this way of reasoning seems like somewhat naive consequentialism.
Maybe? It is hard to reason well about these things given my strong emotions towards the admin.
But I do think the current administration is uniquely terrible by American standards.[1] It attracts and gives power to incompetent sycophants with no moral boundaries.
There was something Eliezer said about Bernie Sanders recently that really resonated with me recently:
[T]hank you also for consistently trying to do as seems right to you over the years, a stance that has grown on me as I have had more chance to witness its alternatives.
Having Trump as the president really just seems like it would be terrible for AGI governance because he is a terrible person. I’m sorry, I really don’t think there’s a more “precise” way to put it. Character matters. Trump doesn’t even pretend to be a kind person/is not under much pressure to appear to be nice.
(To be clear, I agree that, all else equal, it would be good for the Iranian regime to fail. Alas, all else would not be equal. While I think it would definitely be bad for your soul[2] to do things in the realm of “sabotage the American economy/military operation in order to make our president look bad,” I don’t think I’m obligated to stop my enemy when he is making a mistake either.)
Re character: I think most Americans (including myself) have been so far removed from true corruption that we have forgotten how bad it can possibly get. Even my state of Illinois, which is notable for its historical machine politics and general corruption (4 of our 11 last governors serving time + many others like Mike Madigan), has still more or less seen forward progress, because the corruption wasn’t bad enough to completely erode politics in the state.
But it CAN get that bad. We’re seeing this now with the Trump admin. I am generally left-leaning, but at this point I think I’d take an honest Republican over a corrupt Democrat—a position I did not hold previously—because corruption eats policy and utterly erodes the foundation upon which we build fair markets and strong institutions.
Maybe? It is hard to reason well about these things given my strong emotions towards the admin.
But I do think the current administration is uniquely terrible by American standards.[1] It attracts and gives power to incompetent sycophants with no moral boundaries.
There was something Eliezer said about Bernie Sanders recently that really resonated with me recently:
Having Trump as the president really just seems like it would be terrible for AGI governance because he is a terrible person. I’m sorry, I really don’t think there’s a more “precise” way to put it. Character matters. Trump doesn’t even pretend to be a kind person/is not under much pressure to appear to be nice.
(To be clear, I agree that, all else equal, it would be good for the Iranian regime to fail. Alas, all else would not be equal. While I think it would definitely be bad for your soul[2] to do things in the realm of “sabotage the American economy/military operation in order to make our president look bad,” I don’t think I’m obligated to stop my enemy when he is making a mistake either.)
Although even by global standards it’s quite bad.
i.e., you should not do this.
Re character: I think most Americans (including myself) have been so far removed from true corruption that we have forgotten how bad it can possibly get. Even my state of Illinois, which is notable for its historical machine politics and general corruption (4 of our 11 last governors serving time + many others like Mike Madigan), has still more or less seen forward progress, because the corruption wasn’t bad enough to completely erode politics in the state.
But it CAN get that bad. We’re seeing this now with the Trump admin. I am generally left-leaning, but at this point I think I’d take an honest Republican over a corrupt Democrat—a position I did not hold previously—because corruption eats policy and utterly erodes the foundation upon which we build fair markets and strong institutions.