Scott Alexander wrote in Book Review: History of the Fabian Society about how the Fabian society had eight political thesis that they agreed on.
I want to propose eight points that I think we can agree as a rationality movement about:
1. We want public policy that's backed up by empiric evidence. We want a government that runs controlled trials to find out what policies work.
2. We want that government bureaucrats who make predictions about the future makes them in a way where the accuracy of their predictions gets measured.
3. We want a policy that funds AI safety research and that's a bit cautious about AI.
4. We want government money to go into anti-aging research of the kind that SENS does.
5. We want less bureaucracy around running scientific studies so that nightmares don't have to happen
6. We want the right not to have to endure what amounts to torture at end of our lives
7. We want to end the War on Drugs
8. We want that the FDA switching from using p-values to using better statistical models
Do you think one of those points isn't consensus in our community? Do you think there are other political demands where we have consensus?
(Please avoid talking about political issues where you don't think there's consensus in our community in this thread)
I don't know if I count as part of the "movement", but I can't agree on these demands, because they all assume that notions such as "public policy" and "government" are valid and legitimate.
Suppose we were to turn them round and write them as negative demands; 5, 6, and 8 all reduce to freedom of contract. 7 is covered by "no crimes, only torts" since the concept of a "victimless tort" is obviously meaningless. 1 and 2 are fundamentally just questions of governance procedure, and become a lot less odious when you're not forced to live under / pay for a policy you don't support chosen by broken systems of governance. 3 and 4 are demands that other people's money be spent, and allowing such things is a gift to Moloch (see also: Olsonian scramble, rent-seeking); if we rule that out, we're left with "we want to be able to give our money to $CAUSE instead of having it taxed to fund causes we don't support" (causes like #7, come to think of it).
So rather than 8 demands, one principle would seem to suffice: "The support of a plurality of irrational humans is no license to trespass upon individual liberties". Then again, nothing provides such a license; a superintelligent AGI doesn't have the ethical right to do so either. Both the elected government and the AGI, in practice, have the power to do so (in the former case it's because most people believe democracy legitimises government and will support it), but if might makes right then we may as well not bother with AI alignment research ;-)