In 2024, climate scientists published a paper in the journal, Nature, about the economic effects of climate change, asserting that the economic effects would be many times worse than previously reported.
That paper has been cited by politicians, news, and the UN. But..
...it's wrong. Indeed, the results were so preposterous that all three peer-reviewers raised doubts during the peer review process. One said, "I have a major concern on the uncertainty and validity of the empirical...model they built and used for projections."
Another said, "it is somewhat difficult to comprehend the full rationale for the particular econometric specification that is used." The reviewer also noted that the authors needed more tests to support their conclusions.
The same reviewer also noted that "it may be helpful for this paper not to accompany the often hyperbolic narratives in some of the literature." The reviewer observed that even the astounding increase in effects would be modest year over year and statistically insignificant.
The third reviewer was more pointed. They stated, "it is somewhat difficult to fully gauge the robustness of the results when there are several seemingly arbitrary methodological choices being made."
They also asserted that the use of statistics could be improved.
With these comments, any self-respecting journal would have told the authors to go back to the drawing board. But no, this was a paper showing the terrible effects of climate change and it was going to be published. After a few minor changes, two reviewers threw in the towel.
The second reviewer did not. They stated, "several concerns persist and the authors have not addressed some of these."
A fourth reviewer stated, "I find all of this well explained and fairly convincing, yet, purely subjectively, I have a hard time in believing the results, which seem unintuitively large..."
IOW, he couldn't see how the conclusions were correct.
Nevertheless, Nature published the paper and its results. The media glommed onto the doom peddling. It was the second most cited climate paper of 2024.
It is still used by the UN to discuss climate change and "green energy" solutions to mitigate the economic damage of climate change.
It was cited by Sheldon Whitehouse in the Congressional record as proof that the economic consequences of climate change will be catastrophic.
The problem is that the paper was laughably wrong.
In June 2025, the paper "Data anomalies and the economic commitment of climate change," was published in which the results of the original paper were eviscerated. It turns out that someone was able to go through the vague modeling and determined that...
...they had overestimated the effects by nearly 3 times. The actual effects would be a blip in decreased growth - at worst. Nature is now investigating.
Here is the thing. Nature should have pulled the plug when the reviewers were noting the opaqueness of the model.
Nature didn't because it was a climate paper and it had the right results - namely, catastrophic climate impacts.
Bad science leads to bad results. But this wasn't science. It was propaganda.
It was a model with vague assumptions combined with bad statistical analyses to get the worst outcome possible. And it worked because the authors got the paper published and it made a splash. Few people will hear about the retraction, which should happen.
Climate science is filled with this garbage. Yet, few people acknowledge this because the climate change priests won't have any debate in their religion.
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Bad climate science and NASA is at the forefront of it. Here, NASA discusses how the burned area in the US appears to be increasing since 1983.
Why does NASA stop at 1983? Because the government is jiggering the results to amplify the fear. Let me explain.
The National Interagency Fire Center keeps the official records for forest fires and area burned. According to the NIFC, there are no official records for forest fire area burned before 1983 and it won't provide that data.
Weird, huh?
I mean, one would think that there is information regarding area burned prior to 1983. Well, there is. Bjorn Lomborg did a fantastic job four years ago going through the data.
This, of course, caused the media and climate scientists to throw a hissy fit.
A persistent myth on the left is that poor people eat sugary foods because it's cheaper. SNAP is a program that is supposed to supplement people's food budgets.
Let's see what I can buy on the average weekly benefit for a family of four.
The average monthly benefit for a family of four is $726, which translates to ~$169 per week ($726/4.3=168.83).
So, I shopped at Target and here is what I was able to buy:
1) 5 gallons of milk; 2) 10 pounds of chicken breast; 3) 5 pounds of ground beef;
4) 10 salad kits that provided 35 to 40 servings of salad per week and they don't even have to be made; 5) 2 pounds of tomatoes; 6) 5 pounds of oranges; 7) 3 boxes of cereal; 8) 2 loaves of bread; 9) 1 pound of cheese; 10) 2 pounds of bananas; 11) 2 pounds of apples;
Intersex. You have heard trans activists refer to intersex as proof that biological sex is "complex." You have likely heard that intersex people make up 1.7% of the population.
That statistic is a lie created by Anne Fausto-Sterling and repeated by hospitals for $.
Sterling is a "sexologist" who has long sought to "disrupt" the idea that biological sex has two sexes. In 1993, she claimed that there were five sexes - male, female, merm, ferm, and herm.
But her real contribution to misinformation was her paper claiming that 1.7% of the...
...population is intersex. To get to that number, she included a range of syndromes that no clinician considers intersex. The reason is that those syndromes are very clearly male or female but with developmental dysfunctions.
Recently, I went to Ocean Prime, a restaurant in Boston. It is very expensive. It is a place I would never go in my 20s. Appetizers start at $23. Entrees start at $39.
Yet, it was filled with people in their mid- to late-20s. I struck up a conversation with one of them.
He was a young man waiting for some friends. Three in fact. All of them his roommates. He lived in in a four-bedroom apartment in Boston. He couldn't afford to live with fewer people. No big deal. I asked him if they were going to eat at Ocean Prime. He told me it was...
..."their favorite restaurant." I asked how often they eat at Ocean Prime. "Once a month or something like that."
I was floored. Eventually, his friends showed up and off they went to their tables with their girlfriends.
Maui's government has decided to blame "outsiders" for its failures. According to the mayor, "This is...about restoring housing to residents and reducing our overdependence on tourism."
Let's see how progressive governance is the problem, and how this will harm Maui.
Maui requires a mindboggling amount of permits just to build a single home. Builders must zoning restrictions, water-use regulations, and historical- and environmental-preservation requirements. This is before they even get to filing permits on actually building the home.
When they get to those permits, they are required to get permits on separate applications and schedules for electrical, plumbing, grading, and driveway work. Once that is done, they must wait for an understaffed permitting office to issue each permit.
Scientific results are limited to the quality of data. When it comes to climate science, the data is shoddy - at best.
In 2012, scientists and news organizations trumpeted the demise of the Great Barrier Reef. What happened next shows the limitations of science.
In 2012, a study published in the prestigious journal, PNAS, showed that the GBR had suffered a 50% decline in coral cover over a 27-year period. Climate scientists and the media ran with the horrors of acidifying seas and a warming climate.
But there was a problem.
The scientists could only go back to 1985 because, frankly, the data before 1985 was very limited and very suspect. As even the Coral Monitoring Network admits, coral cover had huge ranges of reliability even through the 90s. This was also true for the GBR.