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Elsewhere in the Enviro-Activist Mediasphere

Written By: Paul Chesser
Published In: AmSpecBlog
Publication date: 11/21/2009
Publisher: The American Spectator

No need for me to leave out the other two media objects of my occasional denunciation in the Climategate story. George Soros's organizational daughter-in-law, Washington Post reporter Juliet Eilperin, apparently was instructed by her editor to come up with copy superficially sufficient to fill a 472-word space on page A14. Of course she obliged, tapping out a crime story while barely addressing the substance of what was discovered. She even read the statement from the Climate Research Unit confirming authenticity of the records, made at least four phone calls, and included the sexy part about the alarmists wanting to beat up Pat Michaels (Look at that face -- you wanna mess with him?!)!

Not bad, I guess, for a getaway Friday -- but points deducted, Juliet, for accepting at face value the CRU/alarmist assumption that it was a hack job. Very well could have been an insider with a conscience.

As for my other target, I decided to visit the Web site of the Society of Environmental Journalists to see what, if any, buzz might be going on there (despite it being a usually quiet Saturday). It was quiet, but they do have a news aggregator with continual feeds from other news organizations. I found the following headlines among the most recent (which include Saturday stories):

Hidden threat: Elevated pollution levels near regional airports
Today's Arctic Circle Comic Strip
Michigan recycling rates drop
Children starve in parched southern Madagascar
As nuclear reactor fleet ages, engineers ask,' is 80 the new 40?'
Tree-eating bugs threaten Monarch butterfly in Mexico
No sign of climate research units, emails, scientist tricks, hackers, or East Anglia. Maybe Monday!

topics:
Mainstream Media, Global Warming, Environmentalism, Climate Change


Paul Chesser is a special correspondent for the Heartland Institute and is director of Climate Strategies Watch. The views he expresses do not necessarily reflect the views of these organizations.

 


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