Q&A: Fred Singer, the proud godfather of global warning denial, dies at 95
clips.substack.com
In 2005 I did one of my weekly Q&As with smart, important, interesting or newsworthy people with Fred Singer, the brilliant scientist and reliable critic of climate change and the idiocy and hysteria associated with it. Global warming is always a hot topic in liberal media circles, where the political and scientific consensus is that global climate change is occurring, it is a danger, it is caused by mankind and we need to start doing something serious about reversing it. For a little balance, we called up Fred Singer, aka "the godfather of global warming denial." An expert on global climate change and a pioneer in the development of rocket and satellite technology, he holds a Ph.D. in physics from Princeton and happens to be the guy who devised the basic instrument for measuring stratospheric ozone. Now president of the Science & Environmental Policy Project research group (sepp.org), his dozen books include "Hot Talk, Cold Science: Global Warming's Unfinished Debate." I talked to him by telephone from his offices in Arlington, Va.
Q&A: Fred Singer, the proud godfather of global warning denial, dies at 95
Q&A: Fred Singer, the proud godfather of…
Q&A: Fred Singer, the proud godfather of global warning denial, dies at 95
In 2005 I did one of my weekly Q&As with smart, important, interesting or newsworthy people with Fred Singer, the brilliant scientist and reliable critic of climate change and the idiocy and hysteria associated with it. Global warming is always a hot topic in liberal media circles, where the political and scientific consensus is that global climate change is occurring, it is a danger, it is caused by mankind and we need to start doing something serious about reversing it. For a little balance, we called up Fred Singer, aka "the godfather of global warming denial." An expert on global climate change and a pioneer in the development of rocket and satellite technology, he holds a Ph.D. in physics from Princeton and happens to be the guy who devised the basic instrument for measuring stratospheric ozone. Now president of the Science & Environmental Policy Project research group (sepp.org), his dozen books include "Hot Talk, Cold Science: Global Warming's Unfinished Debate." I talked to him by telephone from his offices in Arlington, Va.