Although I don’t agree with all conclusions, I liked to read this post and think some critique is extremely important.
You write: EA’s lack of diversity and parallels to colonialism and institutional racism have meaningful repercussions for EA as a movement. When we can’t engage with people who make these critiques, it damages our reputation and credibility.
I think indeed that with the recent shift from the EA movement towards political influence, optics and finding political alliances are increasingly important. EA ideas can resonate with both conservatives and the left, but I think that the (centre-)left is probably the most natural ally when it comes to tech/AI regulation, larger foreign budgets and improved animal welfare.
From my observations the EA movement is currently doing a mediocre job at aligning with the (centre-)left, mainly due to a lack of diversity in the movement (especially in leadership) and the optics of being a billionaire-backed movement. I saw an outburst of different forms of critique on EA and long termism from the (SJ-)left on Twitter in response to the Time article from some of the usual aspects (Timnit Gebru (multiple tweets an hour), Phil Torres) and some people new to me, e.g. Seth Lazar (although supported by Rob Reich) and many others.
As you mentioned CEA already works on the topic of diversity, although I think there is way more to be done. Some ideas (maybe on some of them work is already done):
Actively steering in newly starting groups to prevent path dependency that goes against diversity (e.g. focus on gender parity in group leadership, more diverse cause area focus of group from the start)
Way more efforts into community building in the
Global south
Non-elite universities with greater diversity in their student population
More focus on other types of impactful career paths that attract a diverse group instead of a (too big of a) focus on AI Safety work, e.g. animal welfare, global health & development and policy careers
Regarding the critique of EA being too much of a billionaire / finance-friendly movement:
Without actually engaging in addressing and researching issues related to global wealth disparity, we cause the impression that we are biased in this discussion in favour of large wealth disparities. We should do more research into this potential cause area and interventions, e.g. fair taxation, the rent-seeking nature of the financial sector and the optimal division of wealth created by the (SV) tech sector. If we conclude that those topics are not important, we should have excellent arguments why we don’t work on it. For now it just feels that these topics are not sufficiently discussed. This makes EA too suspicious to be an ally for the (centre-)left
I think I recently saw something about EA billionaires trying to increase tax on billionaires, which is along the lines of what you suggest.
Your suggestions for diversity in local groups would reduce the blindspots of my own that I uncovered during the writing of this post—I think it’s easy to fall into patterns as a group based on the interests of the members, and therefore forget how wide the conversation and action under the umbrella “EA” is.
The focal point of the post is more around EA’s potential to do more power-sharing, rather than solely increase the diversity of people within EA (though diversity is part of it). I think of it like a consultancy: a consultancy usually isn’t criticised for being too homogenous. Instead, people just decide not to use that consultancy in favour of one that has the skills/perspectives/track record/etc that they’re looking for. Although EA isn’t one centralised company, I see similarities because (in many but not all) cases, we are a group of people who are trying to apply tools to other peoples’ problems.
A consultancy doesn’t need political allies or alignment, though it may choose to take on projects of a certain flavour. I’d be interested to hear your thoughts on whether EA needs to (or should be) seeking the political alignment you mentioned.
Although I don’t agree with all conclusions, I liked to read this post and think some critique is extremely important.
You write: EA’s lack of diversity and parallels to colonialism and institutional racism have meaningful repercussions for EA as a movement. When we can’t engage with people who make these critiques, it damages our reputation and credibility.
I think indeed that with the recent shift from the EA movement towards political influence, optics and finding political alliances are increasingly important. EA ideas can resonate with both conservatives and the left, but I think that the (centre-)left is probably the most natural ally when it comes to tech/AI regulation, larger foreign budgets and improved animal welfare.
From my observations the EA movement is currently doing a mediocre job at aligning with the (centre-)left, mainly due to a lack of diversity in the movement (especially in leadership) and the optics of being a billionaire-backed movement. I saw an outburst of different forms of critique on EA and long termism from the (SJ-)left on Twitter in response to the Time article from some of the usual aspects (Timnit Gebru (multiple tweets an hour), Phil Torres) and some people new to me, e.g. Seth Lazar (although supported by Rob Reich) and many others.
As you mentioned CEA already works on the topic of diversity, although I think there is way more to be done. Some ideas (maybe on some of them work is already done):
Actively steering in newly starting groups to prevent path dependency that goes against diversity (e.g. focus on gender parity in group leadership, more diverse cause area focus of group from the start)
Way more efforts into community building in the
Global south
Non-elite universities with greater diversity in their student population
More focus on other types of impactful career paths that attract a diverse group instead of a (too big of a) focus on AI Safety work, e.g. animal welfare, global health & development and policy careers
Regarding the critique of EA being too much of a billionaire / finance-friendly movement:
Without actually engaging in addressing and researching issues related to global wealth disparity, we cause the impression that we are biased in this discussion in favour of large wealth disparities. We should do more research into this potential cause area and interventions, e.g. fair taxation, the rent-seeking nature of the financial sector and the optimal division of wealth created by the (SV) tech sector. If we conclude that those topics are not important, we should have excellent arguments why we don’t work on it. For now it just feels that these topics are not sufficiently discussed. This makes EA too suspicious to be an ally for the (centre-)left
I think I recently saw something about EA billionaires trying to increase tax on billionaires, which is along the lines of what you suggest.
Your suggestions for diversity in local groups would reduce the blindspots of my own that I uncovered during the writing of this post—I think it’s easy to fall into patterns as a group based on the interests of the members, and therefore forget how wide the conversation and action under the umbrella “EA” is.
The focal point of the post is more around EA’s potential to do more power-sharing, rather than solely increase the diversity of people within EA (though diversity is part of it). I think of it like a consultancy: a consultancy usually isn’t criticised for being too homogenous. Instead, people just decide not to use that consultancy in favour of one that has the skills/perspectives/track record/etc that they’re looking for. Although EA isn’t one centralised company, I see similarities because (in many but not all) cases, we are a group of people who are trying to apply tools to other peoples’ problems.
A consultancy doesn’t need political allies or alignment, though it may choose to take on projects of a certain flavour. I’d be interested to hear your thoughts on whether EA needs to (or should be) seeking the political alignment you mentioned.