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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!Phil Jones, the British scientist at the center of a worldwide scandal over e-mails appearing to show climate scientists manipulating global warming data, says he considered killing himself "several times" during the crisis, the Times of London reports. "I am just a scientist," Jones said. "I have no training in PR or dealing with crises." As climate change deniers called for him to resign his post, and even making threats on his life, Jones lost weight and went on beta-blockers and sleeping pills. He continues to receive death threats, including two in the past week. "I was shocked," he ...
Negotiations at the climate summit in Copenhagen broke down Monday when a group of African nations accused wealthier countries of trying to abandon the Kyoto Protocol, The Guardian reports. Members of the Group of 77, a loose coalition of developing countries that includes much of Africa, the Middle East and China, spoke out against what they called an effort to sideline poor countries and walk away from the only binding agreement on carbon emissions. Talks were suspended for two hours Monday, but continued informally and were expected to resume later in the day. Delegates said the episode ...
The reaction to Sarah Palin's Washington Post op-ed Wednesday has been swift and harsh among her liberal critics in the press. As Politics Daily's Walter Shapiro notes: "The Post was attacked for publishing the piece, sneered at for not fact-checking Palin's assertions, and ridiculed for failing to identify Palin's presumed ghostwriter. At the Atlantic's Web site, Marc Ambinder wrote a scathingly critical annotation that is almost as long as Palin's original text." In response, Palin has taken to her usual platform -- Facebook -- to defend herself: The response to my op-ed by global warming ...
WASHINGTON (Nov. 30) -- Prince Albert of Monaco today waded into the controversy over the hacked e-mails that have given fresh ammo to climate change skeptics, saying, "There is no more room for doubt." The prince, who heads a private environmental foundation that works on issues related to climate change, said the tempest over the e-mails was predictable. But it doesn't change what he sees as the fundamental reality. "On every subject of scientific nature there is some controversy. There can be opposing arguments or opposing theories. [And] this will be reviewed," said the head of the ...
(Nov. 29) -- Earlier this month, it posted internal e-mails that damaged the reputation of leading climate change researchers. Last week, it published more than 500,000 text messages sent from government personnel in the hours after the terrorist attacks of 9/11. Such explosive disclosures are just business as usual for WikiLeaks, which since its founding two years ago has beaten legal challenges and criticism to establish itself as one of the leading, if controversial, bulwarks against official secrecy. While some are already calling for a congressional probe to look into how the 9/11 ...
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