we still have no way of knowing its total long-run effect
Well, it's not like we have no evidence either way. We have weak evidence for a positive effect.
For one, it may happen that it lowers the cost of having children for poor unmarried women [...] so that in the new long-term equilibrium, more children are born to such women
It may also happen that people in dangerous and impoverished situations pursue early and fecund reproductive strategies: if you can't count on each child surviving and prospering, then you have more kids (and start earlier) to increase the chance of some child surviving and prospering. In this case, lowering the risks to children and mothers would result in fewer children.
I find it exceedingly unlikely that increasing "stigma and fear" will reduce such behavior. For instance, out-of-wedlock births, teen pregnancy, divorce, etc. are all higher in more socially conservative societies — including when we compare the U.S. vs. Western Europe, or "red states" vs. "blue states" within the U.S. ...
I find it exceedingly unlikely that increasing "stigma and fear" will reduce such behavior.
I'd take liberal arguments about the ineffectiveness of "stigma and fear" much more seriously if those liberals weren't simultaneously using "stigma and fear" to promote their own agenda, e.g., suppressing discussions of race realism.
A piece I saw that Benjamin Todd adapted from THINK's module on charity assessment. Some of you may recall the network's recent launch.
cipergoth said that it should be emphasised that this isn't a trick question where the answer is they all worked or none did.
I thought Round 2 would have no effect and expected Round #5 to have no effect not a negative one, I got 6 out of 8 correct. How well did you do?
I recommend checking out the links and references. Gwern's comment there was also interesting.