Wednesday, September 18, 2024

Please Share Suffering Survey

New song from Tears for Fears! The Girl that I Call Home

 

The Organization to Prevent Intense Suffering (OPIS) has released a global survey to better understand suffering. The survey is here. (I hope you aren't in a position to be able to answer.) 

More info:

The survey is part of a project to provide a more comprehensive overview of human and non-human suffering on our planet. While pain and suffering are often evaluated numerically in clinical settings, we think this initiative is novel in the attempt to collect data across many different conditions, with a specific focus on the phenomenon of suffering. We plan to submit our findings to a scientific publication in addition to communicating them as part of the larger overview.

We would appreciate your help in filling out the survey if you are currently suffering significantly, or have in the past, from any condition or life situation. We would also appreciate your sharing it with any friends, family, acquaintances or colleagues who are suffering from a particular condition and may also be interested in contributing to this research project.


The face of intense suffering. 😎

Monday, September 16, 2024

Two Graphs Worth a Glance

If you find these posts useful, please share them. TY!


Energy = The way out of poverty.
From Todd Moss' Eat More Electrons.
Related: We can get more energy from existing nuclear plants.




Some context: right now, ur planet is historically cold.
Not "Destroying the Earth." Not "Burning."
From Malthusians and Misanthropes by Jack Devanney.

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

"Morality" is a myth and "reason" is irrelevant

I've listened to a number of episodes of the podcast "Lives Well Lived" by Peter Singer & Kasia de Lazari Radek.

In their podcast, Kasia and Peter argue that "reason" can lead people to live more "moral" lives.

I think their podcast itself disproves each aspect of that argument.

Kasia and Peter have had seventeen episodes with people chosen to show a well-lived life. But the majority of the interviews I have heard have been with very smart people who understand the horrors of factory farms and still are not vegetarians; e.g., psychologist Paul Bloom, economist Tyler Cowen, and most absurd (in his rationalizations) Neil deGrasse Tyson (And Jonathan Haidt, with whom I had a personal connection as discussed in Losing. And probably Danny Kahneman.)


(This is not a "People are hypocrites!" or a "Why can't people be as smart as me?!" post.)


Longtime readers know that, over time, I've realized we are each just a bag of chemical reactions. These bags exist to get a certain combination of atoms - genes - into the next generation.

All of our feelings and thoughts come from bodies and brains that evolved over unfathomable eons of time. And these bodies and brains evolved for a singular purpose - to get genes to the next generation.

Not to be rational. Not to be moral. Not to be "good."

Just to reproduce.

How humans think and feel evolved to keep us alive, gather resources, be liked, and get our genes to the next generation.

Our feelings come first.

We then employ our thoughts to "justify" our feelings.

We are not rational animals; we are rationalizing animals.

For many reasons, we are confused and deluded about this. 

One illusion comes from our sense of "moral outrage." But these feelings are simply the product of evolution. Not only do we "love" our family (they share our genes!) and our mates (obv), but we also do better (have more babies) when we work together. So we are angry at and demand "justice" for those who lie or cheat or steal or otherwise attempt to freeload on cooperation.

But this isn't "morality" in any real sense. It is all just chemical reactions to driven by the most successful chemicals on earth.

The counter is: If reason and morality don't exist, how has there been "moral progress"? Why have we "expanded the circle"?

Because it benefits us.

Just as bands of hunter-gatherers did better when they worked together (and policed offenders), bigger and bigger groups did better and better via trade and division of labor. We then came up with rationalizations for why we are no longer at war with Eastasia, and developed treaties and laws to get a "fair" deal. However, respecting and working with more people all comes down to how it benefits us.

For example: If everyone with power had had a decline in living standards because of an end to slavery, slavery wouldn't have ended. However, the North developed a non-slave-centric economy, so they could then "morally" oppose slavery.

And, as I've noted, there are still about as many human beings living in slavery today in our "morally evolved" world.

(Whenever we try something not based in self-interest / incentives (e.g., "from each according to their ability, to each according to their need") it ends up a bloody, regressive failure.)

And even as we have evolved to be an interconnected global market with rules and institutions to mutually benefit most (wrongly interpreted as a morally advanced society), we still regularly descend into savage and brutal tribalism.


Are there people who "do good"? There are people who are celebrated for being "good" and "moral," whose actions are outside the current norms of society. Our brains are big and complicated and can be programmed to do many things.

But it is all just programming. There is no "choice" to be good.

Even if there are people who "do good," that doesn't mean morality exists or that reason matters. "Moral" people following "reason" do crazy and even criminal stuff.

No judgment! They are just following their programming!

(We should also ask: Are the people we admire actually making the world a better place in terms of overall suffering? It is rarely clear, especially when you consider all sentient beings.)

Just like those who go off the "ethical" deep end or those who create terrible unintended consequences (like me for decades, as documented in Losing), I think it is actively harmful to operate under the delusion that reason matters.

It is harmful because this delusion leads to wasted effort and more suffering than there needs to be. If we honestly face facts and deal with people as they actually are, we could reduce suffering more efficiently.

(This isn't a contradiction. It is entirely possible to realize that we are just bags of chemical reactions and to still want less suffering. Suffering actually exists.)

Monday, September 9, 2024

Italy

There is a truism Anne always reminds me of: "No one gives a $#!t about your vacation." (This isn't true of me - I often love hearing about where others have been. Hearing trip reports from others is why we spent a week in the Berner-Oberland, the highlight of our travels in the past few years and one of the top highlights of my life.) 

But I've heard from several subscribers and One Step donors that they like our travel pictures. So below are some from Italy. 

(BTW, today is the third anniversary of my first day off of oh-pee-oyds after my accident on January 21, 2021. I'm still on pregabalin. Personally, I'm exceedingly grateful for very strong pain meds.)


Florence, which I did not like - crazy crowded in mid-May.


For the 666 Picante Spicy Olive Oil. LOL!


Siena

Corniglia in Cinque Terre




So so so glad we didn't spend more than a few hours in Pisa - the very definition of over-touristed (and the pushiest "sellers" I've ever encountered).




Milan train station

Vernazza in Cinque Terre (yes, these are out of order)



Friday, September 6, 2024

Weekend Reading: Thank God for the Atom Bomb

The Enola Gay, the B-29 that dropped Little Boy on Hiroshima.

I defend dropping at least the first atomic bomb in Losing. (Noting, among other things, that the two nuclear bombings were less deadly and destructive than when the US firebombed Tokyo: "The Operation Meetinghouse firebombing of Tokyo on the night of 9 March 1945 was the single deadliest air raid of World War II,[22] greater than Dresden,[23] Hamburg, Hiroshima, or Nagasaki as single events." More.) 

Here is a longer discussion of the atomic bombs' use from The New Republic in 1981.

Sometimes the least bad option is fucking horrific. Kinda the definition of war.

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Choose Truth and Hope over Dogma and Doom

"when you hold the definition of poverty constant, the rate fell from about 22% before the Great Society to about 2-3% today ... Giving poor people food and medical care really does make them less poor — as does giving them housing vouchers and cash subsidies like the EITC. The welfare state does what we created it to do."

Noah Smith: Progressives need to learn to take the W

Outrage is only one motivation for change, and it comes with a cost. 

excerpts:

[I]f we want to measure the impact of welfare programs like food stamps, Medicaid, and the EITC, we can’t just update our standards in order to cancel out the effect of these programs, and then conclude that America hasn’t done anything to reduce poverty!  ...

My hypothesis is that some progressives don’t want to acknowledge the success of the War on Poverty — and of subsequent welfare programs like the EITC and Child Tax Credit — because they’re afraid that acknowledging past successes might reduce outrage, and thus reduce momentum for further reform. ...

[M]any progressives seem not to know how to acknowledge their own victories. They’re so dependent on outrage as their motivating force that they recoil against any positivity that might sap that wellspring of anger.

This ends up hurting progressive causes, for a number of reasons. Most obviously, it leads progressives to incorrect conclusions about which tools are effective for achieving their goals. If you insist on telling yourself — and the world — that poverty in America hasn’t fallen, you’ll discount the power of the welfare state. That will also play into conservative hands, since the idea that welfare programs are ineffective is central to the arguments against them.

Another reason progressives shouldn’t rely exclusively on outrage is that it’s probably a lot more powerful in the short term than in the long term. Organizational behavior researchers and management experts will generally tell you that flagellating your employees can motivate them to greater efforts for a while, but will eventually lead to burnout and cognitive exhaustion. Theories of long-term motivation, like the broaden-and-build theory and self-determination theory, emphasize harnessing positive emotions of hopefulness and growth.

...activists are finding themselves unable to sustain their energy. Protests against abortion bans have been fairly anemic. And it’s not hard to see why — rates of depression among young progressives have soared. There’s a fair amount of research suggesting that political negativity is being “internalized”

After decades of progress against poverty, racism, and sexism, the progressive culture of the 2010s told young Americans that everything in their country was horrible and that they needed to revolt against it. ...

Again, this is not to say that outrage is never appropriate, or that it’s never effective. Sometimes it is. But it’s suboptimal to have it be the one and only motivating force behind all pressure for social change. You need positive motivations too — hope, including rational hope based on past successes, is important.

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Nancy Pelosi: This Century's MVP


If Dems win this Fall, no one (other than Joe) will deserve more credit than Nancy Pelosi.

This would be the second time she saves us; cut from Losing (link with more):

Nancy Pelosi got Biden elected.

If Nancy had agreed to another round of stimulus checks in September or early October 2020, Tangerine Palpatine would have won the electoral college again. 

Friday, August 30, 2024

Weekend Reading: Abolishing Suffering & The Buddhist Drug

Alison Krauss - If I Didn't Know Any Better


1. When I first saw this discussion of abolishing suffering, I thought, "Ugh. This is why I don't spend time at ACX (or the EA forums). I even started writing a post against it (heck, the company is even called "far out"). But then I realized it would be irrational to badmouth something I hadn't fully read or considered.

Well, I'm glad I read it. I would give long odds (1,000:1 or more) that nothing will come of these particular efforts. Humans are, in general, just too conservative / squeamish / irrational. Even worse, we rationalize and even glorify suffering. 

With that said, I believe the vast majority of people are doing less-worthwhile things than Pearce, Sparks, Kowrygo, etc. 

This review, IMO, is definitely worth your time. (Unless you haven't done enough exercise for the week; more and more, I've come to realize that good exercise is the best use of our time, up to a point; link to mentioned videos.) 

2. The Buddhist* Drug: Why Does Ozempic Cure All Diseases? 

More: A 5-year observational study of ~12,000 individuals with obesity taking GLP-1 drugs (without diabetes) with propensity-matched controls:
A significant reduction of all-cause mortality (HR 0.23, 95% CI 0.15, 0.34)

Over the course of five years, obese people in the control group had a 3.5% chance of dying. Similar people in the group that took GLP-1 drugs (like Ozempic) had only a 0.75% chance of dying.

What's more, they found that the GLP-1 group had a lower risk of ischemic heart disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, hypertension, stroke, atrial fibrillation, acute kidney injury, and allergic reactions.

*Buddhism: Desire is the root of all suffering.

Please consider forwarding this to a friend or enemy.

Siena, Italy. That's a lot of gargoyles!


Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Video and Outsourced "Kids These Days!"

 This was a very innovative video back in the days when MTV played music videos.


People have always said, "Kids these days!"

Here is a longer examination of this phenomenon - how people across the political spectrum consistently say that morality is in decline. 

(By the way, I saw a post from a guy with six kids bemoaning the "declining" birthrate, in part because parents won't keep up with pop culture. We are such rationalizing animals.)

Monday, August 26, 2024

Interview From 2015 - “Vegan is a distraction”

Received several "Veganism is The Way!" messages lately, including a link to a professor's "Vegan!" manifesto that quotes "The End of Veganism" (disapprovingly and dismissively, obv). Then I came across a 2015 interview Tobias Leenaert did with me (below). Tobias is "The Vegan Strategist" (VS) and author of How to Create a Vegan World. Thanks again to him for the interview, but it seems like my take is no more popular today than when I started this blog 10+ years ago. And it wasn't popular then! (I know it isn't necessarily true that as many people hate these ideas - the loud people just make it feel that way.) 

We are rationalizing, not rational, animals. The more we recognize this, the more we can actually have an impact. If that is really what we want. 

(There is nothing at all new below. Yet I'm still sharing it. Sorry. Please consider forwarding this to someone who might be willing to read it. TY.) 

 

“Vegan is a distraction” An interview with Matt Ball

November 23, 2015 by Tobias Leenaert

Matt Ball is a long-time activist. In 1993, he cofounded [a vegan advocacy organization] and led the organization as Executive Director for more than 20 years. Today, he is [President of One Step for Animals.] He’s the author of several books on activism, and blogs at MattBall.net. As far as I’m concerned, he’s one of the most thoughtful voices and best strategic thinkers in our movement. There’s no getting around him on a strategy blog, so I interviewed him about purity, effectiveness, definitions, and dogma in the vegan movement.

Sit down and enjoy another longread.

VS: How would you define a vegan? A vegan diet?

MB: Before considering this question, I think it is important to step back and consider what is happening in the real world. Hopefully, it could help put the focus on what really matters:

You could argue that Jane’s brothers had it better. Andy and Brian and Gene and Martin were tossed into a bag, on top of hundreds of others. Over many agonizing minutes, they were crushed as more and more were added to the bag. With increasing panic, they struggled with all their might to move, to breathe, as their collective weight squeezed the air from their lungs. No matter how desperately they fought and gasped, they couldn’t get enough air, until finally, mercifully, they blacked out and eventually died.

Jane’s torments were just beginning, however. Her mouth was mutilated, leaving her in so much pain she couldn’t eat for several days. One of her sisters was unable to eat and starved to death. Jane ended up stuffed into a tiny wire cage with Becky, Arlene, Megan, Tracy, and Lynn. To call it a “prison” would be a gross understatement. They were crammed into the cage so tightly that the wires rubbed their skin raw. Their excrement mixed with that of thousands of others, and the horrible ammonia stench of the piles of feces burned their nostrils and lungs.

Struggling for freedom, Megan was eventually able to reach her head through the wires. But then she was trapped, unable to get back in. Over the next few days, she slowly, painfully died of dehydration.

After over a year of this torture, Jane’s feet became tangled in the wire mesh of the floor. Unable to move, she was beginning to dehydrate. But before death could end her pain, she was torn from the cage, her entangled toes left behind, ripped from her body. The brutality of her handler crushed many of her bones, and she was thrown into a truck. For the next 14 hours, she and hundreds of others were driven through the Iowa winter, without protection, food, or water. The cold numbed the pain of Jane’s mutilated feet, but not the acute agony of her shattered bones. She was then shackled upside down, and had her throat cut. That’s how her torment ended.

An unfathomable number of individuals have suffered and are suffering just as Jane did.

Given that this is the current reality, we have a choice to make:

  • We can spend our very limited time and resources worrying about, arguing about, and attacking each other over words and definitions.
  • Or we can focus our efforts entirely on actually ending the system that brutalizes individuals like Tracy and Gene.

If we take Jane’s plight seriously, the best thing most of us can do at the moment is to help persuade more people to buy cruelty-free foods. [And cage-free commitments by corporations.] As tempting as it is, we can’t just remain in our bubble, liking and retweeting what our fellow advocates say. We can’t be distracted by online debates. We can’t endlessly reevaluate every hypothetical.

Instead, we have to focus on realistic strategies that start to create significant and lasting change with new people in the real world. As hard as it is, we absolutely must stop paying attention to people who want to create the world’s smallest club, and start paying attention to what actually creates real change with people who currently don’t know about Jane’s plight.

Questions like the above – about our definitions and opinions – seem harmless. But not only do they waste valuable time and resources, they reinforce the idea that our work is an academic exercise. It isn’t – the lives of individuals like Tracy and Andy depend on us actually doing constructive work in the real world.

VS: Do you think it is useful for vegans to point it out when they see non-vegan behaviour of “vegans”?

Three things should guide our actions in any situation:

  1. The behavior or practice we see has actual, real-world negative consequences for animals.
  2. We have a realistic expectation that our actions will lead to a net good; i.e., there is reason to believe positive change is likely, and it is unlikely there will be any offsetting negative or contrary consequences.
  3. There is nothing better (i.e., more likely to reduce suffering) that we could be doing with our limited time and resources.

It is hard to imagine anything we could do that would have fewer real-world positive consequences for animals than spending our limited time and resources policing the world’s smallest club.

I’ve actually found a pretty clear distinction between people whose primary concern is the purity and exclusivity of their club, vs those who are really working to change the world for animals. The former view everyone as the enemy. The latter view everyone as either a current or potential ally.

Viewing everyone as an ally is not only necessary for truly helping individuals like Jane and Andy, but it is also much better for our mental health and the sustainability of our activism.

VS: What are some exceptions you would make? Is there non-vegan behaviour you indulge in?

In an interview many years ago, someone was infuriated that I had once said I wouldn’t police what our kid ate at birthday parties. They justified their anger by saying it would send “mixed messages” if a four-year-old ate a piece of non-vetted cake. I replied that I never knew anyone who said, “Oh, I would have stopped eating animals, but then I saw this toddler having cake!”

You (Tobias) have wisely pointed out that what we personally consume is nowhere near as important as the influence we can have in the wider world. So I think our limited time is better spent figuring out how to be better examples and advocates, rather than trying to be ever more “pure.” 

And even if you don’t agree with that, the only way to be truly pure is to be dead. But really, is the best-case scenario for the world one where you’re dead? It would be really sad if that were the case.

The evidence doesn’t support that, though. By being a thoughtful, realistic, positive, bottom-line-focused advocate, we can have a significant impact beyond what we accomplish with our personal purchases.

There is so much each one of us can do to lessen the amount of suffering in the world, to expand our circle of compassion, to bend the arc of history toward justice.

But making the world a better place has to be our fundamental goal. We can’t be motivated to follow some dogma, or comply with some definition, or “defend” some word. To make the world a better place, we have to deal with others where they are. We have to be realistic about what change can happen and how it can most likely be brought about. We have to be pragmatic in evaluating our options and choosing the best course of action, given the variables and uncertainties inherent in the real world.

The best thing I can do in one situation (e.g., a child’s birthday party) might not be the best I can do in another situation (e.g., meeting with a group of new activists). And neither of these might be the best thing you could do in the opportunities you encounter. I can’t know for sure what the best thing to do is in any particular situation, but I do know it isn’t simple.

VS: To what extent should we use the word “vegan” in our outreach and to what extent other words? When? What words?

[tl;dr - Remove the word “vegan” from your vocabulary if you want to help animals.]

I stopped eating meat, eggs, and dairy over a quarter century ago. At the time, and for years after, I was mindlessly pro-“vegan.” Not pro-animal, or pro-compassion, or pro-change. Pro-“vegan.” The word. The identity. The philosophy and “lifestyle.”

But in the real world, “vegan” is a stereotype, a punchline, an excuse. People say, “I could never be vegan” and that is the end of the conversation – the end of any opportunity for constructive engagement, for steps taken that could have a real-world benefit for animals.

“Vegan” is an ego-boost, a divider, a distraction. It is too easy to simply judge things as “vegan / not vegan,” instead of focusing on cruelty to animals, working to end factory farms, and having any real impact in the real world.

When I focused on “vegan” instead of how to bring about real change for animals in the real world, I was being both self-centered and lazy. I understand the desire to only care about “vegan,” of course. But at best, the word distracts from doing our best to help new people make compassionate choices that have real consequences for animals.

VS: You have said that the greatest hindrance to the spread of veganism … is vegans themselves. Can you elaborate?

I’ve seen the dynamic of “I could never be vegan” play out for years. As discussed in The Accidental Activist, bottom-line-oriented activists experience a huge increase in the quantity and quality of conversations when they changed their shirts (stickers, etc.) from “Ask me why I’m vegan” to “Ask me why I’m vegetarian.”

University of Arizona research in early 2015 bears this out: non-vegetarians see “vegan” as impossible, and “vegans” as angry, fanatical, and judgmental. I have known several individuals who have given up lucrative careers to dedicate themselves to farm animals, and yet been so put off by the actions of “vegans,” that they want to disassociate themselves from the word. This is depressing, but it’s reality. I believe it is better to face reality and adjust so we can really help animals in the real world.


VS: Do we need to guard a definition or some line? Is that important? Is there a danger of watering down the concept of “veganism”?

It can be utterly addictive to debate terms, argue philosophy, and defend positions. It can be next to impossible to turn away from a debate [natch], given that we each think we are right, and should be able to convince someone if we get the next post just right. [double natch!]

In the end, though, we have limited time and resources. We can, of course, spend this limited time trying to convince someone who has wedded their sense of self-worth to a specific position. But this is no more constructive than spending our time arguing with our Uncle Bob. I think we should spend our limited time and resources reaching out, in a constructive way, to new people – people who actually could make a difference with better-informed choices.

As difficult as it is, it would be so amazing if everyone who reads your blog would stop engaging in internecine debates. Ignore the attacks. Ignore the name-calling. Give up the fantasy of winning an argument. [natch^3] Give up any concern with words or dogma. It would be so incredible if we were to just focus on positive outreach to new people.

VS: For most of your career, you have mainly worked on person-to-person outreach, rather than institutional outreach. What is the reason behind that?

When I stopped eating animals back in the day, there was really no consideration of doing institutional outreach regarding farm animals. [Even before Henry Spira's campaign.] Before I did a more utilitarian evaluation of my efforts, I did try to put pressure on Procter and Gamble to stop testing their products on animals, even going so far as to get arrested.

After that, though, I realized I needed to work where I could have the biggest impact in terms of reducing suffering. 

But I couldn’t just go to a restaurant or food service provider and ask them to add in more cruelty-free options. This is a capitalist society, and if the demand isn’t there, no company is going to create supply (this played out when some McDonald’s introduced a veggie burger years ago, and it failed). [Sad update.] Similarly, I would have no impact as an individual in asking Smithfield or Tyson to stop using gestation crates or move to a less cruel slaughter method.

Things have changed significantly in the past three decades [and even more in the past nine]. The animal advocacy movement as a whole has gained significant political and market power [maybe not so much] such that corporations are more likely to listen and cooperate. Demand for meat-free options has grown in breadth (if not depth) such that working with institutions can have a lasting impact and further drive the cruelty-free demand / supply cycle. There is so much potential – more than half of the people in the US are specifically concerned with the treatment of farm animals!

Some of the most important and consequential work being done right now is at the institutional level. e.g. banning the most barbaric practices from factory farms, increasing the availability of cruelty-free options, and building the companies that will create the products that will replace animal products. [A lot harder than I expected at the time.]

But as long as people want to eat an animal’s flesh, animals will be treated like meat. Of course, this isn’t saying that all animal exploitation is equally bad, or that abolishing gestation crates or battery cages isn’t an important step forward.

What we do know, however, is that even in “humane” meat situations, there is suffering – often, egregious cruelty. We’ve seen this regularly, including PETA’s recent exposure of the horrors of Whole Foods “humane meat.”

The continuing necessity of work on the demand side, combined with my background and opportunities to date, leads me to conclude that at this moment, I can have the biggest impact on the advocacy side. [?] I don’t know if this will continue to be the case, however. [!] There is a ton of exciting work going on now that wasn’t the case even 10 years ago!

VS: What do you think of reducetarian outreach?

The reducetarian approach is rooted in one vitally important psychological insight: people are more likely to attempt and maintain a change that seems achievable, rather than something that seems far beyond where they are now. This has been shown over and over again – not only that the more realistic a change is, the more likely people are to attempt it, but also that the more stepwise a change, the more likely people are to maintain that change.

But as currently embodied, the reducetarian movement misses another important psychological truth (as discussed by Dr. Gordon Hodson): Goals must be not only reasonable and achievable, but clear. “Eat less meat” is not a clear goal. Reach out to just about anyone considered to be a likely target for dietary change and ask them to “eat less meat,” and they will almost universally reply, “Oh, I don’t eat much meat.”

🙁

They often add, “Just chicken.” But of all the factory-farmed animals brutalized and killed for food, the vast majority are birds. Yes, nearly everyone cares more about mammals than birds. But as Professor of Veterinary Science John Webster has noted, modern poultry production is, “in both magnitude and severity, the single most severe, systematic example of man’s inhumanity to another sentient animal.” Combine this with the fact that it takes more than 40 chickens to replace the meals produced by one pig, and more than 200 birds to replace one cow, everyone who “eats less [red] meat” and replaces even a little of it with birds is causing a lot more suffering.

Like doctors, our first duty as advocates should be to “do no harm.” The initial test we should run on any potential campaign or message is, “Is there any chance that my efforts will actually lead to more animals suffering in the real world?” Unfortunately, I think the “eat less meat” campaign might fail that test. [The data continue to support this, sadly.]

VS: Speaking of chickens, you recently helped create One Step for Animals, which emphasizes decreasing chicken consumption. It’s clear that that would help save a lot of lives and suffering (as chickens are both such small animals and so intensively raised). Do you think there’s any truth to the idea that this is speciesist, or that it encourages eating other animals?

Encouraging people to cut back on or avoid eating chickens is just that. It is in no way saying that people should eat cows, pigs, dogs, or chimpanzees.

One Step isn’t concerned with speciesism, but rather, realism. One Step starts with all the statistics and known psychological truths

Just as importantly, though, One Step refuses to be driven by definitions. One Step refuses to engage or appease the dogmatists. Rather, One Step for Animals is concerned only with results in the real world: reducing the most suffering possible. You can disagree that this approach is likely to do that, but “reducing suffering” is the only metric by which One Step (or any group) should be judged.

VS: What is the number one piece of advice you would give to vegan activists?

[tl;dr - Please be an advocate for animals, not a word]

Rather than considering how popular something is with your circle of friends, judge everything by the likely consequences your actions will have with non-vegetarians in the real world. To a first approximation, this will mean calculating how your actions will impact the consumption of chickens.

Saturday, August 24, 2024

"A Step Down" - Skip (egoism) + Chappell Roan

I heard Chappell Roan on NPR but hadn't looked up anything about her until this morning. The grandparents part of this video is hilarious.  

Email I received:

I was flying to ... and used some of the time to start rereading Religions from the start. I also read a classic text from Epictetus. My note to you was that Losing is a step down (or two) from Epictetus in terms of gravitas but a step or two up in terms of enjoyability. :) But also there’s a common theme of freedom from those with the money by not playing by their rules.

Didn't see that comparison coming, did ya?

Javelinas in our neighborhood. Look at the far left.

Friday, August 23, 2024

Two-and-a-half quick political bits (sorry)

Is it morning in America, or mourning in America?

1. Any Democrat would have won in 2008.

No Democrat other than Biden would have beat Tangerine Palpatine in 2020.

This is not to say the Obamas aren't great*. Just that Joe will never fully get the respect or credit he deserves.

2. I hear social psychologist Jonathan Haidt is still criticizing liberals for "failing to take conservative values seriously," even though his thesis has been disproven for years now. 

Donald Trump has zero values. Not any conservative values, not any liberal values. He doesn't believe in any god (other than himself). He can't even fake knowing the bible and uses it to fleece his followers. He is an anti-family man. He is a convicted criminal and a con. He literally badmouths veterans and the United States. He loves dictators and disdains democracy. (Much longer, more detailed analysis.)

Trump has the support of 40+% of the United States because humans are tribal. It has nothing to do with values. It isn't liberals' fault. It isn't because Colbert mocks TFG or because Stephen King is "mean" on Twitter.

Trump is the head of one team. He took over the party by explicitly preaching hatred and fear. That is all it is. 

The reason Haidt remains popular is that many, if not most, liberals will fall all over themselves to seem 'fair' and badmouth 'both sides.' 

Trump is right that he could kill someone and not lose support. Many liberals wouldn't support Joe because he is old. Values have nothing to do with it. 

2.5. From Matt Y:

“When we fight, we win” was one of the key catchphrases of the convention. But I’m often reminded of Frederick the Great’s dictum that “to defend everything is to defend nothing.” When Democrats genuinely fight to win, they choose their battles. When Democrats try to advance on all fronts simultaneously, they actually aren’t fighting at all, they are flailing.


* Sadly, there is no honest way to get past the fact that MAGA is Barack's primary political legacy.

And "Obamacare" would never have passed w/o Joe working Congress. 

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Big Numbers Hurt Animals (still)


Several people have forwarded recent articles about animal issues, all of which feature mind-numbing statistics. So here are bits from posts in 2014 and 2016:


One of my many, many regrets is that in the years after I stopped eating animals, I would lapse into Carl Sagan mode and talk about the "billions and billions" of animals who were killed for food each year. It was only later that I realized that using big numbers was actually undermining my efforts to convince people to take a step to help animals.

This article by Scott and Paul Slovic discusses the issue in more detail. Excerpt:
How big do the numbers have to be for insensitivity to begin? Not very, it turns out. 
Consider the recent death of the Syrian child Aylan Kurdi when his family braved the choppy seas off the coast of Turkey. The image of Aylan lying face down on the beach captivated the world’s attention and even, in short order, resulted in refugee policy changes in countries as far away as the United States. But 14 Syrian children drowned in the Aegean Sea the next day. Did you notice? Did you care? 
And even 14 is much higher than necessary to desensitize us.... “Compassion fade” can occur when an incident involving a single person expands to as few as two people. 
Of course, this is a hard issue to deal with constructively, given that most people care more about and relate better to individual mammals, while the vast majority of factory-farmed animals are birds. But at the very least, we should stop talking about how many billions of animals are killed and talk more about individual stories, especially the brilliance of individual birds.

As Stalin said, "One death is a tragedy, but a million is a statistic."

This Psychology Today article discusses the dynamics in detail; excerpt:

Mother Teresa once said, 'If I look at the mass I will never act.' When Stalin and Mother Teresa agree on a point, I sit up and pay attention. It turns out that the human tendency to turn away from mass suffering is well documented. Deborah Small and Paul Slovic have termed this phenomenon the collapse of compassion. It's not simply that as the number of victims goes up, people's sympathy levels off. No, when the numbers go up, the amount of sympathy people feel goes perversely down. And with it goes the willingness to donate money or time to help.
This has obvious implications for animal advocacy. Many vegans talk about how many billions and billions of animals are killed every year. But as the above article relates, this just numbs people.

Furthermore, in the face of unfathomable numbers, one burger or chicken nugget seems negligible -- indeed, less than negligible.


Obviously, if we are going to create a world where all these animals aren't killed for us to eat, we have to convince people not to eat animals. [Duh] We need to be psychologically insightful in our efforts to do this, instead of repeating facts / stories that move us. Indeed, if something is meaningful to us as long-time vegans and activists, it is almost certainly not the best way to reach someone who currently eats meat.