This sounds right, but the counterfactual (no social accountability) seems worse to me, so I am operating on the assumption it’s a necessary evil.
I live high trust country, which has very little of this social accountability, i.e. if someone does something potentially rude or unacceptable in public, they are given the benefit of the doubt. However, I expect this works because others are employed, full time, to hold people accountable. I.e. police officers, ticket inspectors, traffic wardens. I don’t think we have this in the wider Effective Altruism community right now.
This sounds right, but the counterfactual (no social accountability) seems worse to me, so I am operating on the assumption it’s a necessary evil.
I live high trust country, which has very little of this social accountability, i.e. if someone does something potentially rude or unacceptable in public, they are given the benefit of the doubt. However, I expect this works because others are employed, full time, to hold people accountable. I.e. police officers, ticket inspectors, traffic wardens. I don’t think we have this in the wider Effective Altruism community right now.