'Population Expert' Paul Ehrlich?

An obituary for an alarmist climatologist refers to Erlich, author of the hysterical, now-discredited tome "The Population Bomb," as a population expert. In his 1968 book Ehrlich called for the government to take immediate action to control population in order to prevent mass starvation in America.

How absolutely and totally wrong do your predictions have to be before the media stops calling you an "expert" in your field? The Times laid down a marker in its deeply sympathetic Tuesday obituary for alarmist climatologist Stephen Schneider, in which writer Douglas Martin identified Paul Ehrlich as a "biologist and population expert."

You may remember Ehrlich as the author of the hysterically alarmist, now totally discredited 1968 best-seller "The Population Bomb," which called for the U.S. government to take "immediate action" to halt population growth, in order to avert mass death by starvation in the 1970s.

Dr. Schneider wrote books on the effects of climate change on areas as diverse as politics and wildlife. He advised the administration of every president from Richard M. Nixon to Barack Obama and was part of a United Nations panel on climate change that shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former Vice President Al Gore.

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In a statement, Mr. Gore called Dr. Schneider "a prolific researcher and author, co-founder of the journal Climatic Change and a wonderful communicator" who greatly contributed "to the advancement of climate science."

In an interview on Monday, the biologist and population expert Paul R. Ehrlich said, "I don't think anybody has worked harder and longer to educate the public on climate issues in particular and science issues in general."