Despite the fact that a peer-reviewed journal was cancelled for the stated reason that it published work critical of the IPCC claims, two distractions have now surfaced:
If the publishers discovered all this in 24 hours and gave the editors a chance to defend themselves, and made a decision to cancel the journal, they are superhuman. So I'd love to hear any theory as to what actually went on except for either:
Please note that I am not commenting on either the question of whether pal review happened, or on whether the research was sound. Not having read it, it might be the worst research ever published. But the right scholarly way to deal with bad research is by writing rebuttals, not by punishing the editors. The right way to deal with pal review is by a careful process of correct procedure - was it deliberate, was it dishonest, did the editors get a chance to respond? You can't do that in 24 hours.
The message being spread now is that somehow all 'skeptics' have become tarnished by the alleged bad actions of this journal. Let's put that to bed forthwith. The journal concerned was:
Pattern Recognition in Physics
In summary, we see the catastrophists defending their turf, as always, with strong arm tactics instead of reason. When caught out, they have tried to turn the tables by claiming that, in the case of this journal, the editors behaved badly - that is, they behaved the same way the catastrophists have consistently behaved.
Pal review is bad, it infects peer review in all fields, and contributes to the (IMO) decreasing relevance of peer-reviewed publication for the future of good science. But when it is tacitly allowed everywhere and only objected to when one wants to do nasty things to those one disapproves of, one is not upholding what is right, but only pretending to uphold it. That is, it is hypocrisy. It will be very interesting to watch further developments and see if that is what happened in this case.
Links:
[1] http://peacelegacy.org/user/5
[2] http://www.addtoany.com/share_save?linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fpeacelegacy.org%2Farticles%2Fmore-copernicus-publications-scandal&linkname=More%20on%20the%20Copernicus%20Publications%20Scandal
[3] http://peacelegacy.org/category/topics/censorship
[4] http://peacelegacy.org/category/topics/peer-review
[5] http://peacelegacy.org/category/topics/scandals