Current:Home > MyA famous climate scientist is in court, with big stakes for attacks on science -Streamline Finance
A famous climate scientist is in court, with big stakes for attacks on science
View
Date:2025-04-17 10:03:45
In a D.C. courtroom, a trial is wrapping up this week with big stakes for climate science. One of the world's most prominent climate scientists is suing a right wing author and a policy analyst for defamation.
The case comes at a time when attacks on scientists are proliferating, says Peter Hotez, professor of Pediatrics and Molecular Virology at Baylor College of Medicine. Even as misinformation about scientists and their work keeps growing, Hotez says scientists haven't yet found a good way to respond.
"The reason we're sort of fumbling at this is it's unprecedented. And there is no roadmap," he says.
A famous graph becomes a target
The climate scientist at the center of this trial is Michael Mann. The Professor of Earth and Environmental Science at University of Pennsylvania gained prominence for helping make one of the most accessible, consequential graphs in the history of climate science.
First published in the late 1990s, the graph shows thousands of years of relatively stable global temperatures. Then, when humans start burning lots of coal and oil, it shows a spike upward. Mann's graph looks like a hockey stick lying on its side, with the blade sticking straight up.
The so-called "hockey stick graph" was successful in helping the public understand the urgency of global warming, and that made it a target, says Kert Davies, director of special investigations at the Center for Climate Integrity, a climate accountability nonprofit. "Because it became such a powerful image, it was under attack from the beginning," he says.
The attacks came from groups that reject climate science, some funded by the fossil fuel industry. In the midst of these types of attacks - including the hacking of Mann's and other scientists' emails by unknown hackers - Penn State, where Mann was then working, opened an investigation into his research. Penn State, as well as the National Science Foundation, found no evidence of scientific misconduct. But a policy analyst and an author wrote that they were not convinced.
The trial, more than a decade in the making
The trial in D.C. Superior Court involves posts from right wing author Mark Steyn and policy analyst Rand Simberg. In an online post, Simberg compared Mann to former Penn State Football coach Jerry Sandusky, a convicted child sex abuser. Simberg wrote that Mann was the "Sandusky of climate science" writing that Mann "molested and tortured data." Steyn called Mann's research fraudulent.
Mann sued the two men for defamation. Mann also sued the publishers of the posts, National Review and the Competitive Enterprise Institute, but in 2021, the court ruled they couldn't be held liable.
In court, Mann has argued he lost funding and research opportunities. Steyn said in court that if Penn State's president, Graham Spanier, covered up child sexual assault why wouldn't he cover up for Mann's science. The science in question used ice cores and tree rings to estimate Earth's past temperatures.
"If Graham Spanier is prepared to cover up child rape, week in, week out, year in, year out, why would he be the least bit squeamish about covering up a bit of hanky panky with the tree rings and the ice cores?" Steyn asked the court.
Mann and Steyn declined to speak to NPR during the ongoing trial. One of Simberg's lawyers, Victoria Weatherford, said "inflammatory does not equal defamatory" and that her client is allowed to express his opinion, even if it were wrong.
"No matter how offensive or distasteful or heated it is," Weatherford tells NPR, "that speech is absolutely protected under the First Amendment when it's said against a public figure, if the person saying it believed that what they said was true."
Many scientists under attack
Mann isn't the only climate scientist facing attacks, says Lauren Kurtz, executive director of the Climate Science Legal Defense Fund.
"We help more scientists every year than the year before," Kurtz says, "We actually broke a record in 2023. We helped over 50 researchers."
Dozens of climate scientists from the federal government have contacted her group in recent years, many alleging they were censored under the Trump administration. During his presidency Donald Trump denied the science of climate change and pulled the U.S. out of the U.N. Paris Climate Agreement addressing global warming.
But while climate researchers were early targets of people rejecting peer-reviewed science, now those attacks have spread to biomedical scientists, supercharged by the COVID-19 pandemic. Kurtz says while they primarily provide legal defense for climate researchers, they've recently heard from COVID-19 researchers, too.
Hotez worries about the ramifications for the future of science and medicine. He says: "Young people, looking at future careers, looking at how scientists are attacked are going to say, 'Well, why do I want to go into this profession?'"
Solutions for attacks on scientists
Hotez says he's glad Mann is fighting back in court. But he doesn't think a bunch of lawsuits is a sustainable solution. And he says he wants to keep working in the lab.
"We have a new human hookworm vaccine that'll come online soon," he says, "That's how I want to spend my time. I don't want to spend my day making cold calls to plaintiff lawyers."
Imran Ahmed, chief executive at the Center for Countering Digital Hate, says any response has to include social media companies as that's where attacks on scientists happen every day. Research finds that social media platforms can encourage the spread of scientific and medical misinformation.
Hotez says he and Mann are working on an upcoming project, collaborating on what they see as overlap in attacks on climate science and biomedicine, and how to counter it.
veryGood! (23389)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- DeSantis will call Florida lawmakers back to Capitol to impose new sanctions on Iran
- Chicago and police union reach tentative deal on 20% raise for officers
- 150 dolphins die in Amazon lake within a week as water temps surpass 100 degrees amid extreme drought
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- University of Virginia says campus shooting investigation finished, findings to be released later
- Here's what's in Biden's $100 billion request to Congress
- 'Best hitter in the world': Yordan Alvarez dominating October as Astros near another World Series
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Belgian minister quits after ‘monumental error’ let Tunisian shooter slip through extradition net
Ranking
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- US warns of a Russian effort to sow doubt over the election outcomes in democracies around the globe
- Are there melatonin side effects? What to know about the sleep aid's potential risks.
- Baltimore firefighter dead, several others injured battling rowhome blaze
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Russian-American journalist detained in Russia, the second such move there this year
- Case dropped against North Dakota mother in baby’s death
- Month after pig heart transplant, Maryland man pushing through tough physical therapy
Recommendation
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
New Jersey dad sues state, district over policy keeping schools from outing transgender students
Brazil police conduct searches targeting intelligence agency’s use of tracking software
This week on Sunday Morning (October 22)
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
Bomb and death threats prompt major Muslim group to move annual banquet
He ordered a revolver, but UPS lost it. How many guns go missing in the mail each year?
Belgian minister quits after ‘monumental error’ let Tunisian shooter slip through extradition net