Hey CuzzA, yes, great discussion! Here's something I want to lay out in terms of "scientists fudging numbers." Unfortunately, there has been a recent spate of "fudging" across scientific disciplines that have come to light. A number of papers have recently been retracted due to scientific misconduct. These papers span the fields from ecology to developmental biology (cloning). Sadly this misconduct does tarnish the entire field of science. Fortunately, this misconduct is dealt with swiftly and harshly within the scientific community.
It is really important to note, however, that for the climate change work, the leaked emails were blown out of proportion and misrepresented. Many of the leaked emails about scientists talking about "tricks of data" etc. were largely taken out of context. As any human, we scientists make shorthand comments and joke about things through email. Sadly, these emails were propagated as scientists "fudging data."
As a scientist who has received federal grant money for research, I can tell you the process of how this works is far different from what is painted in the media. Seriously, scientists make very little money from our research. The vast majority of the grant money goes to support student education and the remainder actually goes back into the economy, buying services from companies to buy products or services for travel. (If anyone is interested, I would be happy to expand on how this works, just seems beyond the scope of the current discussion).
As I said before, the beauty of science is that it is a self-correcting field. As scientists, we fight among ourselves to advocate our individual views, based on the data we collected from our particular studies. But at the end of end of the day, our knowledge emerges from the consensus of thousands of studies that converge to point us in the right direction.
Currently, the consensus scientific view of climate change and coral reef declines makes it very clear that we are in bad shape.