Eugine_Nier comments on Terrorist baby down the well: a look at institutional forces - Less Wrong

14 Post author: Stuart_Armstrong 18 March 2014 02:30PM

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Comment author: Viliam_Bur 18 March 2014 04:04:50PM *  27 points [-]

Seems like politicians are willing to invest in prevention if the prevention is fighting against a human enemy, because then it moves from the "prevention" category to the "war" category.

War against terrorism = soldiers go and kill some foreigners. War against drugs = policemen go and kill some dealers, or arrest some users.

War against flood = ???. Not gonna happen.

And probably the "prevention" aspect is completely irrelevant. You can get votes for being tough on drugs or terrorism, even if your policies do not in fact reduce drug usage or terrorism. The war itself is the product you sell; prevention is just an excuse.

If people would believe that Flood Fairy exists and causes flood, you could get some points as a politician for assembling a special team of super fighters to kill the Flood Fairy. That would be exciting. Other ways of preventing floods are boring.

The average voter does not care about rationality, only about killing.

Comment author: Eugine_Nier 19 March 2014 03:45:18AM 1 point [-]
Comment author: Gunnar_Zarncke 19 March 2014 07:28:04AM 2 points [-]

Seems to be a name thing.

The popularity of a war on poverty waned after the 1960s

Comment author: ChristianKl 19 March 2014 02:40:40PM 0 points [-]

The War on Cancer leads to people getting cancer "prevention" screenings that produce unnecessary operations and don't increase life expectancy.

It's about using violence to cut out the cancer in the early stages. It fits well into the pattern of the other examples.