Right, it sounds absurd and maybe hilarious, but it’s actually what I had in mind. The advantage is internal coherence. The idea is basically to let “ecomodernism” go mainstream, having a Greenpeace-like org that has ideas more similar to the Breakthrough Institute. It’s far from clear that this can work, but it’s worth a try, in my view. About your suggestion: I love it and voted for it.
Maybe so… like an economics version of the ACLU that builds a reputation of sticking up for things that are good even though they’re unpopular. Might work especially well if oriented around the legal system (where ACLU operates and where groups like Greenpeace and the ever-controversial NRA have had lots of success), rather than purely advocacy? Having a unified brand might help convince people that our side has a point. For instance, a group that litigates to fight against nimbyism by complaining about the overuse of environmental laws or zoning regulations… the nimbys would naturally see themselves as the heroes of the story and assume that lawyers on the pro-construction side were probably villains funded by big greedy developers. Seeing that their opposition was a semi-respected ACLU-like brand that fought for a variety of causes might help change people’s minds on an issue.
(On the other hand, I feel like the legal system is fundamentally friendlier terrain for stopping projects than encouraging them, so the legal angle might not work well for GMOs and power plants. But maybe there are areas like trying to ban Gain-of-Function research where this could be a helpful strategy.)
We’d still probably want the brand of this group to be pretty far disconnected from EA—groups like Greenpeace, the NRA, etc naturally attract a lot of controversy and demonization.
Right, it sounds absurd and maybe hilarious, but it’s actually what I had in mind. The advantage is internal coherence. The idea is basically to let “ecomodernism” go mainstream, having a Greenpeace-like org that has ideas more similar to the Breakthrough Institute. It’s far from clear that this can work, but it’s worth a try, in my view. About your suggestion: I love it and voted for it.
Maybe so… like an economics version of the ACLU that builds a reputation of sticking up for things that are good even though they’re unpopular. Might work especially well if oriented around the legal system (where ACLU operates and where groups like Greenpeace and the ever-controversial NRA have had lots of success), rather than purely advocacy? Having a unified brand might help convince people that our side has a point. For instance, a group that litigates to fight against nimbyism by complaining about the overuse of environmental laws or zoning regulations… the nimbys would naturally see themselves as the heroes of the story and assume that lawyers on the pro-construction side were probably villains funded by big greedy developers. Seeing that their opposition was a semi-respected ACLU-like brand that fought for a variety of causes might help change people’s minds on an issue. (On the other hand, I feel like the legal system is fundamentally friendlier terrain for stopping projects than encouraging them, so the legal angle might not work well for GMOs and power plants. But maybe there are areas like trying to ban Gain-of-Function research where this could be a helpful strategy.)
We’d still probably want the brand of this group to be pretty far disconnected from EA—groups like Greenpeace, the NRA, etc naturally attract a lot of controversy and demonization.