I think that’s particularly true of some of the calls for democratization. The Cynic’s Golden Rule (“He who has the gold, makes the rules”) has substantial truth both in the EA world and in almost all charitable movements. In the end, if the people with the money aren’t happy with the idea of random EAs spending their money, it just isn’t going to happen. And to the extent there is a hint of cutting off or rejecting donors, that would lead to a much smaller EA to the extent it was followed. In actuality, it wouldn’t be—someone is going to take the donor’s money in almost all cases, and there’s no EA High Council to somehow cast the rebel grantee from the movement.
Speaking as a moderate reform advocate, the flipside of this is that the EA community has to acknowledge the origin of power and not assume that the ecosystem is somehow immune to the Cynic’s Golden Rule. The people with power and influence in 2023 may (or may not) be wise and virtuous, but they are not in power (directly) because they are wise and virtuous. They have power and influence in large part because it has been granted to them by Moskovitz and Tuna (or their delegates, or by others with power to move funding and other resources). If Moskovitz and Tuna decided to fire Open Phil tomorrow and make all their spending decisions based on my personal recommendations, I would become immensely powerful and influential within EA irrespective of how wise and virtuous I may be. (If they are reading, this would be a terrible idea!!)
I think that’s particularly true of some of the calls for democratization. The Cynic’s Golden Rule (“He who has the gold, makes the rules”) has substantial truth both in the EA world and in almost all charitable movements. In the end, if the people with the money aren’t happy with the idea of random EAs spending their money, it just isn’t going to happen. And to the extent there is a hint of cutting off or rejecting donors, that would lead to a much smaller EA to the extent it was followed. In actuality, it wouldn’t be—someone is going to take the donor’s money in almost all cases, and there’s no EA High Council to somehow cast the rebel grantee from the movement.
Speaking as a moderate reform advocate, the flipside of this is that the EA community has to acknowledge the origin of power and not assume that the ecosystem is somehow immune to the Cynic’s Golden Rule. The people with power and influence in 2023 may (or may not) be wise and virtuous, but they are not in power (directly) because they are wise and virtuous. They have power and influence in large part because it has been granted to them by Moskovitz and Tuna (or their delegates, or by others with power to move funding and other resources). If Moskovitz and Tuna decided to fire Open Phil tomorrow and make all their spending decisions based on my personal recommendations, I would become immensely powerful and influential within EA irrespective of how wise and virtuous I may be. (If they are reading, this would be a terrible idea!!)