James Delingpole · February 29, 2012 at 8:19pm

When you're a true believer in man-made global warming, obviously. If you lie under those circumstances (or commit identity theft or forge documents or try to sully the reputation of a think tank or its employees through smears leaked to the left-liberal press) you are not a bad person at all. You are a hero!

How do I know this? Because an expert says so in the Guardian. His name is James Garvey (author of a book called "The Ethics of Climate Change," so he must know his stuff, right?) - and he's discussing the affair known as Fakegate - or Gleickgate - in which well-known climate activist Peter Gleick used what you and I might consider underhanded, nay, downright immoral and unlawful methods to try to blacken the reputation of the Heartland Institute.

What Heartland is doing is harmful, because it gets in the way of public consensus and action. Was Gleick right to lie to expose Heartland and maybe stop it from causing further delay to action on climate change? If his lie has good effects overall – if those who take Heartland's money to push scepticism are dismissed as shills, if donors pull funding after being exposed in the press – then perhaps on balance he did the right thing. It could go the other way too – maybe he's undermined confidence in climate scientists. It depends on how this plays out.

Liberals: gotta love their sense of humor!

Comments:


DocJay
Joined
Jul '11
DocJay

I have not lied since I quit dating.

The King Prawn
Joined
Dec '10
The King Prawn

Utilitarianism: because getting your way really is that damn important.

Samuel Amaral
Joined
Oct '11
Samuel Amaral
The King Prawn: Utilitarianism: because getting your way really is that damn important. · 1 minute ago

The Donuts justify the means.

Diane Ellis

The trend I've seen lately of so-called ethicists espousing some of the most clearly unethical ideas (e.g. the defense in the Journal of Medical Ethics of "after-birth abortion") is really alarming.

This kind of rubbish should be met with derision and mockery, of course, but too many people seem to take these ideas seriously that mockery is rendered an insufficient tool to combat them.

Paul Erickson
Joined
May '11
Paul Erickson

What a perfect illustration of relativistic thinking!

Percival
Joined
Mar '11
Percival

It depends on how this plays out.

In other words, we won't know if the lie is a worthy lie until we know what effect it will have on our narrative.

How about credibility, Mr. Garvey?  You figure you and your merry band of prevaricators will have any need of that?   Probably not -- it's a bourgeois concept anyway.

Samuel Amaral
Joined
Oct '11
Samuel Amaral

Diane Ellis, Ed.: The trend I've seen lately of so-called ethicists espousing some of the most clearly unethical ideas (e.g. the defense in the Journal of Medical Ethics of "after-birth abortion") is really alarming.

This kind of rubbish should be met with derision and mockery, of course, but too many people seem to take these ideas seriously that mockery is rendered an insufficient tool to combat them. · 1 minute ago

So how to combat them then ? It is kind of hard to maintain a straight face while someone is making and obviously twisted or silly argument.

What is even more interesting is that if Mr James Delingpole would even insinuate - I remember the post about the death threats which something similar- such kind of thing, all hell would break lose. So in a sense this ethicist is not providing an opinion, but merely stating the obvious : The cause is greater than truth and morals.

Eric Rasmusen
Joined
Feb '12
Eric Rasmusen

What Heartland is doing is harmful, because it gets in the way of public consensus and action.

  Does anybody know of an equivalent quote from Lenin, Stalin, or Mao? I hope the Heartland people don't end up with icepicks stuck into them.

Paul Erickson
Joined
May '11
Paul Erickson

Eric Rasmusen

What Heartland is doing is harmful, because it gets in the way of public consensus and action.

  Does anybody know of an equivalent quote from Lenin, Stalin, or Mao? I hope the Heartland people don't end up with icepicks stuck into them. · 1 minute ago

Where's Jonah Goldberg when we need him?

Brian
Joined
May '10
Brian

Eric Rasmusen

What Heartland is doing is harmful, because it gets in the way of public consensus and action.

  Does anybody know of an equivalent quote from Lenin, Stalin, or Mao? I hope the Heartland people don't end up with icepicks stuck into them. · 1 minute ago

I'm afraid these people are so far gone that such a quote would be received as a compliment.  

Brian
Joined
May '10
Brian
James Delingpole:Liberals: gotta love their sense of humor! · · 30 minutes ago

Thank you James.  I have read so much from you, and now listened to you as well.  Brilliant.  It is apparent that this movement to move governments around the world to the left is on the ropes, and I am thankful you are keeping up the fight.

Bluenoser
Joined
Dec '11
Bluenoser

Situational ethics.  All, but the very best, of us employ them from time to time.  But the social-political left revel in them along the lines of an almost Babylonian orgy.   They raise them to an art form. Moral relativism, how a culture “feels good” about its own suicide.

Mendel
Joined
Mar '11
Mendel

So according to the linked article, Gleick lied by posing as a member of the Heartland Institute to obtain a list of their donors.I agree that this tactic is highly unethical and that Gleick has made a mockery of any scientific contributions he or his peers have made and deserves to lose his job forthwith.

However, I fail to see how this is ethically any different from James O'Keefe's people using assumed Muslim identities to elicit embarassing quotes from an NPR exec.  Both cases involve the same type of lying with the same end: exposing opponents' secrets.  Yet I didn't hear much complaining on Ricochet about O'Keefe's tactics.

Both sides lie, cheat and steal to press their message.  Just because your opponent might do it more often or underhandedly than you doesn't mean your [expletive] doesn't stink too.

Edited on February 29, 2012 at 9:00pm
Roberto
Joined
Mar '11
Roberto

Brian

Eric Rasmusen

What Heartland is doing is harmful, because it gets in the way of public consensus and action.

  Does anybody know of an equivalent quote from Lenin, Stalin, or Mao? I hope the Heartland people don't end up with icepicks stuck into them. · 1 minute ago

I'm afraid these people are so far gone that such a quote would be received as a compliment.   · 6 minutes ago

Unfortunately all too true. One has to only consider Mr. Stone opinioning:

"Stalin has a complete other story. Not to paint him as a hero, but to tell a more factual representation...we can't judge people as only 'bad' or 'good'. [Hitler] is the product of a series of actions. It's cause and effect."

Give Me Liberty
Joined
Apr '11
Give Me Liberty

Islam has a word for this known as Taqiyya.  Basically lying is acceptable if it protects you or moves forward your cause.  Interesting how the two movements have so much in common. 

Roberto
Joined
Mar '11
Roberto

Mendel: So according to the linked article, Gleick lied by posing as a member of the Heartland Institute to obtain a list of their donors.I agree that this tactic is highly unethical and that Gleick has made a mockery of any scientific contributions he or his peers have made and deserves to lose his job forthwith.

However, I fail to see how this is ethically any different from James O'Keefe's people using assumed Muslim identities to elicit embarassing quotes from an NPR exec.  Both cases involve the same type of lying with the same end: exposing opponents' secrets.  Yet I didn't hear much complaining on Ricochet about O'Keefe's tactics.

Both sides lie, cheat and steal to press their message.  Just because your opponent might do it more often or underhandedly than you doesn't mean your [expletive]doesn't stink too. · 4 minutes ago

Edited 3 minutes ago

His attempting to pass off a forged memo with the other documents he stole is I think rather the kicker that takes this incident over the top.

Grendel
Joined
Apr '11
Grendel

If you change "Gleick" to "US security agencies" and "Heartland Institute" to "Islamist militant" the Left's ends-justify-the-means attitude does an abrupt 180 deg. turn.

Valiuth
Joined
Apr '11
Valiuth

Mendel: So according to the linked article, Gleick lied by posing as a member of the Heartland Institute to obtain a list of their donors.I agree that this tactic is highly unethical and that Gleick has made a mockery of any scientific contributions he or his peers have made and deserves to lose his job forthwith.

However, I fail to see how this is ethically any different from James O'Keefe's people using assumed Muslim identities to elicit embarassing quotes from an NPR exec.  Both cases involve the same type of lying with the same end: exposing opponents' secrets.  Yet I didn't hear much complaining on Ricochet about O'Keefe's tactics.

Both sides lie, cheat and steal to press their message.  Just because your opponent might do it more often or underhandedly than you doesn't mean your [expletive]doesn't stink too. · 12 minutes ago

Edited 10 minutes ago

If it was just undercover work that would not be outrageous. He was pedaling false documents he claimed to have gotten undercover. 

LowcountryJoe
Joined
Jan '11
LowcountryJoe

Mendel: So according to the linked article, Gleick lied by posing as a member of the Heartland Institute to obtain a list of their donors.I agree that this tactic is highly unethical and that Gleick has made a mockery of any scientific contributions he or his peers have made and deserves to lose his job forthwith.

However, I fail to see how this is ethically any different from James O'Keefe's people using assumed Muslim identities to elicit embarassing quotes from an NPR exec.  Both cases involve the same type of lying with the same end: exposing opponents' secrets.  Yet I didn't hear much complaining on Ricochet about O'Keefe's tactics.

Both sides lie, cheat and steal to press their message.  Just because your opponent might do it more often or underhandedly than you doesn't mean your[expletive]doesn't stink too.

O'Keefe's involvement is deceptive just like Gleick's.  But, really, the secrets exposed by O'Keefe were much more damaging/revealing than the out-in-the-open goals of a think-tank which hasn't bought into the misguided mob-like hysteria that human beings are the source of climate patters. 

Grendel
Joined
Apr '11
Grendel
Mendel: However, I fail to see how this is ethically any different from James O'Keefe's people using assumed Muslim identities to elicit embarassing quotes from an NPR exec.  Both cases involve the same type of lying with the same end: exposing opponents' secrets. 

There is a difference between lying to get someone to do what she is not allowed to do in order to obtain what you are not entitled to get, and misrepresenting one's self in order to incline someone to be more candid than he would be otherwise.

To be explicit, I submit that there is nothing wrong with lying.  I take my cue from the Eighth Commandment, "Thous shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor".  Bringing one's miscreant neighbor to justice is not acting against him, whether one does it through simple  sworn testimony or through subterfuge.  Garvey tries to make that defense, but the "justice" he invokes is just political preference that tries to beg the central question of whether catastrophic AGW is a clear and present danger.


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