This is based on a discussion in #lesswrong a few months back, and I am not sure how to resolve it.
Setup: suppose the world is populated by two groups of people, one just wants to be left alone (labeled Jews), the other group hates the first one with passion and want them dead (labeled Nazis). The second group is otherwise just as "good" as the first one (loves their relatives, their country and is known to be in general quite rational). They just can't help but hate the other guys (this condition is to forestall the objections like "Nazis ought to change their terminal values"). Maybe the shape of Jewish noses just creeps the hell out of them, or something. Let's just assume, for the sake of argument, that there is no changing that hatred.
Is it rational to exterminate the Jews to improve the Nazi's quality of life? Well, this seems like a silly question. Of course not! Now, what if there are many more Nazis than Jews? Is there a number large enough where exterminating Jews would be a net positive utility for the world? Umm... Not sure... I'd like to think that probably not, human life is sacred! What if some day their society invents immortality, then every death is like an extremely large (infinite?) negative utility!
Fine then, not exterminating. Just send them all to concentration camps, where they will suffer in misery and probably have a shorter lifespan than they would otherwise. This is not an ideal solutions from the Nazi point of view, but it makes them feel a little bit better. And now the utilities are unquestionably comparable, so if there are billions of Nazis and only a handful of Jews, the overall suffering decreases when the Jews are sent to the camps.
This logic is completely analogous to that in the dust specks vs torture discussions, only my "little XML labels", to quote Eliezer, make it more emotionally charged. Thus, if you are a utilitarian anti-specker, you ought to decide that, barring changing Nazi's terminal value of hating Jews, the rational behavior is to herd the Jews into concentration camps, or possibly even exterminate them, provided there are enough Nazi's in the world who benefit from it.
This is quite a repugnant conclusion, and I don't see a way of fixing it the way the original one is fixed (to paraphrase Eliezer, "only lives worth celebrating are worth creating").
EDIT: Thanks to CronoDAS for pointing out that this is known as the 1000 Sadists problem. Once I had this term, I found that lukeprog has mentioned it on his old blog.
It's worse to break the two legs of a single man than to break one leg each of seven billion people?
If a genie forced you to choose between the two options, would you really prefer the latter scenario?
I'm sorry, but I really can't imagine the size of 3^^^3. So I really can't answer this question by trying to imagine myself filling all those roles. My imagination just fails at that point. And if anyone here thinks they can imagine it, I think they're deluding themselves.
But if anyone wants to try, I'd like to remind them that in a random sample there'd probably be innumerable quintillions of people that would already be getting tortured for life one way or another. You're not removing all that torture if you vote against torturing a single person more.
First, I would eliminate two leg breaking. Second, one leg breaking.
Of course, an epidemic one leg breaking would have othere severe effects like starvation to death and alike. What should come even before two broken legs.
In a clean abstract world of just a broken leg or two per person, with no further implications, the maximal pain is stil the first to be eliminated, if you ask me.