• Javi@feddit.uk
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    4 days ago

    They’re no better than their Russian/American/Chinese billionaire equivalents; they just find themselves restricted by higher standards in Europe.

    Make no mistake, if it weren’t for the laws currently in place, European billionaires would be making the exact same moves those in America currently are.

    The saying “there is no such thing as an ethical billionaire” springs to mind. Who did they, or their families fuck over, in order to garner that sort of wealth?

    Anyone who was truly altruistic, and had that sort of money, would not retain their status of billionaire for very long.

    • swlabr@awful.systems
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      4 days ago

      The saying “there is no such thing as an ethical billionaire” springs to mind. Who did they, or their families fuck over, in order to garner that sort of wealth?

      There’s a running joke/working theory I’ve heard that in order to become billionaire, you have to have killed someone. (The reality is almost definitely worse)

      • V0ldek@awful.systems
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        23 hours ago

        The billionaire initiation ritual is that scene from Kingsman where

        spoiler for a 11yo movie I guess

        they ask him to kill his dog but instead of a dog it’s a literal child that was performing forced labour for the last year and just wants to go home to its parents, and the bullets are very much live

        • swlabr@awful.systems
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          22 hours ago
          the passing criteria:

          They only pass if they go out of their way to kill a dog anyway.

    • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      The Peter Singer EA concept is incredible solid and well argued, such a shame it’s been stolen by grifters

      • corbin@awful.systems
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        4 days ago

        Singer’s original EA argument, concerning the Bengal famine, has two massive holes in the argument, one of which survives to his simplified setup. I’m going to explain because it’s funny; I’m not sure if you’ve been banned yet.

        First, in the simplified setup, Singer says: there is a child drowning in the river! You must jump into the river, ruining your clothes, or else the child will drown. Further, there’s no time for debate; if you waste time talking, then you forfeit the child. My response is to grab Singer by the belt buckle and collar and throw him into the river, and then strip down and save the child, ignoring whatever happens to Singer. My reasoning is that I don’t like epistemic muggers and I will make choices that punish them in order to dissuade them from approaching me, but I’ll still save the child afterwards. In terms of real life, it was a good call to prosecute SBF regardless of any good he may have done.

        Second, in the Bangladesh setup, Singer says: everybody must donate to one specific charity because the charity can always turn more donations into more delivered food. Accepting the second part, there’s a self-reference issue in the second part: if one is an employee of the charity, do they also have to donate? If we do the case analysis and discard the paradoxical cases, we are left with the repugnant conclusion: everybody ought to not just donate their money to the charity, but also all of their labor, at the cheapest prices possible while not starving themselves. Maybe I’m too much of a communist, but I’d rather just put rich peoples’ heads on pikes instead and issue a food guarantee.

        It’s worth remembering that the actual famine was mostly a combination of failures of local government and also the USA withholding food due to Bangladesh trading with Cuba; maybe Singer’s hand-wringing over the donation strategies of wealthy white moderates is misplaced.

          • mountainriver@awful.systems
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            4 days ago

            There is a genocide going on right now in Gaza. Has Singer, the great utilitarian, said anything about how the common man should act to stop it?

            Is it more effective to protest or block ports or destroy weaponry? Do we have a moral obligation to overthrow governments supporting genocide, in particular if that government is in our country? If we come across one of the perpetrators of the genocide do we have a moral obligation to do something?

            Or are these all to uncomfortable questions, while the donation habits of the middle class is comfortable questions?

            • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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              4 days ago

              I have no idea what Peter Singer has to say about Gaza. I haven’t heard anything decisive about what the most effective way to help stop the genocide is, I don’t think there is much evidence on the matter right now. Based on EA I’d say do as much as you can, but don’t neglect the possibly more effective causes like malaria nets and direct giving in the meantime.

              Is your argument that Singer’s philosophical arguments are fallacious because he hasn’t delivered a guide to how to help the Palestinians? Because I don’t think that works out.

              If your argument is that he himself is a poor philosopher or activist for that reason, then sure, I have nothing against that.

              • mountainriver@awful.systems
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                4 days ago

                My argument is that if he hasn’t spoken out on Gaza, if he hasn’t urged people to do what he thinks would be the best way to stop the genocide, then he is either a fool who can’t see what is in front of him or a moral coward who can’t act on his convictions.

                Either way it makes him a poor ethics philosopher. We can be pretty sure that unless he himself is an experienced life guard, he would in fact not dive in to the river to save the child.

                • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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                  4 days ago

                  If he wouldn’t save the drowning child, does that mean I shouldn’t? Does his potential personal failings really invalidate his ideas and arguments?

                  No. That’s exactly the ad hominem fallacy.

      • swlabr@awful.systems
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        5 days ago

        who is this peter singer fellow? Sounds like a great and unproblematic man. Please tell us more of his teachings.

          • swlabr@awful.systems
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            4 days ago

            Not sure on that but I think he’s related to Sabrina Carpenter. Source, this line from Espresso:

            I’m working late, 'cause I’m a Singer

        • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          Don’t know anything about him as a person, but his writing on veganism and EA is some of the most concise and convincing modern moral philosophy I’ve read.

          Clearly formulated, with clear assumptions and solid arguments and conclusions built on them, making it easy to critique without having studied moral philosophy.

            • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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              5 days ago

              I’d be genuinely interested in an elaboration. Reading the article, the fundamental issue seems to be that he’s an idealist utilitarian who opposes racism and animal suffering in the wrong way?

              The article concludes that

              Of course, there are plenty of good reasons to become a vegetarian, to advocate for better treatment for animals, or to oppose factory farming.

              But I genuinely haven’t seen such reasons which do not ultimately end up in some form of Singer’s argument that suffering implies moral value. Do you have a link exploring it further?

              • ebu@awful.systems
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                4 days ago

                the fundamental issue seems to be that he’s an idealist utilitarian who opposes racism and animal suffering in the wrong way

                don’t worry, he’s just a misunderstood good guy

          • corbin@awful.systems
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            4 days ago

            Let’s do veganism now. I’m allowed to do this because I still remember what lentil burgers taste like from when I dated a vegan at university. So, as with most vegans, Singer is blocked by the classical counting paradoxes from declaring that a certain number of eukaryotic cells makes something morally inedible, and the standard list of counterexamples works just fine for him. Also, I hear he eats shellfish, and geoducks are bigger than e.g. chicks or kittens (or whatever else we might not want to eat.) I don’t know how he’d convince me that a SCOBY is fundamentally not deserving of the same moral insight either; I think we just do it by convention to avoid the cosmic horror of thinking how many yeast cells must die to make a loaf of bread, and most practicing vegans aren’t even willing to pray for all the bugs that they accidentally squish.

            I agree with everything else he puts forward, but it boils down to buying organic-farmed food and discouraging factory farming. Singer is heavy on sentiment but painfully light on biology.

            • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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              4 days ago

              As I understand his argument, it goes

              1. If you can suffer, you have moral value
              2. We have an obligation to not cause suffering to beings with moral value
              3. Some animals can suffer, therefore they have moral value, and we have an obligation to not cause suffering to them

              You can then of course ask whether yeast can suffer, which we don’t have any evidence of, but you’re welcome to stop eating yeast if you feel morally obliged to anyway. Lack of evidence doesn’t mean we know they don’t suffer. But for the animals where we have convincing evidence that they experience suffering, such as most intelligent mammals, we all have a clear moral obligation to stop causing them harm.

              Counting cells doesn’t really enter the argument. Evidence of suffering does, which is not just about sentiment.

              The inability to draw a perfect distinction between beings that can suffer and those who cannot doesn’t stop us from identifying cases clearly on either side of that line.

              What Singer eats doesn’t really matter for the argument.

              • corbin@awful.systems
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                4 days ago

                You now have to argue that oxidative stress isn’t suffering. Biology does not allow for humans to divide the world into the regions where suffering can be experienced and regions where it is absent. (The other branch contradicts the lived experience of anybody who has actually raised a sourdough starter; it is a living thing which requires food, water, and other care to remain homeostatic, and which changes in flavor due to environmental stress.)

                Worse, your framing fails to meet one of the oldest objections to Singer’s position, one which I still consider a knockout: you aren’t going to convince the cats to stop eating intelligent mammals, and evidence suggests that cats suffer when force-fed a vegan diet.

                When you come to Debate Club, make sure that your arguments are actually well-lubed and won’t squeak when you swing them. You’ve tried to clumsily replay Singer’s arguments without understanding their issues and how rhetoric has evolved since then. I would suggest watching some old George Carlin reruns; the man was a powerhouse of rhetoric.

    • swlabr@awful.systems
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      5 days ago

      It’s somewhat non-trivial to create a billionaire, let alone an EA variant; what other ideas do you have for improving EA?

      • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        The point I was trying to make was that the article isn’t really about EA not working, it’s more about billionaires claiming to donate effectively not actually doing so.

        • swlabr@awful.systems
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          4 days ago

          It’s almost as if the wealthy by and large don’t actually care about doing good or improving society!!!

            • swlabr@awful.systems
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              4 days ago

              yeah, so we agree, EA, which is predicated on the wealthy actually giving away their money, is a flawed concept as that is something the wealthy cannot be compelled to do without force

              • SmoothOperator@lemmy.world
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                4 days ago

                EA isn’t a political framework, it’s a moral framework. It tells you what a morally good action looks like. Usually that doesn’t involve compelling you to perform that action by any other means than appealing to your desire to be moral.

                It for sure is morally good to spend any extra money you have in a way that does the most good, billionaire or not. Not sure I see the flaw in that. Especially if you don’t do it instead of being an activist of systemic change, but in addition to that.

                • swlabr@awful.systems
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                  4 days ago

                  EA is absolutely a political framework. You’re just too lazy or smooth-brained to see it.

                  Usually that doesn’t involve compelling you to perform that action by any other means than appealing to your desire to be moral.

                  You… don’t know what a moral framework is.

                  It for sure is morally good to spend any extra money you have in a way that does the most good, billionaire or not.

                  “Duuuuuuuh it’s good to do thing that do most good duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuh” <- that’s you