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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 22, 2023

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I feel about this post the way I feel about articles that say wine or chocolate in moderation has mild health benefits. Maybe there are some people who would benefit from adding a small amount of dark chocolate to their diet and this is valuable information to them, but most people are going to use that information to justify excessive consumption. Maybe there are some people who are so devoted to steel manning that they're missing out on important insights because they accept too many bad-faith weakman objections, but most people need to be pushed to focus on their opponent's best arguments. There are many, many sites on the internet that can be described as a magnifying glass focused on the outgroup's crazies, and most of them produce circle-jerks and dunk contests rather than a burning pyre of illumination. There's no alpha left in trying to detect structural flaws in your opponent's position based on their dumbest arguments.

There might be a tiny tiny bit of alpha in trying to explain the outgroup's collective epistemological dynamics, but "my opponents say they believe this because of x, but they really are motivated by y" is not exactly an untapped field of inquiry online either.

Any honest and rational believer needs to grapple for an explanation for how the crazies managed to all be accidentally right despite outfitted — by definition — with erroneous arguments. Such a scenario is so implausible that it commands a curious inquiry about its origin.

I don't think this is as unlikely as you say. Many political issues are directional in the near term (e.g. should taxes/welfare/prison sentence length go slightly up or down relative to status quo). Many crazies who you disagree with about the optimal tax level are going to end up on your side of the "should taxes go up or down' debate. Your opponents and engagement-driven social media have strong incentives to emphasize the crazies on your side, and you have a strong incentive to downplay their extremity by sane-washing them.

I feel about this post the way I feel about articles that say wine or chocolate in moderation has mild health benefits. Maybe there are some people who would benefit from adding a small amount of dark chocolate to their diet and this is valuable information to them, but most people are going to use that information to justify excessive consumption.

https://slatestarcodex.com/2014/03/24/should-you-reverse-any-advice-you-hear/

Qua Scott, there are many pathologically selfish and selfless people in the world. Selfish people need to hear the message that other people's preferences matter and you can't always put yourself first. Selfless people need to hear the message that it is sometimes okay to put yourself first. But group A might hear the message/content intended for group B and use it to justify their destructive behaviour, and vice versa.

I feel this way about a lot of modern "self-care" content, which seems like it was (at least initially) intended to give some measure of succour to genuine victims of child abuse, bullying or similar, but was quickly co-opted by selfish narcissists (invariably claiming to suffer from some nebulously defined "trauma") to rationalize their self-absorption and inconsiderate behaviour. Or indeed a lot of journalistic content about the dangers of excessive exercise, which may be useful advice to the handful of legitimate fitness freaks out there, but likely ends up being consumed by the obese and sedentary as a reason not to go for a walk.