I accept that political donations and activism are among the best ways to do good as an individual.
But it is less obvious that EA as an academic discipline and social movement has the analytical frameworks that suit it to politics—we have progress studies and the abundance movement for that.
It is of course necessary for political donations to be analysed as trade offs against donations to other cause areas. And there’s a lot of research that needs doing on the effectiveness of campaign donations and protest movements in achieving expected outcomes. And certain cause areas definitely have issue-specific reasons to do political work.
But I wouldn’t want to see an “EA funds for Democrats” or a “EAs Against Trump” campaign.
That 12 people agreed with such a clearly false statement concerns me on what is usually a pretty rational forum. If we include sea fishing and all the insects we kill through spraying, not even close to 99 percent animals we kill are factory farmed. It might even be under half.
Also a line like
“Dwarfs all human problems (including throughout history)” might be true, but it’s extremely uncertain and a great way to turn people off this cause and make people less likely to donate.
over 99 percent of the world doesn’t work on factory farming, and this at least appears to make it sound like you think their work is relatively unimportant.
I think the animal welfare movement still has a big a motivation/messaging problem which doesn’t help on the donation front. I think there’s a lot to learn from examples like the masterful Lewis Bollard TED talk here which still claims factory farming is the biggest moral problem of our time without unintentionally alienating people.
https://youtu.be/dvLnIecUNL8?si=VyvYqWjIp701j_MB