As you grow up, you start to see that the world is full of waste, injustice and bad incentives. You try frantically to tell people about this, and it always seems to go badly for you.
Then you grow up a bit more, get a bit wise, and realize that the mother-of-all-bad-incentives, the worst injustice, and the greatest meta-cause of waste … is that people who point out such problems get punished, (especially) including pointing out this problem. If you are wise, you then become an initiate of the secret conspiracy of the successful.
You try frantically to tell people about this, and it always seems to go badly for you.
Telling people frantically about problems that are not on a very short list of “approved emergencies” like fire, angry mobs, and snakes is a good way to get people to ignore you, or, failing that, to dislike you.
It is only very recently (in evolutionary time) that ordinary people are likely to find important solutions to important social problems in a context where those solutions have a realistic chance of being implemented. In the past, (a) people were relatively uneducated, (b) society was relatively simpler, and (c) arbitrary power was held and wielded relatively more openly.
Thus, in the past, anyone who was talking frantically about social reform was either hopelessly naive, hopelessly insane, or hopelessly self-promoting. There’s a reason we’re hardwired to instinctively discount that kind of talk.
You should present the easily implemented, obviously better solution at the same time as the problem.
If the solution isn’t easy to implement by the person you’re talking to, then cost/benefit analysis may be in favor of the status quo or you might be talking to the wrong person. If the solution isn’t obviously better, then it won’t be very convincing as a solution or you might not have considered all opinions on the problem. And if there is no solution, then why complain?
As you grow up, you start to see that the world is full of waste, injustice and bad incentives. You try frantically to tell people about this, and it always seems to go badly for you.
Then you grow up a bit more, get a bit wise, and realize that the mother-of-all-bad-incentives, the worst injustice, and the greatest meta-cause of waste … is that people who point out such problems get punished, (especially) including pointing out this problem. If you are wise, you then become an initiate of the secret conspiracy of the successful.
Discuss.
Telling people frantically about problems that are not on a very short list of “approved emergencies” like fire, angry mobs, and snakes is a good way to get people to ignore you, or, failing that, to dislike you.
It is only very recently (in evolutionary time) that ordinary people are likely to find important solutions to important social problems in a context where those solutions have a realistic chance of being implemented. In the past, (a) people were relatively uneducated, (b) society was relatively simpler, and (c) arbitrary power was held and wielded relatively more openly.
Thus, in the past, anyone who was talking frantically about social reform was either hopelessly naive, hopelessly insane, or hopelessly self-promoting. There’s a reason we’re hardwired to instinctively discount that kind of talk.
You should present the easily implemented, obviously better solution at the same time as the problem.
If the solution isn’t easy to implement by the person you’re talking to, then cost/benefit analysis may be in favor of the status quo or you might be talking to the wrong person. If the solution isn’t obviously better, then it won’t be very convincing as a solution or you might not have considered all opinions on the problem. And if there is no solution, then why complain?
Is that true? ’Cause if it’s true, I’d like to join.