You hedge your claim with phrases like 'based on my personal experience', "seems', 'hold the belief', but many people will read over these as the point you make in the first sentence is quite strong. Extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence but you present only one extended point - and one that is controversial. This might give the impression that you have only this one. I suggest that you reference more of the evidence you have reviewed.
It may give the impression I have only one point, but that's all I'm trying to do. I'm trying to point out that the approach to EA at the moment tends to be very cultish, at least in my local area. It's not hard to find the relevant arguments furthering the position I'm hinting at, but they are already well developed by academic experts, just not presented within EA spaces online. I'm a shit writer, but I am knowledgable. Perhaps someone else can better communicate what I'm suggesting.
Over the last few days I've been reviewing the evidence for EA charity recommendations. Based on my personal experience alone, the community seems to be comprehensively inept, poor at marketing, extremely insular, methodologically unsophisticated but meticulous, transparent and well-intentioned. I currently hold the belief that EA movement building does more harm than good and that is requires significant rebranding and shifts in its informal leadership or to die out before it damages the reputation of the rationalist community and our capacity to cooperate with communities that share mutual interests.
It's one thing to be ineffective and know it. It's another thing to be ineffective and not know it. It's yet another thing to be ineffective, not know it, yet champion effectiveness and make a claim to moral superiority.
In case you missed the memo deworming is controversial, GiveWell doesn't engage with the meat of the debate, and my investigations of the EA community's spaces suggests that it's not at all known. I've even briefly posted about it elsewhere on LessWrong to see if there was unspoken knowledge about it, but it seems not. Given that it's the hot topic in mainstream development studies and related academic communities, I'm aghast at how irresponsive 'we' are.
What's actionable for us here. If you're looking for a high reliability effective altruism prospect, do not donate to SCI or Evidence Action. And by extension, do not donate to EA organisations to donate to these groups, including GiveWell. I am assuming you will use those funds more wisely instead, say buying healthier food for yourself.
For who don't to review the links for a more comprehensive analyses from Cochrane and GiveWell, here is one summary of the debate recommended in the Cochrane article:
Additional criticisms of GiveWelL charities: http://lesswrong.com/lw/mo0/open_thread_aug_24_aug_30/cp8h
The kind of work I think EA's should be focussing on http://lesswrong.com/lw/mld/genosets/cnys AND
http://lesswrong.com/r/discussion/lw/mk2/lets_pour_some_chlorine_into_the_mosquito_gene/
The problem with MIRI: http://lesswrong.com/lw/cr7/proposal_for_open_problems_in_friendly_ai/cm2j