Baseball Musings
Baseball Musings
March 08, 2007
Alarmists

I don't quite see why Sports Illustrated needs to scare us about global warming, but using a fake photo doesn't really help their cause. (Story starts here.)

Update: I didn't mean to post this. When I thought about what I wanted to say, I decided it didn't have a place on this blog. I must have hit save by accident. But since I did, I don't think the story is balanced at all. Only the worst case scenarios are cited, and to me that's just bad journalism.

Update: I should have credited FishStripes with a pointer to the article. They have Dontrelle's reaction to the photo. Also, Cafe Hayek agrees with the one sidedness of the story:

It's a bit of a stretch. A huge stretch. And of course it's a stretch in one direction only. It could have been written this way:
The next time you get to enjoy throwing a baseball in February or enjoying a December game at Chicago's Soldier Field instead of viewing it mostly as a rite of passage or a test of your toughness, thank global warming.

Posted by David Pinto at 10:24 AM | Other | TrackBack (0)
Comments

Manbearpig strikes again... and this time, he's SUPER SERIAL!!!

Posted by: crg at March 8, 2007 10:50 AM

I don't think they're scaring us with stories about global warming (which isn't much in doubt these days). Rather, they are showing how sports are adjusting to the undeniably forthcoming changes in our global climate. It's an interesting read actually.

Posted by: Ben K. at March 8, 2007 11:10 AM

If you're going to worry about disasters, how about the effects of peak oil production on baseball?

Posted by: Rob McMillin at March 8, 2007 11:35 AM

Along the lines of your update, David, I wonder if Dontrelle intended to be part of a political piece like this. (I didn't read the article... maybe it's covered in there.)

Posted by: Mike at March 8, 2007 01:04 PM

I thought it was a really interesting read as well. There are points where the tone comes off a little self-righteous, but as Ben K. said, there isn't much doubt anymore about the realities of global warming.

I would have to agree with the sentiment though that this doesn't really belong on this blog or in SI. I follow sports for the escape.

Posted by: robustyoungsoul at March 8, 2007 01:41 PM

What does global warming have to do with politics? There is a consensus among the scientific community (minus the eminent scholar Michael Crichton) that it is happening.

Posted by: Joe at March 8, 2007 01:46 PM

There's plenty of doubt, it just isn't warranted. By the same token that evolution is only a "theory", global warming (and the associated causes) haven't really been "proven". Some people won't believe anything they don't want to.

I think the tone and fake photo (which I didn't feel was misleading- it was credited as a "photo illustration" are excellent examples of traditional sports-talk hyperbole focused on another topic.

Posted by: josh at March 8, 2007 01:55 PM

No problem with the post, or the article. A bit of a problem with those criticizing the article before reading it.

But I do want to defend the picture -- calling it fake makes one think it is meant to fool the viewer into thinking it a documentary photograph instead of a metaphorical image illustrating the theme of the article. I think it does that well (whether or not one agrees with the piece.)

Posted by: Capybara at March 8, 2007 02:00 PM

Gravity is a just a theory also :)

Posted by: Ben K. at March 8, 2007 02:02 PM

It doesn't seem THAT one-sided. Most of what is said in the article is supported by facts (things that have already happened) or science. People have to open their eyes to this worldwide phenomena. If you're not part of the solution...

Posted by: marsrover21 at March 8, 2007 02:28 PM

[i]I don't think they're scaring us with stories about global warming (which isn't much in doubt these days). Rather, they are showing how sports are adjusting to the undeniably forthcoming changes in our global climate. It's an interesting read actually.[/i]

Well said.

Posted by: Jurgen at March 8, 2007 05:05 PM

David,

Uh-oh, now you've done it. A lot of religions can be openly criticized or questioned but not the religion of global warming. You'll end up with dozens of comments on this subject.

Posted by: largebill at March 8, 2007 05:59 PM

If only every drop of that water was a paying Marlins fan...

Posted by: Josh at March 8, 2007 07:01 PM

I bet Professor Gore is ashamed that he's gone and almost drowned Dontrelle with his own personal energy habits.

Posted by: rrk at March 8, 2007 11:58 PM

What's your complaint about a fake photo? The shot of Dontrelle Willis standing in a flooded stadium is obviously not intended to be a depiction of an actual event. Your idea of a balanced piece seem to mirror those of the media as a whole: both sides of an issue must be given equal weight even when widespread agreement exists on the inaccuracy of one. In other words, you would give equal time to the flat earth society in a discussion of whether the earth is round? THAT's lousy journalism!

Posted by: Rand at March 9, 2007 12:38 AM

Hear, hear, Rand!

Posted by: Brent at March 9, 2007 07:54 AM

I think Rand has brought in a near-perfect analogy. Laying aside that apres Ptolemy, few actually believed the earth to be flat, bottom line is that no one could affect the shape of the earth no matter what they believed about it.

The Kyoto protocol, calling for a one-third decrease in energy consumption among "developed" nations (i.e., China=not) over ten years was expected to have an effect of 0.05 degrees Centigrade (that would be less than one-tenth of one degree F) in terms of the earth's surface temp. So, to put that in street terms, you could shut down your hvac system and shut off your electricity at home for FOUR MONTHS in a year and not achieve the goal.

Go for it, Rand.

Posted by: rrk at March 9, 2007 03:31 PM

There is a consensus among the scientific community (minus the eminent scholar Michael Crichton) that it is happening.

Science doesn't work by consensus. People need to get that through their heads.

Posted by: Steven Andrew Miller at March 10, 2007 03:04 PM
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