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Yi-Yang

986 karmaJoined Working (6-15 years)Kuala Lumpur, Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Bio

Participation
1

ex-CEA

Minimally passive community building work in Malaysia

Sequences
1

A list of writings regarding cross-cultural interactions in EA

Comments
90

Topic contributions
1

My Malay is pretty rusty and I don't have a good sense Malaysia's Syariah laws, but your interpretation looks right to me. 

Happy to be corrected.

I'm capturing "vibes" here so this might be confusing...

If you generally feel a lot of happiness for other EAs' advantages, then disagree-vote. 

If you feel neutral or conflicted, I would abstain. 

If you feel generally more envious, then agree-vote.

Was I able to clarify things? 

Hmm depends on which resonates most. If you do come from an impressive background but still don't feel valued and capable within EA, I would say disagree-vote here. 

Thanks for asking! If you live in a high-income country but still feel a lot of envy with EAs who have more economic advantages, then I would still agree-vote. 

Thanks for sharing! Hmm, that does pique my interest too..

Thanks, you're right. I'm gesturing at the later. 

1.a. I found EA's reality more exclusive than its inclusive messaging suggested.

Needs not fulfilled: clarity, authenticity, equality

Associated emotions: confusion, disappointment, anger

Description: “I was drawn to EA because it seemed like an inclusive, compassionate community focused on doing the most good. The messaging talks about being welcoming to everyone, caring for all beings, and solving problems together. I expected something more like a collaborative movement where passionate people work together as equals. Instead, I found a highly stratified system, where only the most credentialed, accomplished, and competent people get funding, platforms, or influence. I feel disappointed. I know EA doesn’t advertise itself as democratic and egalitarian. But the gap between EA's inclusive messaging and its exclusive reality leads to mismatched expectations.”

1.b. I found EA's messaging accurately reflects its inclusive and meritocratic reality.

Needs fulfilled: clarity, authenticity, equality

Associated emotions: trust, satisfaction

Description: "I was drawn to EA because it seemed like a community focused on doing the most good, and I've found that it lives up to its messaging. Whilst EA does have standards and focuses on competence, I've experienced it as genuinely inclusive and welcoming to people from diverse backgrounds who are committed to EA principles. The stratification that exists seems merit-based rather than arbitrary— I've seen many examples of people without impressive credentials being given opportunities, funding, and platforms based on the quality of their ideas and work. I appreciate that EA is honest about being a movement focused on expertise and impact rather than pure egalitarianism, which helps set appropriate expectations. The gap between messaging and reality feels minimal, and I feel like I can trust what EA organisations say about their values and practices."

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