I've been writing a few posts critical of EA over at my blog. They might be of interest to people here:
- Unflattering aspects of Effective Altruism
- Alternative Visions of Effective Altruism
- Auftragstaktik
- Hurdles of using forecasting as a tool for making sense of AI progress
- Brief thoughts on CEA’s stewardship of the EA Forum
- Why are we not harder, better, faster, stronger?
- ...and there are a few smaller pieces on my blog as well.
I appreciate comments and perspectives anywhere, but prefer them over at the individual posts at my blog, since I have a large number of disagreements with the EA Forum's approach to moderation, curation, aesthetics or cost-effectiveness.
I think much of this criticism is off. There are things I would disagree with Nuno on, but most of what you're highlighting doesn't seem to fairly represent his actual concerns.
He does. Also, I suspect his main concern is with people being banned rather than having their posts moderated.
I don't know what Nuno actually believes, but he carefully couches both of these as hypotheticals, so I don't think you should cite them as things he believes. (in the same section, he hypothetically imagines 'What if EA goes (¿continues to go?) in the direction of being a belief that is like an attire, without further consequences. People sip their wine and participate in the petty drama, but they don’t act differently.' - which I don't think he advocates).
Also, you're equivocating the claim that EA is too naive (which he certainly seems to believe), too consequentialist (which I suspect but don't know he believes), ignores common sense (which I imagine he believes), what he's actually said he believes - that he thinks it should optimise more vigorously - what the hypothetical you quote.
I'm not sure what you want here - his blog is full of criticisms of EA organisations, including those linked in the OP.
He literally links to why he thinks their priorities are bad in the same sentence.
I don't think it's reasonable to assert that he conflates them in a post that estimates the degree to which OP money dominates the EA sphere, that includes the header 'That the structural organization of the movement is distinct from the philosophy', and that states 'I think it makes sense for the rank and file EAs to more often do something different from EA™'. I read his criticism as being precisely that EA, the non-OP part of the movement has a lot of potential value, which is being curtailed by relying too much on OP.
I think you're mispresenting the exact sentence you quote, which contains the modifier 'to constrain the rank and file in a hypocritical way'. I don't know how in favour of maximisation Nuno is, but what he actually writes about in that section is the ways OP has pursued maximising strategies of their own that don't seem to respect the concerns they profess.
You don't have to agree with him on any of these points, but in general I don't think he's saying what you think he's saying.