Trump 2.0 being more pro-Israel could be due to him being more extreme in all directions (perhaps due to new staff members, vice president, I don’t know), rather than due to pro-Palestinian protests.
The counter-reaction are against the protesters, not the cause itself. The Vietnam War protests also created a counter-reaction against the protesters, despite successfully ending the war.
I suspect for a lot of these pressure campaigns which work, the target has a tendency to pretend he isn’t backing down due to the campaign (but other reasons), or act like he’s not budging at all until finally giving in. The target doesn’t want people to think that pressure campaigns work on him, the target wants people to think that any pressure him will only get a counter-reaction out of him, in order to discourage others from pressuring him.
You’re probably right about the courts though, I didn’t know that.
I agree that there is more anti-abortion efforts due to Roe v. Wade, but I disagree that these efforts actually overshot to a point where restrictions on abortion are even harsher than they would be if Roe v. Wade never happened. I still think it moved the Overton window such that even conservatives feel abortion is kind of normal, maybe bad, but not literally like killing a baby.
The people angry against affirmative action have a strong feeling that different races should get the same treatment e.g. when applying to university. I don’t think any of them overshot into wanting to bring back segregation or slavery.
Oops, “efforts which empirically appear to work” was referring to how the book, If Anyone Builds, It Everyone Dies attracted many big name endorsements who aren’t known for endorsing AI x-risk concerns until now.
Trump 2.0 being more pro-Israel could be due to him being more extreme in all directions (perhaps due to new staff members, vice president, I don’t know), rather than due to pro-Palestinian protests.
The counter-reaction are against the protesters, not the cause itself. The Vietnam War protests also created a counter-reaction against the protesters, despite successfully ending the war.
I suspect for a lot of these pressure campaigns which work, the target has a tendency to pretend he isn’t backing down due to the campaign (but other reasons), or act like he’s not budging at all until finally giving in. The target doesn’t want people to think that pressure campaigns work on him, the target wants people to think that any pressure him will only get a counter-reaction out of him, in order to discourage others from pressuring him.
You’re probably right about the courts though, I didn’t know that.
I agree that there is more anti-abortion efforts due to Roe v. Wade, but I disagree that these efforts actually overshot to a point where restrictions on abortion are even harsher than they would be if Roe v. Wade never happened. I still think it moved the Overton window such that even conservatives feel abortion is kind of normal, maybe bad, but not literally like killing a baby.
The people angry against affirmative action have a strong feeling that different races should get the same treatment e.g. when applying to university. I don’t think any of them overshot into wanting to bring back segregation or slavery.
Oops, “efforts which empirically appear to work” was referring to how the book, If Anyone Builds, It Everyone Dies attracted many big name endorsements who aren’t known for endorsing AI x-risk concerns until now.