What does “unsafe” mean for this prediction/wager? I don’t expect the murder rate to go up very much, nor life expectancy to reverse it’s upward trend. “Erosion of rights” is pretty general and needs more specifics to have any idea what changes are relevant.
I think things will get a little tougher and less pleasant for some minorities, both cultural and skin-color. There will be a return of some amount of discrimination and persecution. Probably not as harsh as it was in the 70s-90s, certainly not as bad as earlier than that, but worse than the last decade. It’ll probably FEEL terrible, because it was on such a good trend recently, and the reversal (temporary and shallow, I hope) will dash hopes of the direction being strictly monotonic.
So, the current death rate for an American in their 30s is about 0.2%. That probably increases another 0.5% or so when you consider black swan events like nuclear war and bioterrorism. Let’s call “unsafe” a ~3x increase in that expected death rate to 2%.
An increase that large would take something a lot more dramatic than the kind of politics we’re used to in the US, but while political changes that dramatic are rare historically, I think we’re at a moment where the risk is elevated enough that we ought to think about the odds.
I might, for example, give odds for a collapse of democracy in the US over the next couple of years at ~2-5%- if the US were to elect 20 presidents similar to the current one over a century, I’d expect better than even odds of one of them making themselves into a Putinesque dictator. A collapse like that would substantially increase the risk of war, I’d argue, including raising a real possibility of nuclear civil war. That might increase the expected death rate for young and middle-aged adults in that scenario by a point or two on its own. It might also introduce a small risk of extremely large atrocities against minorities or political opponents, which could increase the expected death rate by a few tenths of a percent.
There’s also a small risk of economic collapse. Something like a political takeover of the Fed combined with expensive, poorly considered populist policies might trigger hyperinflation of the dollar. When that sort of thing happens overseas, you’ll often see reduced health outcomes and breakdown in civil order increasing the death rate by up to a percent- and, of course, it would introduce new tail risks, increasing the expected death rate further.
I should note that I don’t think the odds of any of this are high enough to worry about my safety now- but needing to emigrate is much more likely outcome than actually being threatened, and that’s a headache I am mildly worried about.
What does “unsafe” mean for this prediction/wager? I don’t expect the murder rate to go up very much, nor life expectancy to reverse it’s upward trend. “Erosion of rights” is pretty general and needs more specifics to have any idea what changes are relevant.
I think things will get a little tougher and less pleasant for some minorities, both cultural and skin-color. There will be a return of some amount of discrimination and persecution. Probably not as harsh as it was in the 70s-90s, certainly not as bad as earlier than that, but worse than the last decade. It’ll probably FEEL terrible, because it was on such a good trend recently, and the reversal (temporary and shallow, I hope) will dash hopes of the direction being strictly monotonic.
So, the current death rate for an American in their 30s is about 0.2%. That probably increases another 0.5% or so when you consider black swan events like nuclear war and bioterrorism. Let’s call “unsafe” a ~3x increase in that expected death rate to 2%.
An increase that large would take something a lot more dramatic than the kind of politics we’re used to in the US, but while political changes that dramatic are rare historically, I think we’re at a moment where the risk is elevated enough that we ought to think about the odds.
I might, for example, give odds for a collapse of democracy in the US over the next couple of years at ~2-5%- if the US were to elect 20 presidents similar to the current one over a century, I’d expect better than even odds of one of them making themselves into a Putinesque dictator. A collapse like that would substantially increase the risk of war, I’d argue, including raising a real possibility of nuclear civil war. That might increase the expected death rate for young and middle-aged adults in that scenario by a point or two on its own. It might also introduce a small risk of extremely large atrocities against minorities or political opponents, which could increase the expected death rate by a few tenths of a percent.
There’s also a small risk of economic collapse. Something like a political takeover of the Fed combined with expensive, poorly considered populist policies might trigger hyperinflation of the dollar. When that sort of thing happens overseas, you’ll often see reduced health outcomes and breakdown in civil order increasing the death rate by up to a percent- and, of course, it would introduce new tail risks, increasing the expected death rate further.
I should note that I don’t think the odds of any of this are high enough to worry about my safety now- but needing to emigrate is much more likely outcome than actually being threatened, and that’s a headache I am mildly worried about.