Outrage is now a sort of forking mechanism that slices new communities out of power sparring over object-level territory so arbitrary that rules like “don’t eat a burrito served to you by a white person” emergehttps://twitter.com/esyudkowsky/status/1010501006277267462 …
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Norms created as a byproduct of social ladder-climbing are probably usually pretty bad, but maybe the bigger problem is just that they’re unpredictable; you have to rely on power dynamics more because the norms are always in flux
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If you don’t know precisely what the rules are going to be today, but violating them means expulsion, your best bet is to figure out who the enforcers are, internalize everything they say as best you can, and score brownie points whenever possible to insulate yourself from errors
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Ultimately, the safest path is to become one of the more influential enforcers yourself. It’s hard to know exactly how to do that, so mostly you just see people standing adjacent to popular outrage & repeating the words, hoping some Vox writer eventually credits them
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Replying to @webdevMason
Trying to do good by eg speaking out against racism is very often the path to becoming a target of outrage. The safest path is to stay silent on all social justice issues.
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It’s super dangerous if you think you know the rules, because you don’t. If you commit a lot of attention to the enforcers & prioritize not stepping on their toes over even performing the norms, you’ll be better off
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