XPost: misc.legal, alt.freespeech, alt.news-media
XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.guns
In a previous column, I detailed Michael Mann’s unraveling legal crusade, focusing on his courtroom defeat and the staggering financial penalty
levied against him.
Readers' responses were passionate, particularly about the absence of commentary on Mark Steyn.
Let me be direct: the omission was intentional. The Mann saga deserved
focus, and Steyn’s fight deserves its own chapter.
This is that chapter.
Author, broadcaster, and unflinching cultural critic Mark Steyn did not
merely weather a defamation trial. He survived it physically, financially,
and morally when most would have buckled under the strain. What began as a battle over words became a battle over the soul of free speech.
The Lawsuit That Should Have Never Been
In 2012, Michael Mann filed a defamation suit against Steyn, the National Review, the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), and Rand Simberg.
Simberg had published a blog post likening Mann’s professional conduct to
Penn State’s handling of Jerry Sandusky. Steyn quoted Simberg’s post and
added his commentary, calling Mann’s famous "hockey stick" graph
fraudulent.
Rather than engage in rebuttal, Mann went for the jugular. He sued.
Steyn endured a legal process that lasted over a decade, dragging him
through courtrooms, draining his resources, and exposing him to smears.
While National Review and CEI were eventually dismissed from the case,
Steyn fought alone. There were no corporate backers or legal insulation,
just Steyn, his pen, and a mountain of principle.
The Cost of Conviction
Principles, however, are expensive. Steyn didn’t just face Mann’s lawyers;
he faced time. And time brought more than court dates.
In 2022, while doing what he always does, broadcasting the truth to an international audience, Steyn suffered a heart attack on air. He would
suffer another soon after.
Still, he pressed on. Even with his health failing and finances strained,
he refused to settle. Steyn said no, where others bowed out or apologized
to stop the pain. He believed that calling out what he viewed as
scientific fraud was his right and his duty.
Few in the pundit class today are made of such steel.
The Jury’s Verdict and the Aftershock
After all the drama, the jury delivered a verdict as contradictory as the
case itself. They awarded Mann one dollar in compensatory damages from
both Steyn and Simberg. One dollar. This was the jury’s way of
acknowledging that Mann was defamed, but not in any meaningful or provable
way.
Then came the shock: the jury levied $1 million in punitive damages
against Steyn, while for Simberg, it was just $1,000.
It was as if the jury wanted to punish Steyn not for what he said but for
who he is: a thorn in the establishment's side, a commentator who refuses
to accept consensus as holy writ.
The penalty felt personal, vindictive, and divorced from the actual
impact.
A Victory, Years in the Making
That injustice would not stand. In May 2025, a D.C. Superior Court judge
issued a stunning reversal. The punitive damages were slashed from $1
million to just $5,000, a more proportional figure given the $1
compensatory judgment.
In legal terms, the court found that the original award was “grossly excessive.” But in human terms, it was something far more profound: vindication.
Steyn had stood alone for over a decade, enduring the weight of the court
and the pressure of being a target in the climate orthodoxy’s war on
dissent. He didn’t just win on paper; he won morally, publicly, and
profoundly.
A Warning Shot Against SLAPP Tactics
This case, like Mann’s broader legal campaign, embodied a SLAPP, a
Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation. These lawsuits are
designed not to win but to exhaust, intimidate, and silence. And in the
world of climate science, where the political and the empirical are often inseparable, they have been used to devastating effect.
Steyn refused to be silenced. His actions likely discourage future
plaintiffs from using defamation law as a bludgeon against ideological
foes.
We are entering a new phase in the debate over climate change and its scientific underpinnings. For years, critics were painted as conspiracy theorists or shills.
But the Mann-Steyn trial pulled back the curtain on the tactics used to
enforce climate orthodoxy. The courtroom was not a cathedral of truth but
a theater stage, and in the end, the audience wasn’t buying it.
The Power of the Individual
Mark Steyn’s story is not just about one man’s fight against the system.
It’s about the system’s fear of one man.
Here is a commentator, armed with nothing more than sharp prose and the conviction to use it, who stood his ground against a climate elite armed
with media backing, institutional credibility, and nearly bottomless
resources. He didn’t just survive; he exposed their fragility.
That Steyn did so while recovering from multiple heart attacks and footing
his own legal bills only adds to the gravity of his achievement. Most
people would have walked away, and most would have compromised.
Steyn doubled down.
The Vindication We Needed
It’s fitting that this ruling came shortly after Michael Mann’s own
courtroom defeats, wherein he was ordered to pay nearly a million dollars
in legal fees after a court found he had misled jurors about his financial losses. Mann, once untouchable, now carries the stain of judicial rebuke.
In contrast, Steyn walks away with a $5,000 penalty and a global
acknowledgment that he was targeted not because he was wrong but because
he was fearless.
No Apology Needed
This column isn’t an apology for omitting Steyn’s saga from the Mann
piece.
It’s an elevation.
A deliberate decision to give a principled man the dedicated space he
earned.
Mark Steyn didn’t win because the courts suddenly grew sympathetic to
dissent. He won because he endured long enough to expose the hollowness of
the attack against him.
If you're tired of being told what to think by bureaucrats in lab coats,
if you believe lawsuits shouldn’t police speech, and if you admire men who
risk everything to preserve truth, take a moment and tip your hat to Mark Steyn.
He didn’t just fight the climate consensus; he fought the machine and
lived to write about it.
https://pjmedia.com/david-manney/2025/05/24/mark-steyns-vindication-a- triumph-for-free-speech-and-personal-fortitude-n4940136
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