Dowie’s Bombshell of a Book

Posted by: Keith Kloor

Whoa, this headline should snap a few necks back:

Is modern conservation linked with ethnic cleansing?

It’s a link to this article by Mark Dowie, which is based on his new book, Conservation Refugees: The Hundred-Year Conflict Between Conservation and Native Peoples.

Anyone who knows Mark Dowie (and is familiar with his last few books) can expect the latest to ring a few alarm bells in the conservation community (and prompt some top environmental chiefs to reach for their tums).

The last time I talked with Mark he was gasping at the book’s finish line. I can’t wait to read it. And Mark, when Val and I come calling in Point Reyes this summer, where you gonna put the two little kids trailing behind us? You didn’t have to worry about that the last time we visited.

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Category: Anthropology, conservation

The Climate Debate Litmus Test

Posted by: Keith Kloor

Nothing bugs me more than when so-called progressives have their own litmus test on political issues.

In the last two days, blogger Joe Romm has taken his fellow climate advocate, Jim Hansen, to the woodshed (see here and here), because of Hansen’s vocal opposition to cap and trade. One irony is that Hansen, in this commentary published yesterday, uses the same blunt rhetorical language that is characteristic of Romm’s blogging style.

No matter. Hansen, who argues that a carbon tax is far superior to cap and trade as a solution to global warming, is off the reservation. (Romm is an equally vocal proponent of cap and trade and dismisses carbon tax as politically untenable, and thus unworthy of serious consideration.)

Now one would think this a healthy debate to have in a democracy.  Not Romm. This headline from today’s post tells you everything you need to know about the terms of debate that Romm (and like-minded climate advocates) have set for all discussion on climate change politics and policies:

Memo to Hansen 2: Why is the country’s top anti-science blog reprinting your stuff?

It’s the ultimate litmus test: if anything you say can be used as fodder for Morano and his crowd, then you’re aiding and abetting the enemy, and thus you’re no better than them.

In an email to me some months ago, one staff writer for a prominent environmental webzine used this same logic to slap down a few critical posts I wrote (see here and here) about Romm and another climate blogger:

“Oh, ha! I see you already were linked in Morano’s latest email. Congratulations.”

That’s simply moronic. Imagine if every journalist worried if what he or she wrote would be used as a screaming headline by Drudge. (Actually, most journalists would gladly cut off a pinky toe in exchange for a prominent Drudge link.)

Or if that kind of logic was followed by U.S. politicians when crafting legislation? You wouldn’t see this or this.

As Roger Pielke Jr. notes here, Jim Hansen’s carbon tax versus cap and trade argument is strikingly similar to that of Rex Tiller’s, Exxon Mobil’s CEO. Does this mean Hansen is also giving comfort to the oil and gas industry?

Yesterday, after Romm posted part one of his missive against Hansen, this comment caught my eye:

Is climate change a serious enough problem that it trumps representative government?

I dunno. Is it serious enough that it dismisses all views that dissent from your own?

Several months ago, Roger Pielke, Jr., that big bad bogeyman to Romm and his ilk, said this to me and a bunch of other journalists at a roundtable seminar: “We live in interesting times.”

Yes, indeed.

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Category: Joe Romm, cap and trade, carbon tax, climate change, global warming

The Value of Fakes

Posted by: Keith Kloor

An archaeologist discovers a very curious thing:

It appears that electronic buying and selling has actually hurt the antiquities trade.

How can this be?

The short answer is that many of the primary “producers” of the objects have shifted from looting sites to faking antiquities. I’ve been tracking eBay antiquities for years now, and from what I can tell, this shift began around 2000, about five years after eBay was established.

What’s remarkable about this trend is not just the dampening effect on pothunting (one hopes), but that experts are having an increasingly harder time detecting genuine artifacts from the fakes.

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Category: Archaeology, pothunters