LETTER: Cliff Mass plays it too safe in describing climate change effects

The atmospheric sciences professor ignores certainty in favor of obfuscation.

So [atmospheric sciences professor] Cliff Mass was here a couple weeks ago, delivering a lecture at the Port Angeles Library.

I read about it in the Aug. 19 PDN (“Few Peninsula Climate Change Effects – Yet”).

True to form, Mass played it very conservatively.

After all, he is the meteorological big-shot in the Pacific Northwest and would probably like to keep it that way.

It’s a common strategy among climate scientists: Promulgate doubt and uncertainty and thereby forestall political action.

I mean, near-term human extinction resulting from abrupt, catastrophic, runaway greenhouse gases is an unhappy outcome and remains unmentionable in polite society.

Clearly, Mass strives to tell the scientific truth where mathematical certainty abides.

Thus, while there may be no God today, there could be in the future.

But this weatherman is not providing the whole scientific truth, which is that human civilization is already caught in multiple runaway feedback cycles, such as exponential methane release in the Arctic and the inexorable melting of the sea and land ice at the poles (“Going Dark” by Guy McPherson, 2013).

Scientific rationality and restraint are weak tea for the howling night in the rain-soaked field where all the cows are black.

Mark Schrader,

Port Angeles

More in Opinion

PAT NEAL: A rainforest expedition

IT WAS A dark and stormy night. Inside the cabin, the wood… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: What Thanksgiving means to me

THANK YOU FOR reading this. Writing our nation’s only wilderness gossip column… Continue reading

Carolyn Edge.
First year of Recompete data shows projects gaining momentum

OCTOBER MARKED ONE year since the Recompete initiative started, with the goal… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: You could be spawned out

MAYBE YOU’VE HAD one of those days. You wake up in the… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: This otter work

WHO SAYS THERE’S no good news? Lately, the co-managers of our natural… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: A bad day on the river

THIS TIME OF year brings back a lot of memories. These can… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The Halloween hunt for Bigfoot

I WON’T BORE you, dear reader(s), with the petty details of my… Continue reading

Funding from the Recompete program has helped First Step expand programs and hours at Family Resource Centers in Port Angeles and Forks.
Helping families thrive with support center

WHAT DOES AFFORDING diapers have to do with employment? If you need… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: Singing the birdfeeder blues

THIS IS THE season of one of the greatest migrations on Earth… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The great deer hunt of 2025

OPENING DAY. IT’S a day when anything can happen. I was hoping,… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The great clam hunt of 2025

THIS MUST BE the best autumn weather in years. And just when… Continue reading

PAT NEAL: The great mushroom hunt

FALL MUST BE my favorite time of year. Could be because I… Continue reading