I believe that EA could tone down the free books by 5-10% but I am pretty skeptical that the books program is super overboard.
I have 50+ books I’ve gotten at events over the past few years (when I was in college), mostly politics/econ/phil stuff the complete works of John Stuart Mill and Adam Smith, Myth of the Rational Voter, Elephant in the Brain, Three Languages of Politics, etc (all physical books). Bill Gates’ book has been given out as a free PDF recently.
So I don’t think EA is a major outlier here. I also like that there are some slightly less “EA books” in the mix like the Scout Mindset and The AI Does Not Hate You.
So I definitely think I’m making a rhetorical argument there to make a point.
But I don’t think the problem is quite as bad as you imply here: I’m mostly using fire to mean “existential risks in our lifetimes,” and I don’t think almost any EA critic (save a few) think that would be fine. Maybe I should’ve stated it more clearly, but this is something most ethical systems (and common sense ethics) seem do agree upon.
So my point is that critics do agree dying of an existential risk would be bad, but are unfortunately falling into a bit of parochial discourse rather than thinking about how they can build bridges to solve this.
To the people who are actually fine with dying from x-risk (“fires aren’t as important as you think they are”), I agree my argument has no force, but I just hope that they are clear about their beliefs, as you say.