Climate scientists are claiming that changes at Twitter following Elon Muskâs takeover of the social media platform have unleashed a wave of unfair abuse directed at them.
The platform, they claim, is now flooded with âclimate denial.âÂ
Dr. Mark Maslin, professor of Earth System Science at University College London, told The Guardian heâs been the target of âabuse and rude commentsâ on Twitter as a result of him challenging the position of âclimate deniers.âÂ
Maslin also said that, prior to Musk taking over, he used to have meetings with a top Twitter executive to coordinate efforts to ensure that âtrusted informationâ would be pushed to the top of feed rankings. That way, perspectives Maslin disagrees with would be less likely to be seen.Â
Musk laid off that department head during a purge after he bought the platform.Â
No Definitions And Examples
The Guardian article doesnât explain exactly what âclimate denialâ is or provide any links to or screenshots of examples of what the scientists are calling abuse.Â
The article quotes Maslin and other scientists referring to âclimate denial.â The article headline refers to âclimate crisis deniers,â which seems to imply that âclimate denialâ is also disputing if climate change is producing catastrophic outcomes.Â
Cowboy State Daily reached out to Maslin to ask what he believes falls outside the realm of âtrusted informationâ and if that includes perspectives he simply disagrees with as opposed to the promotion of perspectives that challenge established, indisputable science.
Maslin was also asked if thinks itâs appropriate for a social media platform to coordinate with activists on an issue to purge perspectives they donât agree with.Â
Maslin didnât reply.Â
Hateful Canard
Dr. Judith Curry, president and co-owner of Climate Forecast Application Network, told Cowboy State Daily the issue of climate denial is âa hateful canardâ thatâs applied to a range of ideas that arenât approved by a circle of climate scientists.Â
Before she moved into the private sector, Curry was a professor of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Georgia Institute of Technology, as well as chair of the program. She also was a professor in the Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences Program in Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Environmental Studies Program at the University of Colorado-Boulder.Â
Curry is a moderate voice in the debate. In her latest book, âClimate Uncertainty and Risk,â she argues that climate change is an exceedingly complex issue, both in terms of the science and its impacts, as well as the policies aimed at addressing it.Â
âWe have mischaracterized climate risk by conflating the slow incremental risks from warming (such as sea level rise) and the risks from extreme weather that have little, if anything, to do with the warming,â Curry said.Â
She said in our zeal to eliminate carbon dioxide emissions, weâre jeopardizing our energy supply, which will only cause more harm than good.Â
Denial LabelÂ
In 2011, Curry criticized the âhockey stick graph,â which shows temperatures over the last 1,000 years.
The graph, which was produced by climatologist and Penn State Professor Michael E. Mann and some of his colleagues, purportedly shows an exponential rise in temperatures over the last few decades, which makes it look like a hockey stick.
For her criticism of the graph, Curry said she was labeled a âdenier.âÂ
âI have seen scientists and politicians labeled as âdeniersâ who agree with the IPCC science assessment, but donât think that this is a problem that trumps all others and needs to be urgently addressed,â Curry said.Â
Curry said the label has been applied to highly reputable scientists, such as James Hansen and Kerry Emanual, because they advocate for nuclear energy instead of solar and wind.Â
âBecause of his extremely active levels of âdenial entrepreneurship,â my operating definition of âclimate denierâ is anyone who disagrees with Michael Mann about anything related to climate,â Curry said.Â
Censorship Collusion
Curry said itâs concerning that Maslin admitted in the Guardian article to coordinating with employees of Twitter to suppress perspectives he doesnât like â and admitted it apparently with some pride.Â
Following his takeover of Twitter, Musk released thousands of documents showing frequent collusion between staff members of Twitter and government officials, as well as deliberate efforts to suppress conservative viewpoints.
Prior to Muskâs takeover, Curry said the engagement she received on her Twitter feed was considerably lower.Â
âFor the [approximately] 18 months prior to Muskâs takeover of Twitter, I felt as if I was tweeting into a void â hardly any new followers and virtually no likes or retweets of my tweets,â Curry said.Â
Within a week after Musk took over, she said, her followers and engagement greatly increased. Since November, her followers have doubled.Â
âI was obviously shadow banned in some way,â Curry said, referring to the practice of lowering the ranking of content so itâs seen by fewer users of a platform.Â
Hateful Attacks
Curry said Twitter has vastly improved under Musk, but itâs a work in progress.
There are people on both sides of the debate on climate issues that are âexceedingly ignorantâ about science and the impact of climate change, she said. But they speak loudly on the topic.Â
However, itâs those on the alarmist side of the debate whose rhetoric of extinction and crisis is the most out of touch with reality, she said.
Curry said that despite the bad information they spread, she thinks itâs more important to reign in what she calls âlibelous and hateful attacksâ by climate scientists who hold faculty positions at universities.Â
Lately, Mann has been on a rampage on Twitter, attacking figures who express viewpoints he doesnât like. Some might call the Tweets abusive.Â
In one tweet, Mann called Curry âa go-to figure on the denial circuit.âÂ
Disparaging Tweets
In a tweet about Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder Roger Pielke Jr., Mann wrote, âRoger Pielk Jr. is still around? I thought he was now writing a sports column or something.âÂ
Pielke has been a regular commenter on climate change issues, arguing that the science on extreme weather is far more nuanced and uncertain than is often presented in the media. Heâs also been critical of the International Panel on Climate Change, a consortium of the worldâs leading climate scientists, for what he says is an increasingly biased view of climate change.Â
Mann also disparaged research meteorologist Ryan Maue, who served as a chief scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration during the Trump administration.Â
Mann called him a âfossil fuel propagandist.âÂ
Whoâs The Abuser?Â
Maslin, too, isnât above throwing the same type of harsh criticism at the people who disagree with him.
He accused Dr. Matthew Wielicki of âposting fake science.â When Wielicki asked for examples of what Maslin considered to be âfake science,â Maslin didnât provide any. Instead, Maslin replied, âAnd you are not even consistent in your denial â so we all assume you are doing this for attention.âÂ
âMann has apparently singled us out for attacks because each of us has greater than 50,000 followers on Twitter,â Curry said.Â
She said rather than being reprimanded for such behavior, scientists like Mann are rewarded by prestigious university chairs and institutes, as well as given awards from professional societies.Â
âUntil this problem is cleaned up, I see no home for addressing this issue,â Curry said, adding that itâs ironic for them to complain about hostile comments on Twitter when they tend to dish it out so much.Â
Everyone Gets Nasty Comments
Curry said that abusive comments happen on Twitter all the time, but itâs nothing exclusive to climate scientists on the alarmist side of the debate, such as Mann and Maslin.Â
âI receive nasty comments all the time,â Curry said.Â
She said when it gets to be too much, sheâll mute the individual, and Twitter provides tools to limit notifications to help screen out some of the unwanted remarks.Â
Since Curry tends toward the middle on climate issues, she said the hateful comments come to her from both sides.Â
âHowever, I will say that the really vile and hateful comments come predominantly from the âalarmedâ side of the spectrum,â Curry said.
Contact Kevin Killough at Kevin@CowboyStateDaily.com





