Case Study: How Climate Skeptics Spoon Feed the Wall Street Journal

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Nothing like a smoking gun to tie the Wall Street Journal opinion pages to the Exxon-funded global warming denial industry. Though not surprising, it is pretty embarassing, especially considering that the WSJ next month will be absorbed into NewsCorp, which has pledged carbon neutrality by 2010. We assume that the promise will extend to curbing noxious emissions from WSJ's editorial pages. Take a look at this latest exposé of the denial industry by Sue Sturgis posted on Facing South, connect some dots, and you'll see why this story ought to hasten the speed with which Murdoch brings the hammer down.

Sturgis carefully documents the recent denial campaign of the John Locke Foundation of Raleigh, North Carolina and its ties to Exxon money, the Heartland Institute, Cato, Heritage and the rest of the naysaying Who's Who. They got together in September on a conference call to plot strategy to derail climate policy development at the state level. Their prime target? The Center for Climate Strategies, a nonprofit group of scientists, engineers, economists and policy experts who work with governors and state officials of every political stripe to figure out how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Within weeks the attack campaign was seeing the light of day.

On Oct. 17, Locke released what it called a "peer review assessment" by the Boston-based Beacon Hill Institute -- who had a representative on the September call -- claiming the Center used "seriously flawed" methods in crafting climate proposals...... Beacon Hill's assessment, however, didn't......disclose that among Beacon Hill's clients are the CSE Foundation, DCI Group, Heritage Foundation, Manhattan Institute, Pacific Research Institute and Texas Public Policy Foundation -- which together have received at least $1,780,000 from ExxonMobil since 1998.

Also offered up on the conference call as part of the attack campaign toolbox was a series of "investigative" articles on the Center by Paul Chesser of the Locke Foundation, articles which had been published in the Carolina Journal, Locke's own monthly "newspaper" and online organ. The Carolina Journal, in Swift Boat fashion, would serve as an "authoritative" source around which an echo chamber would be deployed. Sure enough, the Locke Foundation published

a series of scathing attacks directed at the Center in its own publications and other outlets including the American Spectator, Washington Times, Washington Examiner and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

The byline on all of these pieces? Paul Chesser. Sturgis also points out that in 2006 Chesser distinguished himself by attacking the Evangelical Climate Initiative in a piece in the American Spectator. His main weapon? References to the Book of Revelation and the end of days.

Now enter Brendan Miniter, assistant editor of OpinionJournal.com, with a piece called Swell Swine (sub req'd), published in the Wall Street Journal on September 29th. It's an attack on climate policy initiatives underway in North Carolina, and on the Center for Climate Strategies, which he inaccurately calls a "global warming group," and whose executive director he likens to Al Gore. His sources? The Carolina Journal and Paul Chesser. He says so, right in his piece, without providing any background or context about either. It's a slightly toned down version of material swallowed hook-line-and-sinker from Chesser's attack toolbox.

At least he didn't quote the Book of Revelation.

Mr. Murdoch, over to you. Lovely if you could start by making the Wall Street Journal's editorial pages carbon neutral.


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