I’m annoyed (with “the community”, but mostly with human nature & myself) that this kind of drama gets so much more attention than eg typical reviews of the Manifest experience, or our retrospectives of work on Manifund, which I wish got even 10% of this engagement. It’s fun to be self-righteous on the internet, fun to converse with many people who I respect, fun especially when they come to your defense (thanks!), but I feel guilty at the amount of attention this has sucked up for everyone involved.
This bit from Paul Graham makes a lot more sense to me now:
> When someone contradicts you, they’re in a sense attacking you. Sometimes pretty overtly. Your instinct when attacked is to defend yourself. But like a lot of instincts, this one wasn’t designed for the world we now live in. Counterintuitive as it feels, it’s better most of the time not to defend yourself. Otherwise these people are literally taking your life.
Kudos to all y’all who are practicing the virtue of silence and avoiding engaging with this.
While it could have been much, much better written, on net I’m glad the Guardian article exists. And not just in a “all PR is good PR” sense, or even a “weak opponents are superweapons” sense; I think there’s a legitimate concern there that’s worthy of reporting. I like the idea of inviting the journalists to come to Manifest in the future.
That said, I am quite annoyed that now many people who didn’t attend Manifest, may think of it as “Edgelordcon”. I once again encourage people who weren’t there to look at our actual schedule, or to skim over some of the many many post-Manifest reports, to get a more representative sense of what Manifest is like or about.
If Edgelordcon is what you really wanted, consider going to something like Hereticon instead of Manifest, thanks.
Not sure how many people already know this but I formally left Manifold a couple months ago. I’m the most comfortable writing publicly out of the 3 founders, but while I’m still on the company board, I expect Manifold vs my own views to diverge more over time.
Also, Rachel and Saul were much more instrumental in making Manifest 2024 happen than me. Their roles were approximately co-directors, while I’m more like a producer of the event. So most of the credit for a well-run event goes to them; I wish more people engaged with their considerations, rather than mine. (Blame for the invites, as I mentioned, falls on me.)
EA Forum is actually pretty good for having nuanced discussion: the threading and upvote vs agreevote and reactions all help compared to other online discourse. Kudos to the team! (Online text-based discourse does remain intrinsically more divisive than offline, though, which I don’t love. I wish more people eg took up Saul on his offer to call with folks.)
Overall my impression of the state of the EA community has ticked upwards as a result of this all this. I’m glad to be here!
[the rest of this comment is a bit emotional, a bit of a rant/ramble. i don’t necessarily reflectively endorse the below, but i think it pretty accurately captures my state of mind while writing.]
but man, people can be mean. twitter is a pretty low bar, and although the discourse on twitter isn’t exactly enjoyable, my impression of the EA forum has also gone down over the last few days. most of the comments that critique my/rachel’s/austin’s decisions (and many of the ones supporting our decisions!) have made me quite sad/anxious/ashamed in ways i don’t endorse — and (most) have done ~nothing to reduce the likelihood that i invite speakers who the commenters consider racist to the next manifest.
i’m a little confused about the goals of a lot of the folks who’re commenting. like, their (your?) marginal 20 minutes would be WAY more effective by… idk, hopping on a call with me or something?[1] [june23-2024 — edit: jeff’s comment has explained why: yes, 1:1 discussion with me is better for the goal of improving/changing manifest’s decisions, but many of the comments are “trying to hash out what EA community … norms should be in this sort of situation, and that seems … reasonably well suited for public discussion.”]
there have been a few comments that are really great, both some that are in support of our decisions & some that are against them — austin highlighted a few that i had in mind, like Isa’s and huw’s. and, a few folks have reached out independently to offer their emotional support, which is really kind of them. these are the things that make me agree with (8): i don’t think that, in many communities, folks who might disagree with me on the object level would offer their emotional support for me on the meta-level.
i’m grateful to the folks who’re disagreeing (& agreeing) with me constructively; to everyone else… idk, man, at least hold off on commenting until you’ve given me a call or let me buy you a coffee or something. [june23-2024 — see edit above]
and i would explicitly encourage you, dear reader, to do so! please! i would like to talk to you much more than i would like to read your comment on the EA forum, and way more than i’d like to read your twitter post! i would very much like to adjust my decision-making process to be better, and insofar as you think that’s good, please do so through a medium that’s much higher bandwidth!
i’m a little confused about the goals of a lot of the folks who’re commenting. like, their (your?) marginal 20 minutes would be WAY more effective by… idk, hopping on a call with me or something?
To the extent that people are trying to influence future Manifest decisions or your views in particular, I agree that 1:1 private discussion would often be better. But I read a lot of the discussion as people trying to hash out what EA community (broadly construed) norms should be in this sort of situation, and that seems to me like it’s reasonably well suited for public discussion?
Fwiw, I think the main thing getting missed in this discourse is that even 3 out of your 50 speakers (especially if they’re near the top of the bill) are mostly known for a cluster of edgy views that are not welcome in most similar spaces, people who really want to gather to discuss those edgy and typically unwelcome views will be a seriously disproportionate share of attendees, and this will have significant repercussions for the experience of the attendees who were primarily interested in the other 47 speakers.
I’d strongly recommend against inviting them. If they decide to come, then I’d probably let them, but intentionally bringing in people who want to stir up drama is a bad idea and would ruin the vibes.
Some reflections on the Manifest 2024 discourse:
I’m annoyed (with “the community”, but mostly with human nature & myself) that this kind of drama gets so much more attention than eg typical reviews of the Manifest experience, or our retrospectives of work on Manifund, which I wish got even 10% of this engagement. It’s fun to be self-righteous on the internet, fun to converse with many people who I respect, fun especially when they come to your defense (thanks!), but I feel guilty at the amount of attention this has sucked up for everyone involved.
This bit from Paul Graham makes a lot more sense to me now:
> When someone contradicts you, they’re in a sense attacking you. Sometimes pretty overtly. Your instinct when attacked is to defend yourself. But like a lot of instincts, this one wasn’t designed for the world we now live in. Counterintuitive as it feels, it’s better most of the time not to defend yourself. Otherwise these people are literally taking your life.
Kudos to all y’all who are practicing the virtue of silence and avoiding engaging with this.
While it could have been much, much better written, on net I’m glad the Guardian article exists. And not just in a “all PR is good PR” sense, or even a “weak opponents are superweapons” sense; I think there’s a legitimate concern there that’s worthy of reporting. I like the idea of inviting the journalists to come to Manifest in the future.
That said, I am quite annoyed that now many people who didn’t attend Manifest, may think of it as “Edgelordcon”. I once again encourage people who weren’t there to look at our actual schedule, or to skim over some of the many many post-Manifest reports, to get a more representative sense of what Manifest is like or about.
If Edgelordcon is what you really wanted, consider going to something like Hereticon instead of Manifest, thanks.
Not sure how many people already know this but I formally left Manifold a couple months ago. I’m the most comfortable writing publicly out of the 3 founders, but while I’m still on the company board, I expect Manifold vs my own views to diverge more over time.
Also, Rachel and Saul were much more instrumental in making Manifest 2024 happen than me. Their roles were approximately co-directors, while I’m more like a producer of the event. So most of the credit for a well-run event goes to them; I wish more people engaged with their considerations, rather than mine. (Blame for the invites, as I mentioned, falls on me.)
EA Forum is actually pretty good for having nuanced discussion: the threading and upvote vs agreevote and reactions all help compared to other online discourse. Kudos to the team! (Online text-based discourse does remain intrinsically more divisive than offline, though, which I don’t love. I wish more people eg took up Saul on his offer to call with folks.)
Overall my impression of the state of the EA community has ticked upwards as a result of this all this. I’m glad to be here!
Some of my favorite notes amidst all this: Isa, huw, TracingWoodgrains, and Nathan Young on their experiences, Richard Ngo against deplatforming, Jacob and Oli on their thoughts, Bentham’s Bulldog and Theo Jaffee on their defenses of the event, and Saul and Rachel on their perspectives as organizers.
cosigned, generally.
most strongly, i agree with:
(1), (3), (4)
i also somewhat agree with:
(2), (7), (8), (9)
[the rest of this comment is a bit emotional, a bit of a rant/ramble. i don’t necessarily reflectively endorse the below, but i think it pretty accurately captures my state of mind while writing.]
but man, people can be mean. twitter is a pretty low bar, and although the discourse on twitter isn’t exactly enjoyable, my impression of the EA forum has also gone down over the last few days. most of the comments that critique my/rachel’s/austin’s decisions (and many of the ones supporting our decisions!) have made me quite sad/anxious/ashamed in ways i don’t endorse — and (most) have done ~nothing to reduce the likelihood that i invite speakers who the commenters consider racist to the next manifest.
i’m a little confused about the goals of a lot of the folks who’re commenting. like, their (your?) marginal 20 minutes would be WAY more effective by… idk,hopping on a call with meor something?[1]there have been a few comments that are really great, both some that are in support of our decisions & some that are against them — austin highlighted a few that i had in mind, like Isa’s and huw’s. and, a few folks have reached out independently to offer their emotional support, which is really kind of them. these are the things that make me agree with (8): i don’t think that, in many communities, folks who might disagree with me on the object level would offer their emotional support for me on the meta-level.
i’m grateful to the folks who’re disagreeing (& agreeing) with me constructively
; to everyone else… idk, man, at least hold off on commenting until you’ve given me a call or let me buy you a coffee or something.[june23-2024 — see edit above]and i would explicitly encourage you, dear reader, to do so! please! i would like to talk to you much more than i would like to read your comment on the EA forum, and way more than i’d like to read your twitter post! i would very much like to adjust my decision-making process to be better, and insofar as you think that’s good, please do so through a medium that’s much higher bandwidth!
To the extent that people are trying to influence future Manifest decisions or your views in particular, I agree that 1:1 private discussion would often be better. But I read a lot of the discussion as people trying to hash out what EA community (broadly construed) norms should be in this sort of situation, and that seems to me like it’s reasonably well suited for public discussion?
thanks, this has cleared things up quite a bit for me. i edited my comment to reflect it!
Fwiw, I think the main thing getting missed in this discourse is that even 3 out of your 50 speakers (especially if they’re near the top of the bill) are mostly known for a cluster of edgy views that are not welcome in most similar spaces, people who really want to gather to discuss those edgy and typically unwelcome views will be a seriously disproportionate share of attendees, and this will have significant repercussions for the experience of the attendees who were primarily interested in the other 47 speakers.
I’d strongly recommend against inviting them. If they decide to come, then I’d probably let them, but intentionally bringing in people who want to stir up drama is a bad idea and would ruin the vibes.