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Harrison Frontier's avatar

One thing that jumps out to me is how much potential EA is leaving on the table by not doing more to push idealistic, talented people into the institutions that already shape the world—government agencies, major media outlets, high-profile companies. These are the places with real power to nudge the future in better directions, yet they’re practically starved of EA-aligned perspectives. Think about it: there are probably only a handful of EAs working in U.S. foreign policy agencies, OMB, Treasury, or major newsrooms. These institutions are massive levers for change, but they’re not exactly overflowing with people who think seriously about doing the most good.

EA has built this big, dynamic community, but its focus feels strangely narrow. The prevailing model seems to be about taking a tiny handful of exceptional individuals and steering them into hyper-specific, high-priority fields like AI alignment or biosecurity. Fine, those are important. But what happens to the rest of the talented people EA attracts—the ones who don’t land one of these highly competitive roles? Right now, it doesn’t seem like there’s much effort to help them channel their energy and skills into the other critical institutions that could use them.

The world has more than a few problems, and EA has the scope to think bigger—not just in terms of maximizing impact per person but in deploying more people across a broader range of challenges. It’s not about abandoning AI or biosecurity; it’s about realizing that embedding EA-aligned thinking in influential institutions—places that already hold enormous sway—could massively expand the movement’s impact. EA has built the network; now it needs to act like it.

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