By Craig Rucker
Is there a more self-contradictory term than "settled science?" 
Science should always be open to challenge and investigation. The 
scientific method demands that conclusions must follow facts.  We must 
never adjust the facts to suit a conclusion. 
Sadly, this is not always the case.
We posted an article at CFACT.org
 which highlights how "Stanford University medical professor John 
Ioannidis, in an interview with Agence France Presse (AFP), blew the lid
 off the trustworthiness of the peer-review process." 
[W]hen studies are replicated, they rarely come up with the same 
results. Only a third of the 100 studies published in three top 
psychology journals could be successfully replicated in a large 2015 
test,” AFP reported, summarizing Ioannidis’ findings...
According to Ioannidis, the peer-review process guarantees little in
 terms of trustworthiness even before political agendas compromise the 
issue. 
When only a third of peer-reviewed studies reach the same results
 when they are replicated by outside authors, this is a serious problem.
 Regarding climate change papers, the peer-reviewed papers are likely 
even less reliable – before even considering the inescapably political 
nature of the topic – because many papers address predictions and models
 for which it is impossible to test the paper’s conclusions against 
objective evidence. For example, when a scientist invents a climate 
model predicting rapid global warming or seriously negative future 
climate impacts, and when a paper summarizing the results of his or her 
model appears in a peer-reviewed journal, there is no way at the time of
 publication to compare the climate predictions against real-world 
observations. This adds an additional level of doubt to the accuracy of 
global warming predictions published in peer-reviewed science journals. 
And this is before taking into consideration the inherently political 
nature of the global warming debate and the political agendas of journal
 editors and their carefully selected article reviewers. 
When science is sound its results hold up.  Repeated experiments 
reach the same conclusions.  There must be no “politicized” or "secret 
science."  Data must be made available for all to scrutinize and there 
should be no coercion in terms of outcome.  The scientific method must 
never be compromised. 
Politics and rent-seeking greed have sadly infected the scientific 
process, particularly on the issue of climate.  Global warming 
campaigners have treated peer-reviewed academic literature like sacred 
texts.  However, the Climategate scandal revealed warming researchers 
were working diligently to exclude any science that contradicted their 
carefully honed, alarmist narrative from the literature.   
We should expect more from the scientific community.
Science is too important to accept less.
CFACT
