I don't think you're taking enough of an outside view. Here's how these accomplishments look to "regular" people:
CFAI, while confusingly written, was way ahead of its time, and what Eliezer figured out in the early 2000s is slowly becoming a mainstream position accepted by, e.g., Google's AGI team.
You wrote something 11 years ago, which you now consider defunct and still is not a mainstream view in any field.
The Sequences are simply awesome.
You wrote series of esoteric blog posts that some people like.
And he did manage to write the most popular Harry Potter fanfic of all time.
You re-wrote the story of Harry Potter. How is this relevant to saving the world, again?
Finally, I suspect many people's doubts about SIAI's horsepower could be best addressed by arranging a single 2-hour conversation between them and Carl Shulman. But you'd have to visit the Bay Area, and we can't afford to have him do nothing but conversations, anyway. If you want a taste, you can read his comment history, which consists of him writing the exactly correct thing to say in almost every comment he's made for the past several years.
You have a guy who is pretty smart. Ok...
The point I'm trying to make is, muflax's diagnosis of "lame" isn't far off the mark. There's nothing here with the ability to wow someone who hasn't heard of SIAI before, or to encourage people to not be put off by arguments like the one Eliezer makes in the Q&A.
You re-wrote the story of Harry Potter. How is this relevant to saving the world, again?
It's actually been incredibly useful to establishing the credibility of every x-risk argument that I've had with people my age.
"Have you read Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality?"
"YES!"
"Ah, awesome!"
merriment ensues
topic changes to something about things that people are doing
"So anyway the guy who wrote that also does...."
I intended Leveling Up in Rationality to communicate this:
But some people seem to have read it and heard this instead:
This failure (on my part) fits into a larger pattern of the Singularity Institute seeming too arrogant and (perhaps) being too arrogant. As one friend recently told me:
So, I have a few questions: