Will prominent rationalists judge that Trump's second term was the most positively impactful term in the last 68 years?
115
1kṀ450k
2028
9%
chance

This will be resolved based on my judgement of the vibes of top Rationalist voices in 4 years.

If through their Tweets and Substack posts, I get the sense that they are happy with Trump's reforms, and that what got done was extremely impactful, vastly outweighs any harms, and was more sizable than what other post WWII presidents have accomplished, then I will resolve YES. Otherwise, NO.

EDIT: This would be judged from 1960 with JFK (68 years before 2028).

  • Update 2025-02-05 (PST) (AI summary of creator comment): Majority Requirement Clarification:

    • A majority of prominent rationalists must hold the view that Trump’s second term was the most positively impactful since 1960.

    • The final judgment will consider the vibes of rationalists across a spectrum, where the intensity of their views is weighed—if the core (top) voices are more fervent, they can outweigh a larger number of mildly opposing voices.

    • The process involves assessing gradations among rationalists, meaning that the consensus reflects the overall tendency rather than a strict headcount.

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You know, the base rate at random of this happening is 1 in 17 or about 7%, so really if you think Trump is especially bad it should be substantially lower than that, it’s just that prediction markets aren’t liquid enough to correctly resolve at the extreme low or high end of probabilities

@Balasar resolution risk plus Trump is more extreme.

https://gizmodo.com/social-security-website-crashes-as-doge-linked-disruption-at-the-agency-continues-2000583777

Trump’s changes are just making the government work worse, not more efficiently

I feel like at this point the lion's share of the risk on this market is on it being misresolved due to somewhat vague criterion.

Another question: who's "prominent?" E.g. is Eneasz Brodski included but maybe weighed less heavily than obvious candidates because he's a host/co-host of multiple clearly rationalist podcasts like the Mindkiller and Bayesian Conspiracy?

Question: who counts as rationalist? E.g. Nate Silver & Dwarkesh Patel are clearly "prominent," but are they rationalist or rat-adjacent? Does rat-adjacent count if they have significant influence on rationalist thinking/info sources (both examples would be yes in this case)? Does rat-adjacent count regardless?

Another big cut, cancelling out significant progress fighting malaria.

How are you defining the set of prominent rationalists? All lesswrong users? A specific list of named individuals?

@TheAllMemeingEye Random LessWrong users obviously aren't "prominent." Think Holden Karnofsky, Eliezer, Robin Hanson, Paul Christiano, hosts of popular podcasts like the Bayesian Conspiracy or Mindkiller (maybe), any significantly read substack blog authors like Zvi, authors of notable rationalist books like Julia Galef, etc.

A more interesting question is what determines if a prominent individual counts as "rationalist" (e.g. Nate Silver? <minor edit>), which I think deserves it's own comment/thread.

@DavidHiggs

Random LessWrong users obviously aren't "prominent."

My mistake, I forgot about prominance, let's substitute that for "the first 10 unique posters of the top of all time inflation-adjusted upvoted posts on lesswrong" or perhaps "the 10 lesswrong users with the highest google trends scores".

I thought of using lesswrong for this since it would be a clearly defined, easily surveyable, overwhelmingly rationalist group of people.

@TheAllMemeingEye

A more interesting question is what determines if a prominent individual counts as "rationalist" (e.g. Nate Soares?)

Isn't Nate Soares co-leader of MIRI with Eliezer Yudkowsky, the founder and most prominent advocate of the rationalism movement? I'd be shocked if Eliezer let him be in that position if he wasn't rationalist.

@TheAllMemeingEye whoops, confused Nate Soares with Nate Silver, gotta go amend my other comment XD

So the USAID cuts have taken effect - it’s estimated that they will kill 13 million people over the next 4 years

Item 24 in today's ACX presumably bumps the probability here up slightly. (The rest of that post, not so much, I think.)

@dreev I'm actually surprised how against Doge Scott is. In my mind, it's status quo bias, as well as different priors about how bad government was before. I will admit I didn't realize Pepfar was still in limbo.

Lastly, one more crux could be from my experience as a founder: the bias toward action and shaking things up usually is a profound good and leads to very high expected results, whereas to most people it looks like flailing and destruction. I think the best managed orgs will always have a disruptive current and the government has had almost none for forever. See also my Mad Scientist theory.

@dreev If we're ignoring AI, nothing compares to PEPFAR, frankly. It's as efficient as GiveWell, has saved 19 million, and 6 million will die if it doesn't get out of limbo.

@JamesGrugett The problem is that government is not a tech company. You're trying to apply a heuristic from your own experience in a very weird way - if anything, historically speaking, you want governments to be relatively stable democracies with boring centrist-ish leaders rather than schizoposting dictator-aspiring people trying to remove checks and balances.

I think viewing government in an absolute "how bad is it compared to my ideal system" is a mistake. View government relative to other governments. There was corruption in the US government, but it's not nearly at the point where I'd throw it all away for a wildcard with bad economic policy who's worse on even free speech and expression than his opponent.

As for DOGE/Elon specifically, the problem is that it clearly fails cost/benefit.

Benefit:

- DOGE has saved about $3 billion ($10 per American). (Most of DOGE's other savings are things that were already spent and counted anyway, contracts not fully terminated, or firing workers who just re-enter the workforce, at best in a slightly more productive position.) It looks like DOGE's cuts are unlikely to break even with increase of federal spending due to inflation, according to the Kalshi market "how much spending will Trump and Elon cut?"
- Some DEI bloat removed.
- Some woke science (~2% of all grants under the Biden admin) removed.

Cost:
- Many important workers for agencies like NOAA, FAA fired.
- The CPFB has been shut down. The CPFB saved consumers $20 billion, so if you count that as straightforward savings, DOGE has actually lost $17 billion. Some might be phantom savings, because it isn't revenue for the federal government, it's just being moved from a firm to an individual, but overall I think CPFB was good enough that it's better than all the money DOGE saved.
- Some actual longstanding science grants and funding for science in universities removed. Some of which is important research that could save lives. I don't have estimates off the top of my head but I think Scott tried and concluded that it was pretty bad.
- Blatantly illegal actions that undermine the rule of law.
- Elon publicly calling to impeach judges who go against him, also undermining the rule of law.
- Other good websites, agencies, or programs that costed relatively little becoming defunct for seemingly no reason.

Even if you could say DOGE itself is net positive (which it clearly isn't), it pales in comparison to the tax cuts that Trump is making, which will increase the deficit.

But again, PEPFAR + actions that undermine democracy globally outweigh all of this. The only way I could see a turnaround at this point is if he agrees to fund most of the USAID programs under the State Department and implements some seriously good deregulatory policy. But considering how he just saved a corrupt union from automation, that's not a guarantee.


@JamesGrugett It’s worth noting that a lot of DOGE’s targets have been the places where the federal government was innovating the most. For example, they’re tearing out almost everything that the US Digital Service did, which was bringing the rest of the government to have modern websites that are easy to use. They’re tearing out electric car chargers. They’re removing the IRS’s free and easy filing service that was being developed and was a huge step forward.

This isn’t a “bias toward action”, it’s intentional destruction that is getting rid of the innovative parts of the government. The literal actual goal is to make the government more lethargic and less able to take action quickly.

In addition, like zephyr said, a government generally shouldn’t be chaotic. So much of what gets done doesn’t need innovation, it needs to be done consistently and without chaos. I don’t want my weather reports to not happen some days because they’re mixing things up. I want the dollar bills to be printed and not lost. I want my mail to be delivered on time.

And finally, PEPFAR on its own outweighs the benefits of any cost cutting efficiency that may happen (of which there really isn’t much). PEPFAR is more efficient than everything that EA does. If you had me choose between PEPFAR and the entire EA movement, I’d choose PEPFAR.

Given the amount of damage Trump has done in the first month of his administration and shows no signs of stopping, this seems very unlikely. My remaining sources of uncertainty are that:

1) The market creator is the largest YES holder. I generally trust James, but there is some subjectivity in the resolution giving room for motivated cognition.

2) Given Trump's disregard for liberal norms, there's some chance that by the time of resolution, prominent rationalists will be coerced to judge Trump positively in their public statements.

@AriZerner 2 seems very unlikely, I'm guessing the market price is mostly due to 1

Regular reminder to go bet on the actual serious market that is not predicated on sheer delusion: https://manifold.markets/Balasar/will-prominent-rationalists-judge-t-Zg29U08R8g

filled a Ṁ10,000 NO at 4% order

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/qYPHryHTNiJ2y6Fhi/the-paris-ai-anti-safety-summit

Trump has already been a disaster for AI Safety, per Zvi

The Trump Administration has made its position very clear. It intends not only to not prevent, but to hasten along and make more likely our collective annihilation. Hopes for international coordination to mitigate existential risks are utterly collapsing.

@Gabrielle yeah Trump is pretty much the worst nightmare for AI pause types.
Well, I expect it to get worse (government funding big computers). We'll see what happens after the 180 days mentioned in Trump's AI executive order has passed.

opened a Ṁ5,000 YES at 6% order

@jim Worth noting it is dream come true for the "AI safety is pseudoscience" types.

@skibidist In Vance's speech he basically went full e/acc.

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