Troll tax gladly paid... (and there being a troll tax at all is something I wish were otherwise).
I wish Phil had more leeway. One reason my visits to LW have been decreasing is that it has few people saying actually interesting things and lots of people who just quibble with details. Phil is someone I recognize whose content I seek out based on his personal reputation with myself for saying insightful things grounded in deep experience. If he posted more and more regularly, treating Main more like his own personal blog, there is a non-trivial chance I'd come back more often just to read it.
When I criticize, I'm a genius. I can go through a book of highly-referenced scientific articles and find errors in each of them. Boy, I feel smart. How are these famous people so dumb?
But when I write, I suddenly become stupid. I sometimes spend half a day writing something and then realize at the end, or worse, after posting, that what it says simplifies to something trivial, or that I've made several unsupported assumptions, or claimed things I didn't really know were true. Or I post something, then have to go back every ten minutes to fix some point that I realize is not quite right, sometimes to the point where the whole thing falls apart.
If someone writes an article or expresses an idea that you find mistakes in, that doesn't make you smarter than that person. If you create an equally-ambitious article or idea that no one else finds mistakes in, then you can start congratulating yourself.