A few years ago, I read The Life You Can Save by Peter Singer. I felt deeply inspired. The idea that charities could be compared using evidence and reason, the thought that I could save many lives without sacrificing my own happiness: I found these ideas meaningful, and I hoped they would give my life a sense of purpose (even if other factors were likely also at play).
I became an Intro Fellow and read more. I went to conferences and retreats. I now lead my university group.
But I’m frustrated.
I’m now asked to answer for the actions of a man who defrauded millions of people, and for the purchase of castles and $2000+ coffee tables.
I’m now associated with predatory rationalists.
I’m now told to spend my life reducing existential risk by .00001 percent to protect 1018 future humans, and forced to watch money get redirected from the Global South to AI researchers.[1]
This is not what I signed up for.
I used to be proud to call myself an EA. Now, when I say it, I also feel shame and embarrassment.
I will take the Giving What We Can pledge, and I will stay friends with the many kind EAs I’ve met.
But I no longer feel represented by this community. And I think a lot of others feel the same way.
Edit log (2/6/23, 12:28pm): Edited the second item of the list, see RobBensinger's comment.
- ^
This is not to say that longtermism is completely wrong—it’s not. I do, however, think "fanatical" or "strong" longtermism has gone too far.
Is influencing the far future really tractable? How is x-risk reduction not a Pascal's mugging?
I agree that future generations are probably too neglected right now. But I just don't find myself entirely convinced by the current EA answers to these questions. (See also.)
But I'm a polyamorous EA, and I'm frustrated that I'm now associated with predatory polyamorous rationalists too. Their comment didn't make a claim that the association was right to make, or even that that cohort even exists, just that that association is happening.
I think the line is a bit better if you replace rationalists with pseudo-rationalists and tech-bros though.
[Edit: I think using the terms "bigoted language" or "appears bigoted" would have been better choices than "is bigoted". I think you want to be very careful to avoid misunderstandings that you are calling the person bigoted. I realize that quoting the phrase implied that bigoted is referencing the language (not necessarily the person), but if you think someone is using imprecise language, that should make you update that your conversation partner is more likely to misunderstand your own language. Just as you want someone to speak extra-carefully about sexual predators, we can all speak extra-carefully about bigotry etc by throwing in some more qualifiers]