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Auros's avatar

I used to hang out pretty regularly at one of those named group houses that serves as a salon / regular party spot, which was popular with the rationalist crowd and a variety of techies. I don't know Eliezer super well, but I met him several times there, and I realized after Scott released his name that I have met him as well (but didn't know who he was, at the time).

Eliezer is decidedly left-leaning socially, moderate economically. The idea that he would endorse "fascism" is pretty much loony. Scott is I think a bit more conservative in some pragmatic sense -- he seems to be at least open to the idea that "the good life" for many people involves a world that rescues them from the pains of the "paradox of choice" by circumscribing a lot of options, and pushing them into more of a traditional lifestyle. But he also is clearly _opposed_ to the neo-reactionary types who want to achieve that kind of vision of conservative lifestyles by way of violently repressing those who disagree. Maybe you think it's bad that he will engage with those neo-reactionary types via polite conversation; maybe you think all Nazis need punching, and buy into the "paradox of tolerance" idea that for people whose end goal is intolerant, we can't try to just reason with them. But for the Times author to tar Scott as a right-winger like Thiel is a deep misreading of his arguments. I'm sure I disagree with him about a number of things, but I respect that he has a deep reverence for the value and autonomy of each human being.

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Evan Fields's avatar

Thanks for the article! Do you think it's still correct to assume that Scott Alexander is a conservative, given that he's a self described Warren-Biden voter? Or are you basing that inference more on a large body of his writing than recent voting patterns?

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