They are. They just can’t come up with good arguments.
I think what is happening here is a bit more subtle than your summary suggests. First, many of the notions being proposed or discussed while in some sense “conservative″ are things like Moldbug’s ideas which while they do fall into one end, they aren’t in any way standard arguments or even issues. So people may simply not be able to raise effective arguments since they are grappling with approaches with which they haven’t had to think about before. Similarly, I suspect that all of us would have trouble making responses to arguments favoring say complete dissolution of all governments above the county level, not because such arguments are strong, but because we’re not used to thinking about them or constructing arguments against them.
Moreover, the meta-contrarian nature of Less Wrong, makes people very taken with arguments of forms that they haven’t seen before, so there may be a tendency to upvote or support an interesting contrarian argument even as one doesn’t pay as much attention to why the argument simply fails.
Finally, contrarian attitudes have an additional advantage when phrased in a political context: They aren’t as obviously political. The politics-as-mindkiller meme is very strong here, so a viewpoint that everyone recognizes as by nature political gets labeled as potential mindkilling to be avoided while arguments that don’t fit into the standard political dialogue as much don’t pattern match as closely.
Not sure about the last paragraph. People’s ideologies are part of the background to how they think, and political ideas that align with someone’s ideology can sometimes blend into that background without being registered. Contrarian ideas are less likely to blend in, and so more likely to be flagged by mainstreamers as political.
I think what is happening here is a bit more subtle than your summary suggests. First, many of the notions being proposed or discussed while in some sense “conservative″ are things like Moldbug’s ideas which while they do fall into one end, they aren’t in any way standard arguments or even issues. So people may simply not be able to raise effective arguments since they are grappling with approaches with which they haven’t had to think about before. Similarly, I suspect that all of us would have trouble making responses to arguments favoring say complete dissolution of all governments above the county level, not because such arguments are strong, but because we’re not used to thinking about them or constructing arguments against them.
Moreover, the meta-contrarian nature of Less Wrong, makes people very taken with arguments of forms that they haven’t seen before, so there may be a tendency to upvote or support an interesting contrarian argument even as one doesn’t pay as much attention to why the argument simply fails.
Finally, contrarian attitudes have an additional advantage when phrased in a political context: They aren’t as obviously political. The politics-as-mindkiller meme is very strong here, so a viewpoint that everyone recognizes as by nature political gets labeled as potential mindkilling to be avoided while arguments that don’t fit into the standard political dialogue as much don’t pattern match as closely.
Not sure about the last paragraph. People’s ideologies are part of the background to how they think, and political ideas that align with someone’s ideology can sometimes blend into that background without being registered. Contrarian ideas are less likely to blend in, and so more likely to be flagged by mainstreamers as political.