Hmm, even though I’m someone who’d be excited to go to the Bahamas and am happy to subsidize others interested in doing so, I agree that from the outside this is a really funny situation, and I think it’s reasonable to laugh at ourselves a little for it.
But ultimately, we are a movement primarily bottlenecked not by small-donor $s, PR, or appearance of moral rigor, but by a) lacking the strategic clarity to confidently know what we’re doing and b) having enough people to act on the directions that we are moderately confident about what’s right to do.
Building a community of people next to the richest company in EA seems like a reasonable bet for us to get better at both.
Hmm, even though I’m someone who’d be excited to go to the Bahamas and am happy to subsidize others interested in doing so, I agree that from the outside this is a really funny situation, and I think it’s reasonable to laugh at ourselves a little for it.
But ultimately, we are a movement primarily bottlenecked not by small-donor $s, PR, or appearance of moral rigor, but by a) lacking the strategic clarity to confidently know what we’re doing and b) having enough people to act on the directions that we are moderately confident about what’s right to do.
Building a community of people next to the richest company in EA seems like a reasonable bet for us to get better at both.