ChristianKl comments on What EAO has been doing, what it is planning to do, and why donating to EAO is a good idea - Less Wrong Discussion
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Comments (17)
From the post, "This means that we need to start by spreading our values, before talking about implementation." Splitting the difficult "effective" part from the easy "altruism" part this early in the movement is troubling. The path of least resistance is tempting.
Karma for the post is relatively low, and a lot of comments, including the top-rated, can be summarized as "Fun idea, but too crazy to even consider."
The post glosses over the time value of money/charitable donations and the GWWC member quit rate, so I think it's reasonable to say that the Gates Foundation will almost definitely have moved more time value-adjusted money than that of GWWC's members over the next twenty years. Therefore, speculating that GWWC could be a "big deal" comparable to the Gates Foundation in this time frame is overly-optimistic. Still disagree? Let's settle on a discount rate and structure a hypothetical bet, I'll give you better than 20-1 odds.
I don't actually believe this is a big problem in itself, but if the other problems exist it seems like this would exacerbate them.
If a net positive reception is the best example you can bring of EA being close-minded it seems to me that anybody who hasn't looked into the issue of whether EA is open-minded should update in the direction of EA being more open-minded than their priors suggest.