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The Delinquent Teenager Who Was Mistaken for the World's Top Climate Expert Kindle Edition

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 340 ratings

"Blooming brilliant. Devastating" - Matt Ridley, author of The Rational Optimist

"...shines a hard light on the rotten heart of the IPCC" - Richard Tol, Professor of the Economics of Climate Change and convening lead author of the IPCC

"...you need to read this book. Its implications are far-reaching and the need to begin acting on them is urgent." - Ross McKitrick, Professor of Economics, University of Guelph

----

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) performs one of the most important jobs in the world. It surveys climate science research and writes a report about what it all means. This report is informally known as the Climate Bible.

Cited by governments around the world, the Climate Bible is the reason carbon taxes are being introduced, heating bills are rising, and costly new regulations are being enacted. It is why everyone thinks carbon dioxide emissions are dangerous. Put simply: the entire planet is in a tizzy because of a United Nations report.

What most of us don't know is that, rather than being written by a meticulous, upstanding professional in business attire, the Climate Bible is produced by a slapdash, slovenly teenager who has trouble distinguishing right from wrong.

This expose, by an investigative journalist, is the product of two years of research. Its conclusion: almost nothing we've been told about the IPCC is true.

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Donna Laframboise is a former National Post and Toronto Star columnist. During the 1990s she wrote investigative feature articles for Canadian magazines and newspapers. Her first book, The Princess at the Window: A New Gender Morality, was published in 1996 by Penguin Canada. Between 1998 and 2001 Ms. Laframboise was a vice president of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association. . . .

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B005UEVB8Q
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Ivy Avenue Press; 1st edition (October 9, 2011)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ October 9, 2011
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 635 KB
  • Simultaneous device usage ‏ : ‎ Unlimited
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 248 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 340 ratings

About the author

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Donna Laframboise
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Donna Laframboise is an investigative journalist. As a former vice president of the Canadian Civil Liberties Association, she is committed to free speech and to what librarians call intellectual freedom - the right of citizens to receive information from multiple points-of-view.

The Princess at the Window, 20th anniversary edition, includes a new Foreword that examines the hostile reaction to a 2016 documentary film about men's rights. Calling award-winning director Cassie Jaye "a shining example of how feminists ought to behave," Donna says the story of The Red Pill movie reveals how close minded, punitive, and tyrannical the women's movement has become.

Donna is the author of two books about the world's most important climate body - a UN organization known as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). In that context, she has been described by Germany's Der Spiegel as the IPCC's 'sharpest critic,' has testified before a committee of the British House of Commons, and has addressed audiences in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Poland, and the UK.

Her IPCC exposé, The Delinquent Teenager Who Was Mistaken for the World's Top Climate Expert, has been translated into German and Norwegian, and is available in Australia from Connor Court.

Donna blogs at BigPicNews.com. She is the author a 2016 report commissioned by the London-based Global Warming Policy Foundation. It explains that half of all published scientific literature may be wrong, including the climate research on which governments have been basing trillion-dollar decisions.

Donna holds an undergraduate degree in Women's Studies from the University of Toronto. She has been a weekly columnist for the Toronto Star and the National Post, and has served on the editorial board of the latter. Her recent work has appeared in venues as diverse as the Wall Street Journal and VancouverDesi.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
340 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book provides great insight into the IPCC's flawed process and disturbing revelations. They also describe the writing quality as extremely good, easy to read, and transparent. Readers also say the book brings rational, logical thought to the issue.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

74 customers mention "Content"64 positive10 negative

Customers find the book provides a great insight into the political and quasi-religious debate. They also say it's an important book that provides extensive documentary evidence in support. Readers also say the book reveals the true purpose and methods of the change debate in a careful and methodical manner. They say the revelations and allegations are disturbing and are supported by extensive footnotes and links.

"...It is a remarkable research and organizational effort. Proper words of praise are elusive.I was at first puzzled by the title...." Read more

"...Certainly my illusions around this organization are gone. A very informative read...." Read more

"...It's revelations and allegations are disturbing - and are supported by extensive footnotes and links that build a persuasive case that the IPCC is,..." Read more

"...At once enjoyable, disheartening, enlightening, compelling, sobering, frightening, and so on...." Read more

34 customers mention "Writing quality"34 positive0 negative

Customers find the writing quality of the book extremely good, highly readable, and finely crafted. They also say it's accessible to a broad audience.

"...The book is an easy and fast read but Laframboise's breezy writing belies the extensive research and explosive details contained therein...." Read more

"...'s casual tone, it is precisely this that makes it *accessible* to a broad audience...." Read more

"...The book is a good, but sobering read. Donna LaFramboises shows what real journalism is all about." Read more

"...that the IPCC has left should be torn to shreds by this finely crafted book...." Read more

28 customers mention "Writing style"28 positive0 negative

Customers find the writing style very well written, easy to read, and succinct. They also say it's a scathing indictment of the IPCC and the shoddy methods it uses. Readers also appreciate the transparent criticism and honest opinions. They say the book brings balance to a one-sided argument.

"...The writing style is clear and easy to read...." Read more

"...Fear not - it is concise, to the point and has no wasted word - unlike the now too-many iterations of the IPCC ARs...." Read more

"...Reading the book itself is easy and you can get through it in a couple of days (or even one day if you get hooked), however, you will almost..." Read more

"...before, but in this book she brings them all together, fleshes out the arguments, and provides extensive documentary evidence in support...." Read more

6 customers mention "Installation"6 positive0 negative

Customers find the installation in the book easy to read and not requiring a lot of technical knowledge. They also say the documentation is excellent.

"...A lot of serious work went into this book and the documentation is excellent...." Read more

"...'s guide, clearly written in accessible language with a minimum of technical jargon...." Read more

"...This book is a clear and easy read that does not require a background in science or engineering...." Read more

"...Very easy read and non technical...." Read more

A very important investigative report on the facts underlying the many myths of the IPCC
5 Stars
A very important investigative report on the facts underlying the many myths of the IPCC
Unlike reviewers Gleick and Bowles above, I have actually read "The Delinquent Teenager ...". First, in the interest of full disclosure, I am one who was privileged to read Donna's early and final drafts (as well as one whose own work has been cited in the book).One cannot over-estimate the importance of this book in addressing the shortcomings of far too many so-called science journalists (and other media mavens) who have been content to let the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) rest on its self-anointed laurels for far too many years.Until this book, far too many questions about the IPCC had been unasked - by far too many influential people. Donna has asked these questions, and meticulously researched the answers, which she presents in an eminently readable (and easily verifiable) fashion.As Prof. Ross McKitrick observed in his pre-publication review: "Donna Laframboise shows that the IPCC's actual operations bear little resemblance to its public reputation ... far from being an open network of top experts it has turned itself into a narrow clique of like-minded activists ... [The IPCC's] reports have come to be more like agenda-driven propaganda than competent, objective scientific assessments."A copy of "The Delinquent Teenager ..." should be placed on the bookshelf (electronic or otherwise) of every scientist, politician and government functionary who has (unwittingly or not) ever relied on the authority of the IPCC's assessment reports.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2011
Amazon recommended The Delinquent Teenager Who Was Mistaken for the World's Top Climate Expert, by Donna Laframboise, to me. That is, their algorithm picked the book as one they thought they could convince me to buy from them. They were right. Fair enough. I bought it as a Kindle download, and paid $4.99 for it. I hope the author gets $4.98 of it, as she deserves it. It is a remarkable research and organizational effort. Proper words of praise are elusive.

I was at first puzzled by the title. I knew what she was referring to, but it did seem hyperbolic, or at least "cute." After reading it, I'm not sure what else she could have called it.

We all already had learned that the IPCC (as a UN sponsored agency) had a controlling political agenda, and suffered the usual bureaucratic ineptitude. We also knew they had some amateurs (how many times did we hear "newly minted PhD" with reference to Mann). We also understood their use of a cherry-picking selection of sources of information, their hostile approach to non-conforming reviewers and papers, and a penchant for some rather absurd interpretations. They first of all were just not doing very good science. And we suspected that many in the IPCC (to include their apparent comic-relief-porn-writing chairman!) were working for their own self aggrandizement as well as likely their own fame and fortune.

But was it all a teen-age "Dog and Pony Show" gone bad? Apparently so.

The author has written a scholarly tour de force. Without her going too far into the details, it is extremely well organized and documented (with the links in the electronic version making it twice as valuable in this regard).

One minor quibble. Donna Laframboise (like many authors discussing the politics and manipulations of the alarmists rather than the science), perhaps underestimates her own well-developed critical thinking skills relative to the lack of same in the general opposition. As such I don't think that the issue of so many of the IPCC writers (reviewers - not doing original science) being shallow in their credentials is as important as the fact that they were poorly selected, often selected from NGO's with stated agendas, and just did a lousy job. Similarly, in regard to peer-review or lack thereof, the issue is whether or not the paper is conscientiously and honestly crafted, and not how it was (or was not) vetted. Much remarkable material is not peer-reviewed (like Matt Ridley's recent RSA lecture). So less regard for credentials and more for substance - please - to paraphrase of all people, Noam Chomsky. I think the point is that it was the IPCC author's near total disregard for the essential function of the comments of the expert reviewers that is the main damning point.

The author's harsh criticism of the IPCC is clearly valid. We had previously sensed their agenda trumping the scientific facts (a conniving pursuit of their political agenda at the expense of logic), and a characteristic (adult-level!) reluctance to change one's mind and admit error. The perspective offered here, of a support framework of a stereotypical "teen-ager-like" approach to insouciantly doing a job, is, I think, new.
13 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2014
I started with the thought that, "Okay, there may be some dirt here and there". I think we all have assumptions and take for granted that this organization is a benign helper of humanity, mainly because of the school system and the media. Everything associated with the UN is supposedly positive. I was genuinly surprised at the level of conflic-of-interest problems and outright deception that she documents in the IPCC. Here are just some points:

- People with strong ties to environmental activist organizations leading and writing chapters for the assessments.

- Lead authors using literature they themselves co-authored, and rejecting all relevant scientific literature and opinions of real experts.

- Adding material into the report after the expert review process is over, including literature published after its over.

- No conflict-of-interest policy until until May 2011, and even then, that policy was not enforced with the authors writing the new report, because it was introduced after the authors were selected.

And much, much more.

Certainly my illusions around this organization are gone. A very informative read. It is truly scary to think about how much influence this organization and these assessments have had on governments and politicians around the world.
12 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2011
It never ceases to amaze me to regularly come across so-called "reviews" of books on amazon by people who have not read the book in question. Pick any book on a controversial topic and you will find a stream of such outpourings masquerading as reviews by ideologically driven non-readers.

Are such people so insecure in their own positions or worldviews, or so dogmatic that they cannot even bother to read a book that takes a stance different from the one they hold? Instead they need to immediately login and launch into abusive tirades, putdowns and ad hominem attacks? Real reviews may be positive or negative, laudatory or critical, but reviews by non-readers are dishonest, hypocritical and pathetic. That some of these non-readers are recognisably well known names and partisans in the very issues or debates covered in a particular book compounds the hypocrisy.

Let me repeat, one cannot honestly review a book one has not read. Nor can one attack an author without giving chapter and verse examples from that book of where he or she has committed the heinous and fallacious errors of which he/she is accused.

I have read Donna Laframboise's "The Delinquent Teenager Who Was Mistaken for the World's Top Climate Expert". It has a cleverly provocative title that some true believers in catastrophic anthropogenic global warming (CAGW) could consider sacrilegious. The book is however not an argument against CAGW as such. It is neither an academic treatise nor a polemic, but an investigative report into the operations of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)... an investigation that uncovers a sleazy underbelly to a powerful and prestigious organisation before which much of the world's media, opinion makers and political leaders genuflect.

Laframboise brings a reporter's eyes and nose to the IPCC. The book is an easy and fast read but Laframboise's breezy writing belies the extensive research and explosive details contained therein. It's revelations and allegations are disturbing - and are supported by extensive footnotes and links that build a persuasive case that the IPCC is, in fact, a law unto itself - a hotbed of cronyism, shoddy science in the service of political activism, and politically-correct hand wringing. If she is even half correct, the IPCC has a serious case to answer. Read it for yourself, follow her links, examine her footnotes and then give your critique or rebuttal. Until then hold your tongue... and your typing fingers.
217 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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Eva T.
5.0 out of 5 stars Sehr erhellend
Reviewed in Germany on June 26, 2024
Die Autorin Donna Laframboise, eine kanadische Investigativ-Journalistin, hat akribisch recherchiert (wer sich die Mühe machen will, kann einiges selbst nachprüfen). Ihr Schreibstil ist dennoch nicht trocken oder geifernd, sondern unterhaltsam. Wenn alle ihre Ausführungen stimmen, gebührt dem IPPC ein vorderer Platz unter den größten politischen Propagandaschleudern, die es je gegeben hat.
akagypsy
5.0 out of 5 stars Climate alarmists are politicians NOT scientists
Reviewed in Canada on June 16, 2020
Excellent well-researched FACTS about the dismal scientific “proof” consistently trotted out before us by global politicians triggered by climate change. Finding a way to make the citizens of advanced countries pay for their air, (CO2 emissions) ,is indeed the final frontier of government taxation . Use of the following jargon by the global elite should not be acceptable given the scam of climate change ; “green” , “smart”, “sustainable” , “consensus” , “carbon cap and trade credits” . The IPCC is a sham , masquerading as the definitive authority on climate issues, while basing it’s claims on the dubious credibility of their so-called experts. A very good read in understanding how in the 21st century, proper scientific enquiry and integrity , come well behind political expediency in promoting the false narrative of a “climate emergency”
3 people found this helpful
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Dr Brian JM Timms
5.0 out of 5 stars Everybody should read this book
Reviewed in Australia on November 12, 2021
excellent book looking at how the IPCC determines and manipulates the evidence.
Most people do not understand how the IPCC is meant to operate and this book is an interesting insight
Whether you believe in CO2 emissions being the major cause of Global Warming or not you should read this book
RAS
5.0 out of 5 stars A necessary investigation
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 19, 2014
Much discussion of climate change is based on appeals to authority. For many, there can be no greater authority than the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). After all, its work is performed by thousands of the world's top scientists, reviewing the peer reviewed literature and producing a synthesis of what we know about climate change. Donna Laframboise is a Canadian journalist and she has done some investigation to verify if all this is true. And what she discovered was a surprise to her, and I must say, also to me when I read her book.
- The IPCC does not rely only on peer reviewed literature as it claims. Laframboise looked at the many references in the more than 3000 pages of the IPCC reports. There were thousands of references to non-peer reviewed literature - even to newspaper and magazine articles, reports from bodies such as the WWF and so on. In some places, over 40% of the references were to so-called "grey literature" (non-peer reviewed reports).
- Deadlines were repeatedly stretched so that references that supported IPCC positions could be included. In some cases these additional references were added months after the chapters of the report were supposed to have finished.
- In many cases relevant literature was ignored, and IPCC chapter authors were able to high-light their own work at the expense of other work.
- The IPCC does not involve thousands of the world's top scientists as it claims. Many of them were young, inexperienced and in some cases not even qualified. It is a shock to find out that some of the lead authors were in their mid-20s, and some had not even started their PhDs. What many of these young people had, though, was a commitment to the cause.
- Part of the cadres has come from organisations like Greenpeace, WWF and other environmental campaign groups. For a body that seeks to be impartial and objective, the IPCC is recruiting people who have an ideological axe to grind.
- The IPCC has never been subjected to serious auditing. It has gotten away with things because the media have looked all the time aside. No matter appalling the behaviour, the IPCC is still treated as the impartial scientific body it pretends to be. In the same way, the scientific journals and academies are also responsible for not asking questions.
- The IPCC is a political body first and foremost. Delegates are often chosen to represent the different UN nations, not for their competence.
This book really is worthwhile reading, particularly for those who still have some illusions about the IPCC.
7 people found this helpful
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V. Pierre
5.0 out of 5 stars Décoiffant et honnête
Reviewed in France on March 17, 2013
Ce livre met en perspective avec force et vigueur et surtout des arguments la validité du concept écologiste du pannel. Ce qui est particulièrement marquant est l'abus de la "peer review" qui est plutôt pire review retenu "urbi et orbi" par l'IPCC; il est évident que cette technique ne permet pas des avancées scientifiques majeures, car elle bloque toute initiative non conforme.

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