1. Fair, I haven’t spent enough time reading the comments to push back on this. Not sure if you consider something like this as reasonable or a rationalization.
2. I’m not making a case that FTX grantees should keep the money where possible, I’m just pointing out that if your principle is that people shouldn’t spend money they know to have an unclean source, then it actually isn’t as obvious as you are making it out to be. If your argument is around harm done, then clearly there are also considerations around what harms might occur as a result of returning this money (and I hope you would also want to push strongly for those who are involved with returning money to be prioritizing harm mitigation, as one consideration is there might a lot more money available to be redirected from that pool than the EA one). If your argument is about legal proceedings, then I’m hopeful that EAs will follow the law here, and I would condemn EAs who tried to keep the money if it was against the law to. If your argument is about something like—“doing right by retail investors”, then I think you still have to make a case that the retail investors are now the strongest focus of moral obligation for all grantees for that pool of money (though I think that could easily be true for some or even most grantees).
I’m also not casting around for rationalizations to keep the grant money because I’ve never received an FTX grant.
3. I didn’t claim that grant recipients are equal victims to FTX’s depositors, I said there could be scenarios where a grantee takes the place of another victim, through no fault of their own. You can reasonably interpret that as “sometimes grant recipients are also victims”. It sounds like you disagree because you say “Grant recipients are not victims at all.” but I strongly disagree with this.
Suppose someone quits their job to do independent research funded by the FTX future fund. then they lose the “gift” of money that they made some major life changes around, but now have no job to return to, meaning they quit their job for nothing.
Say an organization with 10 researchers who was running in part on FTX money now lose funding. But they’ve also spent millions of FTX money last year. Should they fire everyone and go bankrupt trying to return this money?
I don’t understand how you have so much (and rightly so!) empathy for the retail investors, but at the same time don’t see how it’s possible for grant recipients to also be victims.
4. I think this is not a great analogy, because most of the time you don’t expect people to throw you a wallet and run off, and grant recipients don’t really receive money like that. A better analogy might be: you apply to a scholarship to college. you successfully get this scholarship, and then 2 weeks into college, you find out that Gaddafi funded your scholarship. Should you now decline your scholarship? Now you find out that half of all the college entrance scholarships in your country was funded by Gaddafi, but you’re not actually required to pay it back legally—but a third party is starting a process that allows you to pay it back, should you choose to. Should all those people be morally obliged to return their scholarships, regardless of the situation? What if you can’t go to college if you didn’t have this scholarship? What if 75% of the money wasn’t going to go back to the people harmed by Gaddafi if you declined the scholarship, but kept by the third party? What if you thought you could do better than 75% if you didn’t voluntarily return the money? I mean this is also not a great analogy but I’m mainly trying to illustrate why you could have recipients of grants also be a victim, as well as why modelling grants as wallets that a stranger throws you while running away isn’t great.
FWIW, I think if you’re not going to face major financial issues, then I do think it’s likely morally preferable to return the money than not, all else equal. And I think if you would be in a financially stable situation if you return the money and choose not to, then you should be very careful about the reasoning for your justification, because it would be very easy for there to be some degree of motivated reasoning. But again, I think you haven’t made a case for why it is a moral requirement for all grant recipients to return the money regardless of circumstance, as opposed to something supererogatory.
1.
Fair, I haven’t spent enough time reading the comments to push back on this. Not sure if you consider something like this as reasonable or a rationalization.
2.
I’m not making a case that FTX grantees should keep the money where possible, I’m just pointing out that if your principle is that people shouldn’t spend money they know to have an unclean source, then it actually isn’t as obvious as you are making it out to be. If your argument is around harm done, then clearly there are also considerations around what harms might occur as a result of returning this money (and I hope you would also want to push strongly for those who are involved with returning money to be prioritizing harm mitigation, as one consideration is there might a lot more money available to be redirected from that pool than the EA one). If your argument is about legal proceedings, then I’m hopeful that EAs will follow the law here, and I would condemn EAs who tried to keep the money if it was against the law to. If your argument is about something like—“doing right by retail investors”, then I think you still have to make a case that the retail investors are now the strongest focus of moral obligation for all grantees for that pool of money (though I think that could easily be true for some or even most grantees).
I’m also not casting around for rationalizations to keep the grant money because I’ve never received an FTX grant.
3.
I didn’t claim that grant recipients are equal victims to FTX’s depositors, I said there could be scenarios where a grantee takes the place of another victim, through no fault of their own. You can reasonably interpret that as “sometimes grant recipients are also victims”. It sounds like you disagree because you say “Grant recipients are not victims at all.” but I strongly disagree with this.
Suppose someone quits their job to do independent research funded by the FTX future fund. then they lose the “gift” of money that they made some major life changes around, but now have no job to return to, meaning they quit their job for nothing.
Say an organization with 10 researchers who was running in part on FTX money now lose funding. But they’ve also spent millions of FTX money last year. Should they fire everyone and go bankrupt trying to return this money?
I don’t understand how you have so much (and rightly so!) empathy for the retail investors, but at the same time don’t see how it’s possible for grant recipients to also be victims.
4.
I think this is not a great analogy, because most of the time you don’t expect people to throw you a wallet and run off, and grant recipients don’t really receive money like that. A better analogy might be: you apply to a scholarship to college. you successfully get this scholarship, and then 2 weeks into college, you find out that Gaddafi funded your scholarship. Should you now decline your scholarship? Now you find out that half of all the college entrance scholarships in your country was funded by Gaddafi, but you’re not actually required to pay it back legally—but a third party is starting a process that allows you to pay it back, should you choose to. Should all those people be morally obliged to return their scholarships, regardless of the situation? What if you can’t go to college if you didn’t have this scholarship? What if 75% of the money wasn’t going to go back to the people harmed by Gaddafi if you declined the scholarship, but kept by the third party? What if you thought you could do better than 75% if you didn’t voluntarily return the money? I mean this is also not a great analogy but I’m mainly trying to illustrate why you could have recipients of grants also be a victim, as well as why modelling grants as wallets that a stranger throws you while running away isn’t great.
FWIW, I think if you’re not going to face major financial issues, then I do think it’s likely morally preferable to return the money than not, all else equal. And I think if you would be in a financially stable situation if you return the money and choose not to, then you should be very careful about the reasoning for your justification, because it would be very easy for there to be some degree of motivated reasoning. But again, I think you haven’t made a case for why it is a moral requirement for all grant recipients to return the money regardless of circumstance, as opposed to something supererogatory.