Experience in Math, Datascience, small non-profit management
I care about people and suffering
Prefer intervention through removing bad actors
Not sure how to do that, Lobbying?
Please send me potential jobs and internships
Introduction
Hi everyone, thank you for taking the time to read & help!
I’m very new to EA and new to looking for 3rd sector jobs, so please feel free to send information I didn’t explicitly request & give constructive criticism :)
Short CV
Professional work
Bachelor of mathematics from TAU
Two years total of data science (internships)
One year of firmware optimization (internship)
Two years of cyber security systems integration (pre-uni)
Volunteer work
Five years on board of directors of the Israeli Go Association (four years as head)
One year of volunteer work for the Association for LGBTQ equality in Israel
Other skills
Fluent Hebrew and English, competent Dutch
Conducting research, writing and debating.
Example areas I care about
Direct systemic violence (war, genocide, slavery)
Global warming
Global health
Why direct systemic violence is first on the list
I simply put a huge weight on the amount of mental suffering that comes together with such violence.
What I mean by “bad actors”
Any person or organization that creates harm for their own gain. This could be political leaders, religious leaders or companies.
Some unordered notable examples
Ethiopian leaders in the Tigray war
Chinese leaders in the context of Xinjiang
Owners of some private prisons in the US
Nestle in the context of child labor
ExxonMobil in the context of climate change denial and policy manipulation
Why focus on removing bad actors?
Personal POV
The frustration I feel with bad actors is to me a much stronger motivator than the pain and suffering alone.
I’ll refrain from considering why here ;)
EA POV
Bad actors take attention away from important problems, through misinformation and lobbying. This removes a great amount of financial support from non-EA members for EA causes.
A clear example here is ExxonMobile’s influence on conventional climate change conversations and policy.
Considering the amount of resources non-EA members bring it seems worthwhile to spend effort on where those resources go.
If you have any research about the negative impact of such actors, I would love to read it ;)
How to remove bad actors?
I don’t know. I would love to see more research on any of the following points.
My current understanding and thoughts:
The case of states
Sanctions seem to be mostly ineffective and are often harmful
Peaceful protest seems mostly ineffective
Violent protest seems to be a coinflip between effective and harmful
Lobbying seems effective but requires a lot of pre-existing power
The case of companies
Bad press seems to be a coinflip in the current political climate
The current laws don’t seem to be doing much
What would I prefer to do?
work with people for at least a large part of the day. That means less programming and mathematical research and more management or anything else that leads to a lot of conversations (right now my only idea is lobbying, other ideas are very welcome).
I do realize this is a tall order with my CV, so anything that would combine my strong suits with what I want to do, or would help me transition is more than welcome.
Geographic limitations:
I will be moving from Israel to South Korea in two months and will probably stay there for 1-2 years. I’m guessing that means I’ll have to do remote work, I do realize how this clashes with what I want.
I don’t have authorization to work in the US which seems to be a requirement for a lot of (even remote) jobs.
What did I try?
I’ve tried going through organization lists and seeing which has openings, I’ve tried using the 80,000 hours jobs board.
I’ve seen that I simply do not qualify for most jobs, and that I have a hard time judging how relevant different jobs are to me.
How can you help?
Send jobs/ internships my way.
Send relevant research to the points above.
Give me feedback on anything! My reasoning, the style of this post etc…
Please help me find a job/ internship
TL;DR
Experience in Math, Datascience, small non-profit management
I care about people and suffering
Prefer intervention through removing bad actors
Not sure how to do that, Lobbying?
Please send me potential jobs and internships
Introduction
Hi everyone, thank you for taking the time to read & help!
I’m very new to EA and new to looking for 3rd sector jobs, so please feel free to send information I didn’t explicitly request & give constructive criticism :)
Short CV
Professional work
Bachelor of mathematics from TAU
Two years total of data science (internships)
One year of firmware optimization (internship)
Two years of cyber security systems integration (pre-uni)
Volunteer work
Five years on board of directors of the Israeli Go Association (four years as head)
One year of volunteer work for the Association for LGBTQ equality in Israel
Other skills
Fluent Hebrew and English, competent Dutch
Conducting research, writing and debating.
Example areas I care about
Direct systemic violence (war, genocide, slavery)
Global warming
Global health
Why direct systemic violence is first on the list
I simply put a huge weight on the amount of mental suffering that comes together with such violence.
What I mean by “bad actors”
Any person or organization that creates harm for their own gain. This could be political leaders, religious leaders or companies.
Some unordered notable examples
Ethiopian leaders in the Tigray war
Chinese leaders in the context of Xinjiang
Owners of some private prisons in the US
Nestle in the context of child labor
ExxonMobil in the context of climate change denial and policy manipulation
Why focus on removing bad actors?
Personal POV
The frustration I feel with bad actors is to me a much stronger motivator than the pain and suffering alone.
I’ll refrain from considering why here ;)
EA POV
Bad actors take attention away from important problems, through misinformation and lobbying. This removes a great amount of financial support from non-EA members for EA causes.
A clear example here is ExxonMobile’s influence on conventional climate change conversations and policy.
Considering the amount of resources non-EA members bring it seems worthwhile to spend effort on where those resources go.
If you have any research about the negative impact of such actors, I would love to read it ;)
How to remove bad actors?
I don’t know. I would love to see more research on any of the following points.
My current understanding and thoughts:
The case of states
Sanctions seem to be mostly ineffective and are often harmful
Peaceful protest seems mostly ineffective
Violent protest seems to be a coinflip between effective and harmful
Lobbying seems effective but requires a lot of pre-existing power
The case of companies
Bad press seems to be a coinflip in the current political climate
The current laws don’t seem to be doing much
What would I prefer to do?
work with people for at least a large part of the day. That means less programming and mathematical research and more management or anything else that leads to a lot of conversations (right now my only idea is lobbying, other ideas are very welcome).
I do realize this is a tall order with my CV, so anything that would combine my strong suits with what I want to do, or would help me transition is more than welcome.
Geographic limitations:
I will be moving from Israel to South Korea in two months and will probably stay there for 1-2 years. I’m guessing that means I’ll have to do remote work, I do realize how this clashes with what I want.
I don’t have authorization to work in the US which seems to be a requirement for a lot of (even remote) jobs.
What did I try?
I’ve tried going through organization lists and seeing which has openings, I’ve tried using the 80,000 hours jobs board.
I’ve seen that I simply do not qualify for most jobs, and that I have a hard time judging how relevant different jobs are to me.
How can you help?
Send jobs/ internships my way.
Send relevant research to the points above.
Give me feedback on anything! My reasoning, the style of this post etc…
Thank you so much for taking the time to read!