and its being shown that a large part of the data that has been used to reach that consensus has been manipulated to reach a predetermined conclusion and in light of this agencies have been back tracking from those conclusions.
When faced with new information which calls into question the validity of theories and data underpinning previous results, adjusting the conclusions accordingly is actually forward progress, not "backtracking". At least from a scientific standpoint.
It's like if I have a bunch of small blue spheres, and a bunch of big red cubes, and I conclude from this that red things are bigger than blue things. But then later I get some small red cubes and big blue spheres; I must adjust the conclusion, so that I now suspect that blue things are more likely to be round than red things. But at the end of the day it's still just a prediction; it may need further refinement as more data becomes available. That a prediction is shown to be wrong only demonstrates that the underlying model is flawed, not that it's entirely junk.
The key here is that some of the data and conclusions have been called into question. Not all of it. But, as happens all too often, doubts raised about 5% of a conclusion tend to undermine the 95% which is perfectly valid as well.
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