(This piece was first published at Forbes.com.)
Jeopardy champion: âIâll take âScienceâ for $800, Alex.â
Alex Trebek: âThe answer is, âInferior scientific literacy.â â
Jeopardy champion: âWhat is one of the peer-reviewed factors distinguishing global warming alarmists from global warming realists?â
Alex Trebek: âThat is correct! Pick again.â
Jeopardy champion: âIâll take âScienceâ for $1000, Alex.â
Alex Trebek: âThe answer is, âInferior technical reasoning capacity.ââ
Jeopardy champion: âWhat is another one of the peer-reviewed factors distinguishing global warming alarmists from global warming realists?â
Alex Trebek: âYou are correct again!â
In light of a new peer-reviewed study published in Nature Climate Change, donât be surprised if the above scenario soon becomes a real-world Jeopardy show.
A team of researchers, led by a professor at Yale University, tested more than 1,500 U.S. adults on their scientific literacy and technical reasoning capacity, and then asked them to assign a numerical value to how concerned they are about climate change.
According to the study, published earlier this week, âMembers of the public with the highest degrees of scientific literacy and technical reasoning capacity were not the most concerned about climate change.â
Indeed, âAs respondentsâ science-literacy scores increased, concern with climate change decreased.â
It seems the media needs to reverse whom it deems âanti-scienceâ and âscience deniers.â
Not that Al Gore calling climate scientists at MIT, Harvard, Princeton, etc., âFlat Earthersâ was ever a believable scenario. The same applies to minimally educated newspaper reporters/advocates referring to scientists at NASA, NOAA, Columbia, Penn, etc., as âanti-science.â
When you get right down to it, it has been painfully obvious for quite some time that one side in the global warming debate is supported by objective scientific evidence and the other side is supported by ideology, the need to keep the billions in government gravy-train dollars flowing, and speculative, ever-failing computer models that they program themselves.
Hurricane activity has been near historic lows during the past several years. Tornadoes have become less frequent and less severe as the planet has warmed. Droughts have become less frequent and global soil moisture has improved. Deserts are shrinking. Crop production sets new records nearly every year.
Alex Trebek: âNow on to Final Jeopardy. The topic is, once again, âScience.â How much would you like to risk?â
Jeopardy champion: âIâll bet it all, Alex.â
Alex Trebek: âThe answer is, âRailroad engineering and astronomy.â
Jeopardy champion: âWhat is the training of the top âscientistâ overseeing the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the top âscientistâ overseeing official U.S. government temperature compilations?â
Alex Trebek: âThat is correct! Congratulations, you are our new Jeopardy champion!â
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