Im a news junkie. Ive bookmarked Drudge, and on Election Day, I kept going to his site to check the results of the morning exit polls that were commissioned by the major news agencies.
When the polls showed Kerry way ahead in every battleground except Iowa, like many others, I wondered whether I should even bother to vote.
Something similar happened in Florida in 2000, when thousands of Central time zone voters in the Florida Panhandle (largely Republican) walked away from the polls because CNN had already called the state for Gore, based upon (much more Democratic) votes from the closed polls in the Eastern time zone.
My quandary shows how authority and science are used to influence the political process. We expect scientists (and pollsters can be considered scientists because theyre applied mathematicians) to be both correct and savvy.
So, when I read that the morning sample was based upon a sex ratio of roughly 60:40 (female/male), I automatically figured that whomever did the polling simply adjusted the results to the expected sex ratio of the electorate, multiplying each male vote by approximately 1.1 and each female one by 0.9 (assuming a 50-50 electorate).
In other words, I trusted the experts to know what they were doing, and to report it to the public in a clear manner.
Most other people do the same thing. For instance, when they hear about some forecast of dire climatic changes made at some prestigious university or federal laboratory, they assume that the people who put the thing together are so smart that they would have compensated for any systematic problems with their methods.
Heres an example from global warming: As a matter of convention, most of our computer models for our climatic future assume that carbon dioxide, the main global warming gas, is increasing at a rate of 1 percent per year.
The concentration of carbon dioxide in todays atmosphere is roughly 375 parts per million (ppm). An increase of 1 percent in a computer model for next years climate would raise that concentration to 378.8 ppm, and to 382.5 the following year.
But in reality, thats not whats happening.
In the last three decades, the percent change per year has averaged 0.39, 0.41, and 0.51 per cent, respectively.
What the computer does is more than double the rate of increase that is actually occurring.
The amount of warming produced by those models is directly proportional to the rate of carbon dioxide increase.
In other words, the models are compelled to calculate twice as much carbon dioxiderelated warming as could possibly occur in coming decades.
Back during the Clinton presidency, climate scientists produced a so-called national assessment of the effects of climate warming for the 21st century. They used models that did exactly what I describe above, and the report showed dramatic (and false) results.
The Bush administration has since used the false material from the earlier report for its own study of climate change.
The Bush document, in turn, served as the basis for climate change legislation by John McCain (R-Ariz.) limiting our net emissions of carbon dioxide.
This cant be accomplished without actively discouraging energy consumption, i.e., dramatically raising the price of gas.
McCain is a consummate political animal, positioning himself for a 2008 presidential run. He authored that legislation for one simple reason: He sees political advantage in claiming to care about global warming. After all, most of his Republican competitors are going to be on the other side, against regulation.
Politically, it is profoundly easy to demagogue any climate anomaly into global warming.
Remember Septembers hurricanes? A coalition of scientists, Scientists and Engineers for Change, exploited those disasters by plastering central Florida with billboards claiming that re-electing President Bush would make hurricanes worse because hes not doing enough about global warming.
Their scientific basis? The same computer models used by McCain, with the wrong increase in carbon dioxide.
In this case, they failed. They were not able to persuade enough voters to eke Florida into the Kerry column. And, for that matter, neither did the exit polls produce a large enough effect to turn the nation.
Matt Drudge is a sharp guy. So are the people at Slate Magazine, who kept the erroneous exit poll numbers up all afternoon. (Drudge took them down for a while.)
The poll results were leaked with the full knowledge of their political effect, just as scientists know that a computer model that must overestimate global warming will also stir things up.
[Patrick J. Michaels is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and author of Meltdown: The Predictable Distortion of Global Warming by Scientists, Politicians, and the Media.]