Myron Ebell of the Competitive Enterprise Institute last week
gave thanks for his opponents in the global warming debate:
Former Vice President Al Gore is the gift that keeps on giving
to opponents of global warming alarmism and energy rationing
policies. He leads what I think of as the Dream Team: Gore is the
public leader; James Hansen is the go-to scientist; Reps. Henry
Waxman (D-Beverly Hills) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) pushed through a
cap-and-trade bill in the House that killed cap-and-trade; Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.) was the main promoter in the Senate; when he
dropped the ball, Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) was in charge for
awhile; and she has now been replaced by Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.)
with help from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.).
I used to think that we were just incredibly lucky that the
alarmist movement was led by this group of second raters. I now
realize that it isn’t luck. Global warming alarmism attracts
incompetents, know-nothings, and looney tunes.
Over the weekend, after he refused to show up for a debate that
he arranged, Avatar director James Cameron can be added to Ebell’s
list.
From Climate Depot’s Marc Morano:
Hollywood director James Cameron challenged three high profile
global warming skeptics to a public debate at a global warming and
energy conference. But Cameron backed out of the debate at the last
minute after environmentalists “came out of the woodwork” to warn
him not to engage in a debate with skeptics because it was not in
his best interest.
Cameron challenged Andrew Breitbart,
Climate Depot’s Marc Morano and filmmaker Ann McElhinney of ‘Not
Evil Just Wrong.’ The debate was already in the program for
the Aspen American Renewable Energy Day
(AREDAY) summit.
The website
program described the agreed to debate as
“AREDAY Climate Change Debate: Reality or
Fiction?”
After setting up the public global
warming debate, Cameron and his negotiator then changed formats
multiple times and initially said it would be open to the media and
then said he would only participate if it was private with no
recording devices. The skeptics agreed to all the
changes.
Make sure you also read McElhinney’s
account of Cameron’s cowardice. Without a doubt he was trying
to make so many demands of the three skeptics that he expected them
to throw in the towel. When they didn’t, he bailed.