About three hours ago I posted a brief argument about why one of the US presidential candidates is strongly preferable to the other on five criteria of concern to EAs: AI governance, nuclear war prevention, climate change, pandemic preparedness and overall concern for people living outside the United States. I concluded by urging readers who were American citizens to vote accordingly, and encourage anyone whom they might potentially influence to do so. After about an hour the post had a karma of 23; shortly after that, it was removed from the front page and relegated to 'personal blogposts'. Not surprisingly, at that point it started to attract less attention.
Not having heard of 'personal blogposts', I checked the description, which suggested that they were appropriate for '[bullet point] topics that aren't closely related to EA; [bullet point] topics that are difficult to discuss rationally; [bullet point] topics of interest to a small fraction of the forum's readers (e.g. local events)'. Frankly, I can't see how my blogpost fit any of these descriptors. It focused on the candidates' positions on issues of core concern to EAs, and from the fact that it had a karma score of 23 after an hour, it was obviously of interest to the message board's readership. The remaining possibility--unless there were other unstated criteria--is that it was judged to be on a topic that was 'difficult to discuss rationally'.
If so, I think that's a troubling commentary on EA, or the moderator's conception of EA. My post was clearly partisan, but I don't think any reasonable observer would have called it a rant. This election will almost surely make more difference to most of the causes that EAs hold dear than any other event this year--perhaps any other event this decade. Shouldn't the EA community, if anybody, be able to discuss these issues in a reasonably rational manner? I'd be grateful for a response from the moderator justifying the decision to exclude them.
So you think so far it's mostly been OK? If that's the case, and if it's plausible that high-quality discussions about politics would be valuable, shouldn't we lean towards loosening the policy and seeing what happens?
Best case, good discussions happen and the forum does a better job of meeting its objective. Worst case, bad discussion happens, but then it should be pretty simple to tighten the policy up and no lasting harm would be done.