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13 <br /> established in response to the politically motivated climate disinformation machine that <br /> was associated with e.g. ExxonMobil, CEI, Inhofe/Morano etc. The reaction of the <br /> climate tribes to the political assault has been to circle the wagons and point the guns <br /> outward in an attempt to discredit misinformation from politicized advocacy groups. The <br /> motivation of scientists in the pro AGW tribes appears to be less about politics and more <br /> about professional ego and scientific integrity as their research was under assault for <br /> nonscientific reasons (I'm sure there are individual exceptions, but this is my overall <br /> perception). I became adopted into a"tribe" during Autumn 2005 after publication of the <br /> Webster et al. hurricane and global warming paper. I and my colleagues were totally <br /> bewildered and overwhelmed by the assault we found ourselves under, and associating <br /> with a tribe where others were more experienced and savvy about how to deal with this <br /> was a relief and very helpful at the time. <br /> After becoming more knowledgeable about the politics of climate change (both the <br /> external politics and the internal politics within the climate field),I became <br /> concerned about some of the tribes pointing their guns inward at other climate <br /> researchers who question their research or don't pass various loyalty tests. I even <br /> started spending time at climateaudit, and my public congratulations to Steve <br /> McIntyre when climateaudit won the "best science blog award"was greeted with a <br /> rather unpleasant email from one of the tribal members. While the "hurricane wars" <br /> fizzled out in less than a year as the scientists recovered from the external assault and got <br /> back to business as usual in terms of arguing science with their colleagues, the "hockey <br /> wars" have continued apparently unabated. With the publication of the IPCC 4th <br /> Assessment report, the Nobel Peace Prize, and energy legislation near the top of the <br /> national legislative agenda, the"denialists"were becoming increasingly irrelevant(the <br /> Heartland Conference and NIPCC are not exactly household words). Hence it is difficult <br /> to understand the continued circling of the wagons by some climate researchers with guns <br /> pointed at skeptical researchers by apparently trying to withhold data and other <br /> information of relevance to published research, thwart the peer review process, and keep <br /> papers out of assessment reports. Scientists are of course human, and short-term <br /> emotional responses to attacks and adversity are to be expected, but I am particularly <br /> concerned by this apparent systematic and continuing behavior from scientists that hold <br /> editorial positions, serve on important boards and committees and participate in the major <br /> assessment reports. It is these issues revealed in the HADCRU emails that concern me <br /> the most, and it seems difficult to spin many of the emails related to FOIA,peer review, <br /> and the assessment process. I sincerely hope that these emails do not in actuality reflect <br /> what they appear to, and I encourage Gavin Schmidt et al. to continue explaining the <br /> individual emails and the broader issues of concern. <br /> In summary, the problem seems to be that the circling of the wagons strategy developed <br /> by small groups of climate researchers in response to the politically motivated attacks <br /> against climate science are now being used against other climate researchers and the <br /> more technical blogs (e.g. Climateaudit, Lucia, etc). Particularly on a topic of such great <br /> public relevance, scientists need to consider carefully skeptical arguments and either <br /> rebut them or learn from them. Trying to suppress them or discredit the skeptical <br /> researcher or blogger is not an ethical strategy and one that will backfire in the long run. I <br /> have some sympathy for Phil Jones' concern of not wanting to lose control of his <br /> personal research agenda by having to take the time to respond to all the queries and <br />