Currently enrolled in a MA in Economics at the University of Texas, Austin. I used to teach a high school philosophy class, which included a unit on ethics, meaning that I got to teach my high school students about Effective Altruism. I’m currently transitioning to a career in AI policy.
I donated a kidney altruistically in April 2020.
The charities I donate to regularly include GiveWell’s Maximum Impact Fund and the Clean Air Task Force. I’ve taken the Giving What We Can pledge.
Sometimes I write things down here: ordinaryevents.substack.com
To my mind, the piece is a welcome response to the recent (imo) irresponsible hyping of cross-strait risk by influential US actors. To the extent that anyone’s expectation of the risk of cross-strait violence was influenced by such voices, this piece should help recalibrate down. But of course the fundamental risk remains, even if there are reasons to doubt its immimence as represented by China hawks.
You could do a Straussian reading of this piece such that it is in fact saying ‘China won’t bomb TW next week so let’s calm down’ in order to “avoid having the US government kick-starting a nuclear war by pre-emptive strikes or panic-induced miscalculations.” To the extent that Tim Heath is respected and that WotR is widely read by US decision-makers, I think this reading makes some sense (although ofc there are very strong incentives for the US gov’t to not start a war with China that have nothing to do with whether they’re reading WotR or not). Your mileage may vary.
Your broader point, though, that we should take a longer/less-temporally-bound/more structural view of the risk, is one that I agree with.