One perspective one could have is that this is a positive-sum approach to influence-/power-seeking: supporting neglected policies that would benefit large amounts of the US public buys goodwill, helps develop connections with other funders, and might put people in positions of power that are highly sympathetic to EA ideas. With the current state of the EA brand, this might not be such a bad idea.
There are other ways of seeking influence but they tend to have fewer positive effects (donating to politicians, trying to run one’s own candidates for office) and solely relying on the strategy “become experts and try to convince those in power of the necessary policies” isn’t really bearing fruit. And it seems increasingly untenable to ignore politics, with US & UK (and Netherlands) already drastically slashing international aid and the AGI trajectory depending heavily on those in power.
It is of course different from the default EA strategy of “do the actual thing you believe is directly most cost-effective and communicate very explicitly about your theory of change”. But I don’t think that explicitly communicating this would be well-received by third parties. Even explicitly thinking of it this way internally is risky PR-wise.
It does seem important to clearly delineate within EA when and whose communication is meant to be representative of one’s thinking, and which communication isn’t. Muddying this could be quite detrimental to EA in the long-term. I’m not sure how OpenPhil should’ve acted here. Perhaps better if they had not posted it to the EA Forum so that they don’t signal “we believe this is good on EA grounds”.
All in all, I’m positively inclined towards this fund though.
One perspective one could have is that this is a positive-sum approach to influence-/power-seeking: supporting neglected policies that would benefit large amounts of the US public buys goodwill, helps develop connections with other funders, and might put people in positions of power that are highly sympathetic to EA ideas. With the current state of the EA brand, this might not be such a bad idea.
There are other ways of seeking influence but they tend to have fewer positive effects (donating to politicians, trying to run one’s own candidates for office) and solely relying on the strategy “become experts and try to convince those in power of the necessary policies” isn’t really bearing fruit. And it seems increasingly untenable to ignore politics, with US & UK (and Netherlands) already drastically slashing international aid and the AGI trajectory depending heavily on those in power.
It is of course different from the default EA strategy of “do the actual thing you believe is directly most cost-effective and communicate very explicitly about your theory of change”. But I don’t think that explicitly communicating this would be well-received by third parties. Even explicitly thinking of it this way internally is risky PR-wise.
It does seem important to clearly delineate within EA when and whose communication is meant to be representative of one’s thinking, and which communication isn’t. Muddying this could be quite detrimental to EA in the long-term. I’m not sure how OpenPhil should’ve acted here. Perhaps better if they had not posted it to the EA Forum so that they don’t signal “we believe this is good on EA grounds”.
All in all, I’m positively inclined towards this fund though.