This isn’t really a comment regarding the content of your post, but it made me think of it. I think EAs who write good forum posts should consider submitting them to large philanthropy magazines such as Stanford Social Innovation Review and the Chronicle of Philanthropy.
I think you make an interesting argument here but I can’t help but feel you are preaching to the choir. It is important to make this argument to the people in philanthropy that complain that EA doesn’t address root causes! And those people don’t read the EA forum, they read SSIR and the Chronicle.
I do think the article would need some work and probably toned down a bit, but I don’t think it’s too much of a stretch that posts like this can be published in these other outlets. And more articles that defend EA principles in these other outlets can influence the exact people EA should be trying to influence.
This isn’t really a comment regarding the content of your post, but it made me think of it. I think EAs who write good forum posts should consider submitting them to large philanthropy magazines such as Stanford Social Innovation Review and the Chronicle of Philanthropy.
I think you make an interesting argument here but I can’t help but feel you are preaching to the choir. It is important to make this argument to the people in philanthropy that complain that EA doesn’t address root causes! And those people don’t read the EA forum, they read SSIR and the Chronicle.
I do think the article would need some work and probably toned down a bit, but I don’t think it’s too much of a stretch that posts like this can be published in these other outlets. And more articles that defend EA principles in these other outlets can influence the exact people EA should be trying to influence.