photizo said:
An "implication" is a logical relationship. If his reasoning is fallacious, this does not necessarily imply an intent to deceive...there isn't enough information present for you to make such "fabrications and slanders"...
This is what the guy wrote:
"But who are the skeptics? A few examples reveal that they are numerous and well-qualified. - - - - 32,000 have signed the petition, including more than 9,000 Ph.Ds. - - - - More than 700 scientists have endorsed a 231-page Senate minority report - - - - - - More than 800 scientists heard 80 presentations in March. They endorsed an 881-page document, - - - - "
He specifically listed those people as examples of "the skeptics".
Then he tells us, explicitly, what "the skeptics" (same term) believe that makes them "skeptics", i.e. different:
"- - the skeptics believe the warming is natural and contributions from man are minimal and certainly not potentially catastrophic - - - - skeptics argue that CO2 is not a pollutant but vital for plant life - - - skeptics believe that climate models are grossly overpredicting future warming from rising concentrations of carbon dioxide - - - "
Now the fact is that those 9000 PhDs, 32,000 scientists, 700 scientists, and 800 scientists, do not all (or even most) agree with both the first and third and first part of the second of those, and everyone agrees with the second part of the second one, not just "skeptics".
The fact is also that that first fact is well known and widely publicized by now, and every writer doing even minimal research for such an article has been so informed. Those were deceptive propaganda handouts in the first place, years ago, and they are now lies.
So the writer is either very, very careless and slipshod and ignorant, or deliberately lying: either way, at this stage in the propaganda battle he is retailing lies. Those statements of his there cannot hide behind the confusion of their earlier promulgation - they have been debunked, and are now lies. There is no excuse for them any more.