I’m the author of the LW post being signal-boosted. I sincerely appreciate Oliver’s engagement with these critiques, and I also firmly disagree with his blanket dismissal of the value of “standard practices.”
As I argue in the 7th post in the linked sequence, I think OpenPhil and others are leaving serious value on the table by not adopting some of the standard grant evaluation practices used at other philanthropies, and I don’t think they can reasonably claim to have considered and rejected them—instead the evidence strongly suggests that they’re (a) mostly unaware of these practices due to not having brought in enough people with mainstream expertise, and (b) quickly deciding that anything that seems unfamiliar or uncomfortable “doesn’t make sense” and can therefore be safely ignored.
We have a lot of very smart people in the movement, as Oliver correctly points out, and general intelligence can get you pretty far in life, but Washington, DC is an intensely competitive environment that’s full of other very smart people. If you try to compete here with your wits alone while not understanding how politics works, you’re almost certainly going to lose.
I’m the author of the LW post being signal-boosted. I sincerely appreciate Oliver’s engagement with these critiques, and I also firmly disagree with his blanket dismissal of the value of “standard practices.”
As I argue in the 7th post in the linked sequence, I think OpenPhil and others are leaving serious value on the table by not adopting some of the standard grant evaluation practices used at other philanthropies, and I don’t think they can reasonably claim to have considered and rejected them—instead the evidence strongly suggests that they’re (a) mostly unaware of these practices due to not having brought in enough people with mainstream expertise, and (b) quickly deciding that anything that seems unfamiliar or uncomfortable “doesn’t make sense” and can therefore be safely ignored.
We have a lot of very smart people in the movement, as Oliver correctly points out, and general intelligence can get you pretty far in life, but Washington, DC is an intensely competitive environment that’s full of other very smart people. If you try to compete here with your wits alone while not understanding how politics works, you’re almost certainly going to lose.