer:
For most of his 36 years
broadcasting the weather in the Triangle, Fishel also held a contrarian view
about climate change. He didn’t believe that humans had much to do with warming
the Earth’s atmosphere and would say as much when the topic came up on the air.
But several years ago, he says
he decided he wasn’t being open-minded about the issue and began to study what
climate scientists were saying about it. He now approaches the issue on the air
and on social media with the zeal of a convert.
If someone does have “a
critical piece to the puzzle no other scientist has,” Fishel implored them to
submit their findings to one of the American Meteorological Society’s peer
reviewed journals for publication.
“If they are rejected, and the
author feels unfairly, then make public each and every one of the reviewers’
comments for the entire world to see,” Fishel wrote. “If there is bias and corruption
in the peer review process, everyone needs to know about it so this flawed
process can be halted and corrected.”
But Fishel said he doubts any
of the climate change deniers “has the guts to do this” and said he thinks
they’ll continue “with their pathetic excuse for science education.
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