No problem. You clearly communicated what you intended to, which is never a problem.
From the link, though:
3.3: What do you mean by a desire to avoid guilt?
Suppose an evil king decides to do a twisted moral experiment on you. He tells you to kick a small child really hard, right in the face. If you do, he will end the experiment with no further damage. If you refuse, he will kick the child himself, and then execute that child plus a hundred innocent people.
The best solution is to somehow overthrow the king or escape the experiment. Assuming you can't, what do you do?
'Die trying', is one moral answer. 'Gain permission from the child' is another. 'Perform an immoral act for the greater good' is a third answer. I choose not to make the claim "In some cases you should non-consensually kick a small child in the face because hurting people is bad."
'Die trying' doesn't save the 101 people. If anything, I'd think about the TDT-related benefits of having precommitted to not giving in to blackmail, but in this particular example it's far from clear that the king wouldn't have offered you the deal in the first place had he been sure you were going to refuse it -- though it is in most similar situations I'm actually likely to face in real life.
A Ph.D student in neuroscience shot at least 50 people at a showing of the new Batman movie. He also appears to have released some kind of gas from a canister. Because of his educational background this person almost certainly knows a lot about molecular biology. How long will it be (if ever) before a typical bio-science Ph.D will have the capacity to kill, say,a million people?
Edit: I'm not claiming that this event should cause a fully informed person to update on anything. Rather I was hoping that readers of this blog with strong life-science backgrounds could provide information that would help me and other interested readers assess the probability of future risks. Since this blog often deals with catastrophic risks and the social harms of irrationality and given that the events I described will likely dominate the U.S. news media for a few days I thought my question worth asking. Given the post's Karma rating (currently -4), however, I will update my beliefs about what constitutes an appropriate discussion post.