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Notes -
https://nationalpost.com/opinion/colby-cosh-ubc-covers-for-bad-science-in-homeless-cash-transfer-study
A major university (in Canada) published another one of those studies where they give homeless people money and see if they spend it on crack or job applications. Mostly this was met with admiration and joy by the journalist class. The more right-leaning publication I posted above is more skeptical, pointing out of some of the potential problems with the study:
...
This isn't that interesting, it's just a bad study done in Vancouver, what I found interesting was the writer starts with a brief summary of the replication crisis, to an audience that is presumably not intimately familiar with it:
There has been and is lots of discussion here about relaying rationalist concepts or ideas to outsiders or average random people in Mottizen's day-to-day lives. With the rise of culture war divisions, and especially the political rhetoric surrounding the Coronavirus Lockdowns and other policies, I'm wondering what approach if any you use when talking to acquaintances or friends who skew liberal, who broadly are happy to have the inertia of universities or the intelligentsia on their side, that you often reject social science research or findings unless personally having vetted them, without sounding to them like a low-IQ backwater hick redneck science denying flat-earther. I suspect that this is impossible.
Correct, it's more like both hands, both feet, and possibly a small elephant on the scale.
They excluded the homeless who are the biggest problem, then when half their study population disappeared with the money that didn't count against their claim that the results were good.
But how about this:
Those people will eventually die, and stop being a problem.
Whereas, if we lived in a world that gave everyone money as soon as they became homeless, then in that world there would be no such thing as people who have been homeless for 5 years without getting that money.
In a world where the policy is 'people get money to help recover as soon as they become homeless', there would only be people who got money as soon as they became homeless, so those are the people you'd want to study to understand how a world with that policy would look.
Emphasis on "eventually". These people would in a less functional society just die from their numerous public drug overdoses, or freeze to death in winter, or choke to death on their own vomit drunk off their asses under a bridge, or just starve. I suspect this is what happens to them in China or the third world. In the USA or Canada, however, they are rescued from the brink time and again at either taxpayer expense or by private charities.
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