Author Topic: Bush Administration cut 8 pages from CDC report on Global Warming  (Read 688 times)

ieffinhatecardio

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More censorship from our pals Bush/Cheney. The saddest part of this situation is the Democrats pretending they're actually going to do something about it.

http://news.monstersandcritics.com/usa/news/article_1369175.php/White_House_redacted_climate_change_testimony

US News
White House redacted climate change testimony
By Karyn Chenoweth
Oct 27, 2007, 15:33 GMT

Bush administration officials admit that they redacted testimony on climate change delivered to Congress Tuesday by the head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Senate Democrats are seeking an investigation into what occurred in the White House review of the report on global warming and public health, reports ABC News.

The original, unedited testimony presented to Congress by Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and obtained by ABC News was 14 pages long, but the White House Office of Management and Budget edited the final version down to a mere six pages.

Many of the details in CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding's Senate testimony were deleted, though she did link global warming to health. She says, "Weather is inextricably linked to health.

We see that in the kinds of weather events that occur every day. We see it seasonally, with the relationship to influenza. We see it over years in the consequence of things like El Nino. And I believe we'll see this on a much longer time frame in the context of our changing climate."

Several U.S. news media reports, quoting unnamed sources, said the Bush administration cut more than half of Dr. Gerberding's prepared Senate testimony --- from 14 pages down to six pages. White House officials removed statements such as the "CDC considers climate change a serious public health concern."

White House Press Secretary Dana Perino says the testimony was cut because it did not match a recent report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC. "We have experts and scientists across this administration that can take a look at that testimony and say, this is an error or this doesn't make sense."

One of the lead authors of the IPCC report says Dr. Gerberding's original testimony was scientifically accurate. Dr. Jonathan Patz is an environmental health professor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He says, "I do not find any grounds that anything should have been excluded by the administration."

Dr. Gerberding said in a statement Wednesday that the editing did not change the underlying message of her testimony to the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. The IPCC report describes in detail how climate change would lead to effects such as heat waves, cold spells, extreme weather events and weather disasters, air pollution, increased infectious diseases, and increased waterborne and vector-borne infectious diseases.

But Senate Democrats, including Chairman Barbara Boxer, wrote President Bush stating that the public has a right to know all of the facts about global warming and the threat it poses to their families and communities.