Since writing that post, though, I now lean more towards thinking that someone should “own” managing the movement, and that that should be the Centre for Effective Altruism.
I agree with this. Failing that, I feel strongly that CEA should change its name. There are costs to having a leader / manager / “coordinator-in-chief”, and costs to not having such an entity; but the worst of both worlds is to have ambiguity about whether a person or org is filling that role. Then you end up with situations like “a bunch of EAs sit on their hands because they expect someone else to respond, but no one actually takes the wheel”, or “an org gets the power of perceived leadership, but has limited accountability because it’s left itself a lot of plausible deniability about exactly how much of a leader it is”.
I agree with this. Failing that, I feel strongly that CEA should change its name. There are costs to having a leader / manager / “coordinator-in-chief”, and costs to not having such an entity; but the worst of both worlds is to have ambiguity about whether a person or org is filling that role. Then you end up with situations like “a bunch of EAs sit on their hands because they expect someone else to respond, but no one actually takes the wheel”, or “an org gets the power of perceived leadership, but has limited accountability because it’s left itself a lot of plausible deniability about exactly how much of a leader it is”.