I'm having trouble following you, to be honest.
My best guess is that you're suggesting that, with respect to systems that do not manifest subjective experience in any way we recognize or understand, Occam's Razor provides grounds to be more confident that they have subjective experience than that they don't.
If that's what you mean, I don't see why that should be.
If that's not what you mean, can you rephrase the question?
I think it's conceivable if not likely that Occam's Razor would favor or disfavor qualia as a property of more systems than just those that seem to show or communicate them in terms we're used to. I'm not sure which, but it is a question worth pondering, with an impact on how we view the world, and accessible through established methodology, to a degree.
I'm not advocating assigning a high probability to "landslides have raw experience", I'm advocating that it's an important question, the probability of which can be argued. I'm an advocate of the ...
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