Passive Voice sentences
BAHASA INGGRIS 2 #
Find at least 8 Passive Voice sentences of articles or stories and specify tenses of each of the passive voice
------------------------------------------------------------------
HUMAN-CAUSED GLOBAL WARMING
The debate on global warming has, to its detriment, long since ceased to be a scientific one. Instead, moral fervor for this cause has become a leading religion of our time.
Maintaining the fiction that human-caused global warming is so dangerous that it requires the restructuring of the world economy has come to involve the dedicated efforts of a legion of disciples. Here’s a brief description of some of the main ways that they pursue their agenda.
McCarthyism and legal intimidation
The Attorney General of California, Bill Lockyer, supported by the environmental activist groups Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council, issued suit in September, 2006, against the six largest U.S. and Japanese automakers for damages to the environment caused by vehicle greenhouse gas emissions. Lockyer alleges that his goal is to hold General Motors, Toyota, Ford, Honda, Chrysler and Nissan accountable for the monies that taxpayers are expending to address the harms of global warming. The perceived harms include reduced winter snow, coastal erosion, ozone pollution, seawater intrusion into drinking water supplies, adverse impacts on endangered wildlife and enhanced wildfire risk.
For their part, in a separate suit, the automakers are challenging the Californian emission standards specified under a 2004 ruling by the Air Resources Board, by claiming that matters of fuel-efficiency are an exclusive responsibility of the federal government.
In targeting U.S. car manufacturers alone, Lockyer’s suit exhibits an astonishing selectivity. Do no other manufacturers omit carbon dioxide? If damages were to be awarded - global warming being by definition a worldwide phenomenon - would that give several billion other persons a precedent by which to sue? What about human exhalation; are Californians next going to be taxed for breathing?
That human-caused global warming is damaging to the planetary environment (or can even be identified), is an unproven, and perhaps rather unlikely, hypothesis. Yet Lockyer is proposing that a jury of lay people, based on the preponderance of the evidence, will establish the truth of a matter which - after 15 years of argument, and expenditure of around US $50 billion of research funds –the cream of the world’s climate scientists have been unable to resolve.
Though Lockyer’s suit and arguments might seem merely silly, his tactics in pursuing his agenda are downright sinister. For rather than seeking to establish that the Californian laws will actually serve to check global warming, Lockyer instead has decided to attack auto makers’ potential scientific advisors. In pre-trial discovery, he has asked a federal court to force disclosure of all communications and documents between the car companies and a group of 18 high profile climate sceptics. Most of those named are American citizens, but an international flavour is conferred by the inclusion of at least one British and one Canadian citizen.
The intent is clearly twofold. First, a fishing expedition for material that might be useful to the state in pursuing its case. And second, a warning shot across the bows of all climate sceptics that they speak on this issue, in private let alone in public, at their own peril.
It is interesting to ponder why these particular 18 sceptics made Lockyer’s A-list, for there are clearly many hundreds of well-credentialed scientists who question the conventional global warming wisdom. These other climate rationalists may feel happy at being omitted, not because they have done anything wrong but because no-one likes legal intimidation of this type.
Intimidatory legal threats of the Lockyer type have started to mount against the oil, electric power, auto and other companies whose emissions can be alleged to be linked to “global warming”, with at least 16 cases pending in U.S. federal and state courts. In Mississippi, a class action has been mounted against literally dozens of companies for damages for destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina, the power of which is alleged to have resulted from these companies pumping the atmosphere full of greenhouse gases. Again, it is simply preposterous to believe that a lay jury will have the capability to decide on the “truth” of such assertions when the only thing that the relevant expert scientists are agreed on is that there is no such truth.
Nonetheless, and though they are incompetent to determine scientific truths, legal actions of this type exert a powerful intimidatory pressure on many businessmen and scientists, far beyond the particular individuals who are directly involved. And similar intimidation is now also rampant outside the courts, for example on the web, where notorious climate alarmists are currently trying to prevent skeptical views being aired. As a typical example, George Monbiot’s recent shrill polemic on global warming, “Heat”, is associated with a web page that both talks of “climate criminals” and uses blazing red graphics to let various public celebrities know that “George is watching” their carbon usage.
As a type of modern McCarthyism, these types of intimidation can only serve to stifle informed public debate on climate change. It is particularly deplorable for an Attorney General to be involved in such actions. Recalling Lockyer’s earlier track record of inhibiting scientific evidence, for instance during a 2001 gun-control debate when he gagged California state experts who opposed his plans, one wonders whether his latest action might not provoke a friends-of-court backlash from some of the many Americans who can recognize an attack on their constitutional rights when they see one.
On cue, up pops an amicus brief, not in California but in the US Supreme Court, in support of the Environmental Agency’s 2003 decision not to regulate carbon dioxide emissions under the Clean Air Act. The EPA decision is being challenged by a coalition of 12 states and non-profit organizations, and the amicus brief has been lodged by 8 well established, rationalist climate scientists.
And now, hot on the heels of these intimidatory U.S. court actions come reports of unbalanced press treatment of the climate change discussion in New Zealand and Australia, attempts to muzzle public discussion by the Royal Societies of London and New Zealand, and media manipulation by the U.S. Academy of Sciences and the U.S. Climate Change Science Program - all accompanied by a worldwide propaganda blitz for Mr Al Gore’s movie “An Inconvenient Truth”.
Bias if not censorship in the print media
In a small country such as New Zealand there is a high risk of press bias influencing public policy outcomes about complex science issues. With a market of only 4 million people to sell into, New Zealand media outlets are of limited diversity. The danger that journalistic sheep-like behaviour will inhibit discussion of important public issues is therefore ever present, and has indeed been manifest in the debate, or rather lack of it, on global warming.
Leaving aside that this sentence is a highly confused and inaccurate account of the “hockey stick”, the very same day The Press rejected an article by experienced climate researcher Dr. Gerrit van der Lingen titled “The Broken Hockey Stick”. Dr. van der Lingen’s article explained something that the New Zealand public have not yet been fully informed about - that the hockey stick construction by Penn State paleoclimatologist Dr. Michael Mann and co-authors, which was highlighted by the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its 2001 assessment, has been found to be flawed beyond repair by both a committee of the National Academy of Sciences and an experts' report for a U.S. House committee. Yet Dr. Whitehead and The Press continued to use the hockey-stick as proof of human-caused global warming, and will brook no correction.
A second New Zealand example from earlier this year came when leading weekly magazines North & South and The Listener, and the large circulation newspapers, the NZ Herald and Sunday Star Times, all declined to publish an opinion piece that I submitted to them, titled “The Global Warming Emperor Has No Clothes”. Submission of the article was suggested by local scientists who were strongly concerned about the imbalance in the New Zealand climate change debate.
That the piece was rejected by so many editors reflects, of course, not conspiracy but group think - if indeed thought rather than reflex was involved.
Now posted on the NZ Climate Science Coalition’s website, Carter’s article relates several important facts about contemporary climate that remain unknown to most members of the general public. Such as: that global average temperature has not increased over the last seven years, despite the continuing rise in human-caused greenhouse emissions; that late 20th century temperatures were warm as part of a solar-driven recovery from the Little Ice Age; and that during natural climate cycling, changes in temperature precede their parallel changes in carbon dioxide.
In neighbouring Australia, most of the metropolitan papers also have a long record of unbalanced coverage of the global warming issue. This was exemplified recently by their treatment of the show-stopper of a speech given at the European Union Summit in Finland by Professor Vaclav Klaus, President of the Czech Republic. Klaus, who is a former distinguished Professor of Economics, challenged the conventional wisdom on global warming, and stressed the importance of nuclear energy. In direct contradiction to the views expressed by Prime Ministers Blair (UK) and Balkenende (Nederlands) - that human-caused global warming will cause world climate to reach a dangerous tipping point within 10 to 15 years - Klaus said that "what is concisely referred to as global warming is a fatal mistake of the present time". He also indicated, correctly, that before alarm is raised, first, “a reply must be given to the question whether global warming is occurring, and second, if it is, are humans to blame”?
Given the long-lasting evangelism of major European Union (EU) nations about the risks posed by global warming - and the pressures that they have exerted on USA and Australia to sign the Kyoto Protocol - it was almost sensational news that a head-of-state inside the EU tent is a considered climate sceptic. Yet no major Australian metropolitan papers highlighted this news item; and four of them (The Australian, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Courier-Mail, together with the Auckland N.Z. Herald) also chose not to publish a brief letter to the editor that drew attention to President Klaus’ views.
What about radio, TV and film?
The censorship by the print media that rationalist climate scientists regularly experience, examples of which have just been discussed, is but part of a much wider problem that involves also radio, television and film coverage of the climate change issue.
A startling insight into the way that modern “documentary” films are prepared for cable TV channels - such as Discovery Science Channel, History Channel and National Geographic Channel - is provided by Chuck Doswell.
Alarmist public presentation of the climate change issue in New Zealand and Australia is strongly fuelled also by the politically-correct attitudes of interviewers like Radio New Zealand’s Kim Hill and Chris Laidlaw, or the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Tony Jones. These well-regarded talk-show hosts choose not to interview local rationalist climate experts, but instead succumb to the cultural cringe of deferring to “overseas experts” by providing the oxygen of publicity to zany climate alarmists like the U.K.’s Lord Ron Oxburgh, Sir David King and Professor James Lovelock. One wonders why media editors thus deny the public the basic climate facts and alternative views, especially given the endless column space, air time and viewing time that they allocate to alarmist speculation, and remembering that climate change was a critical issue in New Zealand’s election in December, 2005.
New Zealand was one of the first signatories to the Kyoto Accord, with the signing justified to voters by government estimates that the country would make a profit of around NZ $350 million from the anticipated sale of carbon credits earned by its once-thriving forestry industry. Alas, a change in the carbon accounting rules, and a turndown in forestry investment, have turned that hoped for credit of up to 55 million tons into a deficit of 36 million tons, and this translates into a likely bill, depending upon the costs of tradable carbon credits, of between NZ$0.5 billion and NZ$1.5 billion. At around 1% of New Zealand’s GDP, the financial turnaround is not small beer. This was reflected by New Zealand’s minority Labour party only being able to remain in government by agreeing last year to new coalition partner demands that plans for the introduction of a carbon tax be dropped. Since the election, the government has floundered to come up with rational climate change and energy policies. In order to placate green interests, ministers have even toyed with the reintroduction of a deeply damaging “climate change” provision into the development approval process, by allowing amendments to be tabled to its own Resource Management Act.
It is therefore greatly in the real New Zealand public interest that the national press be vigilant to all sides of the climate debate, and rigorously scrutinize pronouncements by governments and pressure groups alike. Instead, they compliantly and uncritically report climate propaganda from sources that are known to be partial.
Media bias is worldwide
Media bias about global warming is not just a local problem, confined to small, far flung countries like New Zealand and Australia. Its widespread nature is exemplified by the blistering indictment of the U.S. press performance delivered on September 25th by U.S. Senator Inhofe.
The response to Senator Inhofe’s speech was perhaps predictable. Many mainstream media outlets chose to ignore it. A few, like CNN, through reporter Miles O’Brien, indulged in unsuccessful attempts to pick holes in the Senator’s science, a tactic pursued with even more vehemence but equal lack of success by green activist websites. Self-awareness not being a strength of most media workers, that scarcely a peep of mea culpa was to be heard is entirely unsurprising.
PASSIVE VOICE SENTENCES
1. Most of those named are American citizens, but an international flavour is conferred by the inclusion of at least one British and one Canadian citizen. (SIMPLE PRESENT)
2. In Mississippi, a class action has been mounted against literally dozens of companies for damages for destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina (PRESENT PERFECT)
3. The EPA decision is being challenged by a coalition of 12 states and non-profit organizations, and the amicus brief has been lodged by 8 well established, rationalist climate scientists. (PRESET CONTINUOUS)
4. Leaving aside that this sentence is a highly confused and inaccurate account of the “hockey stick”, the very same day The Press rejected an article by experienced climate researcher Dr. Gerrit van der Lingen titled “The Broken Hockey Stick”
(SIMPLE PRESENT)
5. Dr. van der Lingen’s article explained something that the New Zealand public have not yet been fully informed about - that the hockey stick construction by Penn State paleoclimatologist Dr. Michael Mann and co-authors, which was highlighted by the United Nations’ (PRESENT PERFECT)
6. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its 2001 assessment, has been found to be flawed beyond repair by both a committee of the National Academy of Sciences and an experts' report for a U.S. House committee. (PRESENT PERFECT)
7. Submission of the article was suggested by local scientists who were strongly concerned about the imbalance in the New Zealand climate change debate. (PAST CONTINUOUS)
8. That the piece was rejected by so many editors reflects, of course, not conspiracy but group think - if indeed thought rather than reflex was involved. (PAST CONTINUOUS)
9. This was exemplified recently by their treatment of the show-stopper of a speech given at the European Union Summit in Finland by Professor Vaclav Klaus, President of the Czech Republic. (PAST CONTINUOUS)
10. which have just been discussed ( BE PRESENT PERFECT)
11. History Channel and National Geographic Channel - is provided by Chuck Doswell.
(SIMPLE PRESENT)
12. Alarmist public presentation of the climate change issue in New Zealand and Australia is strongly fuelled also by the politically-correct attitudes of interviewers like Radio New Zealand’s Kim Hill and Chris Laidlaw, or the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Tony Jones. (SIMPLE PRESENT)
13. It is therefore greatly in the real New Zealand public interest that the national press be vigilant to all sides of the climate debate, and rigorously scrutinize pronouncements by governments and pressure groups alike. (SIMPLE PRESENT)
14. Its widespread nature is exemplified by the blistering indictment of the U.S
(SIMPLE PRESENT)
Find at least 8 Passive Voice sentences of articles or stories and specify tenses of each of the passive voice
------------------------------------------------------------------
HUMAN-CAUSED GLOBAL WARMING
The debate on global warming has, to its detriment, long since ceased to be a scientific one. Instead, moral fervor for this cause has become a leading religion of our time.
Maintaining the fiction that human-caused global warming is so dangerous that it requires the restructuring of the world economy has come to involve the dedicated efforts of a legion of disciples. Here’s a brief description of some of the main ways that they pursue their agenda.
McCarthyism and legal intimidation
The Attorney General of California, Bill Lockyer, supported by the environmental activist groups Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council, issued suit in September, 2006, against the six largest U.S. and Japanese automakers for damages to the environment caused by vehicle greenhouse gas emissions. Lockyer alleges that his goal is to hold General Motors, Toyota, Ford, Honda, Chrysler and Nissan accountable for the monies that taxpayers are expending to address the harms of global warming. The perceived harms include reduced winter snow, coastal erosion, ozone pollution, seawater intrusion into drinking water supplies, adverse impacts on endangered wildlife and enhanced wildfire risk.
For their part, in a separate suit, the automakers are challenging the Californian emission standards specified under a 2004 ruling by the Air Resources Board, by claiming that matters of fuel-efficiency are an exclusive responsibility of the federal government.
In targeting U.S. car manufacturers alone, Lockyer’s suit exhibits an astonishing selectivity. Do no other manufacturers omit carbon dioxide? If damages were to be awarded - global warming being by definition a worldwide phenomenon - would that give several billion other persons a precedent by which to sue? What about human exhalation; are Californians next going to be taxed for breathing?
That human-caused global warming is damaging to the planetary environment (or can even be identified), is an unproven, and perhaps rather unlikely, hypothesis. Yet Lockyer is proposing that a jury of lay people, based on the preponderance of the evidence, will establish the truth of a matter which - after 15 years of argument, and expenditure of around US $50 billion of research funds –the cream of the world’s climate scientists have been unable to resolve.
Though Lockyer’s suit and arguments might seem merely silly, his tactics in pursuing his agenda are downright sinister. For rather than seeking to establish that the Californian laws will actually serve to check global warming, Lockyer instead has decided to attack auto makers’ potential scientific advisors. In pre-trial discovery, he has asked a federal court to force disclosure of all communications and documents between the car companies and a group of 18 high profile climate sceptics. Most of those named are American citizens, but an international flavour is conferred by the inclusion of at least one British and one Canadian citizen.
The intent is clearly twofold. First, a fishing expedition for material that might be useful to the state in pursuing its case. And second, a warning shot across the bows of all climate sceptics that they speak on this issue, in private let alone in public, at their own peril.
It is interesting to ponder why these particular 18 sceptics made Lockyer’s A-list, for there are clearly many hundreds of well-credentialed scientists who question the conventional global warming wisdom. These other climate rationalists may feel happy at being omitted, not because they have done anything wrong but because no-one likes legal intimidation of this type.
Intimidatory legal threats of the Lockyer type have started to mount against the oil, electric power, auto and other companies whose emissions can be alleged to be linked to “global warming”, with at least 16 cases pending in U.S. federal and state courts. In Mississippi, a class action has been mounted against literally dozens of companies for damages for destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina, the power of which is alleged to have resulted from these companies pumping the atmosphere full of greenhouse gases. Again, it is simply preposterous to believe that a lay jury will have the capability to decide on the “truth” of such assertions when the only thing that the relevant expert scientists are agreed on is that there is no such truth.
Nonetheless, and though they are incompetent to determine scientific truths, legal actions of this type exert a powerful intimidatory pressure on many businessmen and scientists, far beyond the particular individuals who are directly involved. And similar intimidation is now also rampant outside the courts, for example on the web, where notorious climate alarmists are currently trying to prevent skeptical views being aired. As a typical example, George Monbiot’s recent shrill polemic on global warming, “Heat”, is associated with a web page that both talks of “climate criminals” and uses blazing red graphics to let various public celebrities know that “George is watching” their carbon usage.
As a type of modern McCarthyism, these types of intimidation can only serve to stifle informed public debate on climate change. It is particularly deplorable for an Attorney General to be involved in such actions. Recalling Lockyer’s earlier track record of inhibiting scientific evidence, for instance during a 2001 gun-control debate when he gagged California state experts who opposed his plans, one wonders whether his latest action might not provoke a friends-of-court backlash from some of the many Americans who can recognize an attack on their constitutional rights when they see one.
On cue, up pops an amicus brief, not in California but in the US Supreme Court, in support of the Environmental Agency’s 2003 decision not to regulate carbon dioxide emissions under the Clean Air Act. The EPA decision is being challenged by a coalition of 12 states and non-profit organizations, and the amicus brief has been lodged by 8 well established, rationalist climate scientists.
And now, hot on the heels of these intimidatory U.S. court actions come reports of unbalanced press treatment of the climate change discussion in New Zealand and Australia, attempts to muzzle public discussion by the Royal Societies of London and New Zealand, and media manipulation by the U.S. Academy of Sciences and the U.S. Climate Change Science Program - all accompanied by a worldwide propaganda blitz for Mr Al Gore’s movie “An Inconvenient Truth”.
Bias if not censorship in the print media
In a small country such as New Zealand there is a high risk of press bias influencing public policy outcomes about complex science issues. With a market of only 4 million people to sell into, New Zealand media outlets are of limited diversity. The danger that journalistic sheep-like behaviour will inhibit discussion of important public issues is therefore ever present, and has indeed been manifest in the debate, or rather lack of it, on global warming.
Leaving aside that this sentence is a highly confused and inaccurate account of the “hockey stick”, the very same day The Press rejected an article by experienced climate researcher Dr. Gerrit van der Lingen titled “The Broken Hockey Stick”. Dr. van der Lingen’s article explained something that the New Zealand public have not yet been fully informed about - that the hockey stick construction by Penn State paleoclimatologist Dr. Michael Mann and co-authors, which was highlighted by the United Nations
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its 2001 assessment, has been found to be flawed beyond repair by both a committee of the National Academy of Sciences and an experts' report for a U.S. House committee. Yet Dr. Whitehead and The Press continued to use the hockey-stick as proof of human-caused global warming, and will brook no correction.
A second New Zealand example from earlier this year came when leading weekly magazines North & South and The Listener, and the large circulation newspapers, the NZ Herald and Sunday Star Times, all declined to publish an opinion piece that I submitted to them, titled “The Global Warming Emperor Has No Clothes”. Submission of the article was suggested by local scientists who were strongly concerned about the imbalance in the New Zealand climate change debate.
That the piece was rejected by so many editors reflects, of course, not conspiracy but group think - if indeed thought rather than reflex was involved.
Now posted on the NZ Climate Science Coalition’s website, Carter’s article relates several important facts about contemporary climate that remain unknown to most members of the general public. Such as: that global average temperature has not increased over the last seven years, despite the continuing rise in human-caused greenhouse emissions; that late 20th century temperatures were warm as part of a solar-driven recovery from the Little Ice Age; and that during natural climate cycling, changes in temperature precede their parallel changes in carbon dioxide.
In neighbouring Australia, most of the metropolitan papers also have a long record of unbalanced coverage of the global warming issue. This was exemplified recently by their treatment of the show-stopper of a speech given at the European Union Summit in Finland by Professor Vaclav Klaus, President of the Czech Republic. Klaus, who is a former distinguished Professor of Economics, challenged the conventional wisdom on global warming, and stressed the importance of nuclear energy. In direct contradiction to the views expressed by Prime Ministers Blair (UK) and Balkenende (Nederlands) - that human-caused global warming will cause world climate to reach a dangerous tipping point within 10 to 15 years - Klaus said that "what is concisely referred to as global warming is a fatal mistake of the present time". He also indicated, correctly, that before alarm is raised, first, “a reply must be given to the question whether global warming is occurring, and second, if it is, are humans to blame”?
Given the long-lasting evangelism of major European Union (EU) nations about the risks posed by global warming - and the pressures that they have exerted on USA and Australia to sign the Kyoto Protocol - it was almost sensational news that a head-of-state inside the EU tent is a considered climate sceptic. Yet no major Australian metropolitan papers highlighted this news item; and four of them (The Australian, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Courier-Mail, together with the Auckland N.Z. Herald) also chose not to publish a brief letter to the editor that drew attention to President Klaus’ views.
What about radio, TV and film?
The censorship by the print media that rationalist climate scientists regularly experience, examples of which have just been discussed, is but part of a much wider problem that involves also radio, television and film coverage of the climate change issue.
A startling insight into the way that modern “documentary” films are prepared for cable TV channels - such as Discovery Science Channel, History Channel and National Geographic Channel - is provided by Chuck Doswell.
Alarmist public presentation of the climate change issue in New Zealand and Australia is strongly fuelled also by the politically-correct attitudes of interviewers like Radio New Zealand’s Kim Hill and Chris Laidlaw, or the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Tony Jones. These well-regarded talk-show hosts choose not to interview local rationalist climate experts, but instead succumb to the cultural cringe of deferring to “overseas experts” by providing the oxygen of publicity to zany climate alarmists like the U.K.’s Lord Ron Oxburgh, Sir David King and Professor James Lovelock. One wonders why media editors thus deny the public the basic climate facts and alternative views, especially given the endless column space, air time and viewing time that they allocate to alarmist speculation, and remembering that climate change was a critical issue in New Zealand’s election in December, 2005.
New Zealand was one of the first signatories to the Kyoto Accord, with the signing justified to voters by government estimates that the country would make a profit of around NZ $350 million from the anticipated sale of carbon credits earned by its once-thriving forestry industry. Alas, a change in the carbon accounting rules, and a turndown in forestry investment, have turned that hoped for credit of up to 55 million tons into a deficit of 36 million tons, and this translates into a likely bill, depending upon the costs of tradable carbon credits, of between NZ$0.5 billion and NZ$1.5 billion. At around 1% of New Zealand’s GDP, the financial turnaround is not small beer. This was reflected by New Zealand’s minority Labour party only being able to remain in government by agreeing last year to new coalition partner demands that plans for the introduction of a carbon tax be dropped. Since the election, the government has floundered to come up with rational climate change and energy policies. In order to placate green interests, ministers have even toyed with the reintroduction of a deeply damaging “climate change” provision into the development approval process, by allowing amendments to be tabled to its own Resource Management Act.
It is therefore greatly in the real New Zealand public interest that the national press be vigilant to all sides of the climate debate, and rigorously scrutinize pronouncements by governments and pressure groups alike. Instead, they compliantly and uncritically report climate propaganda from sources that are known to be partial.
Media bias is worldwide
Media bias about global warming is not just a local problem, confined to small, far flung countries like New Zealand and Australia. Its widespread nature is exemplified by the blistering indictment of the U.S. press performance delivered on September 25th by U.S. Senator Inhofe.
The response to Senator Inhofe’s speech was perhaps predictable. Many mainstream media outlets chose to ignore it. A few, like CNN, through reporter Miles O’Brien, indulged in unsuccessful attempts to pick holes in the Senator’s science, a tactic pursued with even more vehemence but equal lack of success by green activist websites. Self-awareness not being a strength of most media workers, that scarcely a peep of mea culpa was to be heard is entirely unsurprising.
PASSIVE VOICE SENTENCES
1. Most of those named are American citizens, but an international flavour is conferred by the inclusion of at least one British and one Canadian citizen. (SIMPLE PRESENT)
2. In Mississippi, a class action has been mounted against literally dozens of companies for damages for destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina (PRESENT PERFECT)
3. The EPA decision is being challenged by a coalition of 12 states and non-profit organizations, and the amicus brief has been lodged by 8 well established, rationalist climate scientists. (PRESET CONTINUOUS)
4. Leaving aside that this sentence is a highly confused and inaccurate account of the “hockey stick”, the very same day The Press rejected an article by experienced climate researcher Dr. Gerrit van der Lingen titled “The Broken Hockey Stick”
(SIMPLE PRESENT)
5. Dr. van der Lingen’s article explained something that the New Zealand public have not yet been fully informed about - that the hockey stick construction by Penn State paleoclimatologist Dr. Michael Mann and co-authors, which was highlighted by the United Nations’ (PRESENT PERFECT)
6. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in its 2001 assessment, has been found to be flawed beyond repair by both a committee of the National Academy of Sciences and an experts' report for a U.S. House committee. (PRESENT PERFECT)
7. Submission of the article was suggested by local scientists who were strongly concerned about the imbalance in the New Zealand climate change debate. (PAST CONTINUOUS)
8. That the piece was rejected by so many editors reflects, of course, not conspiracy but group think - if indeed thought rather than reflex was involved. (PAST CONTINUOUS)
9. This was exemplified recently by their treatment of the show-stopper of a speech given at the European Union Summit in Finland by Professor Vaclav Klaus, President of the Czech Republic. (PAST CONTINUOUS)
10. which have just been discussed ( BE PRESENT PERFECT)
11. History Channel and National Geographic Channel - is provided by Chuck Doswell.
(SIMPLE PRESENT)
12. Alarmist public presentation of the climate change issue in New Zealand and Australia is strongly fuelled also by the politically-correct attitudes of interviewers like Radio New Zealand’s Kim Hill and Chris Laidlaw, or the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Tony Jones. (SIMPLE PRESENT)
13. It is therefore greatly in the real New Zealand public interest that the national press be vigilant to all sides of the climate debate, and rigorously scrutinize pronouncements by governments and pressure groups alike. (SIMPLE PRESENT)
14. Its widespread nature is exemplified by the blistering indictment of the U.S
(SIMPLE PRESENT)
Komentar
Posting Komentar